Ex Parte CohenDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardApr 15, 201312043273 (P.T.A.B. Apr. 15, 2013) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE __________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD __________ Ex parte NAHUM COHEN __________ Appeal 2011-005201 Application 12/043,273 Technology Center 3700 __________ Before DEMETRA J. MILLS, DONALD E. ADAMS and ERIC GRIMES, Administrative Patent Judges. GRIMES, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL This is an appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134 involving claims relating to a device for administering injections. The Examiner has rejected the claims as obvious. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We reverse. STATEMENT OF THE CASE The Specification discloses “a fluid transfer device employing a removable cartridge having multiple needles, where the cartridge is automatically advanced to the next unused needle after a needle has been used, until all of the needles in the cartridge have been used once” (Spec. 1). Appeal 2011-005201 Application 12/043,273 2 In this way, “a separate, sterile needle is employed for each injection, reducing the risk of disease transfer from one subject to the next” (id. at 2). Claims 1-4, 8-13, 15, and 17-19 are on appeal. Claim 1 is representative: 1. A fluid transfer device comprising: a cartridge comprising a plurality of needles; an advancer operative to selectably advance any of said plurality of needles in said cartridge to a needle deployment position; a fluid reservoir shareable by a plurality of said needles; and a syringe operative, for each of said needles in said cartridge that is selectably advanced to said needle deployment position, to enter said cartridge, wherein a distal end of said syringe enters a receptacle formed in a proximal end of said needle to couple with said needle in said needle deployment position, and convey fluid from said fluid reservoir and into said needle via said cartridge. Issue The Examiner has rejected all of the claims on appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious in view of D’Antonio.1 The Examiner finds that D’Antonio discloses a single-fluid-reservoir embodiment that includes most of the limitations of claim 1, but differs in that it “us[es] a single exit nozzle 967” rather than a plurality of needles (Answer 4-5). The Examiner finds that, in a separate embodiment, D’Antonio discloses that “it is known to have a plurality of needles … for the purpose of maintaining sterility” (id. at 5). The Examiner concludes that it “would have been obvious to one having ordinary skill in the art … to modify the single exit nozzle (967) … in the single fluid reservoir embodiment with the multiple one-use needles provided in a needle cartridge as taught by 1 D’Antonio et al., US 6,056,716, May 2, 2000. Appeal 2011-005201 Application 12/043,273 3 D’Antonio et al for the purpose of improving health standards for the single fluid reservoir embodiment” (id. at 5). The Examiner reasons that, with this modification, “the reservoir 500 in the multiple needles would be removed and instead the receptacle space occupied by reservoir 500 would be coupled with the single orifice exit nozzle (967) … such that fluid would flow from the single exit nozzle (967) into the receptacle … and into the needle (506)” (id. at 5-6). Appellant argues that “modifying the jet injector of Fig. 7C to be used with the needle cartridges shown in Figs. 5A - 5D would require substantial reconstruction and redesign of D’Antonio’s jet injector and needle cartridges, as well as a change in the basic principles under which D’Antonio’s jet injector and needle cartridges are designed to operate” (App. Br. 5-6). Appellant argues that “the bellows 500 of the needle cartridges shown in Figs. 5A-5D, which D’Antonio teaches are sealed … would need to be modified and provided with an opening such that bellows 500 could be filled from serum container 962” (id. at 6). Appellant argues that “[a]dditionally, D’Antonio’s jet injector of Fig. 7C would need to be modified such that every dose is not administered through the same orifice 969, whereas D’Antonio’s stated principle of operation for Fig. 7C is to administer every dose through the same orifice 969” (id.). We agree with Appellant that the Examiner has not adequately shown that it would have been obvious to modify D’Antonio’s single-fluid- reservoir embodiment to include a cartridge comprising a plurality of needles and a shared fluid reservoir. D’Antonio discloses an “apparatus for Appeal 2011-005201 Application 12/043,273 4 the hypodermic injection of fluids” (D’Antonio, col. 1, ll. 17-18). Figure 7A of D’Antonio is shown below: Figure 7A shows a jet injector “with a fresh magazine with N unused injections positioned in the dispenser” (id. at col. 8, ll. 15-17). D’Antonio discloses that “[d]ispenser 700 includes at its forward end a receptacle or opening 919 for receiving a cartridge 800 holding a serum for injection” (id. at col. 22, ll. 35-38). Figure 5A of D’Antonio is shown below: Appeal 2011-005201 Application 12/043,273 5 Figure 5A shows a cross-sectional view “of a needle hypodermic injector” (id. at col. 20, l. 54) that can be used with the injector of Figure 7A (id. at col. 24, ll. 34-41). D’Antonio discloses that the “bellows 500 may contain a liquid serum” (id. at col. 20, l. 64); pressure on pressure piston 501 “will force the serum in 500 to be expelled through the exit port of needle 506” (id. at col. 21, ll. 24-26). Figure 7C of D’Antonio is shown below: Figure 7C shows an alternative to Figure 7A that allows “an even larger multi-shot system” in which “the multiple-shot cartridge system is replaced by serum container 962” (id. at col. 24, ll. 54-57). D’Antonio discloses that, in this embodiment, “the correct dose of serum 960 is pulled out of container 962 through connecting tube 965 [sic, 964?] and into the injection head.… [E]very dose is administered through the same orifice 969.” (Id. at col. 24, ll. 60-65.) The Examiner argues (Answer 8-9) that D’Antonio’s single-fluid- reservoir embodiment could be modified to be used with the needle cartridges of Figure 5A without substantial reconstruction. The Examiner’s Appeal 2011-005201 Application 12/043,273 6 reasoning, however, relies on modifying the single-fluid-reservoir embodiment to include an “injection head (similar to 703, shown in Fig 7) [that] would pull back drawing serum 960 from the reservoir 962 through the connecting tube 965 and fill [the cartridge] with the appropriately sized dose” (id. at 8), after which “the injection head would push forward pushing serum through the single exit nozzle 967 and into the receptacle formed by 502 … [and] out of the receptacle and into the needle 506 for delivery” (id. at 8-9). The “needle cartridge can then be discarded and a new needle cartridge can be put into place” (id. at 9). After considering the respective positions of the Examiner and Appellant, we agree with Appellant that modifying D’Antonio’s single- fluid-reservoir embodiment to include the limitations of claim 1 would have required substantial reconstruction in order to modify it to include the single- use needle cartridges of that separate embodiment, and the Examiner has not provided an adequate basis for concluding that the required modifications would have been obvious based on the teachings of D’Antonio. The Examiner has not pointed to any teachings in D’Antonio that would have suggested combining the shared fluid reservoir of D’Antonio’s single-fluid- reservoir embodiment with the single-use needles of its magazine embodiment. D’Antonio in fact expressly states that “the multiple-shot cartridge system is replaced by serum container 962” (D’Antonio, col. 24, ll. 56-57, emphasis added) in its single-fluid-reservoir embodiment, which is typically applied for “veterinary and agricultural uses” (id. at col. 24, ll. 55- 56), where the necessity of using a fresh needle for each injection is apparently not an important consideration. Appeal 2011-005201 Application 12/043,273 7 The Examiner has also not provided any persuasive technical reasoning showing that the proposed modification would have otherwise been obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the art who was unaware of the disclosure of the present application. We therefore conclude that the Examiner has not persuasively shown that the modifications proposed by the Examiner would have been obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the art based on D’Antonio and the knowledge in the art, without the benefit of hindsight. Cf. In re Ratti, 270 F.2d 810, 813 (CCPA 1959) (“Once appellant had taught how this could be done, the redesign may, by hindsight, seem to be obvious to one having ordinary skills in the [relevant] art. However, when viewed as of the time appellant’s invention was made, and without the benefit of appellant’s disclosure, we find nothing in the record which suggests appellant’s [invention].”). Thus, we reverse the rejection of independent claim 1 and dependent claims 2-4, 8, 9 and 18 as being obvious in view of D’Antonio. Independent claim 10 is directed to a method for fluid transfer that comprises, among other steps, conveying fluid from a fluid reservoir serially through multiple needles. Since the Examiner's rejection of claim 10 also relies on D’Antonio as discussed above, we also reverse the rejection of independent claim 10 and dependent claims 11-13, 15, 17, and 19. SUMMARY We reverse the rejection of claims 1-4, 8-13, 15 and 17-19 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a). REVERSED lp Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation