A fillip for the pharmaceutical sector

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

A fillip for the pharmaceutical sector

Case of the Year: Neurim v UK government

circadin.jpg

The result

SPCs can be obtained for second medical use patents

The impact

A bonus for pharma companies investing in the development of products for different uses

The Court of Justice of the EU has little to do with patents (at least for now). So when it does rule in one of the limited patent-related areas over which it has jurisdiction, IP attorneys await its rulings with perhaps greater trepidation than normal. It was only last year, after all, that the Court curbed the patentability of human embryonic stem cells in Brüstle, a ruling that clarified the directive on the legal protection of biotechnological inventions.

But this year the Court gave pharmaceutical companies something of a fillip in a dispute related to supplementary protection certificates (SPCs). This is a sui generis right that effectively extends the life of a patent on a specific pharmaceutical-type product by compensating the owner for the time spent obtaining regulatory approval to put it on the market.

At the end of 2009, a hearing officer at the UK Intellectual Property Office IPO refused to grant Neurim an SPC for its product Ciracadin (melatonin). Circadin is used to treat insomnia and the basic patent concerns the use of melatonin to correct a distortion or deficiency in the plasma melatonin profile of humans.

The Office said that because melatonin had already been marketed since 2001 (by CEVA Animal Health under the name Regulin), Neurim's product was not eligible for an SPC. In particular, the hearing officer said that the intended use of the medicinal product could not be taken into account when considering the relevance of an earlier marketing authorisation.

The patent owner took the case to the High Court. At first instance, Mr Justice Arnold upheld the IPO's decision but the Court of Appeal later referred five questions to Europe's highest court. Writing for the Court of Appeal, Lord Justice Jacob (as he was then), made it clear that he thought the lower court had got it wrong. If its finding was right, he said, then "the Regulation will not have achieved its key objects for large areas of pharmaceutical research: it will not be fit for purpose. Whether that is so or not is clearly a matter for the EU's highest court".

Now the Court of Justice of the EU has offered its support to Jacob's interpretation of the rules on SPCs.

"The mere existence of an earlier marketing authorisation obtained for a veterinary medicinal product does not preclude the grant of a supplementary protection certificate for a different application of the same product for which a marketing authorisation has been granted," said the Court, "provided that the application is within the limits of the protection conferred by the basic patent relied upon for the purposes of the application for the supplementary protection certificate."

The ruling was good news for Neurim and other pharmaceutical companies investing in the development of products for different uses. But like a number of Court of Justice rulings, it leaves questions unanswered. Is there, for example, a distinction between obtaining earlier marketing authorisation for veterinary use of a product and human use? While IP owners welcomed Neurim, it was far from being the last word on SPCs.

Case details

Neurim v UK government

Patent number: EP (UK) 0 518 468

Invention: Melatonin to treat insomnia (branded as Circadin)

Technology: Pharmaceuticals

Patent owner: Neurim Pharmaceuticals

Other party involved: UK IPO

Courts: Court of Justice of the EU following a referral by the Court of Appeal in London

For Neurim: Carpmaels & Ransford

For the UK government: S Ossowski and A Robinson as agents and Charlotte May

This case was selected as one of Managing IP’s Cases of the Year for 2012.

To see the rest, click on one of the cases below.

The 10 cases of the year

A fillip for the EU pharmaceutical sector

Relief for trade mark owners in red sole saga

Australian TV streaming service held to be illegal

Smartphone war hits front page in the US

Liberalising the EU’s software market

India allows parallel imports

Victory for fair dealing in Canada

Lacoste loses its trade mark in China

Google prevails in Android attack

EU test case clarifies class headings

Ten you might have missed

Canada: Ambiguous claims can invalidate patents

Russia: Certainty on parallel imports

Italy: TV formats win copyright for the first time

First FRAND cases litigated worldwide

Monsanto loses in Brazil

Data exclusivity backed by Mexican courts

China: A shift over OEM manufacturing

Authors in the US able to reclaim joint copyrights

Germany: Knitted trainers a sign of the future

India: Financial Times loses trade mark

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Counsel explain how the USPTO’s decision to discretionarily deny institution of a PTAB case affects their advice to clients
The Life Sciences Awards announces the winners for the 6th annual awards
The UPC’s plans to roll out its new Case Management System and a setback for TikTok in India were also among the top talking points
Trademark specialist Jonathan Thomas says he’s excited to introduce his clients to other areas of Greenberg Traurig’s practice
Counsel at firms responsible for managing the highest number of registered trademarks explain the secrets behind staying organised and keeping the work flowing in
Attorneys explain what stakeholders should know about Patent Term Adjustments in Brazil, more than three years after a landmark Brazilian Supreme Court ruling
New categories have been added to reflect a changing legal and social landscape
Three sources explain why a notification by Nanjing’s IP centre in China banning AI use in patent drafting is too broad and could be difficult to enforce
Sheppard Mullin’s latest hires explain why the firm's industry expertise impressed them
Elizabeth Godfrey explains why she doesn’t believe in a ‘salesperson’ approach to BD, and reveals how AI is playing an important role at Davies Collison Cave
Gift this article