Select Page

Home / News / BioBlast® / Biosimilar Deals 2021

EXPLORE OUR

Biosimilars Deals 2021

Explore our interactive biosimilar news updates, collating tailored reports by brand, INN, originator/biosimilar applicant, litigation, region, or date. Alternatively, review our weekly BioBlast updates below.

Knowing Too Much – Expert Evidence Sinks Obviousness Challenge in Patent Dispute Over Veterinary Formulations

 

Date of decision: 24 September 2025
Body: Federal Court
Adjudicator:
Justice Jackman

Introduction

Justice Jackman of the Federal Court has handed down judgment in proceedings between Abbey Laboratories Pty Ltd. (Abbey) and Virbac Australia Pty Ltd (Virbac), in a dispute concerning Virbac’s patent for a veterinary topical pour-on formulation for cattle containing macrocyclic lactone and levamisole.  Justice Jackman found that the majority of the patent’s claims were valid and infringed by Abbey, while three claims concerning viscosity modifiers were found invalid for lack of inventive step.

Background

The patent, AU2012227241 entitled “Veterinary Topical Formulation” with a priority date of 23 September 2011 (the 241 Patent), relates to anthelmintic formulations for treating parasitic infections in cattle.  Anthelmintics are products used to treat parasites in livestock, an important aspect of modern livestock farming.

The specification identifies five major classes of broad spectrum anthelmintic.  Of these, macrocyclic lactones, introduced in the 1980s, are described as the most potent killers of worms with a unique quality of also killing external parasites such as lice, mites and ticks.  The 241 Patent addresses the challenge of formulating a stable combination of macrocyclic lactones and levamisole in a pour-on formulation, which is ordinarily difficult given their different physicochemical properties.  The invention claimed stable formulations using specific non-aqueous solvents, namely dimethyl acetamide (DMA), dimethyl isosorbide (DMI), diethyl phthalate (DEP) and dimethyl phthalate (DMP).

Abbey commenced revocation proceedings in May 2024 and subsequently launched its competing product, Levamox Duo, in January 2025,  after an interlocutory injunction was refused in December 2024 on balance of convenience grounds.  Virbac cross-claimed for infringement.  There was no dispute that if the Patent was valid, Abbey had infringed by offering to sell and supplying Levamox Duo in Australia.

Key Issues and Consideration

Inventive Step

Abbey challenged claims 1-10, 13, 15, 16, 18-21 on lack of inventive step.  Claim 1 is as follows (with integers identified):

1.1    A stable formulation including

1.1(a)   a levamisole active ingredient and

1.1(b)   at least one active selected from the group known as macrocyclic lactones

1.2    with both of said actives being dissolved in a non-aqueous system, including solvents selected from DMA, DMI, DEP and DMP

1.3    wherein the formulation is a topical formulation for administration

1.4    to cattle

Abbey had initially also challenged claims 11 and 12 (relating to additional anthelmintics such as triclabendazole), but abandoned that challenge.

Abbey’s inventive step challenge focused on two key propositions: that a person skilled in the art (PSA), would obviously adopt a non-aqueous solvent system, and that the PSA would select one of the four specified solvents.  Both these challenges failed.

Abbey’s expert, Dr Alawi (a pharmaceutical formulator with extensive experience in the animal health industry, including as co-inventor on competing patents), gave evidence that using a non-aqueous system was “the usual approach” for dissolving lipophilic molecules and that including water would be “unusual and a waste of time”.  However, Justice Jackman found that Dr Alawi’s evidence was based on his own specialised research experience rather than the common general knowledge.  Critically, Dr Alawi’s position was contradicted by his own prior conduct.  In developing the invention the subject of New Zealand patent NZ 20060552040 (the 040 Patent), Dr Alawi had tested twelve aqueous formulations combining abamectin and levamisole.  More significantly, for another patent in the same field filed just three months before the 241 Patent’s priority date, Dr Alawi had trialled over forty formulations with eleven out of thirteen test formulations using water and various salt forms of levamisole.

Justice Jackman accepted evidence from Virbac’s expert, Professor Bunt, that a PSA would not exclude water from consideration without first testing.  Professor Bunt explained that water and water-based solvents are generally safer on animals, easier to formulate and less expensive than organic solvents.  Professor Bunt considered that he would have begun testing levamisole’s solubility in water across different pH values, prioritising the salt form of levamisole as salts are the most water-soluble form of a compound.  Dr Alawi admitted in cross-examination that someone who had not conducted his research program would say: “Okay. Let’s try the water” and “let’s try the levamisole … hydrochloride format”.

The Court also considered whether the PSA would have selected any of the four solvents specified in claim 1 (namely, DMA, DMI, DEP and DMP).  Database search evidence relied upon by Virbac showed that DMI, DEP and DMP were not used in any veterinary product at the priority date, and DMA appeared in only one product.

Professor Bunt gave evidence that DMA would have been an unlikely choice due to its known skin irritancy, distinct unpleasant odour, being water-miscible and quite fluid, causing run-off concerns, links to reproductive and developmental toxicity, flammability concerns, and potential regulatory difficulties given its limited prior use in veterinary products.

As to DMI, Professor Bunt had never used it, did not keep it in his ‘library’ of solvents, was not aware of others using it for veterinary formulations, and noted concerns about regulatory approval and cost.  Dr Alawi had not used DMI in any of his prior research work for various patents, explaining he included it in his solvent list as a “back up”.  The Court rejected this explanation, finding the most plausible explanation was that Dr Alawi’s awareness of Virbac’s Cydectin Platinum product led him to include DMI in his list.

As to the phthalates (DEP and DMP), Dr Alawi had not used them in his work for the 040 Patent but listed them as a “back up”.  Neither Dr Alawi, Dr Agnew nor the database search evidence identified any veterinary products using phthalates.  Professor Bunt said it had never been his preference to consider a phthalate when other materials could function just as well.

Justice Jackman accepted Professor Bunt’s list of preferred solvents for the hypothetical task, which in order of preference were: water, PEGs; propylene glycol; glycerol formal; ethanol; benzyl alcohol; methyl ethyl ketone; and NMP – none of which were the solvents listed in claim 1.

Accordingly, his Honour held that it was not obvious that the PSA would adopt a non-aqueous solvent system, nor would the PSA select any of the four solvents listed in claim 1.  Abbey’s inventive step challenge to claim 1 and its dependent claims (claims 2-10, 13, 15) therefore failed.

As to the independent claim 16 (a method of preparation claim requiring dissolving actives in at least one of DMI, DMA, DEP or DMP), as the selection of those solvents was not obvious, his Honour also found this claim to be inventive.

However, claim 19 (a solvent-based topical formulation containing a macrocyclic lactone and levamisole in organic solvents with a viscosity modifier) did not require the use of DMI, DMA, DEP or DMP, but merely the use of one or more organic solvents together with a viscosity modifier.  Professor Bunt’s choice of potential solvents included a number of organic solvents, and his Honour considered that there was nothing inventive about the use of organic solvents in this kind of formulation.  The addition of viscosity modifiers was also common practice within the industry as at the priority date of the 241 Patent – 23 September 2011.  Justice Jackman consequently found claim 19 lacked an inventive step and was invalid.  Claims 20 and 21, being dependant on claim 19, and merely stipulating the concentration and type of viscosity modifier, were also invalid.

Abbey also relied on three pieces of prior art information in its inventive step challenge.  However, his Honour found these documents did not indicate that the development of an anthelmintic combination formulation for cattle should only use a non-aqueous system, nor did they identify any of the solvents specifically nominated in the 241 Patent for pour-on formulations.

Novelty

Abbey relied on a “whole of contents” novelty objection based on Australian patent AU2011234984 (the 984 Patent), directed to compositions comprising four different active agents (1–arylpyrazole, a macrocyclic lactone, an insect growth regulator, and an anthelmintic) for treating parasites.

A preliminary issue arose as to whether Abbey needed to formulate a set of “notional claims” to establish anticipation.  Since EI Du Pont de Nemours and Co v ICI Chemicals & Polymers Ltd [2005] FCA 892; (2005) 66 IPR 462 (Du Pont), it had been understood that a “whole of contents” objection required formulating notional claims that would be fairly based on the prior disclosure.

Justice Jackman declined to follow Du Pont, stating that its reasoning was “wrong”.  The statutory language – “if the information … were to be, the subject of a claim” – does not require information to actually be drafted as a claim.  The legislative history showed the “whole of contents” approach was introduced in response to the Industrial Property Advisory Committee’s recommendation to replace the “unsatisfactory” and “too narrow” prior claiming approach with a “simpler mechanism”.  Requiring notional claims would “re-re-route Australian patent law back towards something resembling prior claiming … but in an even more obscure form”.

His Honour also observed that, when considering whether to depart from earlier single judge decisions, a Judge should not approach such a task through the lens of “judicial comity”, a term which “creates the unfortunate impression that judges should give priority to questions of courtesy and politeness to each other over their duty to apply the law as properly understood”.  Instead, the question is whether there is a “compelling reason” to depart, rather than whether the earlier decision was “plainly” or “clearly” wrong.

Comparison with the 984 Patent

Turning to the comparison between the 241 Patent and the 984 Patent, Justice Jackman found there was no “clear and unmistakable direction” in the 984 Patent to make any formulation within the claims of the 241 Patent.  The 984 Patent required four active ingredients (whereas the Patent required two); listed levamisole as merely one of sixteen possible anthelmintic options; expressly encompassed aqueous formulations (the 241 Patent required non-aqueous); and listed DMA and DMI among over 25 solvents without preference or specific combination with levamisole.  Abbey’s approach of finding isolated references to individual claim features in different parts of the 984 Patent was rejected as failing to anticipate the specific combinations claimed.

Ferrocom Inferences

Abbey submitted that adverse inferences should be drawn under Commercial Union Assurance Company of Australia Ltd v Ferrcom Pty Ltd (1991) 22 NSWLR 389 (Ferrcom) from matters Virbac’s expert, Professor Bunt, had not addressed in evidence in chief – specifically, the obviousness of the solvent concentration ranges in claim 2.  Justice Jackman rejected this as “misplaced” as Professor Bunt had already explained that he would not have selected the relevant solvents in the first place, so there was no need for him to address the concentration ranges of solvents he would not have chosen.

More fundamentally, his Honour held that there would “rarely (if ever)” be scope for such an inference in contemporary expert evidence practice, given the requirement for expert conferences, joint reports, and declarations that all appropriate inquiries have been made.  These safeguards mean “contemporary practice thus does not leave any effective room for a party tactically to seek to ensure that certain subject matter is avoided by an expert witness”.

Outcome and Implications

Justice Jackman found that Abbey had infringed claims 1-10, 13, 15, 16 and 18, and granted an injunction preventing the sale of Levamox Duo, with an inquiry on costs to follow.  His Honour found claims 19-21 invalid.  Abbey has subsequently appealed the decision.

Justice Jackson’s decision demonstrates the importance of ensuring that an expert’s opinion on the issue of inventive step is based on the CGK and not knowledge specific to that particular expert which is not representative of the CGK. His Honour’s judgment also illustrates the power of prior patents and publications to corroborate or dispute the approach which PSAs would have taken to research around the time of the priority date.

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.

Seeds Of Dispute – APO Invalidates Limagrain’s Canola Patent Claims

 

Date of decision: 8 August 2025
Body: Australian Patent Office
Adjudicator:
Felix White

Introduction

The Australian Patent Office (APO) upheld an opposition by Nuseed Pty Ltd and Norddeutsche Pflanzenzucht Hans Georg Lembke KG against Limagrain Europe’s Australian patent application number 2016307234 (the Application) relating to Brassica (canola) plants with pod shattering tolerance.  The Delegate found multiple grounds of opposition successful, namely, certain claims lacked novelty in view of prior use, certain claims lacked inventive step, and all claims lacked sufficiency and support across their full scope.

Limagrain Europe was given two months to propose amendments to remedy the deficiencies and has since filed a request to amend the claims of the application, which is currently being processed by IP Australia.

Background

Australian patent application 2016307234, entitled ‘Brassica plant with pod shattering tolerance’, generally relates to the field of breeding oilseed rape (Brassica napus), which is more commonly known in Australia as canola.  Traditional breeding has focused on reducing harmful seed components (erucic acid and glucosinolates) and improving yield through hybrid vigour.  Canola breeding commonly uses male sterility systems to control pollination, including the Ogura cytoplasmic male sterility (CMS) system from radish (Raphanus sativus), along with its corresponding restorer (Rf) gene.  Introgression of this radish genetic material unexpectedly improved pod shatter resistance, but also caused undesirable traits such as higher glucosinolate levels and lower yield.  Because the genetic mechanisms behind these traits were unclear, the invention aims to provide canola plants with a shortened Raphanus introgression that maintains fertility restoration and pod shatter resistance, while minimising negative traits.  It also discloses SNP (single nucleotide polymorphism) markers to detect the presence or absence of the relevant introgressed regions.  The application is accompanied by a deposit, made under the provision of the Budapest Treaty, of seeds of the B. Napus line R42141F at the National Collections of Industrial, Food and Marine Bacteria in Aberdeen, Scotland.

The application included 27 claims at acceptance, summarised as follows:

  • Claims 1 – 11 directed to Brassica plants comprising a Raphanus genomic fragment conferring pod shatter tolerance (POSH+) characterised by the absence of at least one Raphanus SNP within SEQ ID Nos 4–18 and the presence of at least one Raphanus SNP within SEQ ID Nos 19–21.
  • Claims 12 – 16 directed to methods of identifying POSH+ Brassica plants by detecting the presence and absence of the specified Raphanus SNPs;
  • Claim 17 directed to a method of using one or more primers for detecting one or more of the Raphanus SNPs;
  • Claims 18 – 20 directed to conventional uses of the plants for oil, food, or breeding purposes; and
  • Claims 21 – 27 directed to marker-assisted selection (MAS) methods.

The application was challenged on the grounds of novelty, inventive step, support, sufficiency, and utility.

Evidence from six expert witnesses was submitted.  The Opponents’ five experts provided technical and historical evidence on canola breeding, marker use, and prior seed availability.  The Applicant’s expert responded on molecular biology and SNP assay issues.  The key issues in dispute in the evidence included the reliability of KASP assays in detecting SNPs; whether seeds used in tests were genetically stable and available before the priority date of the application; and the extent of the common general knowledge, especially in respect of material presented at International Rapeseed Congresses.

Key Issues

Novelty

The Opponents relied solely on prior use to establish a lack of novelty, namely the sale of seeds having the claimed SNPs before the priority date.  Evidence was submitted in respect of the sale of various seeds before the priority date, which were purported to have the claimed SNPs.  The Delegate noted that there is a high burden on the Opponents to establish that the same seeds in question, by necessity tested well after the priority date, had been available free in law and equity many years before.  The Delegate rejected some of the evidence on the basis that it did not establish on the balance of probabilities that the seeds tested were ones that were commercially available before the priority date.  However, the Delegate accepted evidence of a purchase order showing the purchase of Ogura restorer line CR51 seeds before the priority date.  The CR51 seeds were homozygous for Brassica at SEQ ID NO. 9 and were homozygous for Raphanus at all other loci tested.  As these seeds, when grown, would have inevitably made a plant with the properties of claim 1, claim 1 was found to lack novelty according to the reverse infringement test.  The Delegate also found claims 6 – 8, 11 and 18 – 20 to be anticipated by the prior use of the CR51 seeds.

The Delegate rejected the Applicant’s argument that there could have been no public disclosure of the genotype because the claimed SNPs had not yet been characterised.  The Delegate stated that a plant bearing the claimed SNPs would have infringed the claim before the priority date, whether its genotype was known at the time or not.

Inventive Step

The Opponents core submission was that each of the claims involved nothing more than the use of a standard marker-assisted selection approach to a known breeding problem.  The Opponents alleged that the invention as claimed lacked an inventive step in view of the common general knowledge alone, as well as in view of the common general knowledge in combination with the disclosure of three different prior art documents.

The Delegate applied the commonly used test for inventive step, namely the “Cripps Question”: would the skilled worker have been directly led to the claimed invention with a reasonable expectation of success?

All experts agreed that the International Rapeseed Congresses were key information-sharing events in the field, and that information presented there was most likely common general knowledge.  The Delegate noted that before the priority date, it was already known that the Raphanus introgression used for fertility restoration in canola also conferred pod shatter resistance, but introduced undesirable traits like higher glucosinolate content and smaller pods.  Experts agreed there was industry motivation to reduce the size of the introgression to retain benefits while removing drawbacks.  A 2011 Rapeseed Congress poster confirmed this goal and reported successful selection of restorer lines with improved pod size and quality while maintaining pod shatter resistance.  The Delegate accepted this as representative of common general knowledge and concluded that the skilled person would have had a reasonable expectation of success in achieving shorter introgressions through conventional breeding.

Consequently, the Delegate found that claims 1–11 directed to the Brassica plants, and claims 18 – 20 directed to their uses, lacked an inventive step in view of the common general knowledge alone, on the basis that the development of such plants would have been an inevitable outcome of routine breeding, even if the precise molecular basis was unknown.

However, the Delegate found that claims 12 – 17 and 21 – 27 directed to specific SNP markers and primer-based detection methods were inventive.  There was no evidence to suggest that the skilled worker would have been directly led to the particular marker sequences based on the common general knowledge or any of the cited documents. The Delegate noted that the evidence fell well short of the requirement in the Cripps Question of establishing a motivation to try any of the claimed markers with a reasonable expectation of success in distinguishing Raphanus from napus DNA.

Support and Sufficiency

The Opponents identified three areas where they alleged the scope of the claims exceeded the enabled subject matter: the species of Brassica, the identity of the Raphanus SNPs and the combination of Raphanus SNPs.  The Delegate was particularly critical of the breadth of the claims and found the claims to be broader than the Applicant’s technical contribution to the art.  The Delegate noted that the Applicant’s technical contribution to the art in the application is a set of SNP markers from the Raphanus introgression into B. napus Ogura restorer lines, some of which are associated with pod shatter tolerance and some which are not, and claimed plants that have some of the former and lack some of the latter.

In relation to the claim extending to all Brassica species, the Delegate found that there was no evidence that the phenotype of pod shatter resistance would be achieved in Brassica species other than B. napus or with any different introgression.  The technical contribution was limited to B. napus Ogura restorer lines.

In relation to the claims extending to any Raphanus DNA, the Delegate found that the reference to the Raphanus DNA in claim 1 only makes sense when it refers to the introgression found in Ogura restorer B. napus lines, so the technical contribution is limited to that genetic background.  The Applicant did not sufficiently establish a principle of general application in terms of the combination of Brassica species and the nature of Raphanus DNA.

In relation to the nature of the Raphanus SNPs, the Delegate considered the technical contribution with respect to marker assisted selection was only the SNPs at the underlined positions, and the evidence suggests that to identify new Raphanus specific SNPs in those sequences would require restarting the entire research project which would amount to undue experimentation.

On the question of sufficiency, the Delegate was not convinced that any of the above three variables were principles of general application.  In particular, the Delegate was not convinced that it was plausible that the prediction for pod shatter phenotype would be relevant for plants other than B. napus with the Ogura restorer Raphanus introgression on chromosome 9.  The Delegate noted that while it is plausible that other SNPs could exist within SEQ ID Nos 4-21, identifying those would involve undue experimentation.

Utility

The Opponents argued that the claimed plants did not deliver promised benefits of improved pod size and reduced glucosinolates.  The Delegate rejected this argument, finding that the utility of the invention was more limited, namely, to act as markers for selecting out unnecessary parts of the Raphanus introgression while maintaining pod shattering tolerance.  There was nothing in the evidence that was inconsistent with this.

Outcome

The Opposition was successful on the following grounds:

  • Claims 1, 6-8, 11 and 18-20 were found to lack novelty in view of the prior use of the Ogura restorer line CR51, which was available free of law and equity before the priority date, and which was demonstrated to lack the Raphanus SNP of SEQ ID 9.
  • Claims 1-11 and 18-20 to plants per se were found to lack inventive step in view of the common general knowledge, in that the skilled worker would have been directly led to reduce the size of the Raphanus introgression through conventional breeding techniques.
  • All claims were found to lack support and sufficiency over their full scope, to the extent that they encompass plants other than B. napus with the Raphanus introgression on chromosome 9, derived from the Ogura restorer line, and to the extent that they encompass SNPs other than those underlined in Figures 1 and 2.

As there was a clear prospect that these grounds could be overcome by amendment, the Delegate provided the applicant with an opportunity to amend the claims.  The Applicant has since filed a request to amend the claims, namely, to delete claims 1 – 11 and 18 – 20, and to amend claims 12 – 17 to limit the methods to Brassica napus plants comprising a Raphanus Ogura restorer fragment, and to define the Raphanus SNP as corresponding to the underlined nucleotides in Table 1 of the application.  The Opponents will have an opportunity to comment on the proposed amendments before a decision is made as to their allowability or otherwise.

Implications

This decision highlights the APO’s strict approach to claim breadth in biotechnology patents.  The APO in this case emphasised a strict post-raising the bar sufficiency standard – claims must match the demonstrated technical contribution to the art, and evidence must be sufficient to establish any claimed principle of general application.  Where the technical contribution is limited to a specific species, introgression, or identified markers, claims will not be allowed to extend to broader plant categories or uncharacterised SNPs.  To withstand opposition, the specification should provide sufficient description and examples to enable broader claims, and ability to argue a principle of general application.  Clear, narrower fallback options should also be included in the claims to ensure amendment is possible to survive opposition.  Alternatively, claims should be drafted carefully to align with the Applicant’s demonstrated technical contribution to the art.

This decision also highlights that seed sales can be novelty-destroying even if their genetic content is undisclosed or uncharacterised.

A further takeaway is the Delegate’s finding on inventive step, namely that the claims to the Brassica plants per se were not inventive, yet the claims to the MAS methods were.  This highlights that while conventional plant breeding outcomes may be found to be obvious, claims directed to the molecular tools (for example, specific SNPs/primers) used to breed them can still be inventive, and worthy of patent protection.


 

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.

 

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.
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.

Triple Null Trouble – APO Finds CSIRO’s High Amylose Wheat Claims Unsupported

 

Date of decision: 14 April 2025
Body: Australian Patent Office
Adjudicator:
Dr S.J. Smith

Introduction

The Australian Patent Office (APO) upheld an opposition by Urrbrae Foods Pty Ltd against CSIRO’s patent application number AU2017292900 (the Application) directed to high amylose wheat.  While grounds of manner of manufacture and entitlement failed, the Delegate found the claims lacked support and the opposition was successful on that ground.  CSIRO was given two months to amend, and costs were awarded against it.  No amendments have been filed.  Instead, CSIRO has filed an appeal of the decision in the Federal Court.

Background

The application, entitled “High amylose wheat – III” relates to high amylose wheat plants and methods of producing them.  The invention concerns wheat grains having null mutations in all three SSIIa genes (A, B and D genomes), leading to increased amylose content (≥45%) and higher dietary fibre fractions such as β-glucan, arabinoxylan, cellulose and fructan.  These traits are purported to improve nutritional value and human health outcomes.

The application contained 28 claims at acceptance.  Claim 1, as the only independent claim, reads as follows:

Wheat grain of the species Triticum aestivum, the grain comprising

i.       mutations in each of its SSIIa genes such that the grain is homozygous for a null mutation in its SSIIa-A gene, homozygous for a null mutation in its SSIIa-B gene and homozygous for a null mutation in its SSIIa-D gene,

ii.       a total starch content comprising an amylose content and an amylopectin content,

iii.    a fructan content which is increased relative to wild-type wheat grain on a weight basis, preferably between 3% and 12% of the grain weight,

iv.      a β-glucan content,

v.       an arabinoxylan content,

vi.      a cellulose content,

the grain having a grain weight of between 25mg and 60mg, wherein the amylose content is between 45% and 70% on a weight basis of the total starch content of the grain as determined by iodine binding assay, wherein the amylopectin content on a weight basis is reduced relative to the wild-type wheat grain, wherein each of the β-glucan content, arabinoxylan content and cellulose content are increased relative to the wild-type grain on a weight basis, such that the sum of the fructan content, β-glucan content, arabinoxylan content and cellulose content is between 15% and 30% of the grain weight.

Dependent claims are directed to flour, food products, methods of producing the wheat, and uses in human nutrition.

Urrbrae initially opposed the application on the grounds of entitlement, manner of manufacture, novelty, inventive step, utility and support.  At the hearing, however, Urrbrae pressed only the grounds of manner of manufacture, support and entitlement.

Key Issues

Lack of Support

The central issue in the case concerned whether the claimed invention—wheat grains exhibiting high amylose and fibre content—was enabled and supported across the full scope of the claims, or whether the disclosure only enabled and supported claims to wheat grains from specific genetic backgrounds.

Urrbrae argued that the CSIRO’s technical contribution was confined to grains developed from the Sunco genetic background.  The specification itself, via the worked examples, highlighted Sunco as uniquely successful in achieving the claimed characteristics of the wheat, while grains from other genetic backgrounds such as EGA-Hume and Westonia lines either failed to achieve the claimed characteristics or achieved inconsistent results.  Urrbrae submitted that this demonstrated that the invention could not be performed across its full breadth, and that the claims therefore extended beyond what was enabled or supported by the specification.

In contrast, the CSIRO argued that the invention lay not simply in the generation of the claimed grain lines from one genetic background, but in the method of generating, screening, and selecting suitable lines.  CSIRO maintained that the specification provided sufficient guidance to enable the skilled person to reproduce the invention across different wheat cultivars, without undue experimentation, and that it was unnecessary to exemplify every possible genetic background.  CSIRO characterised Urrbae’s objection as being that, a priori, it is not possible to generate only wheat grain with the required characteristics.

The Delegate agreed in part with Urrbrae, finding that while the specification clearly enabled production of grains meeting the claimed parameters in Sunco and Westonia backgrounds, it provided no guiding principle for extending those results to other genetic lines such as EGA-Hume.  The Delegate noted that, while the specification lists a number of possible genetic backgrounds into which the triple null mutation could be introduced, it does not provide any indication that success in achieving the claimed phenotype is likely in those strains.  The Delegate referred to the comments of Lord Hoffman in Biogen to the effect that where a patentee provides a new product with a beneficial effect but cannot demonstrate a common principle by which a beneficial effect will be shared by other products of the class, they will not be entitled to a claim to the entire class, as being apt in this case.  The Delegate found that the specification recognises that the genetic background of the wheat is important to achieving the claimed results, but there is no further elucidation of any associated principle that would support a technical contribution to the art of the scope claimed.  Determination of whether wheat grains from any particular genetic background will afford the claimed results effectively left the skilled person to conduct a trial-and-error research project where the outcome is uncertain.  As such, the Delegate found that the technical contribution was limited to the success demonstrated in the Sunco and Westonia genetic lines, and the broader claims were not supported to the extent that they encompassed other wheat grains from other genetic backgrounds.

Manner of Manufacture

Urrbrae argued that the invention did not constitute a manner of manufacture under s 18(1)(a) of the Patents Act 1990, contending that (i) the claims lacked inventive character on the face of the specification, and (ii) not everything within the claims was the result of human action.

Lack of Inventive Character

Urrbrae submitted that there is no inventiveness in developing triple null grain with the intention of producing high amylose wheat plants, particularly where there is a need for improving high amylose wheat plants.  Urrbrae argued that the invention was no more than the use of a known property (increased amylose content) of a known article (triple null wheat) for a new use for which that property makes it suitable, and the serendipitous discovery of other properties or characteristics of that wheat do not take it outside of this category.

CSIRO responded that the prior art incorporated into the specification does not state that grain with the defined characteristics could be produced and that admissions that it was known that triple null wheat had a higher amylose content than wild type do not amount to an admission that grain with the combined claimed characteristics was known. CSIRO also pointed to the specification’s reference to the SBEIIa gene as a more obvious target if seeking to produce wheat with at least 50% amylose.

The Delegate was not persuaded that the specification on its face reveals an absence of the requisite quality of inventiveness, stating that while it may have been obvious to generate triple null wheat with an objective of increased amylose content, the specification makes no clear admission that a grain having an amylose content of 45% and the other parameters defined in the present claims was known or a desired result.  To the contrary, that is presented as the invention.  The Delegate stated that it was not apparent on the face of the specification that the claimed invention would be arrived at without invention.

Result of Human Action

Urrbrae argued that the claimed wheat plants were not the result of human action, since the specification allowed for the possibility of naturally occurring mutations and natural crossing or self-fertilisation of grain lines.  On that basis, Urrbrae submitted that the claims could capture plants arising without human intervention.

CSIRO responded that there was no evidence that triple-null wheat plants—those with mutations in all three SSIIa genes and exhibiting the claimed composition—occur naturally.  The specification, particularly Example 4 and its breeding schematics, demonstrated extensive human involvement through controlled crossing, backcrossing, and selection to achieve the desired phenotype.

The Delegate noted that even if natural mutations are theoretically possible, that does not mean they exist in practice.  There was no evidence that any naturally occurring plants fell within the scope of the claims.

The Delegate held that the claimed invention was clearly the product of deliberate human breeding and selection, not a spontaneous natural occurrence.  A mere possibility of natural existence does not meet the balance of probabilities threshold.  Accordingly, the ground that the claims were not the result of human action was not made out.

Lack of Entitlement

Urrbrae alleged the invention was first made by Dr Colin Jenner, whose ‘Cross III’ wheat achieved amylose contents of up to 55%.  However, the Delegate found that there was no persuasive evidence that CSIRO derived its invention from Dr Jenner.  Whilst no evidence was filed by the named inventor, which the Delegate noted would have been the best evidence, internal CSIRO documentation showed the inventive concept was developed independently of Dr Jenner.  The entitlement ground therefore failed.

Outcome

The opposition succeeded on the ground of lack of support.  The grounds of manner of manufacture and entitlement were rejected.  CSIRO was given two months to file amendments to narrow the claims to align with its demonstrated contribution to the art. Costs were awarded against CSIRO.  CSIRO has not filed any amendments.  Instead, CSIRO has filed an appeal with the Federal Court.

Implications

This decision demonstrates the APO’s strict application of post-Raising the Bar support requirements in the agricultural biotech space.  Broad claims encompassing wheat grains from all genetic lines were not allowed due to a lack of consistent experimental evidence that established a principle of general application.  This finding emphasises the importance, in biotechnology and plant breeding cases, of articulating a clear principle or rationale for why an invention should be expected to work across its claimed scope, particularly when results vary across genetic backgrounds.  Without this, patent applicants risk having their monopoly confined to specific examples rather than the broader class of products they intended to protect.

The decision also confirms that plant breeding inventions remain patentable in Australia where they involve deliberate human intervention, even if some mutations could theoretically occur in nature.  However, patentees should ensure their specifications clearly describe the inventive human contribution, particularly where the invention builds on naturally occurring traits or known breeding systems.


 

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.

 

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.

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.

PiPCast™ | Mediation of IP Disputes in New Zealand

Head of Litigation (New Zealand), Paul Johns, talks with expert IP mediator Sheana Wheeldon about mediation of intellectual property disputes in New Zealand.  The introduction of a new fast-track Commercial List for IP litigation and recent reforms to general court procedure will both lead to an increased focus on pre-litigation mediation.  Pearce IP is acting in the very first IP case on the Commercial List.  This edition of PiPCast™ explores the issues surrounding the use of mediation to resolve IP disputes in New Zealand.

Pearce IP BioBlast® for the week ending 16 January 2026

Pearce IP provides weekly reports on global biosimilars activities in the Pearce IP BioBlast®.  Significant biosimilar activities for the week ending 16 January 2026 are set out below:


Aflibercept

16 January 2026 | EU | New Indication Alert: Bayer’s Aflibercept 8mg EU Approved for RVO
On 16 January 2026, Bayer announced that the European Commission has approved Eylea™ 8mg  (aflibercept 8mg, 114.3 mg/ml solution for injection) for macular oedema… Read more here.

Bevacizumab

On 13 January 2026, Shanghai Henlius Biotech announced that its Biologics Licence Application (BLA) for HLX04, biosimilar to Roche/Genentech’s Avastin® (bevacizumab)… Read more here.

Denosumab

9 January 2026 | BO | Boan Biotech’s Biosimilar Denosumab Approved in Bolivia
On 9 January 2026, Boan Biotech announced that it has received regulatory approval from Bolivia’s National Agency of Medicines and Health Technologies (AGEMED) for BA6101… Read more here.

Dupilumab

On 14 January 2026, Korea Biomedical Review reported that Korean-headquartered Chong Kun Dang has received approval from the European Medicines Agency (EMA) and the… Read more here.

Dupilumab, Guselkumab, Ixekizumab, Trastuzumab Deruxtecan, Vedolizumab, Ocrelizumab

14 January 2026 | Samsung Bioepis to Add 6 Biosimilars to Pipeline: Dupilumab, Guselkumab, Ixekizumab, Vedolizumab, Trastuzumab Deruxtecan & Ocrelizumab; 20 Biosimilars by 2030
At the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference on 14 January 2026, Samsung Epis Holdings announced the addition of six biosimilar candidates to Samsung Bioepis’ pipeline: dupilumab… Read more here.

Insulin Glargine

14 January 2026 | EU | Sandoz’s Biosimilar Insulin Glargine EU Approved
On 14 January 2026, Sandoz announced that the European Commission has approved Ondibta® (insulin glargine solution for injection in pre-filled pen), biosimilar to… Read more here.

Nivolumab

12 January 2026 | IN | Zydus Clear to Launch Nivolumab Biosimilar in India After BMS Injunction Overturned on Appeal
On 12 January 2026, an appellate Division of the High Court of Delhi issued its judgment overturning the grant of a preliminary injunction awarded to Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS) in July… Read more here.

Nivolumab, Ipilimumab

12 January 2026 | TW | New Indication Alert: BMS/Ono’s Opdivo®/Yervoy® Combo Approved in Taiwan for MSI-High/dMMR CRC
On 12 January 2026, Ono Pharmaceutical announced that the Taiwan Food and Drug Administration has approved a new indication for Opdivo® (nivolumab) intravenous infusion in… Read more here.

Pegfilgrastim

9 January 2026 | CA | CuraTeQ’s Pegfilgrastim Biosimilar Approved in Canada
On 9 January 2026, Aurobindo Pharma announced in a regulatory filing that its subsidiary, CuraTeQ Biologics, has received approval from Health Canada for Dyrupeg®, biosimilar… Read more here.

Ustekinumab

14 January 2026 | KR | Samsung Bioepis’ PFP Biosimilar Ustekinumab Approved in Korea
On 14 January 2026, Samsung Bioepis announced that Korea’s Ministry of Food and Drug Safety has approved a pre-filled pen formulation (PFP) of Epyztek®, biosimilar to J&J/Janssen’s… Read more here.

Biopharma Deals

15 January 2026 | Zydus Acquires Agenus’ Biologics Manufacturing Facilities in US $141M Deal
On 15 January 2026, Zydus Lifesciences Ltd and Agenus Inc. announced the closing of a deal in which Zydus acquired Agenus’ biologics manufacturing facilities in Emeryville and Berkeley… Read more here.
 
 
13 January 2026 | Celltrion Plans 41 Biosimilars By 2038; Opens First US Manufacturing Facility
On 13 January 2026, Celltrion revealed at the 44th Annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference that it plans to commercialise up to 18 biosimilar products by 2030 and 41 products… 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.

Seqirus Successfully Opposes Translate Bio’s Liposome Patent – Lessons on Support and Sufficiency

Seqirus, Inc. v Translate Bio, Inc. [2025] APO 5 (18 February 2025)

 

Date of decision: 18 February 2025
Body: Australian Patent Office
Adjudicator: M. Umehara

Background

Seqirus, Inc. opposed Translate Bio, Inc.’s patent application (AU2020202755) concerning the in vivo delivery of mRNA for augmenting proteins and enzymes in genetic diseases.  The invention’s contribution lay in specific liposome-forming lipid combinations (and ratios) which encapsulate the mRNA to facilitate delivery into a cell.  Whilst the specification exemplified liposomes with specific combinations and ratios of various lipids, the claims defined the combinations more broadly than what was exemplified.

Seqirus opposed the application on several grounds, including novelty, inventive step, utility, clarity, sufficiency and support.  The fate of the opposition ultimately turned on the questions of sufficiency (clear enough and complete enough disclosure) and support.

Key Issues and Consideration

Novelty and Inventive Step

The novelty and inventive step debates were straightforward.

Seqirus raised a series of prior art documents on the question of novelty.  The Delegate, however, was not persuaded that any of this prior art provided a clear and unmistakable direction for the claimed liposome composition having the required combination of lipid components, encapsulating within its interior mRNA having the required structure, and a size of less than about 150 nm.

The Delegate then considered inventive step based on the common general knowledge alone and taken together with a series of prior art documents.  When considered in light of the common general knowledge alone, the Delegate stated that, at best, the evidence suggested that a person skilled in the art would have contemplated formulating mRNA with liposomes.  However, it remained unanswered whether the liposome would have encapsulated or merely formed complexes with the mRNA, and what liposome formulation would have been used or what structural modifications may have been carried out on the mRNA.  Ultimately, the Delegate found that, while each feature of the claims was individually known in the art, the combination of those features was not obvious.  The Delegate also did not accept that a person skilled in the art faced with the problem of formulating mRNA for delivery, transfection and protein expression, and armed with any one of the prior art documents would arrive at the claimed invention as a matter of routine.

Utility

On the question of utility, both sides agreed that the specification showed that the scope of the claims included something that was capable of delivering mRNA to a cell and expressing the encoded protein in vivo.  Seqirus argued that a therapeutic effect was also required (but not demonstrated).  However, the Delegate, agreeing with Translate Bio, held that the ‘promise’ of the invention was delivery, transfection, and expression only, and that no therapeutic effect was required.  Consequently, this ground of opposition failed.

Sufficiency (clear enough and complete enough)

This was the decisive issue (together with that of support).

Australia’s law on sufficiency requires the specification to disclose the claimed invention in a manner that is clear enough and complete enough to enable a skilled person to perform the invention across the full width of the claims without undue burden or further invention.

In the present case, the claims covered broad ranges of lipid ratios (e.g., 20–70% cationic lipid, 5%–90% non-cationic lipid (cholesterol and either DSPC or DOPE) and 1 %–15% PEG-modified lipids, but the specification only exemplified narrow ranges (e.g., 25–30% cationic lipid, ~40% cholesterol, 4% PEG-lipid).  The question at hand, was whether Translate Bio’s contribution to the art extends to the general principle of encapsulating mRNA within the full breadth of the claimed liposomes and whether this has been sufficiently enabled.  Experts on both sides agreed that small deviations in lipid content could collapse formulation stability of the essential liposome.  In accepting the evidence presented, the Delegate concluded that each component in the liposome had structural and functional features, and that, if these components were not properly balanced, the successful formation of the liposome which was essential for delivery of the mRNA to the cell could be disrupted.  Thus, the Delegate concluded that the specification did not provide a general principle for broader application beyond what was illustrated in the examples.  As such the claims were said to be overly broad and not enabled across the full scope of the claims.

Support

For similar reasons, the broad monopoly claimed was not commensurate with the technical contribution.  Translate Bio’s demonstrated contribution lay in identifying certain four-component lipid mixtures suitable for encapsulating and delivering mRNA, not a general principle covering all the broadly claimed ranges.

Outcome

The opposition succeeded on grounds of insufficiency and lack of support.  All claims were found invalid in their current form.  Translate Bio was given two months to propose amendments to overcome these deficiencies, but no amendments were proposed before the deadline.  The application was formally refused on 12 May 2025, and costs were awarded to Seqirus.

Implications

Patent applicants should be careful to:

  • describe the invention thoroughly in the specification and include multiple different embodiments and variations traversing the full scope of the claims;
  • exercise caution when drafting claims which go beyond what is exemplified;
  • avoid overly broad generalisations which are not supported by a clear and detailed description; and
  • provide a clear and logical progression from the worked examples to the broader embodiments, including a detailed outline of any claimed principle of general application.

 

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.

Donna Meredith

Donna Meredith

Associate, Patent & Trade Mark Attorney

Donna is a Patent and Trade Mark Attorney with more than 8 years’ post-qualification experience, and a background in biotechnology and biology.

Donna supports Australian and international clients in a range of life sciences fields including nanoparticles, pharmaceuticals, biopharmaceuticals, biotechnology, DNA sequencing, cell and gene therapy, CRISPR technologies, protein chemistry, formulation chemistry, chemical compounds, biofuels, plant varieties, ag-tech, food-tech and medical devices.

New Indication Alert: Bayer’s Aflibercept 8mg EU Approved for RVO

On 16 January 2026, Bayer announced that the European Commission has approved Eylea™ 8mg  (aflibercept 8mg, 114.3 mg/ml solution for injection) for macular oedema following retinal vein occlusion (RVO) including branch, central and hemiretinal vein occlusion.  This is the third indication approved in Europe for Eylea™ 8mg.

The EU approval follows a positive opinion of the EMA’s CHMP for the new indication in December 2025.  Eylea™ 8mg was first approved in the EU in January 2024 for the treatment of nAMD and diabetic macular oedema.

Eylea™ 8mg (known as Eylea HD® in the US) was jointly developed by Bayer and Regeneron.  Regeneron holds the exclusive rights to both 2mg and 8mg Eylea® in the US, while Bayer holds those outside the US, where the companies equally share the profits from sales of the products.

Eylea HD® was FDA approved for the RVO indication in November 2025, following US vial approval for nAMD, DME and diabetic retinopathy in August 2023.  Eylea™ 8mg is also approved for nAMD and DME (as intravitreal injection) in multiple other countries, including Japan (January 2024), UK (January 2024) and Australia (June 2024).  Eylea™ 8mg pre-filled syringe (OcuClick) was approved in Europe (September 2024), Australia (October 2024) and Korea (August 2025).  Regeneron/Bayer have submitted marketing authorisation applications for Eylea™ 8mg for the treatment of patients with macular oedema following RVO including in Japan (May 2025).

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

Calderbank Consequences – Miele Awarded Indemnity Costs Despite 15% Discount for Unsuccessful Arguments

 

Date of decision: 28 August 2025
Body: Federal Court of Australia
Adjudicator:
Justice Rofe

Highlight

This decision concerns the apportionment of costs arising from the substantive decision in Miele & Cie KG v Bruckbauer [2025] FCA 537 (27 May 2025) (Substantive Decision). Justice Rofe considered the appropriate apportionment of costs where Bruckbauer had rejected a Calderbank offer from Miele but ultimately failed in its infringement case, and where Miele had made certain strategic choices which resulted in higher evidence costs being incurred by both parties but with no effect on the overall result of the case.

Background

In the Substantive Decision in May 2025, Miele succeeded in revoking relevant claims of Bruckbauer’s patent AU2012247900 entitled “Hob with central removal of cooking vapours by suction-extraction in the downward direction” (the Patent), which Bruckbauer claimed were infringed by Miele’s cook-top hobs. The revocation of the relevant claims meant that Miele’s cook-top hobs did not infringe Bruckbauer’s Patent.

In the course of the infringement proceedings, and after the close of evidence, Miele served Bruckbauer with a Notice of Offer to Compromise together with a Calderbank offer. The Notice and Calderbank offer together proposed resolution of the proceedings, including that Bruckbauer would pay Miele’s costs in the sum of AUD $250,000, and that the parties would take all necessary steps to facilitate suitable orders being made by the Court to support the resolution of the matter and the payment of costs to Miele. Bruckbauer rejected the offer but subsequently failed in its infringement case.

Key Issues and Consideration

Since Miele succeeded in the Substantive Decision, Miele was entitled to costs. As a result of the Notice and Calderbank offer, Miele argued that it was entitled to indemnity costs. The parties disagreed on two issues affecting the apportionment of costs, namely whether:

1. Miele’s recoverable costs should be discounted due to Miele’s lack of success in relation to certain issues argued in the case (the Chinese Amendments); and

2. Miele should be awarded a portion of its costs on an indemnity basis due to the rejected Calderbank.

In relation to the first point, Miele had argued in the substantive proceedings that the Chinese Amendments (which were amendments made by Bruckbauer to one of its Chinese patent applications) were publicly available in 2015 and disclosed the invention claimed in the Patent, therefore making the relevant claims of the Patent invalid. This argument was ultimately unsuccessful but resulted in a substantial amount of evidence being dedicated to the Chinese Amendments, including unscheduled evidence from Miele which was served days before the start of the trial. Justice Rofe found that a significant portion of the trial was devoted to the issue of the public availability of the Chinese Amendments and the trial was extended due to issues with interpreter-related delays (i.e. lengthening of cross examination due to translation of questions and answers) and uncooperative conduct from witnesses on both sides. Justice Rofe found that it was appropriate to reduce Miele’s costs by 15%, as Miele had initiated the Chinese Amendments issue and the related line of evidence, which ultimately did not add any value to Miele’s invalidity case against the Patent. Accordingly, her Honour considered that the costs would not have been incurred had the issue of the Chinese Amendments not been raised.

In relation to the second point, Justice Rofe considered whether Miele was entitled to indemnity costs under Rule 25.14(3) of the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth), which provides:

(3) If an offer is made by an applicant and not accepted by a respondent, and the applicant obtains a judgment that is more favourable than the terms of the offer, the applicant is entitled to an order that the respondent pay the applicant’s costs:

(a) before 11.00 am on the second business day after the offer was served–on a party and party basis; and

(b) after the time mentioned in paragraph (a)–on an indemnity basis.

Bruckbauer argued that, the Substantive Decision was not more favourable to Miele than what was proposed by Miele under the offer, that the offer was not a genuine compromise and, for those reasons it was reasonable for Bruckbauer to reject the offer. Justice Rofe disagreed, saying that Miele had achieved a more favourable judgment than what was proposed in the offer. Her Honour also considered that no exceptional circumstances existed which would justify an order inconsistent with the Federal Court Rules. Justice Rofe was of the view that the Calderbank offer, which explained why Miele believed it would succeed at trial, constituted a genuine offer of compromise as there was little else that Miele could offer to Bruckbauer by way of compromise and that, by the time Miele extended the offer, Bruckbauer should have been aware that its infringement case was weak. As a result, no exceptional circumstances were established.

Outcome and Implications

Bruckbauer was ordered to pay 85% of Miele’s costs on an indemnity basis from the second business day after the offer was served on Bruckbauer. Miele’s overall costs were discounted by 15% because it had chosen to pursue the Chinese Amendments issue and the associated line of evidence which ultimately had no impact on the outcome of the case.

Justice Rofe’s decision highlights the impact that evidentiary decisions and offers of compromise can have on the extent of the ultimate costs orders. This is of great significance given the high cost of patent litigation 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.

 

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.

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.

Pearce IP and Chantal Savage Honoured in Legal 500 Asia Pacific 2026 Rankings

Pearce IP and Chantal Savage, have been ranked in Australia for Intellectual Property in the Legal 500 Asia Pacific 2026 Rankings.

Legal 500 rankings are so highly regarded due to the award selection process.  Legal 500 rankings take in a broad scope of client and law firm information, combining qualitative and quantitative data to create a strategic compass for clients who are searching for the best legal advisers for their type of work.

Reflecting on her ranking, Chantal said:

“This acknowledgement is meaningful and exciting. My commitment to provide our clients with the best legal advice for their needs and to protect their IP rights has always been my key goal and I’m honoured to be recognised.”

Pearce IP proudly celebrates Chantal’s achievement and the standard of excellence she and Pearce IP continue to set.


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.

 

Zydus Acquires Agenus’ Biologics Manufacturing Facilities in US $141M Deal

On 15 January 2026, Zydus Lifesciences Ltd and Agenus Inc. announced the closing of a deal in which Zydus acquired Agenus’ biologics manufacturing facilities in Emeryville and Berkeley, California, and obtained exclusive rights to develop and commercialise Agenus’ botensilimab and balstilimab (BOT+BAL) immunotherapy combination program in India and Sri Lanka.

The transaction includes a US$75 million cash payment by Zydus to Agenus for the transfer of the biologics manufacturing facilities, a US$16 million purchase of shares in Agenus by Zydus and up to US$50 million in milestone payments by Zydus to Agenus based on BOT+BAL production orders.  Agenus is also eligible to receive a 5% royalty on net sales of BOT+BAL in India and Sri Lanka.

Zydus is establishing a new US subsidiary, Zylidac Bio LLC, which will provide biologics manufacturing sites offering CDMO services to biopharmaceutical companies globally.  According to Zydus, the launch of Zylidac Bio is designed to provide a “safe-harbour” for global biopharmaceutical companies seeking to transition their supply chains to US based partners, in light of the US BIOSECURE Act, which was signed into law in December 2025 and restricts US federal procurement and grants involving biotechnology products or services provided by “biotechnology companies of concern”.

Zydus recently signalled its entry into the North American market, entering into an exclusive licensing and supply agreement with Formycon for the commercialisation of Formycon’s FYB206, biosimilar to MSD’s Keytruda® (pembrolizumab), in the US and Canada.

Samsung Bioepis’ PFP Biosimilar Ustekinumab Approved in Korea

On 14 January 2026, Samsung Bioepis announced that Korea’s Ministry of Food and Drug Safety has approved a pre-filled pen formulation (PFP) of Epyztek®, biosimilar to J&J/Janssen’s Stelara® (ustekinumab).  According to Samsung Bioepis, this is the first PFP presentation of ustekinumab to be approved in Korea.

Epyztek® (SB17) was the first ustekinumab biosimilar approved in South Korea in April 2024.  SB17 was approved in Europe in April 2024 as Pyzchiva® and a Pyzchiva® autoinjector was launched in May 2025 as the first commercially available biosimilar ustekinumab pre-filled pen in Europe.  In the US, Pyzchiva® was approved in July 2024 and launched in February 2025, in PFS and vial forms.  Under a development and commercialisation agreement with Sandoz entered in September 2023, Sandoz has the right to commercialise Pyzchiva® in Europe, Switzerland, the UK, the US and Brazil.

The EMA’s CHMP adopted a positive opinion for Celltrion’s PFP/autoinjector presentation of its ustekinumab biosimilars, Steqeyma® and Qoyvolma®, in December 2025.  Celltrion’s PFP presentation of the product was approved in Australia in the same month.

Sandoz’s Biosimilar Insulin Glargine EU Approved

On 14 January 2026, Sandoz announced that the European Commission has approved Ondibta® (insulin glargine solution for injection in pre-filled pen), biosimilar to Sanofi’s Lantus® Solostar®.  Ondibta® is registered in Europe by Gan & Lee Pharmaceuticals and received a positive recommendation from the EMA’s CHMP in November 2025.

Sandoz expects to launch Ondibta® in Europe by early 2027.  The product is approved for the treatment of diabetes mellitus in adults, adolescents and children aged two years and above.

Sandoz and Gan & Lee partnered in December 2018 in relation to the commercialisation of insulin glargine, insulin lispro and insulin aspart biosimilars.  Under the agreement, Sandoz is responsible for commercialising the products in Europe and other key territories, while Gan & Lee has responsibility for development, registration, manufacturing and supply.

Insulin glargine biosimilars have been approved in Europe since 2014 (the first was Eli Lilly’s Abasaglar®).

Samsung Bioepis to Add 6 Biosimilars to Pipeline: Dupilumab, Guselkumab, Ixekizumab, Vedolizumab, Trastuzumab Deruxtecan & Ocrelizumab; 20 Biosimilars by 2030

At the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference on 14 January 2026, Samsung Epis Holdings announced the addition of six biosimilar candidates to Samsung Bioepis’ pipeline: dupilumab, guselkumab, ixekizumab, fam-trastuzumab deruxtecan-nxki, vedolizumab, and ocrelizumab.

The announcement confirms the November 2025 report that Samsung Bioepis had commenced development of a biosimilar to AstraZeneca/Daiichi Sankyo’s Enhertu® (trastuzumab deruxtecan), with the biosimilar in the early development stage in preparation for preclinical trials.  The same report had also indicated that Samsung Bioepis is developing biosimilars to Regeneron/Sanofi’s Dupixent® (dupilumab), Janssen’s Tremfya® (guselkumab) and Eli Lilly’s Talz® (ixekizumab).

Samsung Bioepis has launched 11 biosimilars to 10 INNs on market around the world and has a biosimilar to MSD’s Keytruda® (pembrolizumab), (SB27) in phase 1 and 3 clinical trials (commenced April 2024).  The company is aiming to have 20 biosimilars in its portfolio by 2030.

At the J.P. Morgan Conference, Samsung Epis also announced that the FDA has approved Samsung Bioepis’ investigational new drug application (IND) for SBE303, an antibody-drug conjugate, which is expected to enter a Phase 1 first-in-human clinical trial in patients with advanced refractory solid tumours this year.

There are a number of companies with dupilumab biosimilars under development.  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.

Biosimilar development of guselkumab is also underway.  In September 2025, Polpharma and MS Pharma announced that they entered into a licensing agreement for the commercialisation of PB019, biosimilar guselkumab, in the MENA region.  In 2023, Alvotech and Advanz Pharma entered into a partnership agreement to commercialise a proposed guselkumab biosimilar in the EU, UK and Switzerland.

Biosimilars to Takeda’s Entyvio® (vedolizumab) are in development by at least Alvotech (Phase 3 clinical trial for AVT16 commenced September 2024), Intas Pharmaceuticals (approval from India’s CDSCO for a Phase 1 bioequivalence study of INTP53 obtained in February 2025) and Polpharma Biologics (which entered into licensing agreements with Fresenius Kabi and MS Pharma for commercialisation of PB016 in August and September 2025).

Ocrelizumab biosimilars (referencing Roche’s Ocrevus®) are in clinical trials sponsored by Biocad (Phase III, enrolment commenced November 2025), Sandoz (comparative pharmacokinetic trial underway), Amgen (Phase III trial reported in January 2025) and Celltrion (Phase III IND for CT-P53 partially approved by the EMA in August 2023).

Chong Kun Dang’s Ph 1 Trial Protocol for Biosimilar Dupilumab EU & UK Approved

On 14 January 2026, Korea Biomedical Review reported that Korean-headquartered Chong Kun Dang has received approval from the European Medicines Agency (EMA) and the UK Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) for its phase 1 clinical trial protocol for CKD-706, biosimilar to Regeneron/Sanofi’s Dupixent® (dupilumab).

According to the report, Chong Kun Dang intends to conduct a European-based clinical trial to demonstrate pharmacokinetic equivalence between CKD-706 and Dupixent® in healthy adults, as well as to assess pharmacodynamics, safety and immunogenicity.

There are a number of dupilumab biosimilars under development.  Alvotech and Advanz Pharma entered into partnership agreements in February 2023May 2023 and June 2024 for the commercialisation of dupilumab (among other biosimilars), in Europe and other regions.

In June 2025, Bio-Thera Solutions and Costa Rican-based SteinCares announced an agreement to commercialise biosimilar dupilumab across Latin America.  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.

As reported in November 2025, and confirmed at the J.P. Morgan Health Conference in January 2026, Samsung Bioepis is developing a dupilumab biosimilar.  It was also reported in December 2025 that Russia’s Binnopharm Group and China’s Mabwell signed a MOU in relation to localising the production of Mabwell’s dupilumab biosimilar in Russia and the EAEU.

Wait and See – Federal Court Reserves Costs Question After Preliminary Discovery Hearing Vacated

 

Date of decision: 29 July 2025
Body: Federal Court of Australia
Adjudicator:
Jackman J

Highlight

Justice Jackman has confirmed that, in the context of a preliminary discovery application, where a prospective applicant vacates a hearing date and the prospective respondent has incurred costs in preparing for the vacated hearing, the question of costs should be determined later, either in the course of disposing of the preliminary discovery proceedings or in any substantive patent infringement proceedings that are later commenced. As a result, MGI Australia failed in its application for costs incurred in preparing for the vacated preliminary discovery hearing.

Background

In March 2025, Oxford Nanopore Technology (ONT) commenced an application for preliminary discovery from MGI Australia (MGI) in order to decide whether to commence patent infringement proceedings against MGI. Since December 2024, MGI had refused to provide samples of its nanopore sequencing devices to ONT so that ONT could determine whether ONT’s patents were infringed by those devices. In the course of these proceedings, the hearing of the application for preliminary discovery was listed for 24 July 2025 and MGI had filed evidence in answer to the application on 28 May 2025.

In late June 2025, ONT informed MGI that it had been able to independently acquire some, but not all, of the materials the subject of the application and that ONT expected to have sufficient basis to commence substantive proceedings for patent infringement. On 4 July 2025, the parties proposed that, among other things, the hearing listed for 24 July 2025 be vacated and that the current proceedings be stayed for three (3) months so that ONT could decide whether to file substantive proceedings within that three (3) month period. In addition to those proposed orders, MGI proposed that ONT pay MGI’s costs incurred in preparing for the vacated hearing. ONT opposed this order, so Justice Jackman indicated that he would decide the matter on the papers, with parties to make suitable submissions.

Key Issues

The key issue under consideration was whether ONT should be responsible for MGI’s costs in preparing for the hearing that was vacated. MGI’s position was that ONT would ordinarily be required to pay costs thrown away by its application and vacated hearing, while ONT’s position was that MGI’s costs were reasonably incurred as the work done would be useful for the purpose of a hearing if substantive proceedings were commenced. ONT argued that any order for costs would be premature and should be deferred until ONT commenced substantive proceedings as ONT expected to rely on MGI’s behaviour in refusing to provide samples of the allegedly infringing devices when requested. If substantive proceedings were not commenced in due course, the costs of the preliminary discovery application would be determined as part of the disposal of the application.

Outcome

Justice Jackman accepted ONT’s submission that an order for costs would be premature as, at the time the hearing was scheduled, MGI had resisted ONT’s requests to produce relevant material, thereby necessitating the preliminary discovery application. His Honour ordered that the question of costs should be reserved for later determination, either in the course of disposing of the current proceedings or in any substantive proceedings that ONT commenced, given that MGI’s conduct between December 2024 and June 2025 in refusing to provide samples had played a part in ONT commencing the application for preliminary discovery.

Implications

This decision turns on the fairly specific circumstances of a hearing for an application for preliminary discovery being vacated because the patentee had been able to independently obtain evidence that would allow it to determine whether substantive proceedings should be commenced. Parties to patent proceedings are required to act with an overarching purpose of facilitating the just resolution of a dispute as quickly, inexpensively and efficiently as possible, and often this assessment cannot be made until all of the relevant circumstances have been revealed.

Subsequent developments

The application for preliminary discovery was withdrawn on 18 September 2025, with ONT commencing patent infringement proceedings against MGI on 6 August 2025.


 

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.

 

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.

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.

Pearce IP BioBlast® for the last three weeks ending 9 January 2026

Pearce IP provides weekly reports on global biosimilars activities in the Pearce IP BioBlast®.  Significant biosimilar activities for the last three weeks ending 9 January 2026 are set out below:


Adalimumab

31 December 2025 | ID | Mabwell’s Biosimilar Adalimumab Approved in Indonesia
On 31 December 2025, Mabwell announced that it has received marketing approval from the Indonesian Food and Drug Authority for its Adalimumab Injection 9MW0113… Read more here.
 
23 December 2025 | Biocon Secures Expanded Global Rights to Fujifilm’s Biosimilar Adalimumab
On 23 December 2025, Biocon Biologics announced that is has secured full and exclusive global rights for Hulio®, biosimilar to AbbVie’s Humira® (adalimumab), from Fujifilm… Read more here.

Aflibercept

On 8 January 2026, the Munich Regional Court granted Regeneron and Bayer preliminary injunctions (PIs) preventing STADA, Hexal, Celltrion and Advanz Pharma from marketing… Read more here.

Bevacizumab

31 December 2025 | US | FDA Rejects Outlook’s BLA for Ophthalmic Bevacizumab for a Third Time
On 31 December 2025, Outlook Therapeutics announced that the FDA issued a Complete Response Letter (CRL) regarding the second resubmission of its Biologics Licence… Read more here.

Daratumumab

On 23 December 2025, CSPC Pharmaceutical Group Limited announced that it has obtained approval from China’s National Medical Products Administration (NMPA) to conduct… Read more here.

Denosumab

1 January 2026 | US | FDA Issues CRL for Alvotech/Dr Reddy’s Biosimilar Denosumab
On 1 January 2026, Medical Dialogues reported that Dr Reddy’s has disclosed to various stock exchanges that it has received a Complete Response Letter (CRL) from the FDA in… Read more here.
 
22 December 2025 | US | FDA Approves Amneal/mAbxience’s Denosumab Biosimilars
On 22 December 2025, Amneal Pharmaceuticals and mAbxience announced that the FDA has approved Boncresa™ and Oziltus™ (MB09), biosimilars to Amgen’s Prolia® and… Read more here.

Guselkumab

19 December 2025 | EU | New Indication Alert: EC Extends J&J’s Guselkumab to Treatment of PsO in Children
On 19 December 2025, Johnson & Johnson announced that the European Commission has approved an indication extension for Tremfya® (guselkumab) as a subcutaneous treatment… Read more here.

Ipilimumab

25 December 2025 | CN | Innovent’s Ipilimumab/Sintilimab Combination Approved in China for Colon Cancer
On 25 December 2025, Innovent announced that its Tabosun® (ipilimumab N01 injection), referencing BMS’ Yervoy®, in combination with Tyvyt® (sintilimab, co-developed by Innovent… Read more here.

Mepolizumab

5 & 7 January 2026 | UK | CN | GSK’s Mepolizumab Approved in the UK and China for COPD
GSK’s Nucala® (mepolizumab) has received approval in China and the UK as an add-on maintenance treatment for adult patients with inadequately controlled COPD characterised by… Read more here.

Nivolumab, Pembrolizumab, Trastuzumab

6 January 2026 | Biocon to Add Pembrolizumab, Nivolumab & Trastuzumab SC Biosimilars to its Portfolio
On 6 January 2026, Biocon Biologics announced that it will unveil three new biosimilars at the 2026 J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference to be held 12-16 January 2026 in San Francisco… Read more here.

Omalizumab

24 December 2025 | KR | Celltrion’s Biosimilar Omalizumab Autoinjector Approved in Korea
On 24 December 2025, Celltrion announced that it has secured approval in Korea for an autoinjector presentation (75mg and 150 mg) of Omlyclo®, biosimilar to Novartis’ Xolair®… Read more here.

Pertuzumab, Cetuximab

22 December 2025 | RU | R-Pharm Provides Updates on Pertuzumab and Cetuximab Biosimilars
On 22 December 2025, R-Pharm announced that it has presented its progress on two biosimilar products at the 29th Russian Oncology Congress: Persinthia®, biosimilar to Roche’s… Read more here.

Ranibizumab

On 2 January 2026, Samsung Bioepis announced that it has begun direct commercialisation of Byooviz®, biosimilar to Genentech’s Lucentis® (ranibizumab), in Europe, following… Read more here.
 
23 December 2025 | US | Bioeq/Zydus’ Biosimilar Ranibizumab FDA Approved
On 23 December 2025, Formycon and Bioeq (a joint venture between Formycon and Polpharma Biologics) jointly announced that the FDA approved Nufymco® as an… Read more here.

Ustekinumab

6 January 2026 | US | Fresenius Kabi Introduces New Dosage Form of Biosimilar Ustekinumab
On 6 January 2026, Fresenius Kabi announced that it has introduced a new presentation of Otulfi®, biosimilar to Janssen’s/J&J’s Stelara® (ustekinumab), in a 45 mg/0.5 mL single-dose… Read more here.
 
27 December 2025 | Aurobindo Pharma Terminates Ustekinumab Biosimilar Licence with BioFactura
On 27 December 2025, Medical Dialogues reported that Aurobindo Pharma’s wholly-owned subsidiary, CuraTeQ, had terminated its agreement with US-based BioFactura Inc regarding… Read more here.
 
23 December 2025 | JP | Samsung Bioepis’ Biosimilar Ustekinumab Approved in Japan
On 23 December 2025,  Samsung Bioepis announced that it has received marketing approval in Japan for Nipro™, biosimilar to J&J’s/Janssen’s Stelara® (ustekinumab).  Nipro™ delivers… Read more here.

Vedolizumab

8 January 2026 | Takeda & Halozyme Partner on Drug-Delivery Technology for Vedolizumab
On 8 January 2026, Takeda announced that it has entered a global collaboration and licence agreement with Halozyme Therapeutics, Inc, which grants Takeda exclusive rights… 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.

Celltrion Plans 41 Biosimilars By 2038; Opens First US Manufacturing Facility

On 13 January 2026, Celltrion revealed at the 44th Annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference that it plans to commercialise up to 18 biosimilar products by 2030 and 41 products by 2038.  This is a slight reduction of its plans announced in September 2024 to have a “portfolio of 22 [biosimilar] products by 2030”.

Celltrion currently has 11 biosimilars approved in various jurisdictions, namely adalimumab, aflibercept, bevacizumab, denosumab, infliximab/SC infliximab, omalizumab, rituximab, tocilizumab, trastuzumab, and ustekinumab.

Celltrion also unveiled at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference that it plans to submit up to 16 investigational new drug (IND) applications by 2028, including up to 10 antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), 4 multi-specific antibodies (msAbs), 1 recombinant protein and 1 peptide.  Three Celltrion IND applications for ADCs (CT-P70, CT-P71 and CT-P73) were accepted by the FDA in 2025.

On 6 January 2026, Celltrion officially opened its first US manufacturing facility, which it acquired from Eli Lilly in late 2025.  Under the deal, Celltrion will conduct contract manufacturing operations for Eli Lilly valued at 678.7 billion won (US$470.5 million) over a 3-4 year period.  According to Celltrion, the acquisition will “ensure long-term supply chain resilience” by eliminating tariff and trade risks and strengthening its competitiveness in the US market.

Henlius’ Biosimilar Bevacizumab BLA Accepted for Review by FDA

On 13 January 2026, Shanghai Henlius Biotech announced that its Biologics Licence Application (BLA) for HLX04, biosimilar to Roche/Genentech’s Avastin® (bevacizumab) has been accepted for review by the FDA.

HLX04 has previously been approved in China (2021) and in multiple Latin American countries, including Bolivia, the Dominican Republic, and Mexico.  In October 2020, Henlius entered into a co-development and exclusive licensing agreement with Hong Kong-headquartered EssexBio, under which EssexBio was granted an exclusive licence to develop, manufacture and commercialise HLX04 globally.

The first bevacizumab biosimilar approved in the US was Amgen’s Mvasi® in September 2017.  There are currently five other bevacizumab biosimilars included in the FDA’s approved drugs database: Pfizer’s Zirabev® (June 2019), Amneal’s Alymsys® (April 2022), Celltrion’s Vegzelma™ (September 2022), Bio-Thera/Sandoz’s Avzivi® (December 2023), and Biocon Biologics’ Jobevne™ (April 2025).

Henlius also has an ophthalmic preparation based on HLX04 under development, which is intended for the treatment of wet AMD.  In August 2025, a new drug application for Henlius’ ophthalmic bevacizumab biosimilar, HLX04-O, was accepted for review by China’s Center for Drug Evaluation of the National Medical Products Administration.

Zydus Clear to Launch Nivolumab Biosimilar in India After BMS Injunction Overturned on Appeal

On 12 January 2026, an appellate Division of the High Court of Delhi issued its judgment overturning the grant of a preliminary injunction awarded to Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS) in July 2025, restraining Zydus’ Indian launch of nivolumab ZRC-3276, biosimilar to BMS’ Opdivo®.

The proceedings were brought by BMS, alleging that ZRC-3276 infringes its Indian patent IN340060, titled “Human Monoclonal Antibodies to Programmed Death 1 (PD-1) for use in treating Cancer”.  The relevant independent claim of IN340060 includes a functional protein-binding affinity limitation as well as specifying an amino acid sequence.  The two appeal judges found that the first instance judge was wrong to find that ZRC-3276 was likely to have an infringing amino acid sequence merely because it was a biosimilar to nivolumab when there was no evidence of the actual sequence of ZRC-3276.  The appeal court noted that biosimilarity is assessed based on comparable safety, efficacy and quality, not amino acid sequence, separating the regulatory issues from issues of patent infringement.

The Appeal Court accepted that there was evidence that neither ZRC-3276 nor Opdivo® satisfied the protein-binding affinity limitation of the claims, further weakening the infringement case based on a product-to-product comparison.

Given the weakened infringement case, and the fact IN340060 will expire in just over 4 months, the Appeal Court held that the public interest in the availability of lower-cost, life-saving drugs tipped matters in favour of the injunction being overturned.  However, Zydus was ordered to provide an account of profits for sales of the allegedly infringing product until expiry of the patent in suit.

Zydus received regulatory approval for its nivolumab biosimilar from India’s CDSCO in July 2024.

Nivolumab biosimilars aimed at the Indian market are also under development by Enzene and Reliance Life Sciences.  At least Amgen, Sandoz, Xbrane/Intas, Boan Biotech, Shanghai Henlius and Biocon also have nivolumab biosimilars under development.

New Indication Alert: BMS/Ono’s Opdivo®/Yervoy® Combo Approved in Taiwan for MSI-High/dMMR CRC

On 12 January 2026, Ono Pharmaceutical announced that the Taiwan Food and Drug Administration has approved a new indication for Opdivo® (nivolumab) intravenous infusion in combination with Yervoy® (ipilimumab), for the treatment of adult patients with unresectable or metastatic microsatellite instability-high (MSI-High) or mismatch repair deficient (dMMR) colorectal cancer (CRC).   This combination was previously approved in Taiwan in July 2025 for the first-line treatment of unresectable or metastatic hepatocellular carcinoma.

In 2011, Ono granted BMS commercialisation rights for Opdivo® excluding in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, where Ono retains all rights.  In July 2014, Ono and BMS agreed to expand their collaboration agreement to jointly develop and commercialise multiple immunotherapies as single agent and combination regimens for cancer in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan.

The Opdivo®/Yervoy® combination has also been approved for the same indication in EU (December 2024), US (April 2025), Australia (June 2025) and Canada (August 2025).

At least Zydus Lifesciences, Amgen, Sandoz, Xbrane/Intas, Boan Biotech, Shanghai Henlius, Enzene, Reliance Life Sciences and Biocon have nivolumab biosimilars in development.  Ipilimumab biosimilars are also on their way, with Sandoz and Shanghai Henlius Biotech announcing a global collaboration agreement for an ipilimumab biosimilar in April 2025.

Open Sesame – the Federal Court Opens the Door to Preliminary Discovery in the Xadago® Dispute

 

Date of decision: 29 October 2025
Body: Federal Court of Australia
Adjudicator: Justice Needham

Introduction

Newron Pharmaceuticals S.p.A. (Newron) and Zambon S.p.A (Zambon) have succeeded in their preliminary discovery application against Arrotex Pharmaceuticals Pty Ltd (Arrotex) in the Federal Court of Australia.  Newron and Zambon sought production of documents from Arrotex, for the purpose of deciding whether to commence court proceedings for actual or threatened infringement of two patents relating to the product and the process of producing high purity safinamide (which contains two particular impurities at a level less than 0.03% by weight).  Safinamide is the active ingredient in Xadago®, which is used in the treatment for moderate-to-late-stage Parkinson’s disease.

Justice Needham’s decision illustrates the ease with which patentees are able to obtain preliminary discovery in the Federal Court of Australia given the low bar set by rule 7.23 of the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth).

Background

In their preliminary discovery application, Newron and Zambon sought production of documents from Arrotex, for the purpose of deciding whether to commence court proceedings for actual or threatened infringement of two patents relating to the product and the process of producing high purity safinamide.  Arrotex had four Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods (ARTG) registrations for safinamide products which had been approved as generic versions of Xadago®.  Arrotex expected to start supply in the near future, following the listing of its products on the PBS.

Rule 7.23 provides that a party may apply to the Court for a preliminary discovery order if that party:

a) reasonably believes that it may have the right to obtain relief in the Court from another person or entity whose description has been ascertained;

b) after making reasonable inquiries, does not have sufficient information to decide whether to start a proceeding in the Court to obtain that relief; and

c) reasonably believes that:

i. the other person or entity has or is likely to have or has had or is likely to have had in their control documents directly relevant to the question whether the first party has a right to obtain the relief; and

ii. inspection of the documents by the first party would assist in making the decision.

In interpreting rule 7.23, the Full Court (Allsop CJ, Perram and Nicholas JJ) in Pfizer Ireland Pharmaceuticals v Samsung Bioepis AU Pty Ltd (2017) 257 FCR 62 (Pfizer) stated that:

  • rule 7.23 is a beneficial provision, which enables a person who believes they may have a right to seek relief to obtain information to make a responsible decision as to whether to start court proceedings;
  • the party seeking preliminary discovery must prove that it has a belief that it may (not does) have a right to relief, and must demonstrate that the belief is reasonable, either by reference to material known to the person holding the belief or by other material subsequently placed before the Court;
  • the question of whether the belief is reasonable requires one to ask whether a person, in light of all of the material before the person holding the belief (or subsequently the Court), could reasonably believe that they may have a right to obtain relief; and
  • to defeat a claim for preliminary discovery, the party from who discovery is sought will need to show, either that the subjectively held belief does not exist, or, if it does, that there is no reasonable basis for thinking that there may be (not is) such a case. That may be done by demonstrating that no reasonable person, faced with the evidence relied on by the prospective applicant, would think that a right to relief might exist.

Newron and Zambon relied on the evidence of Zambon’s General Counsel, Ms De Dominicis, who was the person “primarily responsible for making legal decisions on Zambon’s behalf relating to its concerns” about the possible infringement of the patents.  Ms De Dominicis stated in her evidence that she inferred that the Arrotex products must have been approved on the basis of bioequivalence with Xadago®, and that there was nothing in the material available to her which would lead her to believe that the Arrotex products differed from Xadago® in terms of efficacy and safety.  Accordingly, she believed, but did not know, that the Arrotex products might contain high purity safinamide, and/or might be made using the patented processes.

Arrotex principally relied on the expert evidence of Professor Michael Roberts, an Emeritus Professor of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics at the University of Queensland, and Emeritus Professor of Therapeutics and Pharmaceutical Science at UniSA Clinical and Health Science.  Professor Roberts stated, in his evidence (amongst other things), that determination of bioequivalence did not require determination of whether two drug products have the same or similar levels of impurities, and that there was no reason to believe the percentage of the impurity in the Arrotex products might be below the claimed threshold, because even amounts of the impurity far above that threshold would still result in blood plasma concentrations so low as to be therapeutically meaningless.

Key Issues

The key issue for Justice Needham’s determination was whether Newron’s and Zambon’s belief that they may have a right to relief against Arrotex was reasonable.

In short, her Honour found that Newron’s and Zambon’s belief was reasonable, or, in other words, was not a belief based on “unreasonable, untenable, irrational or baseless” considerations or views.  In reaching this view, Justice Needham noted that rule 7.23 must be applied in a way which gives full weight to its purpose, which is to allow a person to make up their mind whether to commence proceedings.  Her Honour further noted that Newron and Zambon did not need to establish a prima facie case of patent infringement, and that the relevant question was not whether one scientific view was more or less persuasive than another.

Her Honour considered that, giving the views of Professor Roberts the appropriate weight, in the context of the preliminary discovery application, Newron’s and Zambon’s evidence did not demonstrate affirmatively that the safety level of impurities in safinamide was lower than 0.03%, nor did it demonstrate affirmatively that the bioequivalence of the Arrotex products meant that they were the same high purity formulation as Xadago®.  However, her Honour did not consider that she needed to be persuaded to that level.  Instead, her Honour considered that, given the range of scientific views expressed in the patents and Newron’s and Zambon’s evidence, and that given that the Arrotex products did contain safinamide, there was a reasonable basis for the belief that Newron and Zambon might have a right to relief.

Justice Needham did not find persuasive Arrotex’s argument that, as the Therapeutic Goods Administration did not recognise the 0.03% impurity level as a safety threshold, Ms De Dominicis’ belief was unreasonable.  Nor did her Honour accept Arrotex’s submission that bioequivalence of the prospective parties’ products, and reliance on the same testing for each products’ Product Information, did not give rise to a belief that the impurity factor may be present.  Neither ruled out the possibility that the claimed impurity level might be present.

Her Honour also considered Professor Roberts’ reasoning to be circular when he stated that, as his calculations were that safinamide with higher impurity levels were not toxic, then there was no reason to believe that the Arrotex products were high purity products.  To the contrary, her Honour considered that it was equally open to believe that they might be high purity products.  Her Honour also noted that Professor Roberts’ analysis was based on his calculations of toxicity by reason of blood plasma concentrations in vivo, and that in the context of the preliminary discovery application, her Honour had not been able to accept that the calculations on the various assumptions were unassailable.

Accordingly, her Honour held that, when all of the evidence was considered, including the expert evidence of Professor Roberts, a belief that Newron and Zambon might be entitled to relief appeared to be reasonable; that is, it is not a view that could not be held by any reasonable person.

Outcome and Implications

Her Honour ordered Arrotex to provide preliminary discovery, with her Honour then ruling on the access regime for the production of documents by Arrotex and on the issue of costs in a short subsequent judgment.  On the issue of costs, her Honour ordered that the costs of the preliminary discovery application be costs in the cause of any infringement proceedings, but should no infringement proceedings be commenced, then there be no order for the costs of the preliminary discovery application, with the intent that each party bear their own costs.

Justice Needham’s decision applies the principles set out by the Full Court in the Pfizer decision as to the factors relevant to a preliminary discovery application.  Her Honour’s decision illustrates the ease with which patentees are able to obtain preliminary discovery in the Federal Court of Australia given the low bar set by rule 7.23 of the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth).


 

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.

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.

CuraTeQ’s Pegfilgrastim Biosimilar Approved in Canada

On 9 January 2026, Aurobindo Pharma announced in a regulatory filing that its subsidiary, CuraTeQ Biologics, has received approval from Health Canada for Dyrupeg®, biosimilar to Amgen’s Neulasta® (pegfilgrastim).  In the same regulatory filing, CuraTeq also disclosed that it has three other biosimilar applications currently under review with Health Canada.

Dyrupeg® was approved in the EU in March 2025 following its positive recommendation from the EMA’s CHMP two months earlier.  In June 2025, Dyrupeg® also received marketing authorisation in the UK.

There are a number of other pegfilgrastim biosimilars approved in Canada, including Apotex’s Lapegla® (June 2018). Mylan/Biocon’s Fulphila® (June 2018), Accord Healthcare’s Pelgraz® (September 2018), and Nora Pharma’s Niopeg® (April 2024).

Boan Biotech’s Biosimilar Denosumab Approved in Bolivia

On 9 January 2026, Boan Biotech announced that it has received regulatory approval from Bolivia’s National Agency of Medicines and Health Technologies (AGEMED) for BA6101, its 60 mg denosumab injection, biosimilar to Amgen’s Prolia®.  BA6101 is approved for the same indications as the reference product.

Boan Biotech’s denosumab biosimilars were approved in China in 2024 (Boluojia®; BA11021, referencing Amgen’s Xgeva®) and 2022 (Boyoubei®; BA6101, referencing Amgen’s Prolia®).  In November 2025, Boan Biologics’ MAAs for BA6101 and BA1102 were accepted for review by the UK Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).  According to Boan Biotech, regulatory submissions for its denosumab biosimilars are planned for Europe, the US and Japan, among other regions.

Denosumab biosimilars have been approved and launched around the world by a variety of sponsors.  In the US this includes Sandoz’s Jubbonti® and Wyost® (approved March 2024launched June 2025), Samsung Bioepis’ Obodence™ and Xbryk™ (approved February 2025, not yet launched), Celltrion’s Stoboclo® and Osenvelt® (approved March 2025launched July 2025), Fresenius Kabi’s Conexxence® and Bomyntra® (approved March 2025launched July 2025), Shanghai Henlius/Organon’s Bildyos® and Bilprevda® (approved September 2025, not yet launched), Biocon’s Bosaya™ and Aukelso™ (approved September 2025launched October 2025), Richter/Hikma’s Enoby™ and Xtrenbo™ (approved September 2025, not yet launched), Accord’s Osvyrti® and Jubereq® (approved November 2025, not yet launched), and Amneal/mAbxience’s Boncresa™ and Oziltus™ (MB09) (approved December 2025).

Federal Court Considers Offshore Performance of Method Patents in Zoetis’ Application for Summary Dismissal

 

Date of decision: 10 October 2025
Body: Federal Court
Adjudicator: Justice Rofe

Introduction

Justice Rofe has handed down an interlocutory judgment dismissing Zoetis Australia Pty Ltd’s (Zoetis) application for summary dismissal of Scidera, Inc.’s (Scidera) patent infringement claims.  The decision addresses a novel question of Australian patent law: whether all essential integers of a claimed method must be performed domestically for infringement to occur where the method does not produce a product.

Background

Scidera is the patentee of patent AU2010202253 (the Patent) which broadly relates to methods for identifying traits in cattle through genetic testing using single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in nucleic acid samples.  Scidera alleged that MLA, along with the Agricultural Business Research Institute (ABRI), Zoetis Australia Pty Ltd, DataGene Limited and Genotyping Australia Pty Ltd (together, the Respondents), directly infringed or authorised infringement of the Patent through the provision of genomic selection services in Australia.

This decision follows an earlier interlocutory judgment by Justice Rofe in Scidera, Inc. v Meat and Livestock Australia Limited [2025] FCA 308, in which her Honour dismissed the Respondents’ applications to strike out Scidera’s statement of claim.  Following that decision, Scidera was permitted to file an amended statement of claim.

The dispute the subject of her Honour’s decision centres on Zoetis’ business model for genetic testing of Australian cattle.  According to evidence submitted by Zoetis Inc., this testing involved the following steps:

  1. Biological samples from Australian cattle are collected and sent to Zoetis’ Queensland premises.
  2. Zoetis sends these samples to its US-based related entity, Zoetis Inc., for testing.
  3. Zoetis Inc. performs SNP Testing in the US using specialised SNP Chips that detect 50,000+ SNPs through a process involving DNA amplification, hybridisation, and fluorescent imaging.
  4. The testing generates a SNP text file containing genetic data (the Genotype Files), which is transmitted back to Australia.
  5. In Australia, the Genotype Files are analysed by associations or institutes representing breeders to produce reports such as Estimated Breeding Values (EBVs) and Australian Breeding Values (ABVs).  In the case of beef cattle, breeders received EBVs in Australia via ABRI.

Critically, Zoetis’ evidence stated that all SNP testing has been conducted by Zoetis Inc. in the US since Zoetis commenced business in Australia in 2012, and that Zoetis has never had the capacity to perform SNP Testing in Australia.

Zoetis’ application for summary dismissal raised an issue not previously determined in Australia: whether all essential integers of a claimed method must be performed domestically for infringement to occur where the method does not result in a product.  Broadly, Zoetis contended that as a matter of statutory construction, the act of exploitation must occur within the patent area (Australia), and where their SNP testing is performed in the US, there can be no infringement in Australia.

Consideration

Claim Construction

Despite extensive consideration of the Patent’s claims by Beach J in the appeal from the opposition decision in Meat and Live stock Australia v Cargill, Inc (2018) 129 IPR 278 (Cargill), and subsequently in the amendment application in Meat and Livestock Australia Ltd v Cargill, Inc (No 2) (2019) 139 IPR 47 (Cargill (No 2)), the parties still disagreed on the construction of claim 1, which provides:

A method for identifying a trait of a bovine subject from a nucleic acid sample of the bovine subject, comprising identifying in the nucleic acid sample an occurrence of at least three single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) wherein each of the at least three SNPs are significantly associated with the trait, with the degree of statistical significance being p≤0.05, and wherein the at least three SNPs occur in more than one gene; and wherein (a) at least one of the SNPs [meets the limb (a) requirement], or (b) the SNP [meets the limb (b) requirement].

(Emphasis added)

Zoetis argued that the phrase “identifying in the nucleic acid sample an occurrence of at least three SNPs” refers to the step performed by Zoetis Inc. in the United States.  Zoetis characterised the phrase “method for identifying a trait” as a “purpose constraint”, whereby the physical act of conducting the genetic testing must be done with the purpose of resulting in the ability to identify or infer a trait.  According to Zoetis, the claim is met by the mere ability to identify or infer, regardless of whether an identification or inference is actually drawn.  At [73], Justice Rofe observed that:

In recasting the underlined integer as a purpose constraint rather than an essential integer, Zoetis seeks to dismiss Scidera’s contention that the identifying or the drawing of an inference of a trait is an essential integer of the claim that, when performed or used by Zoetis in Australia, satisfies the territorial nexus required by the acts of exploitation and infringement as contemplated by the Patents Act.

So on Zoetis’ construction, the claim is met by carrying out the genetic testing in the US with the mere purpose of being able to infer, and because nothing further is required, the integers of the claim are entirely carried outside the protected jurisdiction.

Scidera rejected this characterisation, contending that its own construction correctly adopts that of Beach J in Cargill, such that “the claim is infringed by a method which takes all the integers, including the actual identification or inference of a trait”.  Scidera referred to the Amended Statement of Claim which particularises that “[…] [t]he identification of the trait occurs upon the provision of the EBV reports”.

Justice Rofe’s “provisional view” favoured Scidera’s construction.  Her Honour rejected Zoetis’ “purpose constraint” characterisation, noting Beach J’s references to “purpose” in Cargill were made in the context of an anticipation analysis, not claim construction.  Beach J had held that for method claims, construing “for” as merely requiring that a disclosure of something that could be used for that purpose is “misconceived” and “inapposite” as it “involves disregarding what is an important limiting and characterising feature of the claim”.  Justice Rofe found that claim 1 requires both identification of SNPs through physical testing and a separate step of identifying or inferring traits, the latter of which appeared to be undertaken in Australia on the evidence available to her Honour.

Justice Rofe identified two flaws in Zoetis’ approach.  First, Zoetis impermissibly disaggregated the integers of the claimed method, focusing solely on the physical testing integer while relegating the identification or inference of traits to a mere purpose.  Her Honour cited Ariosa Diagnostics, Inc v Sequenom, Inc (2021) 159 IPR 371 (Ariosa Diagnostics) and National Resource Development Corporation v Commissioner of Patents (1959) 102 CLR 252 for the principle that the invention is a “unitary concept” and “it is the whole process that must be considered”.  Second, Zoetis’ submission that the invention is not a manner of manufacture contradicted Beach J’s findings in Cargill, where his Honour held the claim 1 was a manner of manufacture because the method “involves drawing an inference about the potential for the trait of interest to exist in the bovine subject” and creates “an artificially created state of affairs of economic significance”.

Territorial Question

Justice Rofe noted that the case raises “a novel and important question of law: whether all the essential integers of a claimed method or process must be performed within the patent area for there to be infringement of a claim to said method or process that does not produce a product”.

Her Honour considered the inclusion of an object clause under s 2A of the Patents Act 1990 (Cth) (the Patents Act), introduced by the Intellectual Property Laws Amendment (Productivity Commission Response Part 2 and Other Measures) Act 2019 (Cth), which states that the object of the Patents Act is “to provide a patent system in Australia that promotes economic wellbeing through technological innovation”.  The Explanatory Memorandum to the amending bill further stated that the object clause would “assist courts in interpreting the Patents Act in cases where the text of the legislation is uncertain or ambiguous”, ensuring “that the patent system remains adaptable and fit-for-purpose”.  Justice Rofe noted that neither party addressed the object clause and how it might influence the question of whether potential infringers may circumvent a patentee’s exclusive rights to exploit its invention through divided performance of a method overseas.

Australian courts have previously considered infringement of method claims involving overseas use, but each involved the extended definition of “exploit”, wherein a product resulting from use of a method overseas was imported into Australia.[1]  Justice Rofe also referred to Ariosa Diagnostics, in which samples were taken from Australian patients and sent to the US for genetic testing and analysis, with the Full Court finding that the Harmony Test results did not constitute a “product” for the purpose of the definition of “exploit” in the Patents Act.  However, unlike the present matter, the method of detecting was carried out in its entirety in the US.  Thereafter, no further steps of the method remained to be performed in Australia – only the results of the test had to be electronically transmitted to the relevant medical practitioner in Australia, who would inform the patient of those results.  As those constituted mere information (and not a product), the Full Court held that no infringement occurred.

Justice Rofe noted that there is no fundamental requirement that all essential integers of a method claim that does not result in a product must be performed in the patent area.  Her Honour observed that there seems to be little basis in the Patents Act to distinguish methods which produce products (where offshore steps are considered), and those that do not.  Justice Rofe considered that such an “arbitrary distinction” would be inconsistent with UK authorities[2] which have demonstrated the UK court’s disinclination to enable infringers to avoid infringement by performing an integer of a claimed method offshore.

In reaching this view, Justice Rofe considered two modern UK cases.  Menashe Business Mercantile Ltd v William Hill Organisation Ltd [2003] 1 All ER 279 concerned a gaming system patent where the host computer processing customer bets was located in Antigua but accessed by UK customers placing bets from the UK.  In that case, Aldous LJ held that the UK punter “will in substance use the host computer in the United Kingdom, it being irrelevant to the punter where it is situated”.  Illumina, Inc v Premaitha Health Plc [2017] EWHC 2930 concerned a prenatal diagnosis patent where DNA sample preparation and sequencing occurred in the UK, but the data analysis and processing to generate diagnostic results occurred in Taiwan.  In that matter, Carr J held that the crucial question was whether, in substance, the process was used in the UK, accepting that any other result would make it “far too easy to avoid infringement of patents of this nature ‘given the ease of digital transmission and the ability to offshore computer processing’”.

Justice Rofe observed that these UK authorities demonstrate that the question of divided-performance of a method overseas is “not a simple one”, and that at this stage, “there may be an arguable case that the policy-based approach taken by the United Kingdom courts in Menashe and Illumina may align with a construction of ‘exploit’ which gives effect to the object clause of the Patents Act”.  Her Honour added that in each UK case, the question of law was “inextricably tethered to the factual circumstances”.

Outcome

Justice Rofe concluded that the matter was “not a straightforward case that is appropriate to be summarily dismissed”.  Her Honour noted that the “relevance and applicability of the United Kingdom case law in light of the object clause and differing statutory language” has not been the subject of argument and warrants full consideration at trial, further stating:

Whether the introduction of the object clause under s 2A of the Patents Act is consistent with a legislative intention towards a construction of infringement that patentees are entitled to enjoy the full benefit of their statutory right that ought not be set at naught by offshoring a step of a claimed method, is a question that merits fulsome argument and consideration on the facts of the case.

Consequently, Justice Rofe dismissed Zoetis’ application and ordered it to pay Scidera’s costs of the interlocutory application.

Implications

Should the matter proceed to trial, the proceedings are positioned to produce the first Australian decision addressing whether all essential integers of a method claim must be performed in the patent area (domestically) for infringement to occur where the method does not produce a product.  Justice Rofe’s decision signals that her Honour may adopt an “in substance” approach similar to UK jurisprudence, preventing circumvention of patented methods through the offshoring of essential steps.


[1] See Apotex Pty Ltd v Warner-Lambert Co LLC (No 2) (2017) 123 IPR 30 at [296]–[298] (per Nicholas J), endorsed in Warner-Lambert Co LLC v Apotex Pty Ltd (No 2) (2018) 129 IPR 205 at [167] (per Jagot, Yates and Burley JJ).

[2] See Von Heyden v Neustadt (1880) 14 Ch D 230, Saccharin Corp Ltd v Anglo-Continental Chemical Works Ltd [1901] 1 Ch 414 and Beecham Group Ltd v Bristol Laboratories Ltd [1978] 95 RPC 15.


 

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.

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.

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

Get our Pearce IP Blogs & BioBlast® sent directly to your inbox

Subscribe to our Pearce IP Blogs and BioBlast® to receive our updates via email.