Ex Parte Ferek-PetricDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardOct 30, 201210418856 (P.T.A.B. Oct. 30, 2012) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ________________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ________________ Ex parte BOZIDAR FEREK-PETRIC ________________ Appeal 2010-000676 Application 10/418,856 Technology Center 3700 ________________ Before STEVEN D.A. McCARTHY, BRETT C. MARTIN and ANNETTE R. REIMERS, Administrative Patent Judges. McCARTHY, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE 1 The Appellant1 appeals under 35 U.S.C. § 134 from the Examiner’s 2 final decision rejecting claims 1-16 and 47-54. Claims 17-46 and 55-58 are 3 cancelled. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). 4 We sustain the rejection of claims 14 and 16 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) 5 as being unpatentable over Hess (US 5,861,007, issued Jan. 19, 1999)6 1 The Appellant identifies the real party in interest as Medtronic, Inc. of Minneapolis, Minnesota. Appeal No. 2010-000676 Application No. 10/418,856 2 Thacker (US 5,024,222, issued Jun. 18, 1991); and as being unpatentable 1 over Carlson (US 6,678,547 B2, issued Jan. 13, 2004) and Hess. We do not 2 sustain the rejection of claim 15 under § 103(a) as being unpatentable over 3 Hess and Thacker or the rejection of claims 1-13, 15 and 47-54 as being 4 unpatentable over Carlson and Hess. 5 Claims 1, 14 and 47 are independent . Claim 14 is illustrative: 6 14. A method comprising: 7 sensing a physiological condition of a 8 patient used as an indicator of autonomic nervous 9 system activity; 10 determining autonomic nervous system 11 activity of a patient based upon the sensed 12 physiological condition indicator of such activity; 13 and 14 selecting a number of atrioventricular (AV) 15 conduction sequences in a search for an AV delay 16 that promotes intrinsic ventricular conduction and 17 that supplies ventricular paces when needed, the 18 search being invoked in response to a 19 determination of the presence of autonomic 20 nervous system activity of a patient, wherein the 21 search includes monitoring intrinsic ventricular 22 activations to determine a time of occurrence 23 before scheduled ventricular paces and includes 24 adjusting an applied AV delay. 25 Claim 1 recites a method including the step of “selecting a set of 26 search criteria based upon the measurement of the autonomic nervous 27 system activity.” Claim 47 recites an implantable medical device including 28 a processor, “wherein . . . the processor selects and applies a set of search 29 criteria based upon the determined activity.” 30 Appeal No. 2010-000676 Application No. 10/418,856 3 ISSUES 1 The Appellant argues claims 14 and 16 as a group for purposes of 2 both grounds of rejection under § 103(a). (App. Br. 6-9 and 15-16; Reply 3 Br. 2-4). Claim 14 is representative. The Appellant argues both grounds of 4 rejection of claim 15 separately. (App. Br. 9-11 and 19; Reply Br. 2-4). 5 Only issues and findings of fact contested by the Appellant have been 6 considered. See Ex parte Frye, 94 USPQ2d 1072, 1075-76 (BPAI 2010). 7 This appeal turns on four issues: 8 First, does the reasoning articulated by the Examiner in support of the 9 conclusion that the subject matter of representative claim 14 would have 10 been obvious from the combined teachings of Hess and Thacker lack some 11 rational underpinning because the proposed combination of the teachings 12 would undermine the principle of operation taught by Hess? (See App. Br. 13 6-9). 14 Second, do the evidence and technical reasoning underlying the 15 rejection of representative claim 14 as unpatentable over Carlson and Hess 16 adequately support the conclusion that one of ordinary skill in the art would 17 have had reason to invoke a search for an AV delay that promotes intrinsic 18 ventricular conduction “in response to a determination of the presence of 19 autonomic nervous system activity of a patient” as recited in claim 14? (See 20 App. Br. 15-16). 21 Third, do the evidence and technical reasoning underlying the 22 rejection of claim 15 adequately support the conclusion that a method 23 including the step of selecting a number of AV conduction sequences based 24 on sympathetic nervous system activity and parasympathetic nervous system 25 activity would have been obvious? (See App. Br. 9-11 and 19). 26 Appeal No. 2010-000676 Application No. 10/418,856 4 Fourth, does Carlson disclose “selecting a set of search criteria based 1 upon the measurement of the autonomic nervous system activity” as recited 2 in independent claims 1 and 47. (See App. Br. 12-15; Reply Br. 2-3). 3 4 FINDINGS OF FACT 5 The record supports the following findings of fact (“FF”) by a 6 preponderance of the evidence. 7 8 Introduction 9 1. The human heart includes four chambers, two atria and two 10 ventricles. “[T]he atria act as primer pumps for the ventricles and the 11 ventricles provide the major source of power for moving blood throughout 12 the vascular system.” (Thacker, col. 4, ll. 50-53). The atria and ventricles 13 act in response to waves of electric voltage which periodically propagate 14 across the heart from the atria, through an artrioventricular (“AV”) node to 15 the ventricles. (See Thacker, col. 4, ll. 40-50). 16 2. Each propagation of a wave of electric potential from the atria 17 to the ventricles may be referred to as an atrioventricular (“AV”) conduction 18 sequence. “The propagation of the action potential through A-V node is 19 delayed by approximately 1/10 of a second to allow the atria to contract 20 ahead of the ventricles thereby pumping blood into the ventricles prior to the 21 very strong ventricular contraction.” (Hess, col. 4, ll. 45-50). 22 3. The heart responds to the physiological demand of the body for 23 blood. Among these responses is the raising or lowering of the heart rate, 24 that is, the time frequency of the waves of electric voltage across the heart. 25 Appeal No. 2010-000676 Application No. 10/418,856 5 The autonomic nervous system itself has two 1 components: sympathetic and parasympathetic (or 2 vagal). The sympathetic component of the 3 autonomic nervous system is relatively slow 4 acting, and is associated with a tendency to raise 5 heart rate, blood pressure and/or cardiac output. 6 The parasympathetic/vagal component of the 7 autonomic nervous system, which provides a 8 relatively faster response than the sympathetic 9 component, is associated with a tendency to reduce 10 heart rate, blood pressure and/or cardiac output. 11 (Carlson, col. 2, ll. 19-27). 12 4. In some patients, the propagation of the voltage waves from the 13 atria to one or both ventricles is fully or intermittently blocked. One 14 method of treating such patients is to use a pacemaker or pacer to apply 15 artificial pacing pulses to the patient’s ventricle. An atrioventricular (“AV”) 16 delay is used to maintain the proper delay between the atrial conduction and 17 the ventricular pulse so as to promote efficient pumping of blood to the 18 body. (See Hess, col. 1, ll. 45-49). 19 5. “Rate adaptive pacers” are pacers which follow a patient’s 20 physiological demand. (Hess, col. 1, ll. 23-24). In other words, a rate 21 adaptive pacer “should vary cardiac rate and, consequently, cardiac output in 22 response to the body’s physiological needs.” (Thacker, col. 1, ll. 15-17). 23 24 Hess 25 6. Hess teaches that rate adaptive pacers were available as of the 26 filing date of the application underlying this appeal. (Hess, col. 1, ll. 23-24). 27 7. Hess teaches that a change in the heart rate induced by a rate 28 adaptive pacer may indicate a need to also change the length of the AV 29 delay. (Hess, col. 1, ll. 21-22). Hess describes an algorithm which 30 Appeal No. 2010-000676 Application No. 10/418,856 6 “generally adapts the AV interval [that is, the AV delay] to lengthen where 1 the patient is capable of AV conduction and to shorten otherwise.” (Hess, 2 col. 4, ll. 44-46). 3 8. Hess teaches that: 4 A particularly problematic situation exists in 5 intermittent AV block patients, since the 6 opportunity for natural conduction will be 7 prevented by having an AV interval that is shorter 8 than the natural one. This problem manifests in 9 rate adaptive pacing because the length of the AV 10 interval should be (and is) adjusted shorter as the 11 rate increases in order to promote efficient cardiac 12 hemodynamics. 13 (Hess, col. 1, ll. 49-56). 14 9. Hess’ algorithm assumes initial values for the AV interval; runs 15 a pacemaker on the initial values; and collects data or runs for a number of 16 AV even sequences until a sufficient number of AV event sequences 17 yielding meaningful data are counted. (Hess, col. 4, ll. 60-66 and fig. 3, refs. 18 12 and 13). The algorithm then lengthens the AV interval, shortens the AV 19 interval or leaves the AV interval unchanged based on the collected data. 20 (E.g., Hess, col. 5, l. 27 – col. 6, l. 18). 21 10. In other words, Hess’ algorithm searches for an AV delay. The 22 search includes monitoring intrinsic ventricular activations (that is, instances 23 of natural ventricular conduction) to determine a time of occurrence before 24 scheduled ventricular paces. The search also includes adjusting an applied 25 AV delay. 26 Appeal No. 2010-000676 Application No. 10/418,856 7 Thacker 1 11. Thacker describes a rate-responsive pacing system. (Thacker, 2 col. 6, ll. 54-56). Thacker describes the preferred pacing system as capable 3 of adjusting “both the pacing rate and the A-V interval in accordance with a 4 physiological sensor to optimize the cardiac output of the patient’s heart.” 5 (Thacker, col. 2, ll. 17-21). 6 12. The Examiner finds that Thacker’s “physiological sensor” 7 senses a physiological condition of a patient indicative of autonomic nervous 8 system activity. (Ans. 3). The Appellant does not appear to contest this 9 finding. (See generally App. Br. 6-9; Reply Br. 2). 10 13. Thacker teaches adjusting both the pacing rate and AV delay in 11 order to optimize the cardiac output as measured by the physiological 12 sensor. (Thacker, col. 2, ll. 17-21). Thacker teaches first adjusting the 13 pacing rate to optimize the output from the physiological sensor. Thacker 14 teaches then reducing the pacing rate and adjusting the AV delay to optimize 15 the output from the physiological sensor. The process of reducing the 16 pacing rate and adjusting the AV delay to optimize the output from the 17 physiological sensor is repeated until the optimum combination of pacing 18 rate and AV delay is determined. (Thacker, col. 3, ll. 24-38). 19 20 Carlson 21 14. Carlson describes a cardiac rhythm management system 100 22 including a cardiac rhythm management device 105 and a time-domain heart 23 rate variability (“HRV”) signal processing module 160. (Carlson, col. 5, ll. 24 21-27; col. 7, ll. 54-61; and fig. 1). Processing a heart rate interval signal 25 215, the module 160 generates an indicator of sympathetic/parasympathetic 26 Appeal No. 2010-000676 Application No. 10/418,856 8 nervous system balance. This indicator consists of the ratio between the 1 variance of a low frequency component of the processed heart rate interval 2 signal to the variance of a high frequency component of the processed heart 3 rate interval signal. Carlson refers to this indicator as the “LF/HF ratio.” 4 (Carlson, col. 7, l. 54 – col. 8, l. 39). 5 15. The Appellant does not appear to contest the Examiner’s 6 finding that the LF/HF ratio is a physiological condition of a patient used as 7 an indicator of autonomic nervous system activity. (See Ans. 6). 8 16. Carlson teaches that: 9 FIG. 7 is a schematic/block diagram illustrating 10 generally, by way of example, and not by way of 11 limitation, one embodiment of portions of device 105 12 including a controller 700 and a therapy module 705. 13 Therapy module 705 provides cardiac rhythm 14 management therapy to heart 115 via electrodes that 15 are communicatively associated therewith. Examples 16 of such therapy include, without limitation, atrial or 17 ventricular pacing therapy, antitachyarrhythmia 18 therapy, multi-site coordination therapy such as 19 biventricular pacing, drug delivery. In one such 20 embodiment, the parameters of such therapy are 21 adjusted and/or optimized by controller 700 based at 22 least in part on one or more indications of 23 sympathetic/parasympathetic balance obtained from 24 time-domain HRV signal processing module 160. 25 For example, such parameters for providing dual 26 chamber pacing therapy are well known in the art 27 (e.g., rate, amplitude, pulsewidth, AV-delay, etc.); 28 such parameters are adjusted, either individually or in 29 combination, to increase or decrease a particular 30 indicator of autonomic balance (e.g., to decrease the 31 lowest local minima of the smoothed LF/HF signal). 32 (Carlson, col. 9, ll. 18-37). 33 Appeal No. 2010-000676 Application No. 10/418,856 9 ANALYSIS 1 First Issue 2 The Examiner’s findings regarding the teachings of Hess and Thacker 3 are summarized in tabular form on pages 3-4 of the Answer. The Examiner 4 finds that “Hess does not explicitly disclose that the physiological sensor 5 that controls the rate responsive mode is a sensor that detects autonomic 6 nervous system activity.” (Ans. 5). The Examiner concludes that it would 7 have been obvious: 8 to provide Hess’ invention with a rate-responsive 9 pacemaker that is responsive to sympathetic 10 nervous system activity to maximize cardiac 11 performance based on an accurate measure of the 12 physiological demand of the body; and to search 13 for an appropriate AV delay based on autonomic 14 nervous system activity to provide an optimal 15 delay based on the specific physiological demand 16 of the patient at a given time. 17 (Id.) 18 The Appellant argues that: 19 There is no rational reason why one having 20 ordinary skill in the art would have looked to 21 Thacker to modify Hess. The AV search 22 techniques disclosed by Hess and Thacker differ, 23 such that modification to Hess in view of Thacker 24 in the manner proposed by the Examiner would 25 have changed and undermined the principle of 26 operation of the Hess technique. 27 (App. Br. 8). The Appellant explains that: 28 Hess is concerned with maintaining intrinsic 29 ventricular conduction and adjusting an AV delay 30 in order to help maintain the intrinsic ventricular 31 conduction. While Thacker states that AV 32 synchrony is important to maintaining efficient 33 Appeal No. 2010-000676 Application No. 10/418,856 10 performance of the heart, Thacker does not 1 disclose or suggest that adjusting AV delay in 2 accordance with the techniques described by 3 Thacker maintains intrinsic ventricular conduction. 4 Indeed, neither Hess not Thacker provides any 5 indication that adjusting AV delay to optimize 6 cardiac output of a patient’s heart, as disclosed by 7 Thacker, would result in the maintenance of 8 intrinsic ventricular conduction, as required by 9 Hess. 10 (Id.) 11 The Examiner’s reasoning has a rational underpinning in the teachings 12 of Hess and Thacker. Hess teaches that rate adaptive pacers were available 13 as of the filing date of the application underlying this appeal. (FF 6). 14 Thacker teaches combining a rate adaptive pacer with a physiological sensor 15 for sensing a physiological condition indicative of autonomic nervous 16 system activity. (FF 12). Thacker teaches adjusting pacing rate in response 17 to the physiological sensor in order to optimize the cardiac output. (See FF 5 18 and 13). Both Hess and Thacker suggest adjusting AV delay in a rate 19 adaptive pacer along with adjustments in pacing rate, in Thacker’s case as a 20 means to further optimize cardiac output. (See FF 7 and 13). 21 Therefore, one of ordinary skill in the art familiar with the teachings 22 of Hess and Thacker would have had reason to combine a rate adaptive 23 pacer with a physiological sensor and to program the pacer to adjust pacing 24 rate and AV delay in response to changes in a physiological condition 25 indicative of autonomic nervous system activity. At this point however, 26 Hess would have suggested to one of ordinary skill in the art a problem with 27 the combination: Where the physiological demand is high, the pacer might 28 adjust the length of the AV delay in response to physiological demand until 29 Appeal No. 2010-000676 Application No. 10/418,856 11 the AV delay is shorter than the intrinsic AV interval. (See FF 8). Hess also 1 would have suggested a solution to this problem, namely, altering the 2 algorithm used to adjust the pacing rate and the AV delay to optimize 3 cardiac output as measured by the physiological sensor subject to the 4 constraint that the pacing rate and the AV delay must be sufficiently long to 5 promote natural ventricular conduction. (See FF 7, 9 and 10). 6 Given these parameters, the acquisition of an appropriate algorithm 7 would be a matter of implementation rather than invention. The Appellant 8 suggests no reason why this implementation would have been beyond the 9 level of ordinary skill in the art. Neither does the Appellant suggest any 10 reason why the results of implementing such an algorithm would have been 11 so unpredictable that the implementation would require more than ordinary 12 skill in the art. Therefore, the combination proposed by the Examiner would 13 not have undermined the principle of operation of Hess. Instead, the 14 principle of operation of Hess would have led one of ordinary skill in the art 15 to implement the combination in the fashion claimed in claim 14. 16 We sustain the rejection of claims 14 and 16 under § 103(a) as being 17 unpatentable over Hess and Thacker. 18 19 Second Issue 20 With respect to the rejection of representative claim 14 as being 21 unpatentable over Carlson and Hess, the Appellant argues that “Carlson fails 22 to disclose or suggest invoking a search for an AV delay in response to a 23 determination of the presence of [autonomic nervous system] activity of a 24 patient. Hess fails to cure this fundamental deficiency of Carlson.” (App. 25 Br. 15-16). The Appellant does not identify any formal definition or clear 26 Appeal No. 2010-000676 Application No. 10/418,856 12 disclaimer in the Specification which might narrow the meaning of the term 1 “in response to” as used in claim 14 as opposed to the ordinary meaning of 2 the term. The broadest reasonable interpretation of the term “in response to” 3 encompasses either a sequence of causation or a sequence in time. 4 Here, Carlson suggests that “the parameters of such therapy,” which 5 may include the AV delay, “are adjusted and/or optimized by controller 700 6 based at least in part on one or more indications of sympathetic 7 /parasympathetic balance obtained from time-domain HRV signal 8 processing module 160,” a physiological condition of a patient used as an 9 indicator of autonomic nervous system activity. (FF 15 and 16). In other 10 words, Carlson teaches that a change in a physiological condition of a 11 patient used as an indicator of autonomic nervous system activity may cause 12 the system to adjust or optimize a parameter such as the AV delay. Hess 13 teaches a technique for adjusting or optimizing the AV delay, namely, by 14 means of a search. Therefore, the combined teachings of Carlson and Hess 15 would have provided one of ordinary skill in the art reason to invoke a 16 search for an AV delay that promotes intrinsic ventricular conduction in 17 response to a determination of the presence of autonomic nervous system 18 activity of a patient as recited in claim 14. Since the Appellant has not 19 identified an error in the rejection of representative claim 14, we sustain the 20 rejection of claims 14 and 16 under § 103(a) as being unpatentable over 21 Carlson and Hess. 22 Appeal No. 2010-000676 Application No. 10/418,856 13 Third Issue 1 Claim 15 recites the “method of claim 14, further comprising: 2 selecting a first number of atrioventricular conduction sequences; selecting a 3 second number of atrioventricular sequences when the determination 4 indicates an increase in sympathetic nervous system activity relative to 5 parasympathetic nervous system activity, wherein the second number is 6 smaller than the first number.” The Examiner concludes that, “in regards to 7 [claim 15], because the optimization routine is converging on an optimal 8 value, each iteration will result in a decreased available potential conduction 9 sequences.” (Ans. 5). Claim 15 recites the selection of different numbers 10 “of atrioventricular (AV) conduction sequences in a search for an AV 11 delay.” The Examiner’s reasoning does not imply that one of ordinary skill 12 in the art would have had reason to select different such numbers depending 13 on whether there is an increase in sympathetic nervous system activity 14 relative to parasympathetic nervous system activity. The Examiner’s 15 reasoning on page 11 appears to confuse the determination of an AV delay 16 with the selection of a number of AV conduction sequences for use in a 17 search to determine that AV delay. 18 The Examiner has not articulated reasoning with some rational 19 underpinning sufficient to support the conclusion that the subject matter of 20 claim 15 would have been obvious from the combined teachings of Hess and 21 Thacker; or from the combined teachings of Carlson and Hess. Therefore, 22 we do not sustain the rejection of claim 15 under § 103(a) as being 23 unpatentable over Hess and Thacker; or the rejection of claim 15 under 24 § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Carlson and Hess. 25 Appeal No. 2010-000676 Application No. 10/418,856 14 Fourth Issue 1 Independent claim 1 recites a method including the step of “selecting 2 a set of search criteria based upon the measurement of the autonomic 3 nervous system activity.” Independent claim 47 recites an implantable 4 medical device including a processor capable of selecting and applying “a 5 set of search criteria based upon the determined activity.” The Examiner 6 finds that Carlson discloses selecting a set of search criteria at column 9, 7 lines 27-30. (Ans. 6). Column 9, lines 27-30 of Carlson teach that, in “one 8 such embodiment, the parameters of such therapy are adjusted and/or 9 optimized by controller 700 based at least in part on one or more indications 10 of sympathetic/parasympathetic balance obtained from time-domain HRV 11 signal processing module 160.” (FF 16). More specifically, the Examiner 12 finds that the “‘search criteria’ is the change that must be made to the AV 13 delay to achieve the desired autonomic balance response.” (Ans. 13). 14 The Examiner’s finding appears to confuse search criteria with the 15 result of the search. The Appellant does not identify any formal definition 16 or clear disclaimer in the Specification which might narrow the meaning of 17 the term “search criteria” as used in claim 14 beyond the ordinary usage of 18 the term. Nevertheless, the ordinary usage of the term “criteria” is limited to 19 standards “on which a decision or judgment may be based.” (WEBSTER’S 20 THIRD NEW INT’L DICTIONARY (G&C Merriam Co. 1971)(“criterion,” def. 21 2)). The Examiner identifies nothing in the Specification which suggests 22 that a broader interpretation might be reasonable. Therefore, a “set of search 23 criteria” refers to standards or parameters which might be used in the search 24 to determine the change required to the AV delay and not to the change 25 itself. 26 Appeal No. 2010-000676 Application No. 10/418,856 15 The Examiner has not provided adequate reasoning to support the 1 finding that Carlson discloses “selecting a set of search criteria based upon 2 the measurement of the autonomic nervous system activity.” The Examiner 3 provides no reason to explain how Hess might remedy this deficiency. We 4 do not sustain the rejection of claims 1-13 and 47-54 as being unpatentable 5 over Carlson and Hess. 6 7 DECISION 8 We AFFIRM the Examiner’s decision rejecting claims 14 and 16. 9 We REVERSE the Examiner’s decision rejecting claims 1-13, 15 and 10 47-54. 11 12 AFFIRMED-IN-PART 13 14 15 16 Klh 17 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation