In the end, Merck effectively stole the data and applied it to their own patent work. They got caught and have now been made to pay.
The drug is important as it generally cures Hep C, but it was never Merck's in the first place
This is more important in terms of revealing the corporate culture involved here..
Big Pharma bombshell: Judge finds Merck lied in patent trial, overturns $200-million verdict
Michael Hiltzik
http://www.latimes.com/business/hiltzik/la-fi-hiltzik-merck-gilead-20160608-snap-story.html
The public already holds drug manufacturers
in low esteem – and now they’ve got more fuel for their
opinion. Federal Judge Beth Labson Freeman of San Jose last week
found that Merck & Co. lied to a business partner
and to the court itself. Freeman threw out a patent infringement
judgment Merck had won against Gilead Sciences, and overturned a
$200-million jury award.
This was a big deal, involving one of
the most profitable drugs on the market today — Foster City,
Calif.-based Gilead’s blockbuster Sovaldi treatment for the hepatitis C
virus — and the world’s fourth-largest drug company Merck.
It’s also an enormous black eye for Merck, whose activities the judge
said consisted of “systematic and outrageous deception in conjunction
with unethical business practices and litigation misconduct.”
But
the case does more than raise questions about the integrity of a huge
corporation. It’s a window into the extent to which the nation’s
overworked patent inspectors can be misled by applicants backed by big
corporate war chests in pursuit of billions of dollars in potential
profits.
Legal
experts have wrestled with that issue for years. “Catching fraud or
other forms of cheating in the patent process is unlikely given the
practical limits of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office,” T. Leigh
Anenson and Gideon Mark of the University of Maryland wrote in a 2013 law review article.
Often,
courts have punished applicants who obtain patents through cheating by
leaving the patents in place, but making them unenforceable by the
wrongdoer.
That’s what Judge Freeman did — she barred Merck from
collecting a dime from Gilead for the two patents it supposedly
infringed. “People have referred to unenforceability as the atomic bomb
of patent lit,” says patent expert Jacob Sherkow of New York Law School.
Merck itself alluded to the value of a strong patent system in announcing its court victory
in March, when it spoke sanctimoniously about how the jury verdict
“upholds patent protections that are essential to the development of new
medical treatments.” A spokesman for the company reiterated the point
last week in commenting on Judge Freeman’s ruling. But Merck insisted
that the hepatitis C drugs at the heart of the case “required many years
of research and significant investment by Merck and its partners.”
Freeman’s ruling has given Gilead the upper hand, for now, in trying to settle the dispute with Merck, which plans to appeal.
The
evidence examined by Freeman strongly suggests that Merck flagrantly
manipulated the patent process to gain unfair advantage.
Sovaldi
and its related Gilead product, Harvoni, have been huge moneymakers for
Gilead, bringing the company more than $20 billion in sales since the
first drug was introduced in 2013. There’s no mystery why, since the
drugs almost invariably cure hepatitis C with minimal side effects – a
big improvement over previous treatments. The drugs are so effective
that Gilead’s stratospheric pricing for them has become Exhibit A in the national controversy over the cost of drugs.
The
case began in 2013, when Merck claimed that its patents covered Sovaldi
and demanded royalties and license fees from Gilead. Gilead refused,
and sued to declare Merck’s patents invalid. The trial jury rebuffed
that argument and ordered Gilead to pay Merck $200 million, plus future
royalties – far less than the $2 billion that Merck had sought.
“That
would have been the single largest patent damages award in U.S.
history,” Sherkow says. Across the biotech industry, opinion was that
Gilead got off easy.
But Gilead really drew blood when it accused Merck of coming to the patent battle with “unclean hands.”
Its
claims stemmed from Merck’s interactions with Pharmasset, the New
Jersey biotech firm that had invented Sovaldi and was acquired by Gilead
in 2011 for $11 billion. Gilead’s story left Judge Freeman appalled.
She described the company’s behavior as “systematic and outrageous
deception in conjunction with unethical business practices and
litigation misconduct.” That conduct included “lying to Pharmasset,
misusing Pharmasset’s confidential information, breaching
confidentiality and firewall agreements, and lying under oath at
deposition and trial.”
Much of the judge’s ire was directed at
retired Merck patent attorney Phillippe Durette, who was working on
patents for antiviral drugs during a period when Merck was trying to
reach its own deal with Pharmasset.
Merck signed a nondisclosure
agreement, or NDA, with Pharmasset, pledging not to use the latter’s
secret information for any purpose other than to decide whether to
pursue the relationship. Pharmasset turned over information including
the structure of a key formulation to a single Merck scientist who was
to be “firewalled” — that is, he couldn’t discuss it with anyone in
Merck’s own drug development loop.
That worked until a March 2004 conference call between Merck and
Pharmasset officials aimed at advancing a possible deal. Pharmasset was
willing to reveal details of its formulas on the call, because it was
led to believe everyone on the call would be subject to the
confidentiality agreement. But the participants included Durette, who
wasn’t firewalled and was in a position to turn what he heard into a
potential goldmine for Merck.
According to Freeman, that’s what
happened. Durette, who she said shouldn’t have been allowed on the call
in the first place, should immediately have been excluded from Merck’s
existing hepatitis C drug development program. Instead, he rewrote
Merck’s earlier patent claims so that they would apply to Pharmasset’s
upcoming release of its hepatitis-C drug. In 2011, Merck even
threatened Pharmasset with a patent lawsuit over the drug.
What
irked the judge even more, she ruled, is that Durette lied. In a
deposition, he repeatedly denied having been on the call. He recanted
at trial only after he was confronted with notes taken by a Pharmasset
employee during the call, proving that he had participated. At that
point, he pleaded a faulty memory.
Freeman didn’t buy it. “It is
overwhelmingly clear...,” she ruled, “that Dr. Durette sought at every
turn to create the false impression that Merck’s conduct was
aboveboard.” She blamed Merck, which she said “sponsored and encouraged”
his conduct, then sought to minimize its importance by attributing the
fiasco to “the failed memory of a retired employee.”
Adding to
the temerity of the big drugmaker, it originally sued Gilead for $2
billion before having to settle for $200 million. Now, pending appeal,
it won’t get even that much for its patent claims, and its reputation
for integrity will carry a value of less than zero.
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