Ex Parte KER¿NENDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardMay 31, 201612850539 (P.T.A.B. May. 31, 2016) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE FIRST NAMED INVENTOR 12/850,539 08/04/2010 37374 7590 06/03/2016 INSKEEP INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY GROUP, INC 2281W.190TH STREET SUITE 200 TORRANCE, CA 90504 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. 21948-557 1041 EXAMINER PRESTON, REBECCA STRASZHEIM ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3738 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 06/03/2016 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): inskeepstaff@inskeeplaw.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte OLLI KERANEN Appeal2014-003838 Application 12/850,539 Technology Center 3700 Before MICHAEL L. HOELTER, ANNETTE R. REIMERS, and MARK A. GEIER, Administrative Patent Judges. REIMERS, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE Olli Keranen (Appellant) appeals under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from the Examiner's decision to reject under 35 U.S.C. § 102(e): (1) claims 1-7, 11, 13, and 14 as anticipated by Sahatjian (US 2005/0010275 Al; pub. Jan. 13, 2005); and (2) claims 1, 8-10, and 14 as anticipated by Sharkawy (US 7,186,265 B2; iss. Mar. 6, 2007), and under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) claims 1-3, 7, 11, 13, and 14 as unpatentable over Tremulis (US 2003/0069593 Al; pub. Apr. 10, 2003) and Moaddeb (US 2005/0288781 Al; pub. Dec. 29, 2005). Claim 12 has been cancelled. Appeal Br. 2. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We REVERSE. Appeal2014-003838 Application 12/850,539 CLAIMED SUBJECT MATTER The claimed subject matter "relates to heart valve repair techniques and annuloplasty devices." Spec. i-f 2; Figs. 4a, 4b, 5. Claims 1 and 14 are independent. Claim 1 is illustrative of the claimed subject matter and recites: 1. A heart valve annuloplasty system for improving the function of a heart valve comprising: a first loop-shaped support, which is configured to abut a first side of said heart valve, a second loop-shaped support, which is configured to abut a second side of said heart valve opposite to said first side such that said heart valve is trapped between said first looped-shaped support and said second loop-shaped support; said second loop-shaped support having an outer boundary which is greater than an outer boundary of said first loop-shaped support said first loop-shaped support and said second loop-shaped support each being formed from a magnetic material, such that, when subjected to an externally applied magnetic field, said first loop-shaped support and said second loop-shaped support, \vhen arranged on radially displaced opposing sides of the heart valve, are attracted to each other by said magnetic field for holding said first loop-shaped support and said second loop-shaped support on opposing sides of the heart valve. ANALYSIS Anticipation by Sahaljian Claims 1-7, 11, 13, and 14 Independent claim 1 calls for, in relevant part, a first loop-shaped support and a second loop-shaped support "each being formed from magnetic material" and "when arranged on radially displaced opposing sides of the heart valve, are attracted to each other by said magnetic field for 2 Appeal2014-003838 Application 12/850,539 holding said first loop-shaped support and said second loop-shaped support on opposing sides of the heart valve." Appeal Br. 20, Claims App. (emphasis added). The Examiner finds that Sahatjian teaches the limitations of claim 1 including the limitations directed to the first loop-shaped support and the second loop-shaped support each being formed from a magnetic material and being attracted to each other by the magnetic field. See Final Act. 3-5. In particular, the Examiner finds: The entire system (stent 100) maybe [sic] formed from (include) a magnetic material (magnetic particles), such that when the first and second loop shaped supports (the loop within portions 140, 160) will move towards each other (as they transition from a delivery to a deployed configuration) when exposed to an externally applied magnetic field. Id. at 4 (citing Sahatjian, i-f 77). The Examiner clarifies her interpretation of the limitations "formed from" and "attracted to each other" in the Answer as follows: First, "formed form" has not been assigned a special definition, as such, [the] Examiner is interpreting "formed from" as an equivalent to "comprising" meaning it is open ended and merely requires the loop shaped/ curved shaped supports (the loop within portion 140 closest to portion 160, and the loop within portion 160 closest to portion 140) to include some magnetic material (magnetic particles). Second, during the implantation/ expansion process the loop shaped/ curved shaped supports (the loop within portion 140 closest to portion 160, and the loop within portion 160 closest to portion 140) are exposed to an external magnetic field which helps promote the loop shaped/ curved shaped supports (the loop within portion 140 closest to portion 160, and the loop within portion 160 closest to portion 140) assume it's deployed state; in the deployed state the loop shaped/ curved shaped supports (the loop within portion 140 closest to portion 160, and the loop within portion 160 closest to 3 Appeal2014-003838 Application 12/850,539 portion 140) are prevented from moving further from each other (i.e. are attracted to each other). Ans. 6 In specific response to the Examiner's findings that the Sahatjian stent is "formed from" magnetic material and that portions 140 and 160 of stent 100 would be attracted to one another when exposed to an externally applied magnetic field, Appellant contends: The stent disclosed by Sahaljian is made of (i.e. formed from) a polymer tube or rod . . . The polymer may include a magnetic heating agent ... such as magnetic particle[s] ... that are susceptible to heating by magnetic hysteresis effects. The heating softens the stent, allowing for a balloon to expand the stent. There is no evidence to suggest that the magnetic particles are present in sufficient amounts for the plastic rod or tube containing them to be magnetic. Neither is there any evidence to suggest that, when subjected to an externally applied magnetic field, any part of the stent can be attracted to any other part of the stent. The only movement of one part of the stent relative to another part of the stent is the radial expansion of the stent by a balloon located inside the stent. This expansion inherently moves parts of the stent away from each other, not towards each other and not by way of an externally applied magnetic field. Appeal Br. 11 (citing to Sahatjian i-fi-19, 14, 77, and 92; claim 18). As forthe Examiner's assertion that the portions 140 and 160 of stent 100 "are prevented from moving further from each other (i.e. are attracted to each other)" in the deployed state, Appellant contends that: "[t]his interpretation ... appears to be unreasonable on its face." Reply Br. 10. Appellant's arguments are persuasive. First, the Sahatjian stent is formed from polymer material (Sahatjian i-fi-1 79, 92), which may include magnetic particles that are susceptible to heating by magnetic hysteresis (id. at i1 77). Heating softens the stent to facilitate its radial expansion by an 4 Appeal2014-003838 Application 12/850,539 expansion balloon. Id. at iii! 68, 69, 7 5. Hence, coils 140, 160 of the Sahatjian stent move away from one another upon the application of a magnetic field and inflation of the expansion balloon. They are not attracted to each other upon expansion. Second, as noted by Appellant, there is no evidence in Sahatj ian to suggest that the magnetic particles are present in sufficient amounts for the plastic rod or tube containing them to be magnetic, or when subjected to an externally applied magnetic field, any part of the stent is attracted to any other part of the stent. See Appeal Br. 11. Third, the Examiner supplies no evidence or technical reasoning to support the contention that coils 140, 160 of Sahatjian's stent 100 being prevented from moving further from each other in the deployed state necessarily means that the coils are being "attracted to" each other. See Ans. 6. We agree with Appellant that such a statement is unreasonable. Thus, by failing to show that Sahatjian teaches several limitations of claim 1, the Examiner has not established by a preponderance of the evidence that Sahatjian anticipates the system recited in claim 1. Accordingly, we do not sustain the Examiner's rejection of claims 1- 7, 11, and 13 as anticipated by Sahatjian. Additionally, similar limitations in independent claim 14 resulted in the same unsupported findings by the Examiner discussed above with respect to independent claim 1. See Final Act. 3-5. For similar reasons set forth above for independent claim 1, we likewise do not sustain the Examiner's rejection of claim 14 as anticipated by Sahatjian. 5 Appeal2014-003838 Application 12/850,539 Claims 1, 8-10, and 14 Anticipation by Sharkawy The Examiner finds that Sharkawy teaches the limitations of claim 1. In particular, the Examiner finds "that the supports (magnetic materials 26, 28) [of Sharkawy] are capable of being positioned such that they abut opposite sides of valve leaflets/ trapping native leaflets." Final Act 6. Appellant contends that the trapping of heart valve tissue by specific structural components, namely, between the loop-shaped supports, is not "all functional language" and is positively recited structure. See Appeal Br. 13. Appellant further contends that Sharkawy discloses that magnets 26 and 28 have polarities wherein a [magnetic field] between the two causes valve mechanism 12 and securing mechanism 14 to couple with each other, collectively defining a securing or locking mechanism . . . and the magnets are in direct contact with each other .... The docking ring 14 is sized to fit inside (within) the annulus and to exert a radially compressive force against the inside wall of the annulus (the portion remaining after valve excision[)]. Reply Br. 13 (citing Sharkawy, col. 10, 11. 19-38, 54--58; col. 11, 11. 3---6); see also Appeal Br. 14. In addition, Appellant contends that "the [Sharkawy] device is configured to compress against the annulus from the inside after the leaflets are cut away. There is no evidence to suggest that the magnets 26 and 28, designed for direct contact, would hold together if separated by the thickness of the annulus." Reply Br. 13. In regard to the relationship between magnets 26, 28 Sharkawy states: In either embodiment, when operatively positioned within a native valve annulus, the two magnets 26 and 28 directly contact each other in a head-to-toe or a top-to-bottom arrangement and form a magnetic bond sufficient to provide a fluid-tight seal between the two and sufficient to maintain the seal during normal 6 Appeal2014-003838 Application 12/850,539 valve and cardiac motion. Sharkawy, col. 11, 11. 3-9 (emphasis added). At the outset, we agree with Appellant that the trapping of heart valve tissue between the loop-shaped supports constitutes positively recited structure in claim 1 because it specifies a physical arrangement of the two loop-shaped supports relative to one another (i.e., they must be configured in a manner that permits the trapping of the heart valve tissue). Against this background, we note that magnets 26, 28 of Sharkawy are in direct contact with each other and do not trap valve tissue therebetween, and that the Examiner has failed to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that heart valve tissue is necessarily trapped between magnets 26, 28 of Sharkawy. See Final Act. 6; see also Ans. 7; Appeal Br. 13; Reply Br. 13. As such, we do not sustain the Examiner's rejection of claims 1 and 8-10 as anticipated by Sharkawy. Additionally, similar limitations in independent claim 14 resulted in the same unsupported findings by the Examiner discussed above with respect to independent claim 1. See Final Act. 5---6. For similar reasons set forth above for independent claim 1, we likewise do not sustain the Examiner's rejection of claim 14 as anticipated by Sharkawy. Obviousness over Tremulis and Moaddeb Claims 1-3, 7, 11, 13, and 14 The Examiner finds that Tremulis "discloses the invention substantially as claimed" (Final Act. 6) except that Tremulis "does not disclose the loop-shaped supports/ curve-shaped supports to be made from a magnetic material that are attracted to each other" (Id. at 7). The Examiner 7 Appeal2014-003838 Application 12/850,539 finds that Moaddeb teaches an annuloplasty ring made from shape memory material ... and a conductive coil (magnetic material) .... The conductive coil (magnetic material) allows the ring to absorb more energy/ heat causing the shape memory material to better transition to the memorized shape, the energy source maybe an externally applied magnetic field. Id. (emphasis added) (citing Moaddeb, i-fi-1 71, 77). The Examiner concludes that: It would have been obvious to one having ordinary skill in the art at the time the invention was made to include the conductive coil (magnetic material), as taught by Moaddeb et al., in the shape memory material making the loop-shaped supports/ curve-shaped supports (rings 12, 14), as disclosed by Tremulis et al., such that the system may be activated, to transition shapes, by a known alternative/ external energy source within the annuloplasty art. Id. (emphasis added). According to Appellant "neither of the cited references teaches an annuloplasty system comprising two supports that are attracted to one another by application of an external magnetic field." Appeal Br. 17. Regarding Tremulis, Appellant states: The Tremulis annuloplasty device is disclosed as being made from plastics, shape memory material, silicone and other materials, ... The shape memory material may be activated from a first to a second clamping state by use of heat. Tremulis does not disclose the use of an external magnetic field to attract a first and a second loop-shaped support or for any other purpose. Id. at 18 (citing Tremulis, i1 49). As for Moaddeb, Appellant asserts: "Moaddeb discloses the use of a magnetic field to contract or decrease the diameter of a ring-shaped device by a direct ferromagnetic shape memory effect and by heating a 8 Appeal2014-003838 Application 12/850,539 conventional shape memory material." Id. (citing Moaddeb, iii! 12, 13). Appellant further notes that neither Tremulis nor Moaddeb disclose "an annuloplasty device or any other device made from a material that would be responsive to an externally applied magnetic field to induce attraction between two support rings." Id. Appellant concludes: "[c]ombining the teachings of Moaddeb and Tremulis could not result in two loop shapes that attract each other as claimed because neither reference teaches attraction. The references only teach shape change, which is distinct from [attraction]." Id. at 19. The Examiner responds: Upon exposure to a magnetic field the magnetic material (conductive coils), as taught by Moaddeb et al., within the loop shaped/ curved shaped supports (rings 12, 14), as disclosed by Tremulis et al., will cause the loop shaped/ curved shaped supports (rings 12, 14) to move toward each other, toward their [memorized] shape (i.e. the loop shaped/ curved shaped supports (rings 12, 14) will be attracted to each other). The loop shaped/ curved shaped supports (rings 12, 14) moving/ being attracted to their [memorized] shape (which happens to be closer together) is a result of (i.e. is caused by) stimulus from the external magnetic field. Ans. 9. According to Appellant, however: "the result of the suggested modification of Tremulis according to Moaddeb would involve the application of an external magnetic field to heat a memory shape material and induce a change in shape rather than to attract two parts of the device toward one another." Reply Br. 14. Appellant continues: The Examiner asserts that a change in shape of a device comprising two supports such that the two supports move closer to one another satisfies the feature recited in claims 1 and 14 of the two supports being "attracted to" one another. ... Appellant 9 Appeal2014-003838 Application 12/850,539 Id. respectfully submits that the Examiner's interpretation of "attracted to" is not reasonable based upon the plain language meaning of attraction in the context of an applied magnetic field. Appellant's arguments are persuasive. The Examiner acknowledges that Moaddeb teaches an annuloplasty ring that uses an externally applied magnetic field to cause the shape memory material of the ring "to better transition to the memorized shape." Final Act. 7. The Examiner also acknowledges that combining Moaddeb with Tremulis would cause the Tremulis loop-shaped supports/curve-shaped supports (rings 12, 14) "to transition shapes." Id. Only after Appellant likewise points out that neither Tremulis nor Moaddeb teaches magnetic attraction, only shape change (see Appeal Br. 1 7-19) does the Examiner suggest that the combined Tremulis/Moaddeb device would result in attraction between the rings 12, 14 of Tremulis by virtue of their being moved toward their memorized shape (see ii .. ns. 9). Hov,rever, as correctly noted by ii .. ppellant, t\vo things merely moving closer to one another does not mean that they are attracted to one another in a magnetic sense. See Reply Br. 14. The Examiner has thus not provided articulated reasoning based on rational underpinnings sufficient to support a prima facie case of obviousness of claim 1 with respect to the limitation of magnetic supports being attracted to each other by a magnetic field. Accordingly, we do not sustain the Examiner's rejection of claims 1-3, 7, 11, and 13 as unpatentable over Tremulis and Moaddeb. Additionally, similar limitations in independent claim 14 resulted in the same unsupported findings and conclusions by the Examiner discussed 10 Appeal2014-003838 Application 12/850,539 above with respect to independent claim 1. See Final Act. 6-7. For similar reasons set forth above for independent claim 1, we likewise do not sustain the Examiner's rejection of claim 14 as unpatentable over Tremulis and Moaddeb. DECISION We REVERSE the decision of the Examiner to reject claims 1-11, 13, and 14. REVERSED cda 11 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation