Ophir Frieder et al.Download PDFPatent Trials and Appeals BoardNov 20, 20202020003362 (P.T.A.B. Nov. 20, 2020) 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. 13/543,044 07/06/2012 Ophir Frieder 8031-94723-01 1329 24197 7590 11/20/2020 KLARQUIST SPARKMAN, LLP 121 SW SALMON STREET SUITE 1600 PORTLAND, OR 97204 EXAMINER LAM, ELIZA ANNE ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3686 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 11/20/2020 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): docketing@klarquist.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________________ Ex parte OPHIR FRIEDER and HOWARD FEDEROFF __________________ Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 Technology Center 3600 ____________________ Before JAMES P. CALVE, KENNETH G. SCHOPFER, and ROBERT J. SILVERMAN, Administrative Patent Judges. CALVE, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 134(a), Appellant1 appeals from the decision of the Examiner to reject claims 1–7, 9–18, 20, and 22–27, which are all of the pending claims.2 Appeal Br. 1. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We AFFIRM and enter a New Ground of Rejection. 1 “Appellant” refers to “applicant” as defined in 37 C.F.R. § 1.42. Appellant identifies Georgetown University as the real party in interest. Appeal Br. 2. 2 Claims 8, 19, 21 are cancelled. Appeal Br. 27, 33, 34 (Claims App.). Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 2 CLAIMED SUBJECT MATTER Claims 1, 9, 17, 18, 20, 22, 23, 25, and 27 are independent. Claim 1 recites: 1. A method for improving the accuracy of pharmacovigilance, comprising tracking drug or medical device treatment responses of a plurality of patients associated with a post-marketing surveillance trial of the drug or medical device treatment, comprising: publishing an informational item about the drug or medical device treatment in the post-marketing surveillance trial to a plurality of social media platforms unaffiliated with the post-marketing surveillance trial of the drug or medical device treatment, wherein publishing includes uploading the informational item to a plurality of social media servers, and wherein the informational item includes identification of the drug or medical device treatment, names of diseases treatable by the drug or medical device treatment and a URL link to a patient registration page; maintaining a log of the plurality of social media platforms that the informational item has been published; inducing the plurality of patients to post trial related responses on the plurality of social media platforms by offering a monetary incentive to the plurality of patients, wherein the monetary incentive is provided by a sponsor of the post- marketing surveillance trial, and further wherein the trial related responses include comments posted at the plurality of social media platforms; receiving registration information from the plurality of patients; storing registration information of the plurality of patients in a storage device; collecting, from the trial related responses, comments that include the name of the drug; or medical device; aggregating the trial related responses from the plurality of social media platforms; integrating posts from an individual patient of the plurality of patients across two or more social media platforms; Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 3 wherein integrating comprises combining similar comments posted by a same patient of the plurality of patients from two or more social media platforms; analyzing the comments that include the name of the drug or medical device in real time to obtain knowledge comprising a safety concern related to the post-marketing surveillance trial including at least one of co-morbid conditions, duration of medical condition, and social variables; and modifying the drug or medical device treatment of the post-marketing surveillance trial in response to the safety concern. Appeal Br. 25–26 (Claims App.). REJECTIONS Claims 1–7, 9–18, 20, and 22 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 112, first paragraph, for failing to comply with the written description requirement. Claims 1, 4, 6, 7, 9, 12, and 14–17 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Wicks (“Accelerated clinical discovery using self-reported patient data collected online and a patient-matching algorithm,” Nature Biotechnology, 29:5, May 2011, 411–14), Paty (US 8,380,531 B2, iss. Feb. 19, 2013), Frankham (US 2012/0072232 A1, pub. Mar. 22, 2012), Official Notice, Abraham-Fuchs (US 2005/0182664 A1, pub. Aug. 18, 2005), and Stoltenberg (US 2003/0126156 A1, pub. July 3, 2003). Claims 2, 10, and 18–22 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Wicks, Paty, Frankham, Official Notice, Wang (US 2008/0256444 A1, pub. Oct. 16, 2008), Abraham-Fuchs, Stoltenberg, and McAlindon (US 7,251,609 A1, iss. July 31, 2007). Claims 3, 11, 23, 25, and 27 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Wicks, Paty, Frankham, Official Notice, Abraham-Fuchs, Stoltenberg, and Doganaksoy (US 2009/0083132 A1, pub. Mar. 26, 2009). Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 4 Claims 24 and 26 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Wicks, Paty, Frankham, Official Notice, Abraham-Fuchs, Stoltenberg, Doganaksoy, and McAlindon. ANALYSIS Claims 1–7, 9–18, 20, and 22 Rejected for Lack of Written Description The Examiner determines the following limitations in independent claims 1, 9, 17, 18, 20, and 22 lack a written description: (1) “modifying the drug or medical device treatment of the post-marketing surveillance trial;” (2) “offering a monetary incentive;” and (3) “social medial platforms unaffiliated with the post marketing surveillance trial.” Final Act. 2. “modifying the drug or medical device treatment” Appellant asserts the Specification describes embodiments that allow “pharmaceutical companies and relevant agencies to quickly collect and analyze large amounts of data to determine whether or not an approved drug may have safety or tolerability concerns that need to be addressed.” Appeal Br. 7 (citing Spec. ¶ 140). Appellant argues that this description supports “modifying the drug or medical device treatment of the post-marketing surveillance trial in response to the safety concern” as claimed. Id. The Examiner responds, “paragraph [140] does not discuss medical devices.” Ans. 5. The Examiner also finds that paragraph 140 describes addressing safety and tolerability concerns by stating it “permits companies to more quickly determine whether or not label changes, product recalls, or additional clinical trials may be appropriate,” but label changes, product recalls, and additional clinical trials do not describe modifying a drug or medical device treatment as claimed. Id. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 5 The Patent Laws state that “[t]he specification shall contain a written description of the invention.” 35 U.S.C. § 112, paragraph 1. The written description requirement examines “whether the disclosure of the application relied upon reasonably conveys to those skilled in the art that the inventor had possession of the claimed subject matter as of the filing date.” Ariad Pharm., Inc. v. Eli Lilly & Co., 598 F.3d 1336, 1351 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (en banc). “[T]he test requires an objective inquiry into the four corners of the specification from the perspective of a person of ordinary skill in the art. Based on that inquiry, the specification must describe an invention understandable to that skilled artisan and show that the inventor actually invented the invention claimed.” Id. The specification does not have to recite a claimed invention identically, but “a description that merely renders the invention obvious does not satisfy the requirement.” Id. at 1352; see also Centocor Ortho Biotech, Inc. v. Abbott Labs., 636 F.3d 1341, 1348 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (“A ‘mere wish or plan’ for obtaining the claimed invention is not adequate written description.”). If no description can be found in the Specification, the only thing the PTO reasonably can do is to point out its nonexistence. Hyatt v. Dudas, 492 F.3d 1365, 1370 (Fed. Cir. 2007). Paragraph 140 of the Specification discloses in pertinent part: Embodiments as disclosed herein enable, among other things, pharmaceutical companies and relevant agencies to quickly collect and analyze large amounts of data to determine whether or not an approved drug may have safety or tolerability concerns that need to be addressed. Other exemplary advantages include the ability to conduct pharmacovigilance on a global scale, which provides early warning signals about, inter alia, tolerability or safety issues, which permits companies to more quickly determine whether or not label changes, product recalls, or additional clinical trials may be appropriate. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 6 We agree with the Examiner that paragraph 140 does not describe a modification being made to drug or medical device treatment in response to safety or tolerability concerns. Nor has Appellant provided evidence that the description of identifying safety or tolerability concerns to be addressed in paragraph 140 reasonably conveys to a skilled artisan that the invention includes “modifying the drug or medical device treatment of the post- marketing surveillance trial in response to the safety concern” as claimed. Paragraph 140 indicates that such early warning signals about safety and tolerability issues permit companies to determine “whether or not label changes, product recalls, or additional clinical trials may be appropriate.” Spec. ¶ 140. We find no description of modifying drug or medical device treatment in paragraph 140. Indeed, we find no description at all of medical devices in paragraph 140. Nor is it sufficient that modifying treatment may be obvious in view of what is described in paragraph 140. The written description requirement demands more. Thus, we sustain the rejection of claim 1 and claims 2–7, 9–18, 20, and 22, which are not argued separately for lack of an adequate written description of this limitation. “offering a monetary incentive” Appellant asserts that paragraphs 104, 105, and 116 describe “offering a monetary incentive” to induce patients to post trial related responses to the social media platforms. Appeal Br. 7. These paragraphs state that sponsors can entice and motivate patients to volunteer for a trial and provide needed information by providing incentives such as preferred/quicker/higher priority access to healthcare provider feedback, discounted prices on prescription refills, updated information on disease and treatment, and support group formation and hosting. Spec. ¶¶ 104, 105, 116. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 7 We agree with the Examiner that the Specification does not describe “monetary incentives.” Ans. 5. We also agree that a “monetary incentive” includes cash payments. Id. However, we consider “discounted prices on prescription refills” to be a monetary incentive because they allow a person to refill a prescription for less money. Thus, we do not sustain the rejection of claims 1–7, 9–18, 20, and 22 on this basis. Yet, Appellant’s argument that all of the incentives in paragraphs 104, 105, and 116 are monetary incentives (Appeal Br. 7) makes the meaning of monetary incentive unclear. The Specification provides no definition or guidance as to the meaning of monetary incentive. Thus, we determine claims 1–7, 9–18, 20, and 22 are indefinite. We enter a new ground of rejection on that basis. See In re Packard, 751 F.3d 1307, 1310, 1314 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (approving indefiniteness standard in MPEP § 2173.05(e) that “[a] claim is indefinite when it contains words or phrases whose meaning is unclear.”); Ex parte McAward, 2017 WL 3669566, at *5 (PTAB Aug. 25, 2017) (precedential) (same); Interval Licensing LLC v. AOL, Inc., 766 F.3d 1364, 1374 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (“With this lone example, a skilled artisan is still left to wonder what other forms of display are unobtrusive and non- distracting. . . . The specification offers no indication, thus leaving the skilled artisan to consult the ‘unpredictable vagaries of any one person’s opinion.’” (citation omitted)); IQASR LLC v. Wendt Corp., 825 F. App’x 900, 905 n.5 (Fed. Cir. 2020) (“Without better guidance, an artisan must speculate which choice of the alternative characteristics better describes any of these terms in a given situation.”); Ex parte Miyazaki, 89 USPQ2d 1207, 1211 (BPAI 2008) (precedential) (holding a claim that is amenable to two or more plausible constructions without clear metes or bounds is indefinite). Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 8 “social media platforms unaffiliated with the . . . trial” Appellant argues that support for “social media platforms unaffiliated with the post-marketing surveillance trial” is in paragraphs 72, 97–99, and 103 of the Specification. Appeal Br. 6. Appellant argues that paragraph 99 describes how “the sponsor publishes an informational item on an ‘Industry Page’ of a social media platform such as LinkedIn, Facebook, or Google+” to support this feature. Id. at 6–7. The Examiner finds the Specification does not use the terms affiliation or unaffiliated. The Examiner defines “affiliate” as “to bring or receive into close connection as a member or branch.” Ans. 4. The Examiner finds that users and sponsors must join a social media site to post information on the site, and this sort of connection is an affiliation. Id. at 4–5. The Examiner notes that paragraph 98 of the Specification states that “the sponsor creates a user identifier for each Phase IV drug for a social media platform, such as LinkedIn.” Id. at 5. The Examiner cites paragraph 97, which describes how patients befriend (Facebook) or follow (Twitter) drugs of interest on social media sites, and finds that this sort of relationship is an affiliation that allows patients to email, text, tweet, or post messages to the sponsor. Id. at 4–5. We agree with the Examiner that the Specification describes sponsors and patients registering with a social media platform in order to participate in clinical trials on social media platforms. Such relationships constitute an affiliation with the social media platform under a broadest reasonable interpretation. Appellant has not cited any description or example of a social media platform that has no affiliation or association with a clinical trial as claimed. The Specification indicates the contrary situation occurs. Thus, we sustain the rejection of claims 1–7, 9–18, 20, and 22 on this basis. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 9 We also enter a new ground of rejection of claims 1–7, 9–18, 20, and 22 under 35 U.S.C. § 112, paragraph two, because the meaning of “social media platforms unaffiliated with the . . . trial” is unclear. The Specification provides no objective guidance as to the meaning of this term. Instead, it describes how trials and participants associate with social media platforms, and Appellant argues that such associations are not affiliations. Claims 1, 4, 6, 7, 9, 12, and 14–17 Rejected Over Wicks, Paty, Frankham, Official Notice, Abraham-Fuchs, and Stoltenberg Appellant argues the claims as a group. Appeal Br. 9–14. We select claim 1 as representative. See 37 C.F.R. § 41.37(c)(1)(iv). Claims 4, 6, 7, 9, 12, and 14–17 stand or fall with claim 1. Appellant raises a number of arguments that we find unpersuasive at least because they attack the references individually rather than as applied by the Examiner. For example, Appellant argues that Wicks and Frankham do not teach or suggest “inducing the plurality of patients to post trial related responses on the plurality of social media platforms by offering a monetary incentive to the plurality of patients” as recited in claim 1. Appeal Br. 9–10. These arguments are not persuasive because the Examiner relies on Abraham-Fuchs to teach offering a monetary incentive to patients. See Final Act. 5; Ans. 6. Furthermore, Frankham teaches the inducing of a plurality of patients to post trial related responses on social media platforms but does use “monetary incentives.” Final Act. 4–5; Ans. 6–7. Frankham teaches the use of social networks and online communities to solicit patients to participate in surveys and to post discussions for drug assessments and clinical trial studies such as Phase IV studies. Frankham ¶ 59. Users can communicate with one another on topics of their interest or mutual interest in this way. Id. ¶ 69. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 10 Frankham also describes web interfaces that generate, initiate, and distribute surveys to one or more leads or patients of an online community or post surveys to a social network. Id. ¶ 99. Surveys may identify drugs, drug dosage, length of treatment, side effects, quality of life, and other issues for patients to provide their responses and input. Id. ¶ 100. Because Frankham does not teach the use of “monetary incentives” to induce patients to post responses, the Examiner relies on Abraham-Fuchs to teach this features. Final Act. 5. Abraham-Fuchs teaches how to improve incentives for patients to participate in clinical trials. Abraham-Fuchs ¶ 8. Abraham-Fuchs teaches that sponsors can define the criteria for rewarding participants. Id. ¶ 42. In particular, Abraham-Fuchs teaches the use of such incentives as financial investments, shares, funds, gift coupons at stores, and points that can be accumulated and cashed out to induce patients. Id. ¶ 44. Appellant further argues that Wicks does not teach aggregating trial related responses. Appeal Br. 10. This argument is not persuasive because the Examiner relies on Frankham to teach this limitation and also to teach publishing information about a study. Final Act. 4–5. Appellant also asserts that Frankham’s collection of survey data does not teach aggregating trial related responses from a plurality of social media platforms as recited in claim 1. Appeal Br. 10. We agree with the Examiner that aggregating trial related responses to surveys published on one or more social media platforms corresponds to aggregating trial related responses as claimed. Final Act. 5; Ans. 7. Claim 1 does not recite a particular format for aggregating trial related responses. Nor does it preclude aggregation of survey responses. Frankham also teaches online trial studies with managed groups whose data is collected and analyzed as claimed. Frankham ¶ 65. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 11 Moreover, Frankham also indicates that social media platforms can post landing pages where patients can identify themselves and provide the same information about drugs, dosages, treatment length, and side effects as in a survey. Id. ¶¶ 100–102. The results and data collected from these pages and social media platforms can be collected like the survey data and stored in a data engine for communication to participants and sponsors. Id. Appellant’s argument that Wicks does not integrate posts of patients across two or more social media platforms is not persuasive because the Examiner cites Stoltenberg and Frankham for this feature. Appeal Br. 10– 11; Final Act. 6; Ans. 7–8. In this regard, Frankham aggregates responses of patients over multiple social media platforms as discussed above. Frankham uses web crawlers to collect data on specific topics and conversations such as who is saying what, where, and when on any combination of one or more networks, online communities, websites, web links (URLs), products, key words, and medical conditions. Frankham ¶ 72. The social networks and discussion platforms may include millions of discussions aggregated over a time period of a day, week, or year with daily updates to the online sources where patients discuss medical conditions related to studies. Id. ¶ 70. The patient responses to surveys and online forums are aggregated in a database for analysis of the use, compliance, and side effects of a particular drug and design of other clinical studies. Id. ¶¶ 61–95. A data engine consolidates multiple databases and data collections from plural web crawlers, surveys, interviews, online discussions, and any other means for further processing, organization, filtering, and data extraction relevant to a particular topic such as a pharmaceutical drug. Id. ¶¶ 78, 79. Stoltenberg integrates duplicate data records in databases. Stoltenberg ¶¶ 3, 11, 15. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 12 Appellant contends that Stoltenberg deduplicates hospital records using a matching score, but such record deduplication does not teach or suggest “integrating posts from an individual patient of the plurality of patients across two or more social media platforms” as recited in claim 1 because merging or deleting duplicate records is fundamentally different from integrating separate posts that are distinct but related because they are posted by the same individual on the same general topic. Appeal Br. 11. The Examiner responds that merging and deduplication are two ways of integrating records based on scoring fields such as a patient’s name, sex, social security number, date of birth, maiden name, and alias. Ans. 8. The Examiner cites Frankham to teach aggregating posts from multiple social media platforms and Stoltenberg to teach merging records using a matching algorithm. Id. at 7–8. Claim 1 recites “wherein integrating comprises combining similar comments posted by a same patient of the plurality of patients from two or more social media platforms.” Appeal Br. 26 (Claims App.). As discussed above, Frankham aggregates posts across multiple social media platforms, online communities, and websites by topic in an index. Frankham ¶ 72. The Examiner merely relies on Stoltenberg to teach an exemplary technique and algorithm that can be used to integrate patients’ posts by factors such as the patient’s name and other personal identification information for each topic. The Specification describes this limitation as “the integration module 506 may clean the reco[r]ded data by combining similar comments posted by the same patient.” Spec. ¶ 129. Stoltenberg teaches that it is known in the art to combine comments by the same patient and in combination with Frankham would combine similar comments by the same patient for a particular topic. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 13 Appellant further asserts that Frankham does not teach or suggest that publishing includes uploading the informational item to a plurality of social media servers, and wherein the informational item includes identification of drug or medical device treatment, names of diseases treatable by the drug, and a URL link to a patient registration page as claimed. Appeal Br. 11–13. We agree with the Examiner that Frankham teaches this limitation. In this regard, Frankham uses a web interface to publish/distribute surveys to one or more social networks and/or online communities via email, SMS, IM, texting, twitter, or by posting or publishing a link or URL to the survey on a discussion platform or social network. Frankham ¶ 99. A survey identifies the drug, drug dosage, length of treatment, side effects and solicits patients’ consent, signature, and medical history, which constitutes a registration as claimed. Id. ¶ 100. Social media platforms may offer a portal or URL to an interface that allows a patient or user of an online community to register by establishing an account with the platform, creating a profile for the survey. Id. ¶ 120. The system may track the study by patient specific information, patient input, dosage, treatment plans and durations. Id. ¶ 101; see Ans. 8. We also agree with the Examiner that Frankham analyzes comments to include the name of the drug or medical device in real time to obtain knowledge about a safety concern related to the trial as recited in claim 1. In this regard, Frankham collects and analyzes data regarding drug dosage, length of treatment, side effects, quality of life, and other social variables as claimed. Frankham ¶¶ 50, 100, 101; Ans. 9. Claim 1 indicates that safety concerns include the duration of a medical condition and social variables. Appellant further argues there is no reasonable expectation of success in combining Wicks and Paty with the other references. Appeal Br. 20–21. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 14 “The reasonable expectation of success requirement refers to the likelihood of success in combining references to meet the limitations of the claimed invention.” Intelligent Bio-Sys., Inc. v. Illumina Cambridge Ltd., 821 F.3d 1359, 1367 (Fed. Cir. 2016). Here, the Examiner finds that Wicks teaches how to publish information about drug or medical device treatment, induce patients to respond, and aggregate and analyze patient responses but does not track responses of plural patients in a clinical treatment as claimed. Final Act. 3. The Examiner relies on Paty to teach how to track responses of plural patients in a clinical trial of a medical treatment. Id. A skilled artisan would have a reasonable expectation of success in adapting Wicks’ method based on Paty’s teachings. Furthermore, Frankham also provides extensive teachings of these steps for a skilled artisan to follow as discussed above. We also agree with the Examiner’s determination that a skilled artisan would have been motivated to modify Wicks and Paty based on Frankham’s teachings to publish information, collect, aggregate, and analyze trial related responses to reach a larger group of people. Final Act. 5; KSR Int’l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 417 (2007) (using a known technique to improve similar methods for similar results is obvious unless its application is beyond the level of ordinary skill). Skilled artisans would combine these teachings with a reasonable expectation of success based on Frankham’s teachings to do so. Appellant’s argument is not persuasive. See In re Geisler, 116 F.3d 1465, 1470 (Fed. Cir. 1997) (“An assertion of what seems to follow from common experience is just attorney argument and not the kind of factual evidence that is required to rebut a prima facie case of obviousness.”). Thus, we sustain the rejection of claim 1 and claims 4, 6, 7, 9, 12, and 14–17, which fall with claim 1. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 15 Claims 2, 10, and 18–22 Rejected Over Wicks, Paty, Frankham, Official Notice, Wang, Abraham-Fuchs, Stoltenberg, and McAlindon Appellant argues the claims as a group. Appeal Br. 14–15. We select claim 18 as representative. Claims 2, 10, and 19–22 stand or fall with claim 18. Independent claim 18 recites a method that aggregates search queries of a plurality of patients from at least one search engine by receiving a search engine server log of search queries and associated IP addresses, integrating the search queries from an individual patient across two or more search engines, and analyzing the aggregated and integrated search queries. Appeal Br. 32–33 (Claims App.). The Examiner relies on Wicks, Paty, and Frankham to teach the steps of aggregating, integrating, and analyzing responses as discussed above for claim 1 and Wang to teach the application of such steps for search queries by receiving from a search engine server a log of aggregated search queries and analyzing the log of search queries to obtain knowledge. Final Act. 7. Appellant argues that Wicks and Frankham do not teach or suggest aggregating search queries as claimed. Appeal Br. 14–15. This argument is not persuasive because it does not address the Examiner’s reliance on Wang to teach aggregating search queries in combination with teachings of Wicks, Paty, and Frankham as discussed above for the rejection of claim 1. Ans. 9. Appellant argues that Wicks and Stoltenberg do not teach integrating search queries from an individual patient across two or more search engines. Appeal Br. 13–14. This argument is not persuasive because the Examiner relies on the combined teachings of Frankham, Stoltenberg, and Wang for this feature. Final Act. 7; Ans. 10. As discussed above Frankham and Stoltenberg teach integration of patient posts across multiple platforms. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 16 Frankham also teaches the use of a web crawler as any type or form of a search engine. Frankham ¶ 71. The web crawler may be configured to collect and track specific topics and conversations by keywords, products, drugs, medical device, user profiles, user traffic, and the like. Id. ¶¶ 59, 68, 72, 73. The web crawler also indexes data collected from sites by keyword. Id. ¶ 109. The web crawler may store the collected text and metadata in a database for organizing, filtering, extracting, and analysis of a topic by a data engine or a topical analysis module. Id. ¶¶ 74–76, 78. The data can be provided in different formats. Id. ¶ 79. The Examiner cites Wang to teach that it is known in the art to receive search results from Internet search logs of popular search queries undertaken by search engines across the world and display the results by popular queries and keywords. Wang, Abstract; id. ¶ 2. Frankham and Stoltenberg teach it is known to aggregate and integrate data collected from individual posts of patients for analysis of safety concerns as discussed above. Wang teaches the use of similar techniques to analyze search queries that are aggregated in an Internet search log. Ans. 10. The Examiner determines it would have been obvious to analyze search logs as Wang teaches in Wicks, Paty, and Frankham for similar results of gaining insights into a very large population of users or patients. Final Act. 7. We agree. See KSR, 550 U.S. at 417. A skilled artisan would have combined the teachings with reasonable expectations of success based on Frankham’s teachings to use search engine web crawlers and Wang’s teachings that it is known in the art to use search engine logs to collect and analyze data for similar predictable results. Thus, we sustain the rejection of claim 18 and claims 2, 10, and 19– 20, which fall with claim 18. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 17 Claims 3, 11, 23, 25, and 27 Rejected Over Wicks, Paty, Frankham, Official Notice, Abraham-Fuchs, Stoltenberg, and Doganaksoy Appellant argues the claims as a group. Appeal Br. 16–19. We select claim 23 as representative, and claims 3, 11, 25, and 27 stand or fall with claim 23. Regarding claim 23, the Examiner relies on the same teachings of Wicks, Paty, Frankham, Official Notice, Abraham-Fuchs, and Stoltenberg as for claim 1. See Final Act. 8. Appellant argues that Frankham does not induce a plurality of patients to post trial related responses by offering a monetary incentive. Appeal Br. 17. This argument is not persuasive for the reasons discussed for the rejection of claim 1, namely, the Examiner relies on the combined teachings of the references particularly Frankham to teach inducing patients to post trial related responses and Abraham-Fuchs to teach the use of monetary incentives to induce patient responses. Final Act. 4–6. Appellant’s arguments that Wicks and Frankham do not teach aggregating download information from a plurality of file sharing websites as recited in claim 23 is not persuasive in view of the Examiner’s reliance on the teachings of Wicks, Frankham, and Doganaksoy. See Appeal Br. 17–18; Final Act. 8. Frankham aggregates information collected from a plurality of websites and social networking communities or sites as discussed above. The Examiner relies on Doganaksoy’s similar teachings that it is known in the art to do so for file sharing websites as claimed. Final Act. 8. Appellant’s arguments that Wicks and Stoltenberg do not integrate posts of a patient across two or more file sharing websites (Appeal Br. 18– 19) does not address the Examiner’s reliance on the combined teachings of Wicks, Stoltenberg, Frankham, and Doganaksoy for file sharing websites. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 18 Appellant’s concerns about deduplication in Stoltenberg are addressed by Frankham’s teachings of aggregating and integrating patient responses from multiple online communities, websites, and social networks with the teachings of Stoltenberg of a matching algorithm that can be used to do so by patient name and personal identifier information. Doganaksoy collects and integrates responses to information posted on file sharing websites by collecting and analyzing logs of file sharing history for similar predictable results. See Doganaksoy ¶¶ 14, 15, 56, 61, 135; Final Act. 8; Ans. 10. Appellant’s arguments that Doganaksoy does not teach publishing an information item to file sharing websites (Appeal Br. 19) is not persuasive because the Examiner relies on the combined teachings of Wicks, Frankham, and Doganaksoy. Final Act. 8; Ans. 10–11. As discussed above Frankham provides detailed teachings of publishing information on a website or social network or file sharing website, and Doganaksoy is relied on to teach a file sharing website with a log of file sharing history for an information item and analysis of that file sharing history to obtain knowledge. Ans. 10–11. Thus, Appellant’s arguments impermissibly attack the references individually when the Examiner has relied on their combined teachings, as set forth in the Final Office Action and Answer, to render obvious this subject matter. The Examiner merely proposes to use Doganaksoy’s technique of analyzing a file sharing website server log of file sharing history for similar benefits in the method of Wicks, Paty, Frankham, Stoltenberg, and the other references for similar improvements and predictable results. Final Act. 8. This reason is supported by rational underpinnings based on the teachings of Doganaksoy of the known advantages of using a server log of file sharing history to analyzing file sharing on a website. See KSR, 550 U.S. at 417. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 19 The expectation of success must be commensurate with the claim scope as discussed above. Wicks, Paty, Frankham, Abraham-Fuchs, and Stoltenberg teach the benefits of publishing information on websites, social media networks, and online communities and then tracking, collecting, and aggregating responses to that information as discussed above. Doganaksoy teaches it is known to perform similar steps by publishing information items on a file sharing website and receiving and analyzing a log of file sharing history for the informational items for similar benefits of gaining knowledge. Appellant’s arguments do not explain why the teachings of these underlying references are not modifiable with Doganaksoy’s teachings for predictable results of tracking file sharing as Doganaksoy teaches with the publishing, aggregation, and integration teachings of the other references. See Final Act. 8; Ans. 10–11; Geisler, 116 F.3d at 1470. The combination of such known techniques for similar benefits that are within the level of ordinary skill in the art is obvious and yields predictable results. KSR, 550 U.S. at 417; see Doganaksoy ¶¶ 47–56. Implicit motivation to combine exists for improvements to make a process stronger, cheaper, faster, lighter, smaller, more durable, and/or more efficient. See DyStar Textilfarben GmbH & Co. Deutschland KG v. C.H. Patrick Co., 464 F.3d 1356, 1368 (Fed. Cir. 2006). Accordingly, we sustain the rejection of claim 23 and claims 3, 11, 25, and 27, which fall with claim 23. Claims 24 and 26 Rejected Over Wicks, Paty, Frankham, Official Notice, Abraham-Fuchs, Stoltenberg, Doganaksoy, and McAlindon Appellant does not present argument for claims 24 and 26. Appeal Br. 7–24. Thus, we summarily sustain this rejection. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 20 CONCLUSION In summary: Claims Rejected 35 U.S.C. § Reference(s)/ Basis Affirmed Reversed New Ground 1–7, 9– 18, 20, 22 112, ¶ 1 Written Description 1–7, 9–18, 20, 223 1–7, 9–18, 20, 224 1–7, 9– 18, 20, 22 112, ¶ 2 Indefiniteness 1–7, 9–18, 20, 225 1, 4, 6, 7, 9, 12, 14– 17 103(a) Wicks, Paty, Frankham, Official Notice, Abraham- Fuchs, Stoltenberg 1, 4, 6, 7, 9, 12, 14– 17 2, 10, 18– 22 103(a) Wicks, Paty, Frankham, Official Notice, Wang, Abraham- Fuchs, Stoltenberg, McAlindon 2, 10, 18– 22 3, 11, 23, 25, 27 103(a) Wicks, Paty, Frankham, Official Notice, Abraham- Fuchs, Stoltenberg, Doganaksoy 3, 11, 23, 25, 27 24, 26 103(a) Wicks, Paty, Frankham, Official Notice, Abraham- 24, 26 3 Affirmed for “modifying” and “unaffiliated” limitations discussed above. 4 Reversed for “a monetary incentive” limitation discussed above. 5 For “unaffiliated” and “monetary incentive” limitations discussed above Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 21 Claims Rejected 35 U.S.C. § Reference(s)/ Basis Affirmed Reversed New Ground Fuchs, Stoltenberg, Doganaksoy, McAlindon Overall Outcome 1–7, 9–18, 20, 22–27 1–7, 9–18, 20, 22 This decision contains a new ground of rejection entered pursuant to 37 C.F.R. § 41.50(b). Section 41.50(b) provides that “[a] new ground of rejection pursuant to this paragraph shall not be considered final for judicial review.” Section 41.50(b) also provides: When the Board enters such a non-final decision, the appellant, within two months from the date of the decision, must exercise one of the following two options with respect to the new ground of rejection to avoid termination of the appeal as to the rejected claims: (1) Reopen prosecution. Submit an appropriate amendment of the claims so rejected or new Evidence relating to the claims so rejected, or both, and have the matter reconsidered by the examiner, in which event the prosecution will be remanded to the examiner. The new ground of rejection is binding upon the examiner unless an amendment or new Evidence not previously of Record is made which, in the opinion of the examiner, overcomes the new ground of rejection designated in the decision. Should the examiner reject the claims, appellant may again appeal to the Board pursuant to this subpart. (2) Request rehearing. Request that the proceeding be reheard under § 41.52 by the Board upon the same Record. The request for rehearing must address any new ground of rejection and state with particularity the points believed to have been misapprehended or overlooked in entering the new ground of rejection and also state all other grounds upon which rehearing is sought. Appeal 2020-003362 Application 13/543,044 22 Further guidance on responding to a new ground of rejection can be found in the MANUAL OF PATENT EXAMINING PROCEDURE § 1214.01 (9th Ed., Rev. 08.2017, Jan. 2018). 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)(1)(iv). AFFIRMED; 37 C.F.R. § 41.50(b) Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation