Ex Parte Ciarniello et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardAug 19, 201612418607 (P.T.A.B. Aug. 19, 2016) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 12/418,607 0410512009 23460 7590 08/23/2016 LEYDIG VOIT & MA YER, LTD TWO PRUDENTIAL PLAZA, SUITE 4900 180 NORTH STETSON A VENUE CHICAGO, IL 60601-6731 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR Anthony Ciarniello 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 ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. 257426 8873 EXAMINER MISIASZEK, AMBER AL TSCHUL ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3624 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 08/23/2016 ELECTRONIC 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. Notice of the Office communication was sent electronically on above-indicated "Notification Date" to the following e-mail address( es): Chgpatent@leydig.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte ANTHONY CIARNIELLO, LONNY REISMAN, and CHARLES BLANKSTEEN Appeal2014--002265 Application 12/418,607 Technology Center 3600 Before ANTON W. PETTING, NINA L. MEDLOCK, and BRUCE T. WIEDER, Administrative Patent Judges. PETTING, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE1 Anthony Ciamiello, Lonny Reisman, and Charles Blanksteen (Appellants) seek review under 35 U.S.C. § 134 of a final rejection of claims 1-33, the only claims pending in the application on appeal. We have jurisdiction over the appeal pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). 1 Our decision will make reference to the Appellants' Appeal Brief ("App. Br.," filed June 19, 2013) and Reply Brief ("Reply Br.," filed December 4, 2013), and the Examiner's Answer ("Ans.," mailed October 4, 2013), and Final Action ("Final Act.," mailed May 17, 2012). Appeal2014-002265 Application 12/418,607 The Appellants invented a way to perform medical analysis. Specification para. 1. An understanding of the invention can be derived from a reading of exemplary claim 1, which is reproduced below (bracketed matter and some paragraphing added). 1. A method of providing a personal health record to an individual patient, the method comprising: [ 1] aggregating electronic medical care information relating to the patient using an automated health care computer information system programmed to integrate a plurality of disparate medical data sources, the health care computer information system having access to at least one source of data, including health plan claims data obtained from at least one health care provider and submitted in connection with a claim under a health plan; [2] deriving clinical information from the health plan claims data; [3] organizing the aggregated medical care information into a medical data file for the patient and storing the medical data file in a computer readable medium of the health care computer information system; [ 4] providing a password-protected, personal Web page for the patient, the Web page including a display of certain elements of the patient's healthcare history automatically populated based on the contents of the medical data file, and further including a section for use by the patient to enter additional healthcare information; [5] receiving the additional healthcare information entered by the patient using the Web page; 2 Appeal2014-002265 Application 12/418,607 and [ 6] updating the medical data file with the received information. The Examiner relies upon the following prior art: Summerell US 5,937,387 Segal Knaus US 2001/0041991 Al US 2002/0004727 Al Aug. 10, 1999 Nov. 15, 2001 Jan. 10,2002 Claims 1--4, 6-10, 11-14, 16-18, 25, 32, and 33 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Segal and Knaus. Claims 5, 15, 19-24, and 26-31 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Segal, Knaus, and Summerell. ISSUES The issues of obviousness tum primarily on the weight afforded non-functional data labels and to the extent weight is afforded, the breadth in scope of the labels employed in the claims. FACTS PERTINENT TO THE ISSUES The following enumerated Findings of Fact (FF) are believed to be supported by a preponderance of the evidence. Facts Related to Claim Construction 01. The disclosure contains no lexicographic definition of "clinical." 3 Appeal2014-002265 Application 12/418,607 02. The plain meaning of "clinical" is an adjective that modifies a noun as involving or based on direct observation of a patient.2 Facts Related to the Prior Art Segal 03. Segal is directed to the field of electronic commerce, telemedicine, and global network medical record management services, and more particularly, creating, storing, accessing, and distributing focused patient medical records. Segal para. 3. 04. Segal describes a need for an integrated view of patient data with the comprehensive medical history necessary for efficient and accurate diagnosis and treatment because, in the face of multiple health care providers, health care insurance companies, and their corresponding individual computer medical record systems, electronic medical records (EMRs) fail to provide centralized and integrated records management. A single patient's EMR is typically fragmented between different health care providers and health insurance providers, with records distributed across multiple repositories. As a result, a physician does not have an integrated view of the patient data, and consequently lacks the comprehensive medical history necessary for efficient and accurate diagnosis and treatment. Segal para. 10. 2 The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition 2015 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. https://www.ahdictionary.com/word/search.html?q=clinical 4 Appeal2014-002265 Application 12/418,607 05. Segal describes Patient Power, a system for creating, storing, accessing, updating, and distributing patient medical records, especially diagnostic-quality medical imaging, under the control of a patient and the coordinated care of the patient and physician. Segal provides centralized and focused online medical record storage, facilitates a patient-physician partnership by which to create and maintain the focused online medical records, provides means for obtaining and storing diagnostic-quality images, establishes Internet-based communication through which to transmit medical records, provides immediate means for conveying critical medical information in emergency situations, and provides means for storing, receiving, and transmitting diagnostic-quality mammograms. Segal para. 21. 06. Segal describes entering data into the patient's medical record. The data is in three primary forms: 1) textual records; 2) scanned records, such as EKGs and special reports; and 3) medical images, such as x-rays. An authorized user, who may be, for example, the patient, a relative of the patient, or the patient's physician, enters textual information through an online Internet connection that interfaces with the GUis and the web server. The web server stores in the clinical database the textual data received through the GUis. For scanned records, the scanner (or a facsimile machine) digitally encodes the original documents and stores the encoded files in the clinical database. For medical images, which require diagnostic quality (significantly higher than the quality required for the scanned documents), the digitizer digitally encodes an 5 Appeal2014-002265 Application 12/418,607 original medical image in a high-resolution format file. Segal para. 27. 07. Segal describes a website-accessible database on the Internet that gathers and disseminates information related to patient medical records. Users, e.g., patients and physicians, can access a clinical database, account database, image archive, web-enabler, and expanded memory image archive via the website. A user enters the appropriate website address (e.g., URL) to obtain access to these databases. Using a series of web pages, users can enter, modify, and obtain information contained in the server databases. Segal para. 84. Knaus 08. Knaus is directed to creating and utilizing a broadband computer-based networked system for individualized control and management of medical records. Knaus para. 3. 09. Knaus describes the integration of medical records by obtaining medical information of a patient, which may include medical records, from a plurality of sources, and entering that information electronically into a computer system of the invention. Sources include primary sources (e.g., hospitals, physician's offices and clinics that directly administer treatment to the patient), and secondary sources (e.g., diagnostic services performed at laboratories), and also payor sources such as insurers. Integration according to the invention creates a completely uniform, 6 Appeal2014-002265 Application 12/418,607 cumulative medical record within a single computer system. Knaus para. 52. ANALYSIS We are not persuaded by Appellants' argument that "[t]he cited references fail to teach or suggest the limitation of 'aggregating electronic medical care information ... [including] health plan claims data."' App. Br. 13. As the Examiner finds, Knaus describes creating medical records from compilations that can be used as primary records for insurers. Ans. 22. The limitation only recites aggregating information and does not recite or narrow the manner or implementation, other than that it somehow use an automated health care computer information system programmed to integrate a plurality of disparate medical data sources. Again, no particular implementation for such integration is recited, and therefore would include Segal' s patient entry that integrates such disparate sourced records within its scope. As the Examiner finds, Knaus also does this, but in an automated form of data collection and entry. Knaus in particular describes its system as accessing the health insurer's database. Further, the phrase "health plan claims data" contains a noun, "data" modified by the adjective phrase "health plan claims." Neither this phrase nor the context narrows or suggests the manner of such modification, so any data having to do with health plan claims are within the scope. In particular, data from any source that are in some manner duplicative or indicative of health plan claims would be within the scope of this limitation. Both references consolidate data that would fall within such a scope. The phrase 7 Appeal2014-002265 Application 12/418,607 is not so narrow as to exclusively refer only to data that come from a health insurer's database. Absent a step that explicitly would do so, we conclude Appellants seek broader scope. We are not persuaded by Appellants' argument that "[t]he cited references fail to teach or suggest the limitation of 'deriving clinical information from the health plan claims data."' App. Br. 14. The analysis here is similar to that of the first argument, as this argument refines the nature of the data obtained from health plan claims data. Both references describe the data compiled as being about the patient and for the benefit of patient and physician. Segal particularly refers to storing such data in a clinical database. But even if the data were not health plan claims data and clinical information derived from the health plan claims data, this would not change the conclusion. Our reviewing court has held that nonfunctional descriptive material cannot lend patentability to an invention that would have otherwise been anticipated by the prior art. In re Ngai, 367 F.3d 1336, 1339 (Fed. Cir. 2004). Cf In re Gulack, 703 F.2d 1381, 1385 (Fed. Cir. 1983) (noting that when descriptive material is not functionally related to the substrate, the descriptive material will not distinguish the invention from the prior art in terms of patentability). King Pharm., Inc. v. Eon Labs, Inc., 616 F.3d 1267, 1279 (Fed. Cir. 2010) ("[T]he relevant question is whether 'there exists any new and unobvious functional relationship between the printed matter and the substrate."') (citations omitted). Appellants argue that the claimed clinical information derived from the health plan claims data patentably distinguishes over the prior art medical 8 Appeal2014-002265 Application 12/418,607 data. We disagree because Appellants have failed to establish that the claimed clinical information derived from the health plan claims data label is in any way functionally related to the claimed system and data file (substrate). As a result, Appellants' claimed data label as being clinical information derived from the health plan claims does not distinguish this invention from the prior art. To more readily see the issue, we construe the limitations at issue as follows: aggregating DATAl using an automated health care computer information system programmed to integrate a plurality of disparate medical data sources, the health care computer information system having access to at least one source of data, including DATA2; deriving DATA3 from the DATA2; organizing the aggregated DATAl into a medical data file for the patient and storing the medical data file in a computer readable medium of the health care computer information system; wherein DAT A 1 is labelled as electronic medical care information wherein DATA2 is labelled as health plan claims data obtained from at least one health care provider and submitted in connection with a claim under a health plan wherein DATA3 is labelled as clinical information. To agree with Appellants' reasoning would mean that each novel set of medical data labels, over which the known medical information system is 9 Appeal2014-002265 Application 12/418,607 used to collect data, is sufficient to warrant a separate patent even if the remainder of the invention is unchanged. This would result not only in Appellants' aggregation of personal health records in a health insurance context distinguishing over the prior art, but equally the same personal health records in a broader context would distinguish over the prior art, as would every single unique set of personal health records. To give effect to Appellants' argument, we would need to ignore our reviewing court's concerns with repeated patenting. We decline to do so. The rationale behind this prior art rejection is preventing the repeated patenting of essentially a known product by the mere inclusion of novel non-functional descriptive material. King Pharm., 616 F.3d at 1279 ("The rationale behind this line of cases is preventing the indefinite patenting of known products by the simple inclusion of novel, yet functionally unrelated limitations.") Cf In re Ngai, 367 F.3d at 1339 ("If we were to adopt Ngai's position, anyone could continue patenting a product indefinitely provided that they add a new instruction sheet to the product."). Here, the limitation of clinical information derived from the health plan claims data in no way depends on the aggregation and aggregation in no way depends on the perception of the data as being clinical information derived from the health plan claims data. Thus, this limitation should be afforded no patentable weight. We agree with the Examiner that the prior art describes claim 1 because it teaches each and every functional limitation of the claim. The difference between the prior art and the claimed invention is simply a rearrangement of 10 Appeal2014-002265 Application 12/418,607 nonfunctional descriptive material (the particular labels). Therefore, we will sustain the Examiner's rejection. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW The rejection of claims 1--4, 6-10, 11-14, 16-18, 25, 32, and 33 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Segal and Knaus is proper. The rejection of claims 5, 15, 19-24, and 26-31 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Segal, Knaus, and Summerell is proper. DECISION The rejections of claims 1-33 are affirmed. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a). See 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(l)(iv) (2011). AFFIRMED 11 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation