Ex Parte TrollsasDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardFeb 21, 201811809059 (P.T.A.B. Feb. 21, 2018) 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. 11/809,059 05/30/2007 Mikael O. Trollsas 050623.00785 9221 45159 7590 SQUIRE PB (Abbott) 275 BATTERY STREET, SUITE 2600 SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94111-3356 EXAMINER KASSA, TIGABU ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 1619 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 02/23/2018 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): sfripdocket @ squirepb.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte MIKAEL O. TROLLSAS Appeal 2017-002360 Application 11/809,0591 Technology Center 1600 Before DONALD E. ADAMS, DEBORAH KATZ, and DEVON ZASTROW NEWMAN, Administrative Patent Judges. ADAMS, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL This appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) involves claims 1 and 5—10 (App. Br. 2; see Ans. 2).2 Examiner entered a rejection under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a). We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We AFFIRM. 1 Appellant identifies the real party in interest as “Abbott Cardiovascular Systems Inc.” (App. Br. 2). 2 “[Cjlaims 4, 11, 12, and 15—22 [stand] withdrawn” (App. Br. 2; see Ans. 2). Appeal 2017-002360 Application 11/809,059 STATEMENT OF THE CASE Appellant’s disclosure “generally relates to a substituted polycaprolactone for biomedical applications such as coating a stent” (Spec. 1:7-8). Appellant’s originally filed claims 1 and 3 are reproduced below: 1. A coating on a medical device which comprises a substituted polycaprolactone, wherein the substituted polycaprolactone comprises units comprising a structure selected from Formula II or combinations thereof, wherein: x, y, and z are independent integers having values ranging from 0-20; n is an integer ranging from 1 to about 100,000; Ri and R2 are independently hydrogen or C1-C20 substituents; Ri and R2 cannot both be hydrogen; and Ri, R2, x, y, and z are selected such that the structure of Formulae I or II are not simultaneously a polylactic acid (PLA), 2 Appeal 2017-002360 Application 11/809,059 polyglycolic acid (PGA), polyhydroxybutyric acid (PBH), polyhydroxyvaleric acid, valerolactone, caprolactone, dioxanone or a copolymer thereof. (Trollsas 20083 9-10.) 3. The coating of claim 1, wherein the substituted polycaprolactone comprises a structure selected from wherein R’ is hydrogen, a protective group or a short chain alkyl group, and wherein m is an integer independent from n ranging from 1 to about 100,000. (Id. at 10-11.) Examiner Restricted Appellant’s originally filed claims and required Appellant to elect a species of coating (see January 6, 2009, Office Action). In response, Appellant elected, inter alia, [A] coating comprising this polymer wherein R’ is a short chain alkyl group as the species of coating. (See Appellant’s January 15, 2009, Response to Restriction Requirement 11; see Ans. 3; see generally Trollsas 2008, 10-11 (claim 3 (third structure, wherein “n” and “m” are 1)).) 3 Trollsas, US 2008/0299164 Al, pub. Dec. 4, 2008. 3 Appeal 2017-002360 Application 11/809,059 During prosecution, however, Appellant amended the claims several times after the foregoing species election, including amendments to claim 1 that ultimately result in the addition, as the last clause, the requirement that “at least one Ri or R2 is a C1-C20 substituent comprising one or more cyclohexyl, 1,4-dimethyl cyclohexyl, alkoxy, phenoxy, aryloxy, ketone, ester, thioether, thioester, amide, amine, thiol, or phenol groups” (see Appellant’s July 8, 2015, Response to Office Action 2; Appellant’s September 19, 2014, Amendment; see also App. Br. 12). Therefore, Appellant’s amended claim 1, as it appears in Appellant’s Brief, is representative and reproduced below: 1. A coating on a medical device which comprises a substituted polycaprolactone; wherein the substituted polycaprolactone comprises units comprising a structure selected from combinations thereof; wherein: x, y, and z are independent integers having values ranging from 0-20; n is an integer ranging from 1 to about 100,000; Ri and R2 are independently hydrogen, C1-C20 substituents, or C1-C20 substituents comprising one or more cyclohexyl, 1,4-dimethyl cyclohexyl, alkoxy, phenoxy, aryloxy, ketone, ester, thioether, thioester, amide, amine, thiol, or phenol groups; Ri and R2 cannot both be hydrogen; 4 Appeal 2017-002360 Application 11/809,059 Ri, R2, x, y, and z are selected such that the substituted polycaprolactone is not a polylactic acid (PLA), polyglycolic acid (PGA), polyhydroxybutyric acid (PBH), polyhydroxyvaleric acid, valerolactone, caprolactone, or dioxanone or where the substituted polycaprolactone is a copolymer, the structure of Formulae I or II are not both a polylactic acid (PLA), polyglycolic acid (PGA), polyhydroxybutyric acid (PBH), polyhydroxyvaleric acid, valerolactone, caprolactone, or dioxanone; and at least one Rj or R2 is a C1-C20 substituent comprising one or more cyclohexyl, 1,4-dimethyl cyclohexyl, alkoxy, phenoxy, aryloxy, ketone, ester, thioether, thioester, amide, amine, thiol, or phenol groups. (App. Br. 12 (emphasis added).) Appellant’s claims 5—10 depend directly or indirectly from Appellant’s claim 1 (see id. at 12—13; see also Reply Br. 6). The claims stand rejected as follows: Claims 1 and 5—10 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over the combination of Chen,4 Trollsas 1999,5 Malmstrom,6 Grube,7 and Campbell.8 ISSUE Does the preponderance of evidence relied upon by Examiner support a conclusion of obviousness? 4 Chen et al., US 2007/0264307 Al, published Nov. 15, 2007. 5 Mikael Trollsas et al., Highly Branched Block Copolymers: Design, Synthesis, and Morphology, 32 Macromolecules 4917 4924 (1999). 6 Eva Malmstrom et al., The effect of terminal alkyl chains on hyperbranchedpolyesters based on 2,2-bis(hydroxymethyl)propionic acid, 197 Macromol. Chem. Phys. 3199-3207 (1996). 7 Eberhard Grube et al., Rapamycin Analogs for Stent-Based Local Drug Delivery, 29 Herz 162—166 (2004). 8 Campbell et al., US 2005/0095267 Al, published May 5, 2005. 5 Appeal 2017-002360 Application 11/809,059 ANALYSIS According to Examiner, Appellant’s claim 1, as presented in this Appeal, requires: R1 and R2 are independently hydrogen, [Cl]-C20 substitutes, or [C1J-C20 substituents comprising one or more cyclohexyl, 1,4-dimethyl cyclohexyl, alkoxy, phenoxy, aryloxy, detone, ester, thioether, thioester, amide, amine, thiol, or phenol groups which . . . [reads on Appellant’s] elected species. (Ans. 13; see id. (“[Appellant’s] elected species ... is still a structure encompassed by [Appellant’s] claim 1[, as presented in this Appeal]”).) We are not persuaded. Examiner’s interpretation of Appellant’s claim 1 fails to account for the last clause of the claim that requires: at least one Ri or R2 is a C1-C20 substituent comprising one or more cyclohexyl, 1,4-dimethyl cyclohexyl, alkoxy, phenoxy, aryloxy, ketone, ester, thioether, thioester, amide, amine, thiol, or phenol groups. (App. Br. 12.) As Appellant explains, “Chen does not teach or suggest using a substituted polycaprolactone which has at least one C1-C20 substituent that comprises one or more cyclohexyl, 1,4-dimethyl cyclohexyl, alkoxy, phenoxy, aryloxy, ketone, ester, thioether, thioester, amide, amine, thiol, or phenol groups, as recited in [Appellant’s] claim 1” and the combination of Trollsas 1999, Malmstrom, Grube, and Campbell does “not cure the deficiency of Chen” (App. Br. 8—9; see Reply Br. 5). Although Examiner may be correct in finding that Trollsas 1999 teaches a previously claimed species of Appellant’s claimed invention, Examiner failed to establish that the combination of Chen, Malmstrom, Grube, and Campbell makes obvious a coating on a medical device that 6 Appeal 2017-002360 Application 11/809,059 comprises a substituted polycaprolactone, within the scope of Appellant’s claimed invention as presented in this Appeal (see Ans. 13 (citing Trollsas 1999 4920: Table 2, sample entry 13 and 4918: Table 1, sample entry 10); see generally Ans. 3—19). Therefore, we are not persuaded by Examiner’s assertion that “[i]t would have been prima facie obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art at the time the claimed invention was made to modify the teachings of Chen et al. by specifically choosing the elected substituted polycaprol[a]ctone because the specific elected caprolactone is taught by [Trollsas 1999]” (Ans. 15—16 (emphasis added)). Further, although Examiner asserts that Trollsas 1999 discloses “other species that are encompassed by the structures recited in [Appellant’s] claim 1,” Examiner failed to identify a specific structure in Trollsas 1999 that when applied in combination with Chen, Malmstrom, Grube, and Campbell suggests a coating on a medical device that comprises a substituted polycaprolactone, within the scope of Appellant’s claimed invention as presented in this Appeal (see Ans. 16; see generally id. at 3—19). The same is true of Examiner’s assertion that [i]t should be clear [from Chen] that upon polymerization and ring opening the modified caprolactone will convert into polymers that contain a branched or linear alkyl, alkenyl or alkynyl chain from Cl to Cl8, cyclic moieties having C3 to C8 including heterocycles of nitrogen, oxygen and sulfur and combinations thereof which are substituent groups that are recited in claim 1 for R1 and R2, which fails to account for the last clause of Appellant’s claim 1 on Appeal (see Ans. 18 (emphasis omitted)). As Appellant explains, the claims as amended in the submission filed on September 19, 2014 no longer include the elected substituted polycaprolactone copolymer because the definition of Ri and R2 has been 7 Appeal 2017-002360 Application 11/809,059 amended to further require “at least one Ri or R2 is a C1-C20 substituent comprising one or more cyclohexyl, 1,4-dimethyl cyclohexyl, alkoxy, phenoxy, aryloxy, ketone, ester, thioether, thioester, amide, amine, thiol, or phenol groups,” while the previously elected substituted polycaprolactone does not have any of the substituents. [Thus,] even though claim 1 still recites Ri and R2 are independently hydrogen, C1-C20 substituents, C1-C20 substituents comprising one or more cyclohexyl, 1,4-dimethyl cyclohexyl, alkoxy, phenoxy, aryloxy, ketone, ester, thioether, thioester, amide, amine, thiol, or phenol groups, the claim 1 further requires that "at least one Ri or R2 is a C1-C20 substituent comprising one or more cyclohexyl, 1,4-dimethyl cyclohexyl, alkoxy, phenoxy, aryloxy, ketone, ester, thioether, thioester, amide, amine, thiol, or phenol groups,” which excludes the previously elected species. (Reply Br. 5—6; see App. Br. 8.) To be complete, we recognize Examiner’s finding that the combination of Chen, Trollsas 1999, Malmstrom, Grube, and Campbell suggests a compound comprising an alkoxyl group (see Ans. 19). As Appellant makes clear, however, Examiner failed to establish that this prior art suggests placing an alkoxyl group at an RI and/or R2 position, as is required by Appellant’s claimed invention (App. Br. 9—10; see Reply Br. 6). CONCLUSION OF LAW The preponderance of evidence relied upon by Examiner fails to support a conclusion of obviousness. The rejection of claims 1 and 5—10 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over the combination of Chen, Trollsas 1999, Malmstrom, Grube, and Campbell is reversed. REVERSED 8 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation