Ex Parte Aggerholm et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardDec 2, 201512964055 (P.T.A.B. Dec. 2, 2015) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE United States Patent and Trademark Office Address: COMMISSIONER FOR PATENTS P.O. Box 1450 Alexandria, Virginia 22313-1450 www.uspto.gov APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE FIRST NAMED INVENTOR ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. 12/964,055 12/09/2010 Steen Aggerholm PA-6744-RFB 4070 9896 7590 12/02/2015 Cook Medical Technologies LLC P.O. BOX 2269 BLOOMINGTON, IN 47402-2269 EXAMINER NGUYEN, TUAN VAN ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3731 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 12/02/2015 PAPER Please find below and/or attached an Office communication concerning this application or proceeding. The time period for reply, if any, is set in the attached communication. PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ________________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ________________ Ex parte STEEN AGGERHOLM, PER ERIK ELGAARD, and THOMAS LYSGAARD ________________ Appeal 2013-006563 Application 12/964,055 Technology Center 3700 ________________ Before MICHAEL L. HOELTER, MICHELLE R. OSINSKI, and JASON W. MELVIN, Administrative Patent Judges. HOELTER, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE This is a decision on appeal, under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a), from a final rejection of claims 1–19, 21, and 22. Final Act. 1 (Office Action Summary). Claim 20 has been canceled. App. Br. 15 (Claims App.). We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We REVERSE. Appeal 2013-006563 Application 12/964,055 2 THE CLAIMED SUBJECT MATTER The disclosed subject matter “relates generally to medical devices and more particularly to angioplasty balloon catheters used to dilate narrowed portions of a lumen such as by cutting or scoring balloons.” Spec. 1:14–16. Independent claim 1 is reproduced below and is illustrative of the claims on appeal: 1. A scoring balloon raw material form for an angioplasty balloon catheter including a balloon wall, and one or more scoring elements formed integrally with the balloon wall; wherein the balloon wall includes at least one zone of greater thickness adjacent the or each scoring element, the at least one zone of greater thickness extending radially in the region of 10% to 20% of the overall circumference of the raw material form. App. Br. 12 (Claims App.). REFERENCE RELIED ON BY THE EXAMINER Sirhan US 2003/0144683 A1 July 31, 2003 THE REJECTION ON APPEAL Claims 119, 21, and 22 rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Sirhan. ANALYSIS Independent claim 1 recites a “raw material form” having a “balloon wall [that] includes at least one zone of greater thickness adjacent the or each scoring element.” Claim 1 further recites that this zone of greater thickness of the balloon wall extends “in the region of 10% to 20% of the overall circumference of the raw material form.” Independent claim 11 includes similar language regarding a “balloon wall . . . formed with at least one zone of greater thickness adjacent the or each scoring element,” but Appeal 2013-006563 Application 12/964,055 3 instead specifies this zone as “extending in an arc in the range of 10° to 60°.” App. Br. 1314 (Claims App.). Independent claim 22 is similar but recites the zone “extending in an arc in the range of 30° to 40°.” App. Br. 15 (Claims App.). The Examiner provides an annotation of Figure 5 of Sirhan which is used by the Examiner to identify item 37. Ans. 4. The Examiner finds that this figure discloses “two zones of greater wall thickness positioned on either side [of the] scoring element (each zone is designated by reference number 37 shown in Fig. 5.” Final Act. 3. The Examiner’s annotated Figure 5 of Sirhan is replicated below: Figure 5 is a sectional view of an inflatable balloon showing wing 34. Appeal 2013-006563 Application 12/964,055 4 The Examiner acknowledges that “Sirhan discloses the invention substantially as claimed except for disclosing [the] dimensions of base 37” being within the claimed ranges. Final Act. 4 (citing claims 1, 2, 6, 11, 12, and 22). On this point, the Examiner references Sirhan’s teaching that: [t]he wings 34 may be present in any number, and may be of any size, or form any suitable angle with a base 37 formed with reference to the outer surface of the balloon in an expanded configuration, as may be necessary to properly perform an intended procedure. Sirhan ¶ 26. Based on this disclosure, the Examiner states that “one of ordinary skill in the art would recognize that dimensions of the base 37 are dependent on the height, the angle and the width of the wing 34.” Final Act. 4. As such, the Examiner states that “[t]hese variables of the wing are the effective variables to make the device of Sirhan to properly perform an intended procedure.” Final Act. 4. The Examiner thus concludes that it would have been obvious “to design the wings 34 of Sirhan so that the two zones of the greater thickness regions 37 would have the dimensions as required in claims 1, 2, 6, 11, 12 and 22” and that “discovering the optimum or workable ranges involves only routine skill in the art.” Final Act. 4 referencing In re Aller, 220 F.2d 454, 456 (CCPA 1955). On the one hand, it is apparent that the Examiner is correlating Sirhan’s base 37 with the claimed zone of greater thickness adjacent the scoring element. Final Act. 3. On the other hand, Appellants “contend the filet structure [identified by the Examiner as zones 37 in Figure 5] does not actually exist in Sirhan” because “Sirhan’s specification does not mention a filet.” App. Br. 6. Appellants also argue that “the curved portion at the intersection of the wing and the balloon wall are merely the result of artistic Appeal 2013-006563 Application 12/964,055 5 license taken by the draftsman and not the manufacturing process.” App. Br. 7. Regarding Appellants’ contentions, our reviewing court has held that drawings can be used as prior art, without referring to the surrounding description, only if the prior art features are clearly disclosed by the drawing. See, e.g., In re Wagner, 63 F.2d 987, 986–87 (CCPA 1933). Here, the filets, which transition between Sirhan’s scoring element (or wing) and balloon wall, are clearly disclosed. See also In re Mraz, 455 F.2d 1069, 1072 (CCPA 1972) (“[W]e did not mean that things patent drawings show clearly are to be disregarded.”); In re Seid, 161 F.2d 229, 231 (CCPA 1947) (“[A]n accidental disclosure, if clearly made in a drawing, is available as a reference.”) (citations omitted). Accordingly, we are not persuaded by Appellants’ contentions that the described filet does not exist or is merely the result of artistic license. Instead, the Examiner can properly rely on Sirhan’s disclosure of the curved filet adjacent the scoring element. However, as previously indicated, the Examiner is correlating Sirhan’s base 37 with the claimed zone of greater thickness. Final Act. 3. Sirhan’s base 37 is described as connected with wing 34 and “formed with reference to the outer surface of the balloon,” but not with any separate parameters such as curvature of the filets that comprise base 37. Sirhan ¶ 26. Even the Examiner’s annotated drawing (see supra) positions wing 34 on one side of the transition point and the filet on the other. While Sirhan clearly discloses a filet, the greater wall thickness associated with the filet appears to cease at the end of the filet. In other words, Sirhan does not Appeal 2013-006563 Application 12/964,055 6 appear to disclose any continuation of a greater wall thickness beyond the end of the filet.1 Although the dimensions of wing 34 (and in some fashion the dimension of base 37) may vary as expressed in Sirhan (see supra), there is no indication that any wing (or base) variation will result in a corresponding change in the curvature of the base filet shown in Figure 5 of Sirhan. Hence, we are not in agreement with the Examiner that Sirhan teaches base 37 as having a variable that affects the illustrated filet. See Final Act. 4. We instead agree with Appellants that “[t]he measurements of the zone are not related to the height, angle, and width of the wing, as those dimensions do not properly describe the zone of thickness.”2 App. Br. 7. As such, we also agree with Appellants that “Aller cannot be applied to Sirhan and Applicants’ invention” in an attempt to ascertain the claimed ranges via optimization of a result effective variable. App. Br. 8; see also Reply Br. 4. This is because “Sirhan discloses no general measurements as to the thickness of the balloon wall or the distance that zone extends beyond the wings.” App. Br. 9. The Examiner’s Answer also provides a rationale as to why one skilled in the art might be motivated to construct Sirhan’s device with 1 Appellants’ Specification indicates that the greater wall thickness is “measured at the transition point between the balloon wall and the cutting or scoring element, identified as point or zone 27 in Figure 3.” Spec. 11:813. Hence, when measuring from the described transition point, Sirhan’s disclosed filet would be included in such measurement. 2 Appellants also state that “the zone of thickness is measured by how far it extends beyond the wing and the thickness of the wall, the zone of thickness cannot be defined by reference to the height, width and angle of the wing as described in Sirhan.” App. Br. 8. Appeal 2013-006563 Application 12/964,055 7 “additional material at the intersection point between the scoring element and the balloon wall (zone of greater thickness) to suit an intended procedure.” Ans. 6; see also Sirhan ¶ 26. To be specific, the Examiner states that one skilled in the art “would recognize that for stenosis with hard plaque, the width of the base and the additional material at the intersection point between the scoring element and the balloon wall (zone of greater thickness) as disclosed by Sirhan should be made wider and thicker to provide a better force concentration in order to cut the hard plaque.” Ans. 6 see also id. at 7–9. As such, any additional material or modification is understood to be directed to the filet, and not with respect to any balloon wall beyond the filet. Without an explanation, the addition of material beyond Sirhan’s filet is indicative of improper hindsight analysis. See App. Br. 10. The Supreme Court has warned that the “factfinder should be aware . . . of the distortion caused by hindsight bias and must be cautious of arguments reliant upon ex post reasoning.” KSR Int'l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 421 (2007). In summary, while it is clearly known to use a scoring element and a transitional filet of indeterminate shape, we are not persuaded that it would have been obvious in view of Sirhan to provide additional material to the balloon wall beyond the filet; or to provide additional material beyond the filet so as to form a zone of greater thickness that is adjacent the scoring element and that extends a certain percentage of the overall circumference or in an arc in a certain percentage range. Further, lacking a result effective variable that might alter a measure from the identified “transition point” (Ans. 4; Spec. 11:813), the Examiner does not explain how discovering the Appeal 2013-006563 Application 12/964,055 8 optimum or workable range of this measure (i.e., the claimed ranges) “involves only routine skill in the art” (Final Act. 4). We reverse the Examiner’s rejection of claims 1–19, 21, and 22. DECISION The Examiner’s rejection of claims 119, 21, and 22 is reversed. 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