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Biosimilars Deals 2021

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Federal Court of Australia Awards Janssen First Pharmaceutical Patent Preliminary Injunction in 7 Years

 

Date of decision: 5 December 2025
Body: Federal Court
Adjudicator: Justice Burley

Introduction

On 5 December 2025, Justice Burley of the Federal Court of Australia granted Janssen a preliminary injunction to restrain Juno Pharmaceuticals from launching generic versions of paliperidone palmitate long acting injectables (LAIs) used for the treatment of schizophrenia pending a final hearing of the matter.

Remarkably, the decision is the first preliminary injunction to be granted in a pharmaceutical patent infringement proceeding in Australia since mid-2018.  Since Justice Jagot’s landmark decision in Sigma Pharmaceuticals (Australia) Pty Ltd v Wyeth (2018) 136 IPR 8; [2018] FCA 1556, which highlighted the “many complexities involved in compensating a generic manufacturer for a wrongly granted preliminary injunction”, the Federal Court has consistently refused such applications.  Justice Rofe’s refusal just three months earlier in Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v Sandoz Pty Ltd [2025] FCA 1067 (Regeneron v Sandoz), which we reported on here, appeared to confirm this trend.  Justice Burley’s decision, however, demonstrates that in the right circumstances, the Federal Court will grant preliminary injunctions in favour of pharmaceutical patentees.

Background

The dispute concerns Australian patent no. AU2008340101 (the Patent), entitled “Dosing regimen associated with long acting injectable paliperidone esters”.  The Patent outlines a dosing regimen for injectable paliperidone palmitate, based on research demonstrating that the drug exhibits “flip-flop kinetics” and achieves better results with injections into the deltoid muscles.  Claim 1 of the Patent claimed a regimen involving two initial deltoid injections on day one and between days 6-10 (loading doses of 150 mg-eq and then 100 mg-eq), followed by monthly maintenance doses of 25-150 mg-eq.

Janssen is the sponsor of pharmaceutical goods for the treatment of schizophrenia by paliperidone palmitate LAIs under the trade names INEVGA SUSTENNA (monthly), INVEGA TRINZA (three-monthly) and INVEGA HAFYERA (six-monthly) (collectively, the INVEGA Products).  Juno has been the sponsor on the ARTG since 28 February 2025 for two one-monthly generic paliperidone LAI products: PALJUNA MONTHLY and VALINO MONTHLY.

Consideration

The application for a preliminary injunction turned on two key questions: whether Janssen had established a prima facie case of infringement (including consideration of Juno’s invalidity arguments); and where the balance of convenience lay.

Strong Prima Facie Infringement

Janssen alleged that Juno would infringe the Patent pursuant to sections 117(2)(b)-(c) (infringement by supply) and section 13 of the Act (infringement by authorisation).

Janssen submitted that the infringement case was relatively straightforward for VALINO MONTHLY, as the product information (PI) was materially the same as the INVEGA SUSTENNA PI and as there were clear instructions to use VALINO MONTHLY for initiating and maintenance doses within the scope of claim 1. Accordingly,  Juno did not seek to defend the infringement case for this product on the basis that it did not authorise such use nor was a joint tortfeasor or infringer pursuant to s 117(2) of the Act. 

The more interesting question arose in relation to PALJUNA MONTHLY.  Its PI did not itself provide instructions for loading doses.  Instead, it directed practitioners that “patients needed to be initiated with another long-acting antipsychotic injection prior to progressing to maintenance dosing” and referred to INVEGA SYSTENNA being “available from another sponsor” for initiation dosing.

Juno argued that there would be no act of primary infringement because the initiating dose would be prescribed using INVEGA SUSTENNA, conduct authorised by Janssen.  Accordingly, Juno submitted it could not be said to ‘authorise’ any infringing conduct.  Juno accepted that there was novelty in this argument as no authority has dealt with the situation where elements of a method said to be infringed have been authorised by the patentee.

However, his Honour’s preliminary view was that by way of the instructions in the PALJUNA MONTHLY PI, “Juno is sanctioning, approving or countenancing the use of PALJUNA MONTHLY as part of a course of treatment that includes the provision of ongoing maintenance doses as part of a dosing regimen (or method) that includes the provision of initiating or maintenance doses”.

Janssen relied on various authorities which demonstrated that where a party supplies parts of a patented product together with instructions to supply a missing integer from another source, the claim will nevertheless be infringed.  Justice Burley also referred to the Full Court’s observations in Ramset[1], that:

[w]here a vendor sets out to make a profit by the supply of that which is patented, but omitting some link the customer can easily furnish, particularly if the customer is actually told how to furnish it and how to use the product in accordance with the patent, the court may find the vendor has ‘made himself a party to the [ultimate] act of infringement.

Juno also submitted that a proportion of patients would use the Juno products in a manner not falling within claim 1, including psychiatrists who do not prescribe in accordance with the PI; patients who fail to take their medicine as prescribed; patients with mild renal impairment who are prescribed doses outside the range claimed; patients switching from different LAI antipsychotics; and missed dose scenarios.  His Honour accepted that these represented “a small but non-trivial cohort” whose use would not amount to infringement, but noted that “the vast majority of uses of the Juno products would fall within the scope of the claims”.  Accordingly, his Honour’s preliminary view was that the prima facie case for infringement was strong.

Invalidity arguments

Juno relied on two grounds of invalidity; lack of inventive step and false suggestion.  Neither was determinative of the application.

Inventive step: Juno contended that the asserted claims lacked an inventive step having regard to the common general knowledge and the disclosure in Revill et al (2006) and three clinical trials referenced in that article.  His Honour found that Juno had “an arguable or prima facie case” that the asserted claims lacked an inventive step and that Janssen’s counterarguments, at least on a preliminary basis, did not demonstrate that the lack of inventive step case was “particularly weak”.  However, Justice Burley observed that a challenge based on lack of inventive step “involves a complex process of fact finding and legal analysis” and that “the ground of invalidity is ill suited to the objective that Juno seeks to attain, which is to demonstrate weakness in the prima facie case of infringement asserted against it”.

False Suggestion: Juno argued that the specification falsely represented that administering loading doses in the deltoid muscle leading to a faster rise of initial blood plasma concentrations was a “discovery” and that the identification of flip-flop kinetics was a “discovery”.  On the submissions available to him, his Honour found these grounds to be “arguable” but did not express a view on their strength, noting conflicts in the expert evidence and that materiality of the representations would turn on construction of the specification as a whole.

Justice Burley concluded that, while Juno had an arguable invalidity case, it did not “rise to the level that it diminishes the strength of the infringement arguments”.

Balance of Convenience

Turning to the balance of convenience analysis, Justice Burley considered a range of factors, including:

  • the PBS price disclosure regime and likely price reductions;
  • potential entry by other generic competitors;
  • Juno’s first mover advantage; and
  • difficulties associated with the calculation of the parties’ losses should an injunction be granted or denied.

PBS Price Reductions: Unlike cases involving the mandatory 25% price drop triggered by the first PBS listing of a generic product, the INVEGA products had already undergone automatic anniversary price cuts, including a 26.1% cut on 1 April 2023 in accordance with the 15th anniversary of listing on the F1 formulary.  However, price disclosure obligations would still apply upon generic entry, resulting in the move of the INVEGA products to the F2 formulary, potentially triggering further reductions.

Justice Burley noted that any statutory price disclosure reduction would not come into effect until at least 12 months after generic entry, with the Patent expiring in December 2028.  His Honour expressed scepticism about Janssen’s claims that mandatory reductions would occur before expiry, finding there was “a real prospect that the first 12 months of competitive trade will not result in a difference between the [Approved Ex-Manufacturer Price] and [Weighted Average Disclosed Price] of greater than 10%”.

Other Generic Entrants:  Teva and Amdipharm had obtained ARTG listings for paliperidone LAIs but neither had applied for PBS listing.  In responses to letters written by Janssen, Teva indicated it had “no present intention” to launch before expiry of the Patent but would not provide the requested undertakings if Juno was not restrained.  Similarly, correspondence from Amdipharm indicated that it would take the outcome of the preliminary injunction application into account in deciding upon its launch plans, but undertook not to supply its products to the Australian market prior to 1 May 2026.  His Honour concluded that it was “a possibility” that additional generics would enter before patent expiry, but on the submissions before him, it could not be “regarded as a probability”.

First Mover Advantage: Justice Burley accepted that the first generic supplier “is likely to have competitive advantages over later generic entrants”, which was characterised by Juno’s witness as “enormous”.  However, the assessment of the value and duration of that advantage was “speculative”, which, in his Honour’s view, favoured Juno on the balance of convenience given the uncertainty of the assessment.  In his assessment of the balance of convenience, his Honour also considered it relevant that, to counter the effect on Juno losing its first mover advantage, Janssen offered an undertaking that if Juno is restrained, Janssen would notify and take steps to enjoin any other generic seeking to list the PBS, and would not itself launch an authorised generic.

Calculating Damages: His Honour rejected Janssen’s submission that calculating damages would be equally difficult in both scenarios.  In a non-restraint scenario where Janssen succeeds at trial, damages may be calculated against Janssen’s “lengthy period of exclusivity” which provides “a ready benchmark against which disruption of the market may be calculated”.  In contrast, calculating damages on the undertaking involved “many uncertainties”, including unknown countermeasures by Janssen in terms of pricing, whether other generics would enter the market, and the duration of Juno’s first mover advantage.  His Honour concluded that “the inherent difficulty in calculating a fair assessment of damages to Juno on the undertaking as to damages on the restraint scenario is greater than calculating damages to Janssen consequent of any finding of infringement in the non-restraint scenario”.

Outcome and implications

Justice Burley granted the interlocutory injunction, with the costs of the application to be costs in the proceeding.  His Honour was ultimately satisfied that a preliminary injunction was appropriate, taking into account both the strength of Janssen’s infringement case, which was not diminished by Juno’s invalidity arguments, and each of the balance of convenience considerations.

His Honour’s decision breaks the trend of Australian courts since mid-2018 refusing preliminary injunction applications in pharmaceutical patent cases.  The key distinguishing feature from recent unsuccessful applications is the strength of Janssen’s infringement case, which contrasts with Justice Rofe’s finding in Regeneron v Sandoz, where her Honour found a “real prospect” that use in accordance with the PI would not infringe due to the difference between “weeks” (as claimed) and “months” (as instructed in the PI).


[1] Ramset Fasteners (Aust) Pty Ltd v Advanced Building Systems Pty Ltd [1999] FCA 898; 164 ALR 239


 

About Pearce IP

Pearce IP is a specialist firm offering intellectual property specialist lawyers and attorneys with a focus on the life sciences industries.  Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory for legal, patent and trade mark excellence, including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, 5 Star IP Lawyers, among others.

In 2025, Pearce IP was recognised by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer’s 5 Star Employer of Choice, and is the “Standout Winner” for inclusion and culture for firms with less than 100 employees. Pearce IP was awarded “IP Team of the Year” by Lawyers Weekly at the 2021 Australian Law Awards. Pearce IP is recognised by Managing IP as the only leading ANZ IP firm with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.

 

Helen Macpherson

Helen Macpherson

Executive, Lawyer (Head of Litigation –Australia)

Helen is a highly regarded intellectual property specialist and industry leader with more than 25 years’ experience advising on patents, plant breeder’s rights, trade marks, copyright and confidential information. She is known for her expertise in complex, high-value patent matters and leverages her technical background in biochemistry and molecular biology to work across a wide range of technologies, including inorganic, organic, physical and process chemistry, biochemistry, biotechnology (including genetics, molecular biology and virology), and physics. Helen is an active member of the Intellectual Property Committee of the Law Council of Australia and the Intellectual Property Society of Australia and New Zealand.

Nathan Kan

Nathan Kan

Lawyer

Nathan is a lawyer specialising in life sciences, providing legal advice and litigation support across intellectual property and commercial disputes. He is passionate about the intersection of law and science, and during his time with the Science and Technology Law Association at the University of Melbourne, he helped lead events, workshops and publications across STEM fields including life sciences, AI and digital transformation.

Pearce IP BioBlast® for the week ending 12 December 2025

Pearce IP provides weekly reports on global biosimilars activities in the Pearce IP BioBlast®.  Significant biosimilar activities for the week ending 12 December 2025 are set out below:


Aflibercept

13 December 2025 | UK | EU | Biocon Secures UK/EU/ROW Settlement with Regeneron/Bayer for Biosimilar Aflibercept; UK Launch in Jan 2026
On 13 December 2025, Biocon Biologics announced that it has reached a settlement and licence agreement with Regeneron and Bayer for Yesafili®, biosimilar to Regeneron/Bayer’s… Read more here.

Aflibercept, Golimumab

At its December 2025 meeting, the European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) recommended indication extensions for a number of… Read more here.

Denosumab

10 December 2025 | IN | Zydus Launches Biosimilar Denosumab in India
On 10 December 2025, Zydus Lifesciences announced the Indian launch of Zyrifa™ (denosumab 120mg SC), biosimilar to Amgen’s Xgeva® (denosumab).  The launch of Zydus’… Read more here.

Dupilumab

On 8 December 2025, GxP News reported that Russia’s Binnopharm Group and China’s Mabwell have signed a MOU in relation to localising the production of Mabwell’s biosimilar… Read more here.

Golimumab, Ranibizumab

12 December 2025 | EU | Positive CHMP Opinions for Bio-Thera/STADA’s Golimumab & Lupin’s Ranibizumab Biosimilars
On 12 December 2025, the European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) announced the outcomes of its December 2025 meeting… Read more here.

Nivolumab

11 December 2025 | US | FDA Grants Priority Review to BMS’ sBLA for Opdivo® Plus Chemo for Classical Hodgkin Lymphoma
On 11 December 2025, Bristol Myers Squibb announced that the FDA has granted priority review to its supplemental Biologics License Application (sBLA) for Opdivo® (nivolumab)… Read more here.

Pembrolizumab

9 December 2025 | US | CA | Formycon & Zydus Ink Exclusive Deal for Biosimilar Pembrolizumab in US & Canada
On 9 December 2025, Formycon and Zydus Lifesciences announced that they have entered into an exclusive licensing and supply agreement for the commercialisation of FYB206… Read more here.

Tocilizumab

12 December 2025 | US | Celltrion Signs Listing Agreement with Major US PBM for Biosimilar Tocilizumab
On 12 December 2025, Celltrion announced that it had successfully secured reimbursement coverage for Avtozma® IV, biosimilar to Roche’s Actemra® (tocilizumab), in the US, having… Read more here.

BioPharma Deals

10 December 2025 | BR | Polpharma & Libbs Farmacêutica Partner on Autoimmune Disease Biosimilar in Brazil
On 10 December 2025, Polpharma Biologics announced that it has entered a licence agreement with Brazilian pharmaceutical company, Libbs Farmacêutica, for the commercialisation… Read more here.

 
 

About Pearce IP

Pearce IP is a specialist firm offering intellectual property specialist lawyers and attorneys with a focus on the life sciences industries.  Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory for legal, patent and trade mark excellence, including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, 5 Star IP Lawyers, among others.

In 2025, Pearce IP was recognised by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer’s 5 Star Employer of Choice, and is the “Standout Winner” for inclusion and culture for firms with less than 100 employees. Pearce IP was awarded “IP Team of the Year” by Lawyers Weekly at the 2021 Australian Law Awards. Pearce IP is recognised by Managing IP as the only leading ANZ IP firm with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.

 

Naomi Pearce

Naomi Pearce

CEO, Executive Lawyer (AU, NZ), Patent Attorney (AU, NZ) & Trade Mark Attorney (AU)

Naomi is the founder of Pearce IP, and is one of Australia’s leading IP practitioners.   Naomi is a market leading, strategic, commercially astute, patent lawyer, patent attorney and trade mark attorney, with over 25 years’ experience, and a background in molecular biology/biochemistry.  Ranked in virtually every notable legal directory, highly regarded by peers and clients, with a background in molecular biology, Naomi is renown for her successful and elegant IP/legal strategies.

Among other awards, Naomi is ranked in Chambers, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, is a MIP “Patent Star”, and is recognised as a WIPR Leader for patents and trade marks. Naomi is the 2023 Lawyers Weekly “IP Partner of the Year”, the 2022 Lexology client choice award recipient for Life Sciences, the 2022 Asia Pacific Women in Business Law “Patent Lawyer of the Year” and the 2021 Lawyers Weekly Women in Law SME “Partner of the Year”.  Naomi is the founder of Pearce IP, which commenced in 2017 and won 2021 “IP Team of the Year” at the Australian Law Awards.

Chantal Savage

Chantal Savage

Special Counsel, Lawyer

Chantal is an intellectual property disputes lawyer with experience advising across the spectrum of IP rights, including patents, trade marks, copyright, plant breeder’s rights and trade secrets/confidential information. Recognised as a Rising Star in IP by the Legal 500 Asia Pacific (2021-2024), Chantal has previously worked for international and top tier law firms in Australia and the United Kingdom and now at Pearce IP.

With a science degree specialising in molecular biology and biochemistry, Chantal’s practice focuses particularly on complex, high-value, multi-jurisdictional patent infringement and revocation proceedings for clients in the life sciences sectors.

Nathan Kan

Nathan Kan

Lawyer

Nathan is a lawyer specialising in life sciences, providing legal advice and litigation support across intellectual property and commercial disputes. He is passionate about the intersection of law and science, and during his time with the Science and Technology Law Association at the University of Melbourne, he helped lead events, workshops and publications across STEM fields including life sciences, AI and digital transformation.

Pearce IP and Leaders Recognised in Chambers Asia-Pacific 2026 Rankings for Third Consecutive Year

Pearce IP has again been ranked in Chambers Asia-Pacific Guide 2026 rankings for Intellectual Property for the third consecutive year.

In addition to the firm-wide ranking, Pearce IP is proud to recognise the individual rankings achieved by three of its leading lawyers:

Naomi Pearce |
Founder & CEO, Executive Lawyer, Patent and Trade Mark Attorney |
Ranked for Intellectual Property: Patents, Australia and
Life Sciences, Australia

Helen Macpherson |
Executive Lawyer & Head of Litigation AU |
Ranked for Intellectual Property: Patents, Australia

Paul Johns |
Executive Lawyer, Trade Mark Attorney & Head of Litigation NZ |
Ranked for Intellectual Property, New Zealand

The Chambers rankings are among the most rigorous and globally respected in the industry and region. These multiple recognitions are an ongoing testament to the technical excellence, commercial insight, and outstanding client service delivered by the Pearce IP team.

Helen Macpherson noted:

“…it’s wonderful to be recognised again. This recognition reflects the dedication of our team and, importantly, the strong partnerships we have with our clients in protecting and enforcing their intellectual property.”

Paul Johns added:

“Being recognised in the Chambers Asia-Pacific 2026 rankings for the third consecutive year is a tremendous honour. The rigour and depth of their research make this recognition particularly meaningful, reflecting the quality and impact of our work in intellectual property across New Zealand and the region.”

Pearce IP’s consistent recognition underscores the firm’s expertise and leadership in delivering intellectual property services across the Asia-Pacific region.


About Pearce IP

Pearce IP is a specialist firm offering intellectual property specialist lawyers and attorneys with a focus on the life sciences industries.  Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory for legal, patent and trade mark excellence, including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, 5 Star IP Lawyers, among others.

In 2025, Pearce IP was recognised by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer’s 5 Star Employer of Choice, and is the “Standout Winner” for inclusion and culture for firms with less than 100 employees. Pearce IP was awarded “IP Team of the Year” by Lawyers Weekly at the 2021 Australian Law Awards. Pearce IP is recognised by Managing IP as the only leading ANZ IP firm with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.

 

Swiss-style Patent Claims In New Zealand – Part 2 Law and Policy

Swiss-style (or Swiss-type) patent claims  have been routinely sought and granted in New Zealand for many years[1].  However, the New Zealand courts are yet to determine the question of what conduct will infringe such a claim.  This article is the second in a series that explores the history of Swiss-style and Swiss-type claims (referred to herein simply as “Swiss claims”) in New Zealand, the relevant law and policy considerations, and the likely judicial approach to the question of infringement.

The first instalment in this series gave a brief history of Swiss claims in New Zealand.  This second part looks at New Zealand law relevant to the infringement of Swiss claims and the commercial and economic circumstances that inform New Zealand’s policy approach to patent law.  The final article in this series will consider how this law might be applied in light of those policy considerations.

Infringement of Swiss claims

The common understanding of Swiss claims is that any infringing conduct will be that of a manufacturer using the substance the subject of the claim for manufacturing a medicament for the claimed purpose.  Further, a medical practitioner using the medicament itself to treat a patient will not be at risk of infringing.  These perceptions may warrant closer consideration in a New Zealand context.

New Zealand statute law

Under the Patents Act 2013[2], a typical Swiss claim will be directly infringed if a person, in New Zealand, does any of the following in respect of the medicament claimed:

  • (a) manufactures the medicament;
  • (b) sells the medicament;
  • (c) “otherwise disposes” of the medicament;
  • (d) offers to do any of (a), (b), or (c);
  • (e) uses the medicament;
  • (f) imports the medicament;
  • (g) keeps the medicament for the purpose of doing any of the above.

It will also be an infringement[3] to supply or offer to supply, in New Zealand, an essential element of the invention, such as the pharmaceutical substance (i.e. the API) referred to in a Swiss claim, for the manufacture of the claimed medicament for the claimed purpose, if that supplier knew or ought reasonably to have known that the substance was suitable for that purpose and that the person being supplied intended to use it for that purpose, and that by doing so the person would themselves infringe.

Common law

New Zealand law also recognises the common law doctrine imposing joint liability where two or more parties participate in a common design that intends and results in an act that infringes a patent.

When confronting the issue of infringement of Swiss claims, the New Zealand courts will without doubt consider the law of other common law countries.  New Zealand’s derivation of its patent law from UK law, and its paucity of domestic patent case law, mean that foreign law is frequently considered in determining New Zealand cases.  Data are scarce[4], but generally UK and Australian law are the most common influences, with Canadian and US law also frequently cited.  To the extent that foreign law would be given any weight, preference is likely to be given to jurisdictions with the most similar legal context, being those in which method of medical treatment claims are deemed unpatentable.  Like New Zealand, the UK has a statutory exclusion of method of treatment claims[5].  Canada generally excludes such claims on a common law basis.  Australia and the USA allow method of treatment claims.

Infringement – New Zealand context

New Zealand imports the majority of its domestically-used pharmaceutical drugs.  It has a relatively small local manufacturing industry that supplies domestically and for export.  Any major infringement action involving a Swiss claim is likely to involve a foreign patent owner claiming primary infringement by importation into New Zealand of, and subsequent dealing in, a product of the process of the claim.

New Zealand’s medicines regulatory regime is generally consistent with those of other developed countries.  An application for approval, including safety and efficacy data from clinical trials, is made to the government regulator, Medsafe.  Medsafe will approve medicines for distribution for specific indications, including approval of a package label, data sheet, and Consumer Medicine Information document.  Medicines may be approved for sale over-the-counter, pharmacy-only, or by prescription.  Certain medical practitioners are nevertheless able to prescribe drugs to a specific patient for “off-label” use for indications not approved by Medsafe.

New Zealand can be slower than other jurisdictions to approve new medicines due to delays at Medsafe[6] and the fact that an economy the size of New Zealand may not be a commercial priority for a drug manufacturer.

New Zealand’s government drug-funding system is unique.  An independent government funder, Pharmac[7], is tasked with securing national supply of drugs within a fixed budget.  It will typically principally fund only one manufacturer’s brand of any particular medicine.  It actively takes steps to avoid funding medicines that may infringe New Zealand patent rights.  This means that if a particular medicine is approved for both “on-patent” and “off-patent” indications, funding even for off-patent uses is highly likely to be available only to a supplier that is, or is authorised by, the relevant patent owner.  High-cost drugs may also only be funded on a Special Authority basis, further limiting the possibility of off-label use being funded.  This system, in practice, reduces the likelihood of a drug supplier being accused of infringing a Swiss claim as there is usually reduced commercial incentive to supply drugs that are subject to patent protection in New Zealand including by Swiss claims.

As a net importer of technology including drugs, New Zealand legislative policy tends to favour limiting patent rights as much as possible within the limits of applicable international agreements, including WIPO treaties and free trade agreements.  For example, New Zealand does not permit any form of patent term extension[8], nor is there any formal patent linkage system relating to regulatory approval of generic medicines[9].  Conversely, New Zealand courts have recently shown a “patent-friendly” tendency[10].

New Zealand also permits advertising of approved drugs direct to the public, unlike the vast majority of developed countries (the USA is the other exception).  Advertising must comply with legislation and is subject to a universally observed voluntary code of conduct.

In the next and final article in this series, we will look at how each of the issues discussed above may impact the judicial assessment of claims of infringement of Swiss claims in New Zealand.  In the meantime, please contact us if you have any questions about Swiss claims in New Zealand.

 


[1] Current New Zealand practice is set out in the IPONZ Patent Examination Manual at https://www.iponz.govt.nz/get-ip/patents/examination-manual/current/swiss-type-claims/

[2] Sections 5, 18, 140.

[3] Under s141 of the Patents Act.

[4] But see Russell Smyth “Judicial Citations – An Empirical Study of Citation Practice in the New Zealand Court of Appeal” (2000) 31 VUWLR 847.

[5] Section 4A, Patents Act 1977 (UK).

[6] See, for example, https://www.medicinesnz.co.nz/our-industry/comparable-countries. This issue is intended to be partially addressed by the passage of the current Medicines Amendment Bill.

[7] See https://www.pharmac.govt.nz/about/what-we-do.

[8] Legislation to provide for patent term extensions (and other matters) to comply with the then proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) was passed in 2016 but never brought into force.  The TPPA failed when the USA withdrew from it.  The replacement Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, which excluded the USA, did not include a patent term extension requirement as there was no longer pressure from the USA to include it.

[9] The New Zealand government says it meets its international obligations in this respect through Medsafe’s publication of all applications for approval of new medicines, supposedly providing sufficient notice for a patent owner to notice any potential infringement and take action before Medsafe grants marketing authorisation.

[10] See, for example, Inguran, LLC & Ors v CRV ltd & Ors [2023] NZHC 3692 discussed in our article here.

About Pearce IP

Pearce IP is a specialist firm offering intellectual property specialist lawyers and attorneys with a focus on the life sciences industries.  Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory for legal, patent and trade mark excellence, including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, 5 Star IP Lawyers, among others.

In 2025, Pearce IP was recognised by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer’s 5 Star Employer of Choice, and is the “Standout Winner” for inclusion and culture for firms with less than 100 employees. Pearce IP was awarded “IP Team of the Year” by Lawyers Weekly at the 2021 Australian Law Awards. Pearce IP is recognised by Managing IP as the only leading ANZ IP firm with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.

 

Paul Johns

Paul Johns

Executive, Lawyer (NZ, AU) & Trade Mark Attorney (NZ), (Head of Litigation – New Zealand)

Paul is Head of Pearce IP’s New Zealand litigation team and an IP dispute specialist with 24+ years’ experience in New Zealand and the UK. He is recognised in IAM Patent 1000, WTR1000, Chambers Asia-Pacific, and Best Lawyers. Paul serves on New Zealand’s Copyright Tribunal, is Vice Chair of the IBA’s Patent Law Subcommittee, and is a member of the Intellectual Property Society of Australia and New Zealand and NZ Intellectual Property Attorneys Inc.

Sally Paterson

Sally Paterson

Executive Lawyer (NZ), Patent & Trade Mark Attorney (AU, NZ)

Sally is a senior Trans-Tasman Patent and Trade Mark Attorney, and a New Zealand registered lawyer with over 20 years’ experience in IP.  Sally’s particular expertise is in life sciences, drawing from her background in biological sciences.

Sally is well respected in the New Zealand IP community for her broad ranging skills in all aspects of intellectual property advice, protection and enforcement.

Sally has extensive experience securing registration for patents, designs and trade marks in New Zealand, Australia and internationally, providing strategic infringement, validity and enforceability opinions, acting in contentious disputes including matters before the courts of New Zealand and before IPONZ and IP Australia, and advising on copyright and consumer law matters.

Julie Ballance

Julie Ballance

Executive, Patent Attorney & Trade Mark Practitioner (AU, NZ), Lawyer & Notary (NZ)

Julie is a senior Trans-Tasman patent attorney, and a New Zealand registered lawyer and notary public with more than 30 years’ experience across a range of technology areas and a first class honours degree in chemistry. Julie is internationally renowned for her considerable patent/trade mark/designs/legal prowess, including being ranked in IAM Patent 1000.

Biocon Secures UK/EU/ROW Settlement with Regeneron/Bayer for Biosimilar Aflibercept; UK Launch in Jan 2026

On 13 December 2025, Biocon Biologics announced that it has reached a settlement and licence agreement with Regeneron and Bayer for Yesafili®, biosimilar to Regeneron/Bayer’s Eylea® (aflibercept) in Europe and ROW, enabling Biocon to launch Yesafili® in the UK in January 2026 and ROW in March 2026, or earlier under certain undisclosed circumstances.  The settlement follows an April 2025 settlement between the companies covering the US and Canada, which paves the way for a US launch of Yesafili® in H2 2026.

Yesafili® was the first aflibercept biosimilar to receive European marketing approval in September 2023, following a positive CHMP opinion in July 2023.  It was approved in the UK in November 2023.

Sandoz’s Afqlir® was the first aflibercept biosimilar to launch in the UK on 24 November 2025, following the 23 November 2025 expiry of Regeneron’s SPC on European patent EP 1183353 (encompassing aflibercept).  At the time, Sandoz announced the launches in major European markets such as Germany and France would follow, with additional European rollouts to occur in 2026.

Other aflibercept biosimilars currently approved in Europe include Samsung Bioepis/Biogen’s Opuviz™ (SB15) (November 2024), Formycon/Klinge’s Baiama® and Ahzantive® (January 2025), Celltrion’s Eydenzelt® (February 2025), Amgen’s Pavblu® (April 2025), Alvotech/Advanz’s Mynzepli® (August 2025) and Alteogen’s Eyluxvi® (September 2025).

Litigation will continue to hold up European launches for some biosimilar sponsors.  For example, in October 2025, the Munich Regional Court granted Regeneron a permanent cross-border injunction preventing Formycon’s launch of its aflibercept biosimilar in 20 countries.  The Hague District Court also granted an injunction in October 2025 preventing Samsung Bioepis from launching its aflibercept biosimilar in the Netherlands.

The news has been better for aflibercept biosimilars in the UK, with Samsung Bioepis and Formycon/Klinge defeating injunction applications by Regeneron/Bayer in relation to their aflibercept biosimilars in October 2025.  In early November 2025, the UK High Court rejected Regeneron/Bayer’s request for an injunction to prevent UK manufacturing activities under the SPC waiver notice provisions in relation to Alvotech’s Mynzepli®.

High Court Draws Clear Line Between Trade Mark Infringement and Misleading and Deceptive Conduct in Bed Bath N’ Table Case

 

Date of decision: 10 December 2025
Body: High Court
Adjudicator: Gageler CJ, Gordon, Edelman, Jagot And Beech-Jones JJ

Highlight

The High Court, in a key decision for all brand owners, has clarified how factors relevant to misleading and deceptive conduct allegations under the Australian Consumer Law should be considered and applied, particularly in contrast to trade mark infringement allegations.

Background

Global Retails Brands Australia Pty Ltd (GRBA) began to use the trade mark (HOUSE B&B mark).

Global Retails Brands Australia Pty Ltd (GRBA) began to use the trade mark shown in the image on the left (HOUSE B&B mark) in Australia in May 2021 in connection with soft homewares stores.  Bed Bath ‘N’ Table Pty Ltd (BBNT), owner of a range of trade marks that included the “BED BATH ‘N’ TABLE” mark, which are also used and registered in connection with soft homeware stores in Australia, took issue with GRBA’s adoption of the HOUSE B&B mark and alleged that use of the HOUSE B&B mark constituted trade mark infringement and misleading and deceptive conduct in breach of section 18 of the Australian Consumer Law (ACL).  BBNT’s misleading and deceptive conduct case relied on its extensive use of, and reputation in, the BED BATH ‘N’ TABLE mark in connection with soft homewares in Australia since 1976.

The case made its way through the Federal Court[1], where the primary judge, Justice Rofe, found that use of the HOUSE B&B mark did not infringe the BED BATH ‘N’ TABLE mark but GRBA’s activities in using the HOUSE B&B mark did constitute misleading and deceptive conduct in breach of the ACL.  Her Honour reasoned that, while the marks were not substantially identical or deceptively similar (ie no trade mark infringement), the ordinary and reasonable consumer being aware of BBNT’s reputation in the BED BATH ‘N’ TABLE mark would see the HOUSE B&B mark and be likely to be misled into thinking that there was some connection between the HOUSE B&B stores and BBNT.

GRBA appealed Justice Rofe’s decision regarding misleading and deceptive conduct to the Full Court of the Federal Court[2], where Justices Nicholas, Katzmann and Downes reversed Justice Rofe’s decision on that point.  Their Honours were of the view that Justice Rofe had erred in concluding that consumers were likely to be misled or deceived by the use of the HOUSE B&B mark when her Honour did not consider the HOUSE B&B mark to be deceptively similar to the BED BATH ‘N’ TABLE mark.  Their Honours were not persuaded that BBNT’s substantial reputation in the BED BATH ‘N’ TABLE mark could account for the different findings given that deceptive similarity (for infringement) requires a likelihood of consumer confusion between two or more marks.

BBNT appealed the Full Court’s decision, asking the High Court to confirm which method of assessing misleading and deceptive conduct was correct.

Outcome

The High Court agreed with Justice Rofe and her assessment of misleading and deceptive conduct, making the following important points:

  • The Full Court had conflated the relevant inquiries for trade mark infringement and misleading and deceptive conduct by unduly focusing its analysis for misleading and deceptive conduct on whether the marks were deceptively similar.
  • The answer to a trade mark infringement case is not necessarily the answer to a misleading and deceptive conduct case. “The scope and function of the Trade Marks Act is different from the scope and function of the Australian Consumer Law, and the interests the former Act protects are different and have, in any event, changed over time.”[3]
  • For misleading and deceptive conduct, the use of the marks must be considered in context; to decontextualise the marks from the parties’ conduct runs the risk of conflating the trade mark concept of “distinctiveness” with “the broader concept of conduct in its immediate and broader context applicable to s18(1) of the Australian Consumer Law”.[4]
  • Justice Rofe’s finding that GRBA’s use of the HOUSE B&B mark constituted misleading and deceptive conduct did not, and does not, give BBNT a monopoly in the words “bed” and “bath”. Rather, Justice Rofe’s assessment was simply that GRBA’s conduct satisfied the statutory requirements for misleading and deceptive conduct; a different manner of use of the words “bed” and “bath” may not result in the same finding.
  • Australian Woollen Mills v F S Walton & Co Ltd (1937) 58 CLR 641 at 658 is good authority that “if a mark or get-up for goods is adopted for the purpose of appropriating part of the trade or reputation of a rival, it should be presumed to be fitted for the purpose and therefore likely to deceive or confuse”. This principle does not require dishonest intention. The High Court stated that a person can be “scrupulously honest and yet by conduct contravene [the ACL]”[5]. In this case, there was sufficient evidence to indicate that GRBA was aware of BBNT’s reputation in the BED BATH ‘N’ TABLE mark and had decided to take part of that mark to incorporate into its own HOUSE B&B mark in order to achieve a certain end (ie to take part of BBNT’s trade).

The High Court allowed BBNT’s appeal, setting aside the Full Court’s decision and reinstating the primary judge’s decision.

Implications

Trade mark infringement and misleading and deceptive conduct actions are often pleaded together in brand litigation. They are, however, two very different beasts, even if on the surface they appear to share some similar elements.  Because of the different considerations involved, it is important to plead both actions (as well as the tort of passing off) where they are available on the facts as different outcomes can result.

Traders should also be careful not to sail too close to the wind when adopting a new trade mark.  The High Court has clarified in this decision that adopting elements of an earlier well-known brand for the purpose of also taking some of that brand’s market share can be sufficient to support a finding of misleading and deceptive conduct.


[1] Bed Bath N’ Table Pty Ltd v Global Retail Brands Australia Pty Ltd (2023) 182 IPR 393

[2] Global Retail Brands Australia Pty Ltd v Bed Bath N’ Table Pty Ltd (2024) 183 IPR 123

[3] Bed Bath ‘N’ Table Pty Ltd v Global Retail Brands Australia Pty Ltd [2025] HCA 50 at [40]

[4] Bed Bath ‘N’ Table Pty Ltd v Global Retail Brands Australia Pty Ltd [2025] HCA 50 at [41]

[5] Bed Bath ‘N’ Table Pty Ltd v Global Retail Brands Australia Pty Ltd [2025] HCA 50 at [54]


 

About Pearce IP

Pearce IP is a specialist firm offering intellectual property specialist lawyers and attorneys with a focus on the life sciences industries.  Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory for legal, patent and trade mark excellence, including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, 5 Star IP Lawyers, among others.

In 2025, Pearce IP was recognised by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer’s 5 Star Employer of Choice, and is the “Standout Winner” for inclusion and culture for firms with less than 100 employees. Pearce IP was awarded “IP Team of the Year” by Lawyers Weekly at the 2021 Australian Law Awards. Pearce IP is recognised by Managing IP as the only leading ANZ IP firm with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.

 

Helen Macpherson

Helen Macpherson

Executive, Lawyer (Head of Litigation –Australia)

Helen is a highly regarded intellectual property specialist and industry leader with more than 25 years’ experience advising on patents, plant breeder’s rights, trade marks, copyright and confidential information. She is known for her expertise in complex, high-value patent matters and leverages her technical background in biochemistry and molecular biology to work across a wide range of technologies, including inorganic, organic, physical and process chemistry, biochemistry, biotechnology (including genetics, molecular biology and virology), and physics. Helen is an active member of the Intellectual Property Committee of the Law Council of Australia and the Intellectual Property Society of Australia and New Zealand.

Kimberley Evans

Kimberley Evans

Executive, Lawyer (AU) & Trade Mark Attorney (AU), (Head of Trade Marks)

Kim is a lawyer and registered Trans-Tasman trade mark attorney with a wide-ranging and impressive practice background spanning private practice, in-house experience and academic activities. Kim’s clients appreciate her responsiveness, and her ability to provide clear and pragmatic branding advice that is tailored to their commercial objectives and informed by industry developments.

Celltrion Signs Listing Agreement with Major US PBM for Biosimilar Tocilizumab

On 12 December 2025, Celltrion announced that it has successfully secured reimbursement coverage for Avtozma® IV, biosimilar to Roche’s Actemra® (tocilizumab), in the US, having signed a listing agreement with Synergie Collective, one of the top five prescription drug benefit managers (PBMs) in the United States.

Patient reimbursement for Avtozma® IV will be available from January 2026, and has been designated as a preferred drug for priority prescriptions in all public and private insurance formularies managed by Synergy.

Avtozma® was the third tocilizumab biosimilar approved in the US (January 2025), and was subsequently launched in an IV formulation in October 2025.  Biogen/Bio-Thera’s Tofidence®/BAT1806 was the first US approved tocilizumab biosimilar (IV formulation, September 2023launched May 2024), followed by Fresenius Kabi’s Tyenne® (SC formulation, March 2024IV formulation launched April 2024SC formulation launched July 2024).

In February 2025, Avtozma® became the third tocilizumab biosimilar approved in the EU, following Fresenius Kabi’s Tyenne®, in both IV and SC forms in November 2023, and Biogen’s IV Tofidence® in June 2024.

Avtozma® has been granted marketing authorisation in a number of other regions, including as the first tocilizumab biosimilar approved in Australia (May 2025)Japan (September 2022) and New Zealand (December 2025), and was considered for listing on Australia’s PBS at PBAC’s November 2025 meeting (outcomes from that meeting are yet to be published).

Positive CHMP Opinions for Bio-Thera/STADA’s Golimumab & Lupin’s Ranibizumab Biosimilars

On 12 December 2025, the European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) announced the outcomes of its December 2025 meeting, including positive opinions for two biosimilars.

Bio-Thera/STADA’s Gotenfia® (BAT2506), biosimilar to Janssen’s Simponi® (golimumab), was recommended for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile idiopathic arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, axial spondyloarthritis and ulcerative colitis.

Gotenfia®/BAT2506 was developed by Bio-Thera and is being commercialised by STADA in Europe under a May 2024 agreement.  Alvotech/Advanz’s Gobivaz® was the first golimumab biosimilar approved in Europe last month (November 2025).

A positive CHMP opinion was also adopted for Lupin’s Ranluspec®, biosimilar to Genentech’s Lucentis® (ranibizumab), for the treatment of nAMD, visual impairment due to DME, proliferative diabetic retinopathy, visual impairment due to macular oedema secondary to retinal vein occlusion (RVO) and visual impairment due to choroidal neovascularisation.

Under an August 2025 agreement, Lupin has partnered with Sandoz, which will market and commercialise Lupin’s ranibizumab biosimilar across the European Union (excluding Germany), Switzerland, Norway, Canada, Australia, Hong Kong, Vietnam and Malaysia.

Samsung Bioepis’ Byooviz® (ranibizumab) was the first ophthalmology biosimilar approved in Europe in August 2021 (in vial form) and has been commercially available in several European countries since March 2023.  On 2 December 2025, Samsung Bioepis announced that the CHMP had adopted a positive opinion for Byooviz® in pre-filled syringe (PFS) form.  Other ranibizumab biosimilars previously approved in Europe include Formycon’s Ranivisio® (approved August 2022, being commercialised in the EU by Teva and STADA/Xbrane’s Ximluci® (approved November 2022).

CHMP Recommends Indication Extensions for Regeneron/Bayer’s Eylea® 8mg & Janssen’s Simponi®

At its December 2025 meeting, the European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) recommended indication extensions for a number of biopharmaceuticals.

Among these, Regeneron/Bayer’s Eylea® 8mg (aflibercept) 114.3 mg/ml solution for injection) was recommended for the treatment of visual impairment due to macular oedema secondary to retinal vein occlusion (branch, central and hemiretinal RVO).  Once approved by the European Commission, this will be the third indication for the high dose form of Eylea®, which was previously approved in the EU in January 2024 for treatment of nAMD and diabetic macular oedema.  Eylea HD® (as the 8mg product is known in the US) was FDA approved for the RVO indication in November 2025.

Alvotech is developing AVT29, a biosimilar to Regeneron’s Eylea® 8mg.  In June 2024, Alvotech entered into an agreement with Advanz Pharma in relation to the commercialisation of AVT29 in EuropeTeva holds commercialisation rights for AVT29 (and AVT06, aflibercept 2mg) in the US.

This month, the CHMP has also adopted a positive opinion for Janssen’s Simponi® (golimumab), for the treatment of paediatric ulcerative colitis.  The CHMP decision follows the FDA’s approval of the same indication in October 2025.

Alvotech/Advanz’s Gobivaz® was the first and only EU golimumab biosimilar approved in Europe in November 2025.  However, Bio-Thera/STADA’s Gotenfia®/BAT2506 is following closely behind, with a positive CHMP opinion for the biosimilar adopted at the December 2025 EMA meeting.

Other biopharmaceuticals to receive CHMP recommendations at the December 2025 meeting are:

FDA Grants Priority Review to BMS’ sBLA for Opdivo® Plus Chemo for Classical Hodgkin Lymphoma

On 11 December 2025, Bristol Myers Squibb announced that the FDA has granted priority review to its supplemental Biologics License Application (sBLA) for Opdivo® (nivolumab) in combination with doxorubicin, vinblastine and dacarbazine chemotherapy for adult and paediatric (12 years and older) patients with previously untreated Stage III or IV classical Hodgkin Lymphoma (cHL).  The FDA has assigned a Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA) goal date of 8 April 2026.

Recent new indication approvals for Opdivo® have generally been for treatments in combination with Yervoy® (ipilimumab) including for:

Previous approvals in combination with chemotherapy include for:

  • Non-small cell lung cancer in Australia, Europe, USA;
  • Urothelial carcinoma in Taiwan, USA; and
  • Gastric, gastroesophageal junction or oesophageal adenocarcinoma in

A number of nivolumab biosimilars are under development including Xbrane/Intas’ Xdivane, Amgen’s ABP 206, Reliance Life Science’s RLS-Nivolumab, Enzene’s candidate, Boan Biotech’s BA1104, NeuClone’s candidate and Zydus’ ZRCr-4276.  In August 2025, Sandoz wound down its Phase III trial of JPB898 as a measure to streamline its biosimilar nivolumab development program following feedback from regulatory authorities regarding requirements for biosimilar approvals.

Polpharma & Libbs Farmacêutica Partner on Autoimmune Disease Biosimilar in Brazil

On 10 December 2025, Polpharma Biologics announced that it has entered a licence agreement with Brazilian pharmaceutical company, Libbs Farmacêutica, for the commercialisation of an unnamed biosimilar for autoimmune diseases in Brazil.

Under the agreement, Polpharma retains responsibility for the development and manufacturing of the biosimilar, while Libbs has exclusive rights for the commercialisation, marketing and distribution of the product in Brazil.

The deal between Polpharma and Libbs follows a licensing agreement between Polpharma and MS Pharma in September 2025 for the commercialisation in the MENA region of biosimilars to guselkumab (PB019, referencing Janssen’s Tremfya®), ocrelizumab (PB018, referencing Roche’s Ocrevus®) and vedolizumab (PB016, referencing Takeda’s Entyvio®).  In August 2025, Polpharma Biologics entered into a global licensing agreement (excluding the MENA region) with Fresenius Kabi for the commercialisation of PB016 (vedolizumab).

Zydus Launches Biosimilar Denosumab in India

On 10 December 2025, Zydus Lifesciences announced the Indian launch of Zyrifa™ (denosumab 120mg SC), biosimilar to Amgen’s Xgeva® (denosumab).

The launch of Zydus’ denosumab biosimilar in India follows a flurry of European denosumab biosimilar launches on 1-2 December, including Sandoz’s Jubbonti® and Wyost®, Fresenius Kabi’s Conexxence® and Bomyntra®, Zentiva’s Zadenvi®, Accord Healtcare’s Osvyrti® and Jubereq® and Samsung Bioepis’ Xbryk™ (available from December 2025).

Denosumab biosimilars launched in the US include Sandoz’s Jubbonti® and Wyost® (June 2025), Celltrion’s Stoboclo® and Osenvelt® (July 2025), Fresenius Kabi’s Conexxence® and Bomyntra® (July 2025), and Biocon’s Bosaya™ and Aukelso™ (October 2025).

In August 2025, it was reported that India’s Central Drugs Control Organisation (CDSCO) had reviewed and accepted without objection a final Clinical Study Report submitted by Intas Pharmaceuticals for its proposed denosumab biosimilar.

Swiss-style Patent Claims In New Zealand – Part 1 History and background

Swiss-style patent claims (often referred to as Swiss-type claims in New Zealand) have been routinely sought and granted in New Zealand for many years[1].  However, the New Zealand courts are yet to determine the question of what conduct will infringe such a claim.  This article is the first in a series of three that will explore the history of Swiss-style claims in New Zealand, the relevant law and policy considerations, and the likely judicial approach to the question of infringement.

This first instalment gives a brief history of Swiss-type claims in New Zealand.  Later articles in the series will explain New Zealand law and policy issues relevant to infringement of Swiss-type claims, and how the law might be applied to such cases.

Background

Swiss-style and Swiss-type claims (referred to herein simply as “Swiss claims”) were developed to circumvent prohibitions on directly patenting methods of medical treatment of humans.  Typically, Swiss claims are useful where a drug already known to be of use in treating one condition is newly discovered to also be effective for treating a different condition, or a new patient group.  They are also useful for when a new, advantageous mode of administration, or new dosage or treatment regime, for a known drug is discovered.  Even in jurisdictions where method of treatment claims are permitted, Swiss claims can also be used to broaden the potential pool of defendants in an infringement suit.  It is likely to be more efficient, effective and PR-friendly for a patentee to sue the manufacturer of a drug that has an infringing use than to individually sue multiple health practitioners for providing a method of treatment within the patent claims.

Swiss claims typically take the form of “Use of [substance or composition] for the manufacture of a medicament for [a new medical use]” although variations are possible.  Although Swiss claims are directed at the use of the substance in question, the novelty resides in the new medical use identified by the inventor.  The new medical use can be a recognised disease or disorder, an underlying pathological mechanism of a disease or disorder, or a mechanism of action used to treat a disease or disorder.

New Zealand history

Presently, Swiss claims are commonly used in New Zealand because section 16(2) of New Zealand’s Patents Act 2013 provides that: “An invention of a method of treatment of human beings by surgery or therapy is not a patentable invention.”  This express exclusion from patentability codified the previous, longstanding interpretation that methods of medical treatment of humans were not patentable in New Zealand despite not being expressly excluded by any previous legislation[2].  New Zealand law has always defined patentable inventions by reference to a “manner of manufacture” within the meaning of section 6 of the English Statute of Monopolies of 1623.  That reference was consistently interpreted to exclude methods of medical treatment of humans.

In 1983, the New Zealand Court of Appeal directly addressed this exclusion in Wellcome Foundation Ltd v Commissioner of Patents[3] (Wellcome).  It ruled that although the scope of patentability could evolve through case law, the exclusion of methods of medical treatment should only be removed by the legislature.  The Court said that this ruling was consistent with the position in other countries in which the scope of patentability was determined by reference to a “manner of manufacture” as used in the Statute of Monopolies, including the United Kingdom[4],  Australia[5]  and Israel[6].

In 1999, the practice of accepting Swiss claims in New Zealand was determined to be correct by the Court of Appeal in Pharmaceutical Management Agency Ltd v Commissioner of Patents[7]  (the Pharmac case).

In 2004, the Court of Appeal confirmed in Pfizer Inc v Commissioner of Patents[8] (Pfizer)  that neither its ruling in Pharmac, nor any other developments since Wellcome, overturned or undermined the prohibition on directly patenting methods of medical treatment of humans.

In 2013, the exclusion from patentability of methods of medical treatment of humans was put beyond the realm of judicial interpretation by the enactment of the Patents Act 2013, including section 16(2) set out above.  The Patents Act 2013 does not expressly address the validity, infringement or any other particular aspect of Swiss claims.  However, Pharmac continues to apply; the granting of Swiss claims is now common practice in New Zealand.

Our next article in this series will take a closer look at the Patents Act 2013, New Zealand common law, and various policy considerations as they pertain to Swiss claims.  In the meantime, we would welcome any questions you may have about Swiss claims in New Zealand.

 


[1] Current New Zealand practice is set out in the IPONZ Patent Examination Manual at https://www.iponz.govt.nz/get-ip/patents/examination-manual/current/swiss-type-claims/.

[2] Including the most recent predecessor, the Patents Act 1953.

[3] Wellcome Foundation Ltd v Commissioner of Patents [1983] NZLR 385. This case concerned an application to patent a method of treating or preventing meningeal leukaemia or neoplasms in the brain of a human or other mammal by the use of the known compounds methodichlorophen and ethodichlorophen which were in use for treating malaria.

[4] Noting the UK Court of Appeal decision in Upjohn Company (Robert’s) Application [1977] RPC 94. The UK now expressly excludes methods of medical treatment following amendment in 2004 of its Patents Act 1977.

[5] Referring to Joos v Commissioner of Patents (1972) 126 CLR 611. Australian law has evolved to now permit claims to methods of medical treatment of humans, see Apotex Pty Ltd v Sanofi-Aventis Australia Pty Ltd [2013] HCA 50.

[6] Pre-1967, at which time the exclusion of methods of medical treatment was expressly included in the Israeli Patents Act 1967, see Wellcome Foundation Ltd v Plantex Ltd [1974] RPC 514.

[7] Pharmaceutical Management Agency Ltd& Ors v Commissioner of Patents [1999] NZCA 330. This case was an appeal from a judicial review of a Practice Note issued by the Commissioner of Patents stating that Swiss claims were permissible in New Zealand. The first appellant, known as Pharmac, is the manager of government subsidisation of drugs in New Zealand. It was joined by Glaxo Group Ltd, Novo Nordisk A/S, and Astra AB. (Author Julie Ballance appeared for Novo Nordisk.)

[8] Pfizer Inc v Commissioner of Patents [2004] NZCA 104. This case was a second appeal from a decision of the Commissioner of Patents refusing a claim for a method of medical treatment of humans. Pfizer argued that legislative amendments, the Pharmac decision, and foreign legal developments undermined the conclusions in the Wellcome case. (Author Paul Johns was involved in acting for Pfizer.)


About Pearce IP

Pearce IP is a specialist firm offering intellectual property specialist lawyers and attorneys with a focus on the life sciences industries.  Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory for legal, patent and trade mark excellence, including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, 5 Star IP Lawyers, among others.

In 2025, Pearce IP was recognised by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer’s 5 Star Employer of Choice, and is the “Standout Winner” for inclusion and culture for firms with less than 100 employees. Pearce IP was awarded “IP Team of the Year” by Lawyers Weekly at the 2021 Australian Law Awards. Pearce IP is recognised by Managing IP as the only leading ANZ IP firm with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.

 

Paul Johns

Paul Johns

Executive, Lawyer (NZ, AU) & Trade Mark Attorney (NZ), (Head of Litigation – New Zealand)

Paul is Head of Pearce IP’s New Zealand litigation team and an IP dispute specialist with 24+ years’ experience in New Zealand and the UK. He is recognised in IAM Patent 1000, WTR1000, Chambers Asia-Pacific, and Best Lawyers. Paul serves on New Zealand’s Copyright Tribunal, is Vice Chair of the IBA’s Patent Law Subcommittee, and is a member of the Intellectual Property Society of Australia and New Zealand and NZ Intellectual Property Attorneys Inc.

Sally Paterson

Sally Paterson

Executive Lawyer (NZ), Patent & Trade Mark Attorney (AU, NZ)

Sally is a senior Trans-Tasman Patent and Trade Mark Attorney and New Zealand lawyer with 20+ years’ IP experience, specialising in life sciences. She is respected for her expertise in IP protection, enforcement, and strategic advice, with extensive experience in patents, designs, and trade marks across New Zealand, Australia, and internationally, including contentious matters before courts, IPONZ, and IP Australia.

Julie Ballance

Julie Ballance

Executive, Patent Attorney & Trade Mark Practitioner (AU, NZ), Lawyer & Notary (NZ)

Julie is a senior Trans-Tasman patent attorney, and a New Zealand registered lawyer and notary public with more than 30 years’ experience across a range of technology areas and a first class honours degree in chemistry. Julie is internationally renowned for her considerable patent/trade mark/designs/legal prowess, including being ranked in IAM Patent 1000.

The End of an Era for Pharma PTEs in AU – Full Court Excludes Formulation Patent Term Extensions in Aripiprazole (ABILIFY) Appeal

 

Date of decision: 1 December 2025

Read more about the Australian patent extension regime in our free downloadable PTE eBook

Pharmaceutical Patent Term Extensions in Australia free e-Book

Body: Full Court of the Federal Court
Adjudicator: Justices Burley, Rofe and Owens

Introduction

In a landmark decision that fundamentally reshapes Australia’s patent term extension (PTE) landscape, the Full Court of the Federal Court has unanimously held that pharmaceutical formulation patents are ineligible for PTE under the Patents Act 1990 (Cth) (the Act).  In a victory for Sun Pharma over Otsuka regarding Sun Pharma’s generic aripiprazole, the Full Court found that a pharmaceutical substance is limited to active pharmaceutical ingredients and does not extend to formulations combining those ingredients with excipients.

While the Full Court also overturned the primary judge’s findings that the asserted claims were invalid for lack of clarity and lack of definition, this small win for Otsuka was rendered moot by the finding that the PTE was invalid.

Unless and until there is a High Court appeal to the contrary, patentees will no longer be able to extend the term of pharmaceutical formulation patents, and their existing patent term extensions for pharmaceutical formulation patents will now be vulnerable to challenge by a simple (and inexpensive process) in the patent office.  Patentees will be urgently reviewing their patent portfolios and revisiting their loss of exclusivity dates in Australia as they prepare for the inevitable rectification applications from generic/biosimilar applicants.  Biosimilar and generic applicants will be inducing their market entry dates, and preparing to file low-cost rectification applications in the patent office, where the originator’s exclusivity was (previously) underpinned by a formulation patent.

Background

The dispute related to Otsuka Japan’s Australian Patent No. 2004285448, entitled “Controlled release sterile injectable aripiprazole formulation and method” (the Patent).  The Patent described and claimed controlled release formulations which contain aripiprazole as the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API).  Aripiprazole molecules bind to receptors (primarily D2 receptors) in the brain, which is useful in treating schizophrenia and bipolar I disorder.

Sun Pharma commenced proceedings against Otsuka seeking to “clear the way” ahead of their Australian launch on 1 April 2025 of their generic version of the ABILIFY MAINTENA (400 mg) powder and solvent for injection.

At first instance, Justice Downes found in Sun Pharma’s favour, holding that the PTE claims were invalid because the majority of the asserted pharmaceutical substances did not “fall within the scope of” the relevant claims.  Her Honour also held that the PTE claims were invalid for lack of clarity and lack of definition.

Notably, Justice Downes rejected Sun Pharma’s argument that formulations could not constitute “pharmaceutical substances” under the Act.  Following Justice Perram’s decision in Cipla Australia Pty Ltd v Novo Nordisk A/S [2024] FCA 1414 (see our report on this judgment here), her Honour held that the definition of a “pharmaceutical substance” included formulations.

Otsuka appealed Justice Downes’ findings on the validity of the claims and the PTE.  Sun Pharma filed a Notice of Contention seeking to uphold her Honour’s orders on alternative grounds, including, critically, that formulations do not constitute “pharmaceutical substances” in the context of the statutory PTE regime.

PTE Statutory Regime

In Australia, section 70 of the Act sets out specific conditions which must be met to obtain a PTE for a pharmaceutical patent, including that:

  • one or more pharmaceutical substances per se must in substance be disclosed in the complete specification of the patent and in substance fall within the scope of the claim(s) of that specification; and
  • goods containing, or consisting of, the substance must be included in the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods.

The term “pharmaceutical substance” is defined in Schedule 1 to the Act to mean:

a substance (including a mixture or compound of substances) for therapeutic use whose application (or one of whose applications) involves:

  • (a) a chemical interaction, or physico-chemical interaction, with a human physiological system; or
  • (b) action on an infectious agent, or on a toxin or other poison, in a human body;

Consideration

The Full Court began by tracing the legislative history of the definition.  The terms “pharmaceutical substance” and “therapeutic use” first appeared in the Patents Amendment Act 1989 (Cth).  The Explanatory Memorandum to that Act stated that the new extension scheme would be available for “therapeutic substances” in the terms of the Customs (Prohibited Imports) Regulations (the Customs Regulations), subject to three added limitations.

The term “therapeutic substance” was defined in the Customs Regulations to mean:

a substance, including a mixture or compound of substances, that has a therapeutic use and includes a surgical ligature, suture or dressing, but does not include a vaccine prepared from microscopic organisms from the body of a person or animal for use in the treatment of that person or animal only.

The Full Court stated that it was clear from this definition that “therapeutic substance” included formulations, and that this conclusion was further reinforced by regulation 2(2)(b) which provided that:

  • (a) each form of a therapeutic substance shall be taken to be a separate and distinct therapeutic substance;
  • (b) if a therapeutic substance is manufactured according to two or more formulations – the substance manufactured according to a particular formulation shall be taken to be a different therapeutic substance from the substance manufactured according to the other or each other formulation; and
  • (c) a therapeutic substance having a particular strength shall be taken to be a different therapeutic substance from the substance having a different strength.

The question was then whether the ‘added limitations’ in the Act’s definition operated to exclude formulations from its scope.

The Full Court found that they did.  The crucial limitation was the statutory requirement that a pharmaceutical substance’s application must involve “a chemical interaction, or physico-chemical interaction, with a human physiological system” or “action on an infectious agent, or on a toxin or other poison, in a human body”.  Their Honours reasoned that this requirement “immediately and naturally puts the focus on the substance which itself produces the therapeutic effect, as distinct from any excipients present in a given formulation”.  Excipients, by definition, are not therapeutically active – they are the non-therapeutic ingredients of dosage forms.  It followed, the Court held, that “it is only the active ingredient that can have a chemical or physico-chemical interaction with a human physiological system, or that can act on an infectious agent, or on a toxin, or other poison, in a human body”.  In this way, the limitation confines the otherwise broad concept borrowed from the Customs Regulations to substances that are “active”.

The Full Court found that this construction was supported by the extrinsic materials accompanying later amendments.  The Revised Explanatory Memorandum to the 1998 Amendment Act (REM) stated that a pharmaceutical substance “may comprise combinations of active ingredients or single active ingredients” and notes that an “extension of term will not be available for claims to new processes of making pharmaceutical substances or new methods of using pharmaceutical substances where the substances themselves are already known”.  In the same section, the REM further stated:

… This has the effect of enabling a generic manufacturer to produce a generic pharmaceutical formulation containing the patented pharmaceutical substance solely for the purpose of obtaining regulatory approval while the patent is still in force. It therefore prevents a patentee from ending up with a further de facto extension of term which would occur if a generic producer could not commence any work on the patented pharmaceutical substance to meet these requirements until the extended term expired.

(Emphasis added)

The subsequent Explanatory Memorandum to the 2006 Amendment Act distinguished between four types of pharmaceutical patents:

… There are broadly four types of pharmaceutical patent: those on the active pharmaceutical ingredient (API); the formulation of the medication; the process for making the API; and methods of use of the medication. Only patents which claim a pharmaceutical substance (ie API) are currently eligible for patent extension in Australia. Pharmaceutical products are frequently the subject of multiple patents which cover different aspects of the product. These patents are potentially of different types, some of which may not be eligible for extension. In some cases the most important (or ‘blocking’) patent may not be extended and thus the most important springboarding work cannot be done until this patent expires in Australia.

(Emphasis added)

The Full Court found this “express clarification of the distinction between an API and a formulation, and the express recognition that an API is the relevant ‘pharmaceutical substance’, is entirely consistent with what [they] regard as the correct construction”.

The Court also held that its construction accorded with the purpose of the PTE regime.  The purpose, as explained in the 1998 REM and cited by the High Court in Alphapharm Pty Ltd v H Lundbeck A/S [2014] HCA 42; 254 CLR at [58], was to provide an effective patent life for newly discovered drugs that had taken extended effort and time to achieve regulatory approval.  The Court observed that “allowing extensions of term for improved or modified dosage forms of known drugs already registered on the ARTG [Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods] is inconsistent or contrary to that object”.

Turning to earlier decisions which had considered the PTE regime, the Full Court noted that there had been three first instance judgments, none of which had been the subject of appellate review, which had held that formulations fell within the scope of the definition of “pharmaceutical substance”.[1] Importantly, the Full Court considered that, although there had been a number of Full Court authorities which had considered various aspects of Australia’s PTE regimes, none of these Full Court decisions had directly and authoritatively settled the meaning of “pharmaceutical substance”. This meant that there was no prior Full Court decision the ratio of which determined any contested issue in these proceedings. Secondly, it meant that there was no decision of a Full Court to which regard might be had for the purpose of construing the term “pharmaceutical substance”.

Turning to earlier first instance authorities, the Full Court considered the reasoning in Pharmacia, Spirit and Cipla, declining to follow them.

In Pharmacia, Justice Weinberg had held that a ready-to-use injectable solution of epirubicin hydrochloride was a “pharmaceutical substance” capable of supporting an extension of term.  His Honour, citing Justice Heerey in Boehringer Ingelheim International v Commissioner of Patents [2000] FCA 1918; (2001) AIPC 91-670, observed that Justice Heerey did not distinguish between the “active ingredients” in a compound and other components of that compound.  The Full Court, however, preferred the reasoning of Justice Bennet in the Full Court decision in H Lundbeck A/S v Alphapharm Pty Ltd [2009] FCAFC 70; 177 FCR 151 at [242] over that of Justice Weinberg in Pharmacia, noting that Justice Bennett had recognised that an active ingredient is seldom administered on its own without excipients but that this did not displace the fact that a “pharmaceutical substance” is limited to the active ingredients.

In Spirit, Justice Rares had found that the controlled release formulation OxyContin achieved a “therapeutic use” via two chemical interactions “in the human physiological system” (emphasis added):  the first being the disintegration of the matrix in the GI tract, and the second being the interaction of oxycodone with nerve cell receptors.  The Full Court identified this as an error.  The disintegration of a dose form to release the active ingredient is not an interaction with a human physiological system in the relevant sense – it is merely the breakdown of excipients to release the drug in the human physiological system.  The only chemical or physico-chemical interaction relevant to the definition is the interaction of the active ingredient (oxycodone) with the nerve cell receptors

In Cipla, at [58], Justice Perram stated that he saw nothing in the 1989 amendments that supported the exclusion of formulations from the definition of “pharmaceutical substance”.  The Full Court disagreed, noting that a pharmaceutical substance is a sub-class of a “therapeutic substance” as defined in the Customs Regulations, and that the express requirement that pharmaceutical substances have a chemical or physico-chemical interaction with a human physiological system explains they do not include a formulation.  The Full Court also noted that Justice Perram, at [186], accepted that if the High Court’s reference to “tablet” in footnote 40 of Alphapharm was not read as an illustration of a method, it was inconsistent with the construction that his Honour had reached.  The Full Court considered that the High Court used “tablet” in the footnote “as an example of what is not a pharmaceutical substance per se” – claims to a dosage form containing an active ingredient, rather than the pharmaceutical substance or active ingredient itself.

Applying this reasoning to the present case, the Full Court held that the formulations claimed in the Patent were not pharmaceutical substances for the purposes of the PTE regime.  The relevant pharmaceutical substance was aripiprazole – a substance that had been on the ARTG since May 2003, before the Patent’s priority date.

Alternative Grounds

The Full Court also upheld Sun Pharma’s alternative contentions: the Freeze-dried Formulations did not satisfy the definition of “pharmaceutical substance” because they cease to exist after reconstitution; the ARTG Goods did not “contain or consist of” the Controlled Release Injectable Formulations; and the claims were not to pharmaceutical substances “per se” because they included process features and limitations on use.

Validity

The Full Court addressed Otsuka’s appeal on claim validity.  The Court upheld the finding that the claims were limited by result, but found that the primary judge erred in concluding the claims were invalid for lack of clarity and lack of definition.

In overturning the primary judge’s lack of clarity and lack of definition finding, the Full Court enumerated a number of principles which it considered to have resonated throughout Australian patent law, including that:

  • the mere fact that knowledge, skill and even some experimental tests may be necessary in putting a patented invention into practice is not sufficient to invalidate the patent if the nature of the invention is adequately described;
  • the duty of the patentee is to state clearly and distinctly, either in direct words or by clear and distinct reference, the nature and limits of what it claims. If using language that is avoidably obscure or ambiguous, the patent is invalid; and
  • it is not the duty of the inventor to define the scope of its claim so as to ensure that it can never be difficult to decide the question of infringement, but only to enable the court to formulate the question which a skilled addressee, wishing to avoid infringement, should ask itself. However, that is not on the basis of any hypothetical infringer. The test is more practical.

Otsuka’s victory on lack of clarity and lack of definition, however, was a pyrrhic one, given the Court’s findings on PTE validity.

Outcome and Implications

The Full Court dismissed the appeal, finding the PTE to be invalid, with Otsuka ordered to pay Sun Pharma’s costs.  The matter is now primed for Otsuka to seek special leave to the High Court.

In the meantime, the Full Court decision definitively resolves a question that has been the subject of consistent but unreviewed first instance authority.  Patents claiming formulations, whether modified release dosage forms, new delivery systems, or other combinations of known active ingredients with excipients, are not eligible for PTEs.

Unless and until there is a High Court appeal to the contrary, patentees will no longer be able to extend the term of pharmaceutical formulation patents, and their existing patent term extensions for pharmaceutical formulation patents will now be vulnerable to challenge by a simple (and inexpensive process) in the patent office.  Patentees will be urgently reviewing their patent portfolios and revisiting their loss of exclusivity dates in Australia as they prepare for the inevitable rectification applications from generic/biosimilar applicants.  Biosimilar and generic applicants will be inducing their market entry dates, and preparing to file low-cost rectification applications in the patent office, where the originator’s exclusivity was (previously) underpinned by a formulation patent.

[1] Pharmacia Italia SpA v Mayne Pharma Pty Ltd [2006] FCA 305 (Pharmacia); Spirit Pharmaceuticals Pty Ltd v Mundipharma Pty Ltd [2013] FCA 658 (Spirit); Cipla Australia Pty Ltd v Novo Nordisk A/S [2024] FCA 1414 (Cipla).


Read more about the Australian patent extension regime in our free PTE eBook which can be downloaded

Pharmaceutical Patent Term Extensions in Australia


About Pearce IP

Pearce IP is a specialist firm offering intellectual property specialist lawyers and attorneys with a focus on the life sciences industries.  Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory for legal, patent and trade mark excellence, including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, 5 Star IP Lawyers, among others.

In 2025, Pearce IP was recognised by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer’s 5 Star Employer of Choice, and is the “Standout Winner” for inclusion and culture for firms with less than 100 employees. Pearce IP was awarded “IP Team of the Year” by Lawyers Weekly at the 2021 Australian Law Awards. Pearce IP is recognised by Managing IP as the only leading ANZ IP firm with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.

 

Naomi Pearce

Naomi Pearce

CEO, Executive Lawyer (AU, NZ), Patent Attorney (AU, NZ) & Trade Mark Attorney (AU)

Naomi is the founder of Pearce IP, and is one of Australia’s leading IP practitioners.   Naomi is a market leading, strategic, commercially astute, patent lawyer, patent attorney and trade mark attorney, with over 25 years’ experience, and a background in molecular biology/biochemistry.  Ranked in virtually every notable legal directory, highly regarded by peers and clients, with a background in molecular biology, Naomi is renown for her successful and elegant IP/legal strategies.

Among other awards, Naomi is ranked in Chambers, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, is a MIP “Patent Star”, and is recognised as a WIPR Leader for patents and trade marks. Naomi is the 2023 Lawyers Weekly “IP Partner of the Year”, the 2022 Lexology client choice award recipient for Life Sciences, the 2022 Asia Pacific Women in Business Law “Patent Lawyer of the Year” and the 2021 Lawyers Weekly Women in Law SME “Partner of the Year”.  Naomi is the founder of Pearce IP, which commenced in 2017 and won 2021 “IP Team of the Year” at the Australian Law Awards.

Helen Macpherson

Helen Macpherson

Executive, Lawyer (Head of Litigation –Australia)

Helen is a highly regarded intellectual property specialist and industry leader with more than 25 years’ experience advising on patents, plant breeder’s rights, trade marks, copyright and confidential information. She is known for her expertise in complex, high-value patent matters and leverages her technical background in biochemistry and molecular biology to work across a wide range of technologies, including inorganic, organic, physical and process chemistry, biochemistry, biotechnology (including genetics, molecular biology and virology), and physics. Helen is an active member of the Intellectual Property Committee of the Law Council of Australia and the Intellectual Property Society of Australia and New Zealand.

Nathan Kan

Nathan Kan

Lawyer

Nathan is a lawyer specialising in life sciences, providing legal advice and litigation support across intellectual property and commercial disputes. He is passionate about the intersection of law and science, and during his time with the Science and Technology Law Association at the University of Melbourne, he helped lead events, workshops and publications across STEM fields including life sciences, AI and digital transformation.

Pearce IP BioBlast® for the week ending 5 December 2025

Pearce IP provides weekly reports on global biosimilars activities in the Pearce IP BioBlast®.  Significant biosimilar activities for the week ending 5 December 2025 are set out below:


Aflibercept

5 December 2025 | KR | Samsung Bioepis’ Biosimilar Aflibercept Set for Korean Market after Appeal Win
On 5 December 2025, Korea’s HIT News reported that Samsung Bioepis has successfully overturned a preliminary injunction granted to Regeneron and Bayer which was… Read more here.
 
26 November 2025 | CN | Boan Biotech’s Biosimilar Aflibercept Approved in China
On 26 November 2025, Boan Biotech announced that Boyoujing® (BA9101), biosimilar to Regeneron/Bayer’s Eylea® (aflibercept), was approved by China’s National… Read more here.

Denosumab

On 1 and 2 December 2025, European launches of denosumab biosimilars were announced by the following sponsors: Fresenius Kabi announced the 1 December… Read more here.
 
2 December 2025 | EU | Biocon Secures EU/ROW Deal for Biosimilar Denosumab Following Amgen Settlement, Launch in EU in December 2025
On 2 December 2025, Biocon announced that it has reached a settlement and licence with Amgen for Europe and ROW, permitting Biocon to launch its Evfraxy® and… Read more here.
 
24 November 2025 | US | Hikma/Richter & Amgen Settle BPCIA Denosumab Litigation
On 24 November 2025, consent orders were made by the US District Court for the District of New Jersey recording that Hikma Pharmaceuticals and Gedeon Richter have… Read more here.

Infliximab

2 December 2025 | CL | Celltrion’s Remsima SC First to LATAM Market
On 2 December 2025, Celltrion announced that it has launched Remsima® SC (infliximab) in Chile, marking the biosimilar’s first entrance into the public market in Central and South… Read more here.

Omalizumab

On 3 December 2025, Celltrion announced that it received FDA approval for a new 300 mg/2 mL pre-filled syringe presentation of Omlyclo®, biosimilar to Novartis’ Xolair®… Read more here.

Pembrolizumab

4 December 2025 | DE | Halozyme Obtains Preliminary Injunction Preventing Sales of MSD’s Keytruda SC™ in Germany
On 4 December 2025, Halozyme announced that the Munich Regional Court has granted its application for a preliminary injunction to prevent MSD from distributing and… Read more here.
 
4 December 2025 | MENA | Formycon and MS Pharma Ink Exclusive Deal for Biosimilar Pembrolizumab in MENA Region
On 4 December 2025, Formycon and MS Pharma announced that they have entered into an exclusive licensing and supply agreement for the commercialisation of FYB206… Read more here.

Pegfilgrastim

4 December 2025 | US | Lupin’s Pegfilgrastim FDA Approved & to be Commercialised in US by Valorum
On 1 December 2025, Lupin announced that the US FDA has approved Armlupeg™, biosimilar to Amgen’s Neulasta® (pegfilgrastim) in 6 mg/0.6 mL pre-filled syringe (PFS) form.. Read more here.

Ranibizumab

2 December 2025 | EU | Positive CHMP Opinion for Samsung Bioepis’ PFS Presentation of Biosimilar Ranibizumab
On 2 December 2025, Samsung Bioepis announced that the European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use has adopted a positive opinion… Read more here.

Tocilizumab

4 December 2025 | NZ | Celltrion’s Avtozma® is First Biosimilar Tocilizumab Approved in New Zealand
On 4 December 2025, New Zealand’s Medsafe approved Celltrion’s Avtozma®, biosimilar to Roche’s Actemra® (tocilizumab), in vial (intravenous) and pre-filled syringe (subcutaneous)… Read more here.

Trastuzumab

8 December 2025 | Celltrion to Expand Use of SC Formulation Technology Including to Develop SC Trastuzumab Biosimilar
On 8 December 2025, Celltrion announced that it intends to expand its biosimilar pipeline by “internalising” hyaluronidase-based subcutaneous delivery (SC) formulation technology… Read more here.

Ustekinumab

1 December 2025 | US  | Express Scripts adds Accord Biosimilar Ustekinumab to Formularies
On 1 December 2025, Accord BioPharma announced that Express Scripts has added Imuldosa®, biosimilar to J&J/Janssen’s Stelara® (ustekinumab), to its largest commercial… Read more here.


BioPharma Deals

6 December 2025 | Biocon Limited to Wholly Acquire Biocon Biologics, Valued at USD 5.5B
On 6 December 2025, Biocon Limited announced that Biocon Biologics will be integrated into it, becoming a wholly owned subsidiary of the company upon completion of the transaction… Read more here.


 

About Pearce IP

Pearce IP is a specialist firm offering intellectual property specialist lawyers and attorneys with a focus on the life sciences industries.  Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory for legal, patent and trade mark excellence, including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, 5 Star IP Lawyers, among others.

In 2025, Pearce IP was recognised by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer’s 5 Star Employer of Choice, and is the “Standout Winner” for inclusion and culture for firms with less than 100 employees. Pearce IP was awarded “IP Team of the Year” by Lawyers Weekly at the 2021 Australian Law Awards. Pearce IP is recognised by Managing IP as the only leading ANZ IP firm with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.

 

Naomi Pearce

Naomi Pearce

CEO, Executive Lawyer (AU, NZ), Patent Attorney (AU, NZ) & Trade Mark Attorney (AU)

Naomi is the founder of Pearce IP, and is one of Australia’s leading IP practitioners.   Naomi is a market leading, strategic, commercially astute, patent lawyer, patent attorney and trade mark attorney, with over 25 years’ experience, and a background in molecular biology/biochemistry.  Ranked in virtually every notable legal directory, highly regarded by peers and clients, with a background in molecular biology, Naomi is renown for her successful and elegant IP/legal strategies.

Among other awards, Naomi is ranked in Chambers, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, is a MIP “Patent Star”, and is recognised as a WIPR Leader for patents and trade marks. Naomi is the 2023 Lawyers Weekly “IP Partner of the Year”, the 2022 Lexology client choice award recipient for Life Sciences, the 2022 Asia Pacific Women in Business Law “Patent Lawyer of the Year” and the 2021 Lawyers Weekly Women in Law SME “Partner of the Year”.  Naomi is the founder of Pearce IP, which commenced in 2017 and won 2021 “IP Team of the Year” at the Australian Law Awards.

Chantal Savage

Chantal Savage

Special Counsel, Lawyer

Chantal is an intellectual property disputes lawyer with experience advising across the spectrum of IP rights, including patents, trade marks, copyright, plant breeder’s rights and trade secrets/confidential information. Recognised as a Rising Star in IP by the Legal 500 Asia Pacific (2021-2024), Chantal has previously worked for international and top tier law firms in Australia and the United Kingdom and now at Pearce IP.

With a science degree specialising in molecular biology and biochemistry, Chantal’s practice focuses particularly on complex, high-value, multi-jurisdictional patent infringement and revocation proceedings for clients in the life sciences sectors.

Nathan Kan

Nathan Kan

Lawyer

Nathan is a lawyer specialising in life sciences, providing legal advice and litigation support across intellectual property and commercial disputes. He is passionate about the intersection of law and science, and during his time with the Science and Technology Law Association at the University of Melbourne, he helped lead events, workshops and publications across STEM fields including life sciences, AI and digital transformation.

Formycon & Zydus Ink Exclusive Deal for Biosimilar Pembrolizumab in US & Canada

On 9 December 2025, Formycon and Zydus Lifesciences announced that they have entered into an exclusive licensing and supply agreement for the commercialisation of FYB206, biosimilar to MSD’s Keytruda® (pembrolizumab), in the US and Canada.

Under the agreement, Formycon will have responsibility for preparing and filing the regulatory dossier and supplying FYB206, while Zydus will commercialise the product in the US and Canada.  The deal will provide Formycon with an upfront payment in the mid-teens of millions of euros and eligibility for milestone payments in 2025, plus further payments linked to development and regulatory milestones, expected to be in the mid to double-digit millions of euros range.  Formycon will also share in the gross profits generated by sales of the product.

The deal marks Zydus’ entry into the US biosimilar market.  It follows quickly behind Formycon’s agreement with MS Pharma for the commercialisation of FYB206 in the MENA region, announced on 4 December 2025.

Formycon commenced an integrated Ph1/3 study in June 2024 to demonstrate PK similarity of FYB206 with Keytruda® in patients with Stage IIB/IIC or Stage III melanoma.  On 10 July 2025, Formycon announced that it had completed patient enrolment.  Formycon expects results to be available in Q1 2026.  Formycon had originally intended to conduct a parallel Phase 3 trial to compare the safety and efficacy of FYB206 with Keytruda® in NSCLC.  However, in February 2025, Formycon announced the premature termination of the Phase 3 trial on the basis that the trial was not necessary to obtain US approval of FYB206.

Bioéticos claimed to have launched the first pembrolizumab biosimilar in Paraguay in August 2025 under the name Pembrolizumab Bioéticos.  In November 2025, Biocad’s Pembroria™ (pembrolizumab) was reportedly approved in Vietnam.  A number of other pembrolizumab biosimilars are currently in clinical trials, including by Samsung Bioepis, Amgen, mAbxience, Sandoz, Celltrion, Bio-Thera and BioNTech.  Alvotech and Dr Reddy’s have entered into a global collaboration and licence agreement to co-develop, manufacture and commercialise a biosimilar to Keytruda®.

Celltrion to Expand Use of SC Formulation Technology Including to Develop SC Trastuzumab Biosimilar

On 8 December 2025, Celltrion announced that it intends to expand its biosimilar pipeline by “internalising” hyaluronidase-based subcutaneous delivery (SC) formulation technology.  According to Celltrion, its SC technology involves temporarily decomposing hyaluronic acid present in subcutaneous tissues to facilitate drug diffusion.

Celltrion’s announcement states that it has been conducting clinical trials for Herzuma® SC (CT-P6 SC), biosimilar to Roche’s Herceptin® SC (trastuzumab hyaluronidase, marketed in the US as Herceptin Hylecta™) since February 2025 and plans to submit applications for approvals of the Herzuma® SC formulation to domestic and foreign regulatory agencies in the first half of 2026.

Herzuma® was launched in Europe in 2018 and in the US in March 2020.

Celltrion developed the world’s first subcutaneous injection of infliximab, Remsima SC®/Zymfentra®, which was launched in Europe in 2020 and in the US in 2024.

Binnopharm & Mabwell Partner on Biosimilar Dupilumab in Russia

On 8 December 2025, GxP News reported that Russia’s Binnopharm Group and China’s Mabwell have signed a MOU in relation to localising the production of Mabwell’s biosimilar to Regeneron/Sanofi’s Dupixent® (dupilumab) in Russia and the EAEU.

The two companies have previously partnered in 2022, with Binnopharm Group obtaining the exclusive rights for the production, registration and sale of Mabwell’s adalimumab and denosumab biosimilars (9MW0113, 9MW0321 and 9MW0311) in Russia and the EAEU.  In January 2024, Mabwell’s adalimumab and denosumab biosimilars were approved for Phase III clinical trials in Russia, where Russian clinical data is required for local marketing, with Binnopharm to conduct and fund the trials.

There are a number of dupilumab biosimilars under development.  A November 2025 report from Korean news outlet, The Asia News Daily, suggests that Samsung Bioepis is developing a dupilumab biosimilar.  In August 2025, CSPC Pharmaceutical announced that it received approval from China’s National Medical Products Administration (NMPA) to conduct clinical trials of its dupilumab injection.  In June 2025, Bio-Thera Solutions and Costa Rican-based SteinCares announced an agreement to commercialise biosimilar dupilumab across Latin America, with Bio-Thera responsible for product development and supply, and SteinCares responsible for commercialisation.

Alvotech and Advanz entered into partnership agreements in February 2023, May 2023 and June 2024 for the commercialisation of various biosimilars, including dupilumab, in Europe and certain other countries, with Alvotech responsible for development, and Advanz responsible for commercialisation.

Biocon Limited to Wholly Acquire Biocon Biologics, Valued at USD 5.5B

On 6 December 2025, Biocon Limited announced that Biocon Biologics will be integrated into it, becoming a wholly owned subsidiary of the company upon completion of the transaction, expected to occur by 31 March 2026.

Under the proposed transaction, Biocon Limited will acquire the minority stakes in Biocon Biologics currently held by Serum Institute Life Sciences, Tata Capital Growth Fund II and Activ Pine LLP, through a share swap of 70.28 Biocon shares for every 100 Biocon Biologics shares, reportedly valuing Biocon Biologics at USD 5.5 billion.  Biocon will also acquire the residual stake held by Mylan Inc (Viatris) for USD 815 million, with a capital raising of USD 500 million through Qualified Institutional Placement approved by Biocon Limited’s Board (subject to shareholder approval) to help fund that acquisition.

According to Biocon, the integration will strengthen Biocon’s global position “to lead in key therapeutic areas” of diabetes, oncology and immunology.  In particular, Biocon considers that it is “uniquely poised to address the rapidly expanding ‘diabesity’ market” as the “only company operating globally with both biosimilar insulins and generic versions of complex peptides, including GLP-1s”.  Biocon’s Semglee® was the first biosimilar approved in the Unites States as interchangeable to Sanofi’s Lantus® (insulin glargine) (July 2021).

Samsung Bioepis’ Biosimilar Aflibercept Set for Korean Market after Appeal Win

On 5 December 2025, Korea’s HIT News reported that Samsung Bioepis has successfully overturned a preliminary injunction granted to Regeneron and Bayer which was preventing Korean sales of Samsung Bioepis’ Afilivu® (SB15), biosimilar to Regeneron/Bayer’s Eylea® (aflibercept).

The ruling of the Seoul High Court’s Civil Division, finding in favour of Samsung Bioepis, follows an October 2025 decision of the Korean Patent Court invalidating a Regeneron patent for ophthalmic formulations of aflibercept (the Korean equivalent to US Patent No. 11,084,865).

Afilivu® was the first aflibercept biosimilar approved in Korea in February 2024.  In April 2024, it was reported that Samil Pharmaceutical would launch Samsung Bioepis’ aflibercept biosimilar in the Korean market from 1 May 2024.  However, that launch was disrupted by the preliminary injunction.  Following the appeal decision, Samsung Bioepis/Samil can now resume distribution of Afilivu® in Korea.

On 29 January 2025, the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit refused to overturn a preliminary injunction preventing Samsung Bioepis from launching its aflibercept biosimilar in the US without a licence from Regeneron.  This ruling affirmed an earlier decision of the US District Court for the Northern District of West Virginia in June 2024, finding that Samsung Bioepis infringed, and had failed to raise a substantial question of invalidity of, Regeneron’s US Patent No. 11,084,865 regarding ophthalmic formulations of aflibercept.

Breaking News – Formulation Patents No Longer Extensible in Australia as Pharmaceutical Patentees Prepare for PTE Shake Down

This morning the Full Court published its decision in Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co Ltd v Sun Pharma ANZ Pty Ltd [2025] FCAFC 161 confirming that pharmaceutical formulation patents are no longer eligible for a patent term extension in Australia.

Read more about the Australian patent extension regime in our free PTE eBook which can be downloaded Pharmaceutical Patent Term Extensions in Australia

In the fight between Otsuka and Sun Pharma over Sun Pharma’s launch of a generic version of ABILIFY MAINTENA (aripiprazole), the Full Court of the Federal Court of Australia held that only patents for active pharmaceutical substances – not pharmaceutical formulations- are eligible for a patent term extension.   The decision was handed down on 1 December, but published today.

The Full Court decision has huge ramifications for stakeholders in the Australian pharmaceutical sector.  Originator companies will no longer be able to extend the term of pharmaceutical formulation patents, and their existing patent term extensions for pharmaceutical formulation patents will now be vulnerable to challenge. Given this seismic shift in the law, we expect Otsuka to seek special leave to appeal to the High Court of Australia.

In the meantime:

  • Patentees will be urgently reviewing their patent portfolios and revisiting their loss of exclusivity dates in Australia as they prepare for the inevitable rectification applications from generic/biosimilar applicants; and
  • Biosimilar and generic applicants will be inducing their market entry dates, and preparing to file low-cost rectification applications in the patent office, where the originator’s exclusivity was (previously) underpinned by a formulation patent.

Our detailed blog on the Otsuka decision and its implications will follow.

Read more about the Australian patent extension regime in our free PTE eBook which can be downloaded Pharmaceutical Patent Term Extensions in Australia

 

About Pearce IP

Pearce IP is a specialist firm offering intellectual property specialist lawyers and attorneys with a focus on the life sciences industries.  Pearce IP and its leaders are ranked in every notable legal directory for legal, patent and trade mark excellence, including: Chambers & Partners, Legal 500, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, MIP IP Stars, Doyles Guide, WTR 1000, Best Lawyers, WIPR Leaders, 5 Star IP Lawyers, among others.

In 2025, Pearce IP was recognised by Australasian Lawyer and New Zealand Lawyer’s 5 Star Employer of Choice, and is the “Standout Winner” for inclusion and culture for firms with less than 100 employees. Pearce IP was awarded “IP Team of the Year” by Lawyers Weekly at the 2021 Australian Law Awards. Pearce IP is recognised by Managing IP as the only leading ANZ IP firm with a female founder, and is certified by WEConnect International as women owned.

 

Naomi Pearce

Naomi Pearce

CEO, Executive Lawyer (AU, NZ), Patent Attorney (AU, NZ) & Trade Mark Attorney (AU)

Naomi is the founder of Pearce IP, and is one of Australia’s leading IP practitioners.   Naomi is a market leading, strategic, commercially astute, patent lawyer, patent attorney and trade mark attorney, with over 25 years’ experience, and a background in molecular biology/biochemistry.  Ranked in virtually every notable legal directory, highly regarded by peers and clients, with a background in molecular biology, Naomi is renown for her successful and elegant IP/legal strategies.

Among other awards, Naomi is ranked in Chambers, IAM Patent 1000, IAM Strategy 300, is a MIP “Patent Star”, and is recognised as a WIPR Leader for patents and trade marks. Naomi is the 2023 Lawyers Weekly “IP Partner of the Year”, the 2022 Lexology client choice award recipient for Life Sciences, the 2022 Asia Pacific Women in Business Law “Patent Lawyer of the Year” and the 2021 Lawyers Weekly Women in Law SME “Partner of the Year”.  Naomi is the founder of Pearce IP, which commenced in 2017 and won 2021 “IP Team of the Year” at the Australian Law Awards.

Helen Macpherson

Helen Macpherson

Executive, Lawyer (Head of Litigation –Australia)

Helen is a highly regarded intellectual property specialist and industry leader with more than 25 years’ experience advising on patents, plant breeder’s rights, trade marks, copyright and confidential information. She is known for her expertise in complex, high-value patent matters and leverages her technical background in biochemistry and molecular biology to work across a wide range of technologies, including inorganic, organic, physical and process chemistry, biochemistry, biotechnology (including genetics, molecular biology and virology), and physics. Helen is an active member of the Intellectual Property Committee of the Law Council of Australia and the Intellectual Property Society of Australia and New Zealand.

Formycon and MS Pharma Ink Exclusive Deal for Biosimilar Pembrolizumab in MENA Region

On 4 December 2025, Formycon and MS Pharma announced that they have entered into an exclusive licensing and supply agreement for the commercialisation of FYB206, biosimilar to MSD’s Keytruda® (pembrolizumab) in the MENA region.

Under the agreement, Formycon will receive an upfront payment and will be eligible for further payments subject to certain development and regulatory milestones.  Formycon will also receive a share of the gross profits generated by sales of the biosimilar in the MENA region.  The agreement further includes an option for future technology transfer.

According to Formycon, the licensing deal with MS Pharma represents the “start of the commercial partnering activities” for FYB206, with further agreements for additional regions and countries to follow.

Formycon commenced an integrated Ph1/3 study in June 2024 to demonstrate PK similarity of FYB206 with Keytruda® in patients with Stage IIB/IIC or Stage III melanoma. On 10 July 2025, Formycon announced that it had completed patient enrolment.  Formycon expects results to be available in Q1 2026.  Formycon had originally intended to conduct a parallel Phase 3 trial to compare the safety and efficacy of FYB206 with Keytruda® in NSCLC.  However, in February 2025, Formycon announced the premature termination of the Phase 3 trial on the basis that the trial was not necessary to obtain US approval of FYB206.

Formycon and MS Pharma have previously partnered on the commercialisation of biosimilars in the MENA region, including FYB202/Otulfi® (ustekinumab), FYB203 (aflibercept) and FYB201/Ravegza® (ranibizumab).

Bioéticos claimed to have launched the first pembrolizumab biosimilar in Paraguay in August 2025 under the name Pembrolizumab Bioéticos.  In November 2025, Biocad’s Pembroria™ (pembrolizumab) was reportedly approved in Vietnam.  A number of other pembrolizumab biosimilars are currently in clinical trials, including by Samsung Bioepis, Amgen, mAbxience, Sandoz, Celltrion, Bio-Thera and BioNTech.  Alvotech and Dr Reddy’s have entered into a global collaboration and licence agreement to co-develop, manufacture and commercialise a biosimilar to Keytruda®.

BioBlast® Editor and Contributing Author

Naomi Pearce & Emily Bristow

Naomi Pearce & Emily Bristow

Editor: Naomi Pearce, Executive Lawyer, Patent Attorney & Trade Mark Attorney
Contributing Author: Emily Bristow, Law Graduate

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