Gilead
Sciences wins reversal of $1.2 billion award in patent
case with Bristol Myers
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[August 27, 2021]
By Blake Brittain and Ankur Banerjee
(Reuters) - A U.S. appeals court on
Thursday threw out a $1.2 billion ruling against Gilead Sciences Inc,
finding a patent on a cancer therapy it was accused of infringing was
invalid, in a blow to rival Bristol Myers Squibb Co.
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The two companies have been embroiled in a case involving
accusations that Yescarta, the CAR-T cell cancer immunotherapy from
Gilead's Kite Pharma unit, infringed on a patent for a similar
therapy from Bristol's Juno Therapeutics.
Last year, a federal judge increased the damages from a jury trial
and ordered Gilead to pay Bristol Myers $1.2 billion in the patent
infringement case. The ruling on Thursday by the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Federal Circuit reversed the decision.
Bristol Myers in a statement said it disagreed with latest ruling
and would seek a review of the Federal Circuit’s decision.
Gilead and Kite's attorney Josh Rosenkranz of Orrick Herrington &
Sutcliffe did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Gilead shares were up 0.3%, while Bristol shares were off 0.5% in
midday trading.
The Gilead drug, Yescarta, belongs to a class of cutting-edge cancer
treatments known as chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy, or
CAR-T, which reprograms the body's own immune cells to recognize and
attack malignant cells.
Gilead bought Kite Pharma, which developed Yescarta, for $11.9
billion in 2017, with the treatment securing U.S. approval that
year. It recorded sales of $338 million in the first six months of
this year.
A jury in 2019 found that Kite willfully infringed and awarded Juno
and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York, which
licenses the patent to Juno, $778 million. U.S. District Judge
Philip Gutierrez increased the award to $1.2 billion in Los Angeles
federal court last year.
[to top of second column] |
Memorial Sloan Kettering did
not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
Bristol Myers acquired Juno and its CAR-T
program with its $74 billion purchase of Celgene
in 2019.
Chief U.S. Circuit Judge Kimberly Moore wrote
for a unanimous three-judge panel that the
relevant parts of Juno’s patent were invalid
because they lacked a sufficient written
description and details.
Moore was joined by Circuit Judges Sharon Prost
and Kathleen O'Malley in the ruling.
During a July oral argument
https://www.reuters.com/legal/
transactional/fed-circ-probes-validity-cancer-treatment-patent-12-bln-win-2021-07-06,
Moore compared the patent's description to
trying to identify a specific car by saying it
has four wheels.
This story corrects paragraph 1 and 2 to show
one patent, not patents.
(Reporting by Ankur Banerjee in Bengaluru and
Blake Brittain in New York; Editing by Bill
Berkrot)
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