US Supreme Court Throws Out Bristol Myers Appeal On Cancer-Drug Related Patent With Gilead

  • The U.S. Supreme Court turned away an appeal made by rebuffed efforts made by Bristol Myers Squibb Co’s (NYSE: BMYJuno Therapeutics Inc to reinstate a $1.2 billion award it won in its patent fight with Gilead Sciences Inc’s (NASDAQ: GILDKite Pharma Inc over Yescarts, a lymphoma drug.

  • Juno and Sloan Kettering Institute for Cancer Research sued Kite in 2017 in a federal court in Los Angeles, accusing it of copying technology the institute licenses to Juno. A jury awarded the plaintiffs $778 million in damages, which a judge later increased to $1.2 billion.

  • But the patent-focused U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit dismissed the award last year, finding that the patent was invalid because it lacked a sufficient written description.

  • A Bristol Myers Squibb spokesperson said it had sought high-court review to “restore the proper balance to our innovation economy by reaffirming the existing patent statute, which requires only a ‘written description of the invention’ that is adequate to inform skilled workers how to make and use it.”

  • “We will continue to work to correct this imbalance and the erroneous standard that the Federal Circuit has set,” Reuters reported citing the spokesperson.

  • A Gilead spokesperson said the company was pleased with the Supreme Court’s decision, which has “effectively ended” the dispute.

  • Juno told the Supreme Court in its appeal that the Federal Circuit’s validity standard for patents forces biologic inventors to outline an “essentially infinite number” of potential variations in a patent.

  • Price Action: BMY shares are up 0.07% at $78.84 on the last check Monday.

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Source: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/us-supreme-court-throws-bristol-182024384.html