BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Patents Court) Decisions >> Astrazeneca AB v Comptroller-General of Patents, Designs and Trade Marks [2012] EWHC 2840 (Pat) (19 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Patents/2012/2840.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2840 (Pat), [2013] RPC 25 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
PATENTS COURT
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
ASTRAZENECA AB |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
COMPTROLLER-GENERAL OF PATENTS, DESIGNS AND TRADE MARKS |
Respondent |
____________________
Charlotte May (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 10 October 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE ARNOLD :
Introduction
Legal context
Marketing authorisations for medicinal products
"No medicinal product may be placed on the market of a Member State unless a marketing authorization has been issued by the competent authorities of that Member State in accordance with this Directive or an authorization has been granted in accordance with Regulation (EC) No 726/2004…."
"Article 3
1. No medicinal product appearing in the Annex may be placed on the market within the Community unless a marketing authorisation has been granted by the Community in accordance with the provisions of this Regulation.
…
Article 4
1. Applications for the marketing authorisations referred to in Article 3 shall be submitted to the Agency.
2. The Community shall grant and supervise marketing authorisations for medicinal products for human use in accordance with Title II.
…
Article 13
1. Without prejudice to Article 4(4) of Directive 2001/83/EC, a marketing authorisation which has been granted in accordance with this Regulation shall be valid throughout the Community. It shall confer the same rights and obligations in each of the Member States as a marketing authorisation granted by that Member States in accordance with Article 6 of Directive 2001/83/EC.
…"
"3. Medicinal products for human use containing a new active substance which, on the date of entry into force of this Regulation, was not authorised in the Community, for which the therapeutic indication is the treatment of any of the following diseases:
…
- cancer,
…"
The SPC Regulation
"(3) Medicinal products, especially those that are the result of long, costly research will not continue to be developed in the Community and in Europe unless they are covered by favourable rules that provide for sufficient protection to encourage such research.
(4) At the moment, the period that elapses between the filing of an application for a patent for a new medicinal product and authorisation to place the medicinal product on the market makes the period of effective protection under the patent insufficient to cover the investment put into the research.
(5) This situation leads to a lack of protection which penalises pharmaceutical research.
(6) There exists a risk of research centres situated in the Member States relocating to countries that offer greater protection.
(7) A uniform solution at Community level should be provided for, thereby preventing the heterogeneous development of national laws leading to further disparities which would be likely to create obstacles to the free movement of medicinal products within the Community and thus directly affect the establishment and the functioning of the internal market.
(8) Therefore, the creation of a supplementary protection certificate granted, under the same conditions, by each of the Member States at the request of the holder of a national or European patent relating to a medicinal product for which marketing authorisation has been granted is necessary. A regulation is therefore the most appropriate legal instrument.
(9) The duration of the protection granted by the certificate should be such as to provide adequate effective protection. For this purpose, the holder of both a patent and a certificate should be able to enjoy an overall maximum of 15 years of exclusivity from the time the medicinal product in question first obtains authorisation to be placed on the market in the Community.
(10) All the interests at stake, including those of public health, in a sector as complex and sensitive as the pharmaceutical sector should nevertheless be taken into account. For this purpose, the certificate cannot be granted for a period exceeding five years. The protection granted should furthermore be strictly confined to the product which obtained authorisation to be placed on the market as a medicinal product."
"Article 2
Scope
Any product protected by a patent in the territory of a Member State and subject, prior to being placed on the market as a medicinal product, to an administrative authorisation procedure as laid down in Directive 2001/83/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 6 November 2001 on the Community code relating to medicinal products for human use or Directive 2001/82/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 6 November 2001 on the Community code relating to veterinary medicinal products may, under the terms and conditions provided for in this Regulation, be the subject of a certificate.
Article 3
Conditions for obtaining a certificate
A certificate shall be granted if, in the Member State in which the application referred to in Article 7 is submitted and at the date of that application:
(a) the product is protected by a basic patent in force;
(b) a valid authorisation to place the product on the market as a medicinal product has been granted in accordance with Directive 2001/83/EC or Directive 2001/82/EC, as appropriate;
(c) the product has not already been the subject of a certificate;
(d) the authorisation referred to in (b) is the first authorisation to place the product on the market as a medicinal product.
Article 13
Duration of the certificate
1. The certificate shall take effect at the end of the lawful term of the basic patent for a period equal to the period which elapsed between the date on which the application for a basic patent was lodged and the date of the first authorisation to place the product on the market in the Community, reduced by a period of five years.
2. Notwithstanding paragraph 1, the duration of the certificate may not exceed five years from the date on which it takes effect."
"Any product which on the date of accession is protected by a valid patent and for which the first authorization to place it on the market as a medicinal product in the Community or within the territories of Austria, Finland or Sweden was obtained after 1 January 1985 may be granted a certificate.
In the case of certificates to be granted in Denmark, in Germany and in Finland, the date of 1 January 1985 shall be replaced by that of 1 January 1988.
…"
The Agreement on the European Economic Area ("EEA Agreement")
"Article 7
Acts referred to or contained in the Annexes to this Agreement or in decisions of the EEA Joint Committee shall be binding upon the Contracting Parties and be, or be made, part of their internal legal order….
Article 23
Specific provisions and arrangements are laid down in:
(a) Protocol 12 and Annex II in relation to technical regulations, standards, testing and certification;
…
Article 65
…
2. Protocol 28 and Annex XVII contain specific provisions and arrangements concerning intellectual, industrial and commercial property, which, unless otherwise specified, shall apply to all products and services."
"contain references to the territory of the 'Community' or of the 'common market' the references shall for the purposes of the Agreement be understood to be references to the territories of the Contracting Parties as defined in Article 126 of the Agreement."
"a valid authorisation to place the product on the market as a medicinal product has been granted in accordance with Directive 2001/83/EC or Directive 2001/82/EC, as appropriate; for the purposes of this subparagraph and the Articles which refer to it, an authorization to place the product on the market granted in accordance with the national legislation of the EFTA State shall be treated as an authorization granted in accordance with Directive 65/65/EEC [now 2001/83/EC] or Directive 81/851/EEC [now 2001/82/EC] as appropriate".
Provisions applicable to Liechtenstein
"For products covered by the acts referred to in this Annex, Liechtenstein may apply Swiss technical regulations and standards deriving from its regional union with Switzerland on the Liechtenstein market in parallel with the legislation implementing the acts referred to in this Annex. Provisions on free movement of goods contained in this Agreement or in acts referred to shall be applicable to exports from Liechtenstein to the other Contracting Parties only to products in conformity with the acts referred to in this Annex."
"In view of the patent union between Liechtenstein and Switzerland, Liechtenstein shall not deliver any supplementary protection certificates for medicinal products as laid down in this Regulation."
Factual background
The dispute over the duration of the SPC
Duration = [date of first authorisation in Community/EEA] – [date of patent] – [5 years].
Duration = [2 March 2004] – [23 April 1996] - 5 years = 2 years 314 days.
Accordingly, the SPC expires on 1 March 2019, 2 years 314 days after the expiry of the Patent.
Duration = [24 June 2009] – [23 April 1996] – 5 years = 8 years 62 days.
However, Article 13(2) of the SPC Regulation provides that the maximum duration of any certificate is 5 years. Accordingly, the SPC expires on 22 April 2021, 5 years after expiry of the Patent.
Earlier case law
Yamanouchi
"23. As is apparent from Article 13, the condition imposed by Article 19(1) in respect of the first marketing authorization in the Community is necessary only for the purposes of determining the duration of the certificate. Thus, Article 8(l)(a)(iv) and (c) and Article 9(2)(e) of the regulation lay down an obligation to provide information concerning that first marketing authorization in support of an application for a certificate, in order to ensure that the competent industrial property authority receiving the application has available to it the information needed in order to determine the duration of the certificate. Article 11(l)(e) provides that that information is to appear in the notification of the grant of the certificate which is published for the information of the public.
24. However, the effect of Articles 8(l)(a)(iv) and (b), 9(2)(d) and 11(l)(d) is that the first marketing authorization in the Community is not intended to take the place of the marketing authorization provided for in Article 3(b) of the regulation, that is to say, the authorization granted by the Member State in which the application is submitted; instead, it constitutes a further condition applying in the event that the latter authorization is not the first authorization to place the product on the market as a medicinal product in the Community. The first marketing authorization in the Community therefore serves a purely temporal purpose.
25. By referring to the first marketing authorization in the Community, the regulation is designed to exclude the possibility that, in Member States in which there has been significant delay in the grant of authorization to place a given product on the market, a certificate can still be granted even though that is no longer possible in the other Member States in which the authorization in question has been granted before expiry of the deadline. The regulation is thus intended to prevent the grant of certificates whose duration varies from one Member State to another. In those circumstances, Article 19(1) cannot be construed as meaning that the existence of an authorization in the Member State in which the certificate is sought is of no relevance.
26. On the contrary, it is the authorization referred to in Article 3(b) of the regulation which confers entitlement to the certificate. That principle is borne out by Article 4, according to which the protection conferred by the certificate extends only to the product covered by the marketing authorization in respect of the corresponding medicinal product. Entitlement to the certificate is strictly linked, therefore, to the existence of a marketing authorization granted in the Member State in which the application is submitted and to the date of that application."
Hässle
"56. First, neither Article 19 of Regulation No 1768/92, nor any other provision of that regulation, nor the recitals therein mentions, whether expressly or by implication, any authorisation other than that relating to provisions on medicinal products in accordance with Directive 65/65, and in particular no mention is made of any authorisation issued by the competent national authorities with regard to the fixing of prices or reimbursement for medicinal products. The scope of Regulation No 1768/92 is specifically defined, in Article 2 thereof, as extending to products protected by a patent which are subject, prior to being placed on the market as medicinal products, to an administrative authorisation procedure as laid down in Council Directive 65/65.
57. There is thus nothing to justify the words 'authorisation to place ... on the market' being interpreted differently depending on which provision of Regulation No 1768/92 they appear in. In particular, those words cannot be construed as having a different meaning according to whether they appear in Article 3 or Article 19, especially when it is apparent from Article 8(1)(a)(iv) and (c) that the marketing authorisation referred to in Article 3(b) may also be the first marketing authorisation in the Community.
58. It follows therefrom that the 'first authorisation to place ... on the market ... in the Community', mentioned in, among others, Article 19(1) of Regulation No 1768/92, must, like the 'authorisation to place ... on the market' mentioned in Article 3 of that regulation, be a marketing authorisation issued in accordance with Directive 65/65."
" 72. In that connection, as stated in paragraph 57 of the present judgment, the words 'first authorisation to place ... on the market' must not be interpreted differently depending on the provision of Regulation No 1768/92 in which they appear. The same is particularly true of the words 'first authorisation to place ... on the market ... in the Community' (see, to that effect, Yamanouchi Pharmaceutical, cited above, paragraphs 23 and 24)."
Novartis
"Is the date of the granting of a marketing authorisation in Switzerland, which is automatically recognised in Liechtenstein, to be considered as the first authorisation to place a medicinal product on the market, for the purpose of calculating the duration of a supplementary protection certificate as provided in Article 13 of Regulation No 1768/92 (as amended by the EEA Agreement)?"
"Since 1973, by virtue of an exchange of notes (LGBl. 1973 No 20/1), Liechtenstein has automatically recognised authorisations granted by the Interkantonale Kontrollstelle (Swiss Institute for the Control of Medicinal Products), a body which is regulated in the Interkantonale Vereinbarung (Amtliche Sammlung des Bundesrechts – 'AS' – 1972, 1026; LGBl. 1973 No 20/2). Between 1990 and 2001, it applied the Heilmittelgesetz (Law on medicinal products) of 24 October 1990 (LGBl. 1990, No 75), Article 7(2) of which merely provided that a medicinal product could be marketed once it was registered at the abovementioned Swiss body. By virtue of the Arzneimittelgesetz-EEE (Law on the marketing of pharmaceutical products in the EEA), of 18 December 1997 (LGBl. 1998 No 45), Liechtenstein established, with effect from 1 May 1998, a system of authorisations in keeping with Community requirements, as a result of the obligations deriving from its membership of the EEA. On 15 December 2000, in order for it to enter into force on 1 January 2001, Switzerland adopted the Heilmittelgesetz (Systematische Sammlung des Bundesrechts – 'SR' – 812.21), which replaced the Interkantonale Vereinbarung and set up a new body (the Schweizerisches Heilmittelinstitut – Swiss Institute for Medicinal Products), which was the successor to the Interkantonale Kontrollstelle. The result of these two pieces of legislation and the exchange of notes of 11 December 2001 (AS 2002, 2788) is that two sets of rules on authorisation coexist in Liechtenstein: the Swiss rules, which are effective in the customs union with Switzerland, and Liechtenstein's own rules, which comply with the requirements of the EEA."
"39. The principle of parallel marketability, enunciated in Annex II to the EEA Agreement, derives from Liechtenstein's involvement in distinct economic areas, which are governed by different, irreconcilable sets of rules. Two legal systems meet in one place: one governs relations between Switzerland and Liechtenstein, the other regulates the latter's membership of the EEA. If there is no conflict between the systems, they are permeable; as a general rule, nothing prevents a product from Switzerland moving from the territory of its partner to that of another EEA member, and vice versa. If, on the other hand, there is conflict, the barriers are raised and the markets are sealed, so that goods authorised in Liechtenstein can be exported to the other Contracting Parties to the Agreement only if they comply with EAA [sic] rules. In conclusion, goods which enjoy unimpeded freedom of movement within the customs union do not, merely because of that, enjoy the same freedom within the EEA.
40. As a consequence, both medicinal products authorised under EEA law and others covered by the Swiss system are found on the Liechtenstein market but, because of the principle of parallel marketability referred to above, the Swiss authorisations, which are automatically effective in the framework of the agreement with Liechtenstein, only allow the medicine to enter other States party to the Agreement if it satisfies the requirements laid down by the applicable legislation: Directives 65/65 and 81/851 (now Directive 2001/83, as amended by Directives 2004/27 and 2004/24). Therefore, it is quite clear that medicinal products originating in Switzerland cannot be automatically marketed within the EEA. As I explained in note 4, since 1 May 1998 and as a result of the Arzneimittelgesetz-EEE, Liechtenstein has been granting marketing authorisations in accordance with Community law, which confirms that the authorisations granted by Switzerland are of no relevance outside the boundaries of the customs union between the two countries.
41. However, does this non-conformity on which all the parties submitting observations are agreed, make it possible to disregard the authorisations when calculating how long supplementary protection is to last? The answer must be sought in the objective of the regulation."
"43. There can be no question that, for the purpose of replying to the referring courts, it is irrelevant that the marketing authorisations granted in Switzerland do not enable the medicinal products which they protect to be traded within EEA territory, other than Liechtenstein. That is also shown by the fact that authorisations conferred by the Member States under Directives 65/65 and 75/319 and the new Directive 2001/83, as recently amended, do not make it lawful for the product to be freely marketed in other Member States."
"49. The purpose of the regulation is not to standardise marketing authorisations but to set up a single system of extended protection and, as regards ensuring that the period of exclusive use lasts for the same time throughout the EEA, the decisive factor is the date on which that use commences, namely the date from which the drug can be lawfully marketed in a part of the EEA, regardless of where, and regardless of the enabling document – it could be a national authorisation issued by a Member State under the directives referred to above, it could be a centralised authorisation granted under Council Regulation No 2309/93 (now Regulation (EC) No 726/2004), or it could be another document which, under the legislation in force, enables it to be lawfully marketed.
50. The latter category includes … both authorisations granted by the EFTA States under their various national laws, which are not in conformity with the sectoral directives, and authorisations granted by the Swiss authorities, which clearly do not comply with the requirements of Community law either, because both types of authorisation allow the medicinal products to be marketed in a part of the EEA. … The reference point is the fact – the legally relevant fact – that the medicines can lawfully be marketed in a part of the EEA, and it is irrelevant whether that occurs by virtue of a document which permits free movement throughout the EEA.
51. The risk, mentioned by one of the interveners, of the consequences of an agreement – the customs union between Liechtenstein and Switzerland – being extended beyond its strict limits – to the other EEA States – in breach of the principles which prevail in international law, is thereby avoided, because it is not a rule of an external legal order which is rendered effective but rather an event with legal significance which occurs in its own legal order. "
"53. The Court of Justice acknowledged in its judgment in Hässle that the 'first authorisation to place [a product] on the market as a medicinal product in the Community' must be a marketing authorisation issued in accordance with Directive 65/65 in any of the Member States (paragraphs 58 and 78 and the second paragraph of the operative part). However, this finding must not be taken out of context: it shows, first, that the intention was to exclude other types of authorisations from the matters covered, such as authorisations relating to prices of, or reimbursement for, medicinal products; second, in Hässle, no Member State of the EEA which was not also a Member of the European Union was involved in the facts of the case before the national courts and consequently it was not necessary to refer to the text of Regulation No 1768/92, as varied by the EEA Agreement and the protocols and annexes thereto and by the decisions adopted by the decision-making bodies of the EEA.
54. As the Court observed in its judgment in Hässle (paragraph 72), the terms 'first authorisation to place … on the market' or 'first authorisation to place … on the market as a medicinal product in the Community' must not be interpreted differently depending on the provision of Regulation No 1768/92 in which they appear. In conclusion, when Article 13 refers to that notion, it also includes authorisations granted under the national law of the EFTA States because that is how Article 3(b) and Article 19(1) read in the wording attributed to them by Annex XVII (point 6) to the EEA Agreement, as adopted by Decision No 7/94 of the Joint Committee….
55. Further, Liechtenstein cannot issue supplementary protection certificates, something which, as the Commission reasons, is the logical consequence of not awarding patents and which has no significance for the purpose of answering the question referred, since the cardinal point, as I have already stated, is the time from when a medicinal product can be lawfully marketed in a part of the EEA, a fact which allows the final day of the period to be fixed when calculating the extended protection. …
…
57. What is more, [the approach advocated by Novartis and others] would disregard Regulation No 1768/92's objective of recognising that the holder of a patent and a certificate should be able to enjoy a maximum of 15 years of exclusivity in the Community (8th recital). Following the scheme of the regulation for basiliximab, for example, Novartis and others would enjoy that exclusivity until 8 October 2013 (see note 29), having been able to market the product in the EEA since 7 April 1998 by virtue of the authorisation granted on that date by the Swiss authorities, which was valid in Liechtenstein.
…
61. … I have already argued that it was clearly the intention of the framers of [Decision 7/94] to take account of authorisations issued by the EFTA States regardless of the Community rules: that is clearly also the case as regards the Swiss authorisations, which, by reason of the agreement with Liechtenstein, are automatically effective in Liechtenstein, an integral part of the EEA. Furthermore, the EEA Council, in its Decision 1/95 (Annex 10), stated, after referring to Decision No 7/94 of the Joint Committee, that Liechtenstein would not issue any supplementary protection certificates but did not deem it necessary to introduce the qualification that, wherever reference was made to authorisations granted in accordance with the national legislation of the EFTA States, authorisations were not to be included which, issued by a member (Switzerland), facilitated the marketing of medicinal products in Liechtenstein."
i) The decisive factor was the date on which the product could be lawfully marketed in any part of the EEA: [50], [55].
ii) It was the intention of the framers of Decision 7/94 that account should be taken of authorisations valid in the EFTA States regardless of the Community rules: [50], [61].
iii) The phrase "first authorisation to place … on the market" should be interpreted in the same manner throughout Regulation 1768/92. Accordingly, the adaptation to Article 3(b) of the Regulation for the purposes of the EEA Agreement should be applied to Article 13 (even though the adaptation is only expressed to be for the purposes of Article 3 and the Articles that refer to it, which do not include Article 13): [54], [61].
iv) It was immaterial that the product was not in free circulation throughout the EEA (i.e. other than in Liechtenstein): [43], [50].
v) It was also immaterial that Liechtenstein did not grant SPCs: [55], [61].
vi) Novartis' interpretation of the Regulation would be contrary to the Regulation's objective ensuring that the holder of a patent and SPC should be able to enjoy a maximum of 15 years of exclusivity: [57].
"28. In that regard, it is clear from Annex II to the EEA Agreement, as amended by Annex 2 to the Decision of the EEA Council No 1/95, that Liechtenstein may, as regards inter alia the medicinal products to which Directive 65/65 refers, apply Swiss technical regulations and standards deriving from its regional union with Switzerland on the Liechtenstein market in parallel with the legislation implementing that directive.
29. The EEA Agreement recognises therefore that two types of marketing authorisation may co-exist in the principality of Liechtenstein, namely marketing authorisations issued by the Swiss authorities, which because of the regional union between Switzerland and that State are automatically recognised in the latter, and marketing authorisations issued in Liechtenstein in accordance with Directive 65/65.
30. Thus, under Article 13 of Regulation No 1768/92, in conjunction with Annex II to the EEA Agreement, as amended by Annex 2 to the Decision of the EEA Council No 1/95, a marketing authorisation issued by the Swiss authorities and automatically recognised in Liechtenstein in the context of its regional union with Switzerland must be regarded as a first marketing authorisation for the purposes of the said Article 13.
31. Such an interpretation of that provision is, moreover, consistent with the purpose of Regulation No 1768/92, set out in the eighth recital in the preamble thereto, as it is to be read for the purposes of the application of the EEA Agreement and according to which the holder of both a patent and an SPC should not be able to enjoy more than 15 years of exclusivity from the time the medicinal product concerned first obtains authorisation to be placed on the market in the EEA. Indeed, if a marketing authorisation issued by the Swiss authorities and automatically recognised by the Principality of Liechtenstein under that State's legislation were precluded from constituting a first marketing authorisation for the purposes of Article 13 of Regulation No 1768/92, the duration of SPCs would have to be calculated by reference to a marketing authorisation issued subsequently in the EEA. Thus, there would be a risk of the period of 15 years of exclusivity being exceeded in the EEA."
Synthon
"'(1) For the purposes of Articles 13 and 19 of [Regulation No 1768/92], is an authorisation a 'first authorisation to place … on the market in the Community' if it is granted in pursuance of a national law which is compliant with [Directive 65/65], or is it necessary that it be established in addition that, in granting the authorisation in question, the national authority followed an assessment of data as required by the administrative procedure laid down in that directive?
(2) For the purposes of Articles 13 and 19 of [Regulation No 1768/92], does the expression 'first authorisation to place … on the market in the Community' include authorisations which had been permitted by national law to co-exist with an authorisation regime which complies with [Directive 65/65]?
(3) Is a product which is authorised to be placed on the market for the first time in the EEC without going through the administrative procedure laid down in [Directive 65/65] within the scope of [Regulation No 1768/92] as defined by Article 2?
(4) If not, is an SPC granted in respect of such a product invalid?"
Neurim
"29. It must be pointed out that the MA in the European Union referred to in Article 13(1) of the SPC Regulation is not intended to take the place of the MA provided for in Article 3(b) of that regulation, that is to say, the authorisation granted by the Member State in which the application is submitted; instead, it constitutes a further condition applying in the event that the latter authorisation is not the first authorisation to place the product on the market as a medicinal product in the European Union (see, to that effect, Case C-127/00 Hässle [2003] ECR I-14781, paragraph 73).
30. However, although those two provisions of the SPC Regulation thus refer to the two different territorial areas of the authorisations in question in defining the duration of the protection conferred by the SPC in a particular situation, there is no reason why, as regards the assessment of the very nature of those authorisations, it is necessary to use different criteria according to which the article is applicable. Therefore, the MA referred to in Article 13(1) of the SPC Regulation is the authorisation of a product which is within the limits of the protection conferred by the basic patent relied upon for the purposes of the application for the SPC.
31. It follows from the above that the answer to the second question is that Article 13(1) of the SPC Regulation is to be interpreted as meaning that it refers to the MA of a product which is within the limits of the protection conferred by the basic patent relied upon for the purposes of the application for the SPC."
Issue 1: Interpretation of Article 13
"1. Is a Swiss marketing authorisation not granted pursuant to the administrative authorisation procedure laid down in Directive 2001/83/EC, but automatically recognised by Liechtenstein, capable of constituting the 'first authorisation to place the product on the market' for the purposes of Article 13(1) of Regulation 469/2009/EC?
2. Does it make a difference to the answer to the first question if:
(a) the set of clinical data upon which the Swiss authority granted the marketing authorisation was considered by the European Medicines Agency as not satisfying the conditions for the grant of a marketing authorisation pursuant to Regulation 726/2004/EC; and/or
(b) the Swiss marketing authorisation was suspended after grant and was only reinstated following the submission of additional data?"
"Regarding the objectives of Regulation No 1768/92, firstly, it must be noted that the fundamental objective of the Regulation, as set out in the first and second recitals in the preamble thereto, is to ensure sufficient protection to encourage pharmaceutical research, which plays a decisive role in the continuing improvement in public health (Case C-392/97 Farmitalia [1999] ECR I-5553, paragraph 19). In that regard, the third and fourth recitals in the preamble give as a reason for the adoption of the Regulation the fact that the period of effective protection under the patent is insufficient to cover the investment put into the pharmaceutical research. Regulation No 1768/92 thus seeks to make up for that insufficiency by creating an SPC for medicinal products. It seeks, in addition, to confer supplementary protection on the holders of national or European patents, without instituting any preferential ranking amongst them (Biogen, paragraphs 26 and 27)."
"35. Second, Regulation No 1768/92, which was adopted on the basis of Article 100a of the EEC Treaty (subsequently Article 100a of the EC Treaty, and now, after amendment, Article 95 EC), establishes, as is apparent from the sixth and seventh recitals in the preamble thereto, a uniform solution at Community level by creating an SPC which may be obtained by the holder of a national or European patent under the same conditions in each Member State. It thus aims to prevent the heterogeneous development of national laws leading to further disparities which would be likely to create obstacles to the free movement of medicinal products within the Community and thus directly affect the establishment and the functioning of the internal market (see Case C-350/92 Spain v Council [1995] ECR I-1985, paragraphs 34 and 35, and Case C-127/00 Hässle [2003] ECR I-14781, paragraph 37).
…
39. Thirdly, apart from the objective of adequate protection to encourage research, Regulation No 1768/92 recognises, as is apparent from the ninth recital in its preamble, the necessity, in a sector as complex as the pharmaceutical sector, to take into account all the interests at stake, including those of public health (see Spain v Council, paragraph 38). For that purpose, the SPC may not be granted for a period exceeding five years. Similarly, the eighth recital in the preamble states that the holder of both a patent and an SPC should be able to enjoy an overall maximum of fifteen years of exclusivity from the time the medicinal product in question first obtains authorisation to be placed on the market in the Community."
Issue 2: Interpretation of Article 2
"3. If Article 13(1) of Regulation 469/2009 refers solely to marketing authorisations granted pursuant to the administrative authorisation procedure laid down in Directive 2001/83/EC, does the fact that a medicinal product was first placed on the market within the EEA pursuant to a Swiss marketing authorisation automatically recognised in Liechtenstein which was not granted pursuant to Directive 2001/83/EC render that product ineligible for the grant of a supplementary protection certificate pursuant to Article 2 of Regulation 469/2009?"
Conclusion