CLEARSTREAM TECHNOLOGIES LIMITEDDownload PDFPatent Trials and Appeals BoardAug 3, 20212020005174 (P.T.A.B. Aug. 3, 2021) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE United States Patent and Trademark Office Address: COMMISSIONER FOR PATENTS P.O. Box 1450 Alexandria, Virginia 22313-1450 www.uspto.gov APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE FIRST NAMED INVENTOR ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. 14/383,764 09/08/2014 Paul Anders Fillmore P-17028.US02 / A-050 7120 138315 7590 08/03/2021 Andrew D. Dorisio 300 West Vine Street Suite 1700 Lexington, KY 40507 EXAMINER ROMANOWSKI, MICHAEL C ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 1782 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 08/03/2021 ELECTRONIC Please find below and/or attached an Office communication concerning this application or proceeding. The time period for reply, if any, is set in the attached communication. Notice of the Office communication was sent electronically on above-indicated "Notification Date" to the following e-mail address(es): dwpatents@dickinsonwright.com ip.docket@bd.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte PAUL ANDERS FILLMORE, ALLAN RONAN, EOIN RYAN, and ANDREW SCHAFFER Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 Technology Center 1700 Before ERIC B. GRIMES, LINDA M. GAUDETTE, and DEBRA L. DENNETT, Administrative Patent Judges. GAUDETTE, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL1 Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 134(a), Appellant2 appeals from the Examiner’s decision twice rejecting claims 9–12, 14–18, and 36–38. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). 1 This Decision includes citations to the Specification, filed Sept. 8, 2014, as amended (“Spec.”), the Non-Final Office Action dated Aug. 22, 2019 (“Non-Final Act.”), the Appeal Brief filed Jan. 21, 2020 (“Appeal Br.”), the Examiner’s Answer dated Apr. 30, 2020 (“Ans.”), and the Reply Brief filed June 30, 2020 (“Reply Br.”) 2 “Appellant” refers to “applicant” as defined in 37 C.F.R. § 1.42(a). Appellant identifies the real party in interest as Clearstream Technologies Limited. Appeal Br. 2. Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 2 We AFFIRM IN PART. CLAIMED SUBJECT MATTER The invention “relates generally to balloons for performing medical procedures, such as angioplasty.” Spec. 1, Technical Field. Claims 9 and 36, reproduced below, are illustrative of the subject matter on appeal. For convenience, claim 13, from which claim 9 depends, is also reproduced below. 1. A parison for being blow molded into a medical balloon for a catheter, comprising: a first tubular layer having a functional modification; and a second tubular layer adapted for bonding with the first tubular layer to form the blow molded balloon. 9. A medical balloon formed by the parison of claim 1, comprising: a tubular, inflatable body comprising a wall, the body including first and second generally conical ends and a generally cylindrical barrel section between the generally conical ends and providing a working surface. 36. A medical balloon formed by a parison for being blow molded into the medical balloon for a catheter, the parison comprising a first tubular layer having a functional modification, and a second tubular layer for bonding with the first tubular layer to form the blow molded balloon, the medical balloon comprising a tubular, inflatable blow molded body comprising a wall formed of the first and second tubular layers bonded together by heat and pressure, the body including first 3 In response to a Restriction Requirement entered July 11, 2017, the Appellant elected claims 9–12 and 14–18 with traverse. Response to Restriction Request, filed Sept. 5, 2017. Claim 1 is pending, but withdrawn from consideration. See Non-Final Act., Office Action Summary. Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 3 and second generally conical ends and a generally cylindrical barrel section between the generally conical ends and providing a working surface. Appeal Br. 22–23 (Claims App.). REFERENCES Name Reference Date Tucker US 2006/0135916 A1 June 22, 2006 Durcan US 2007/0142771 A1 June 21, 2007 Burton US 2009/0234283 A1 Sept. 17, 2009 Allex US 2010/0234875 A1 Sept. 16, 2010 REJECTIONS 1. Claims 9–12 and 14–18 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) as anticipated by Allex. Non-Final Act. 4–8. 2. Claims 36 and 37 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Allex. Non-Final Act. 22–24. 3. Claims 9–12, 14–18, 36, and 37 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Durcan in view of Allex. Non-Final Act. 9–14. 4. Claims 9–12, 14–18, and 36–38 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Durcan in view of Burton and Allex, with Tucker4 relied on as an evidentiary reference for claims 16 and 37. Non- Final Act. 14–22. 4 The Appellant does not argue the Examiner’s findings as to Tucker. See Non-Final Act. 20; Appeal Br. 10. Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 4 OPINION Rejections based on Allex The Examiner rejected claim 9 and its dependent claims 10–12 and 14–18 as anticipated by Allex, and claim 36 and its dependent claim 37 as obvious in view of Allex. Non-Final Act. 4–8, 22–24. In rejecting the claims, the Examiner determined that no distinctive structural characteristic is imparted by the product-by-process recitations of the medical balloon being formed by blow-molding a parison. See Non-Final Act. 3, 23–24. 1. Claim 9 The Appellant argues that the Examiner “failed to carry the burden of showing that the medical balloon of Allex is ‘the same or similar’ to that claimed,” and improperly shifted the burden to the Appellant to show a difference between Allex’s and the claimed medical balloons. Appeal Br. 5. The Appellant argues that claim 9 requires “a parison with a layer that is ‘functionally modified,’ which can simply be blown into an RO [(radiopaque)] balloon without the need for a printing step.” Id. at 4–5. The Appellant explains that a “parison” is “[a] hollow plastic tube from which a bottle or other hollow object is blow-molded.” Id. at 12 (quoting McGraw- Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms (6th ed. 2003)). The Appellant argues that Allex’s balloon is formed in a multistep process that includes steps of blow molding a compliant nylon inflation layer 20, and then applying radiopaque coating 210 to inflation layer 200’s outer surface via printing in a longitudinally striped pattern. Appeal Br. 4 (citing Allex ¶ 70). The Appellant argues that the ordinary artisan would not have been able to blow mold a two-layer parison using Allex’s materials because the Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 5 outer layer comprises an inelastic material. Appeal Br. 5 (asserting that the Examiner has conceded this point). “[W]hen considering the patentability of product claims that contain process limitations, claim scope is generally based on the product itself, not the process. If the process limitation connotes specific structure and may be considered a structural limitation, however, that structure should be considered.” In re Nordt Dev. Co., 881 F.3d 1371, 1374 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (internal citations omitted) (emphasis added). In Nordt, the Federal Circuit determined that the claim term “injection molded” connoted a particular structure of the claimed product (e.g., a knee brace), even though the application used the term to describe a manufacturing process. Id. at 1375. In making this determination, the court found that “at a minimum, the specification demonstrates that ‘injection molded’ connotes an integral structure,” and “neither the Board nor the examiner dispute[d] Nordt’s assertion that ‘there are clear structural differences’ between a knee brace made with fabric components and a knee brace made with injection-molded components.” Id. In contrast to the facts in Nordt, the present Specification does not use the terms “parison” or “blow molded” to describe a structural characteristic of the claimed “medical balloon.” The Appellant does not identify, and, like the Examiner, we do not discern any structural differences between the Appellant’s claimed medical balloon and Allex’s medical balloon. Compare Non-Final Act. 4–5, with Appeal Br. 3–5. Rather, as indicated by the Examiner, Ans. 26, the Appellant’s argued distinctions between the claimed and the prior art medical balloons relate solely to manufacturing advantages. Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 6 See, e.g., Appeal Br. 4–5 (“[B]y having a parison with a layer that is ‘functionally modified,’ which can simply be blown into an RO balloon without the need for a printing step,” “multi-step processing [as used in Allex] is avoided.”). For these reasons, we agree with the Examiner’s determination that the recitation “formed by the parison of claim 1” is not a structural limitation and, therefore, claim 9 does not require a two-layer parison that is capable of being blow molded. “Where a product-by-process claim is rejected over a prior art product that appears to be identical, although produced by a different process, the burden is upon the applicants to come forward with evidence establishing an unobvious difference between the claimed product and the prior art product.” In re Marosi, 710 F.2d 799, 803 (Fed. Cir. 1983). As discussed above, the Appellant has not met this burden. Accordingly, we sustain the rejection of claim 9 as anticipated by Allex. 2. Claim 36 The Appellant argues that the Examiner reversibly erred in construing claim 36 as including a product-by-process limitation because the recitation of a “blow molded body” is a structural limitation, under numerous precedential decisions. Appeal Br. 13. This argument is not persuasive because it fails to identify error in the Examiner’s finding that Allex teaches a blow molded body. Specifically, the Examiner found that Allex teaches that “[t]he inner inflation layer (which defines the body of the balloon) is formed through, inter alia, blow molding [0030], and the fiber layer is pre-formed and then adhesively bonded to the Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 7 inflation layer or wrapped around and adhesively bonded to the inflation layer [0014, 0031–0044].” Non-Final Act. 22–23. The Appellant also argues that the Examiner did not identify evidence to support a finding that Allex’s balloon, formed by “thermobonding” to “attach[] successive layers of inelastic fibers,” would have the same or a similar structure to the claim 36 balloon, formed by blow-molding to bond first and second tubular layers by heat and pressure. Id. at 13. This argument is not persuasive because it is not commensurate in scope with claim 36. Claim 36 recites “a tubular, inflatable blow molded body comprising a wall formed of the first and second tubular layers bonded together by heat and pressure.” As explained above in the discussion of claim 9, the recitation “formed by a parison for being blow molded into the medical balloon for a catheter” is not a structural limitation. The Examiner found that Allex discloses the use of thermobonding, “i.e., the application of heat and pressure” as claim 36 recites, to adhesively bond the medical balloon’s fiber and inflation layers. Non-Final Act. 22–23 (citing Allex ¶ 43). The Appellant has not persuasively explained—i.e., the Appellant has not cited evidence but relies solely on attorney argument—why this finding is erroneous or unreasonable. See Appeal Br. 13–14. The Appellant’s remaining arguments are not persuasive for the reasons discussed above regarding the claim 9 rejection. Accordingly, we also sustain the rejection of claim 36 as obvious in view of Allex. Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 8 3. Dependent Claims 10–12, 14–18, and 37 The Appellant separately argues the patentability of each of claims 11, 14, 16, 17, and 37. We sustain the rejections of claims 11, 16, and 37, but reverse the rejections of claims 14 and 17. a. Claims 11, 16, 37 As to claims 11, 16, and 37, we agree with the Examiner’s explanations of why the arguments are unpersuasive of reversible error. See generally Ans. 26–32. As explained by the Examiner, the Appellant’s arguments are based on overly narrow interpretations of the claim language. We add the following. The Appellant argues that the Examiner erred in interpreting the claim 11 term “working surface” as encompassing the balloon’s conical or tapering sections at the proximal and distal ends. See Appeal Br. 6–7. In support of this interpretation, the Examiner finds that the Specification defines the “working surface” as “typically co-extensive with a generally cylindrical barrel section,” Spec. 2:3–4 (emphasis added). See Ans. 27. Citing to a different portion of the same Specification sentence, the Appellant argues that the ordinary artisan would have understood that the “working surface” is limited to the balloon’s barrel section because the Specification describes the “working surface” as “the surface along the portion of the balloon that is used to achieve the desired treatment effect, such as contacting the calcified plaque,” Spec. 2:1–2. See Reply Br. 2. The Appellant adds that there is no description of the working surface as “coextensive with the [balloon’s] conical sections.” Id. Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 9 The Appellant’s argument is unpersuasive because it fails to identify error in the Examiner’s finding that Allex paragraph 42 describes an embodiment “wherein the first layer extends along only the [cylindrical barrel section (C)]” (Non-Final Act. 5), i.e., the portion of a balloon that the Appellant contends corresponds to the claimed working surface, see Reply Br. 2. Allex paragraph 42 states that “[f]or example, a pre-form[, corresponding to the claim 11 “first layer,”] may be constructed of one or more regions (A), (B), (C)[, a central inflation region (Allex ¶ 38) having a cylindrical barrel shape (see id. at Fig. 6)], (D) and/or (E), which may be assembled on to inflation layer 20 before the braided sleeve is slid over the inflation layer 20. The pre-form may be designed to fit over only a single region[].” Allex ¶ 42 (emphasis added). In addition, we agree with the Examiner’s interpretation of claim 11’s “working surface” as not limited to the cylindrical barrel section. Ans. 27. During examination, claim terms must be given their broadest reasonable construction consistent with the Specification. In re ICON Health and Fitness, Inc., 496 F.3d 1374, 1379 (Fed. Cir. 2007). The broadest reasonable interpretation of the claims must also be consistent with the interpretation that those skilled in the art would reach. In re Cortright, 165 F.3d 1353, 1358 (Fed. Cir. 1999). We agree with the Examiner that the ordinary artisan reasonably would have understood from the adverb “typically,” Spec. 2:3, that the working surface is usually, but not necessarily, limited to the cylindrical barrel section. The Appellant has not provided persuasive evidence demonstrating that a medical balloon’s working surface never extends beyond the barrel section or that the ordinary artisan would have Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 10 understood that the working surface is always limited to the barrel section. See, e.g., Appeal Br. 7 (arguing, without citation to evidence, that “the conical ends are not ‘used to achieve the desired treatment effect.’”). We have considered the Appellant’s argument against the rejections based on Durcan that a construction of the claim term “working surface” as coextensive with both the barrel and conical sections of the balloon “violates well-established canons of claim construction. RF De., Inc. v. Pac. Keystone Techs., Inc., 326 F.3d 1255, 1263 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (‘each claim in a patent is presumptively different in scope.’).” Appeal Br. 17. “However, the doctrine of claim differentiation is not a conclusive basis for construing claims, and [a] patent specification [may] override[] its effect.” American CALCAR, INC. v. American Honda Motor Co., Inc., 651 F.3d 1318, 1337 (Fed. Cir. 2011); see also RF De., Inc., 326 F.3d at 1263 (explaining that claim differentiation is not a “hard and fast rule of construction,” and is applicable where there is a dispute over whether a limitation found in a dependent claim should be read into an independent claim). Here, use of “typically” in the Specification indicates that Appellant’s interpretation of “working surface” is overly narrow. As to claims 16 and 37, the Appellant disputes the Examiner’s finding that the recited “radiopaque tube,” Appeal Br. 23 (Claims App.), reads on Allex’s coating layer 40, arguing that “a ‘coating layer’ applied by spraying is not a ‘tube’ in any sense of the term.” Appeal Br. 9, 14; see also Reply Br. 3.5 As shown in the quotations below, this argument is not persuasive 5 In Reply Brief page 3, the Appellant argues that “[t]he Examiner does not appear to respond to Appellant’s argument for claim 37, requiring ‘an at Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 11 because it lacks evidentiary support and is inconsistent with both the Specification and Allex’s disclosure. The Specification discloses that the second tube may comprise a metal film or a thin flexible material, e.g., a polymer such as nylon. See, e.g., Spec. 4:2 (“The balloon 12 may be a non-compliant balloon . . . .”); id. at 4:26–29 (“[A] first tube 50 comprising a thin layer of material (such as a polymer), may be inserted within a second tube 52 . . . . The second tube 52 may also comprise a compatible polymeric material, but could also be formed of a different material, . . . [and] includes the one or more radiopaque markings 30 . . . .”); id. at 5:10–13 (“As noted above for tube 52, the collars 52, 52b may be comprised of a thin flexible, material (e.g., a polymer, such as nylon) compatible with the material (e.g., a polymer, such as nylon) of the adjacent layer formed by tube 50, but could also be made of different materials, such as one or more metal foils.”). least partially radiopaque tube positioned over the barrel section and extending substantially along only the working surface.’” In arguing the rejection of claim 37 in the Appeal Brief, the Appellant states that “[a]s previously noted, a coating layer is not a ‘tube’ under any reasonable interpretation of the term, including in light of the teachings of Appellant’s specification. Hence, the obviousness rejection of claim 37 should be reversed for this additional reason.” Appeal Br. 14. Claims 16 and 37 are identical except for their dependencies from claims 9 and 36, respectively, and the Examiner fully addresses this argument in responding to the Appellant’s claim 16 Appeal Brief arguments. See Ans. 29–30. As the Appellant refers back to its claim 16 argument when discussing claim 37 in the Appeal Brief, we view the Examiner’s failure to reiterate the claim 16 response in responding to Appellant’s claim 37 Appeal Brief argument as harmless error. Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 12 Allex similarly discloses that “coating layer 40 is composed of one or more layers of a compliant polymeric material. . . . . [S]uitable materials . . . include nylon . . . .” Allex ¶ 45. Allex discloses that “[t]he coating layer 40 may be applied in any number of ways as are known in the art.” Id. ¶ 46. Allex does not require application by spray coating, but states that “[t]ypical coating methods include spray coating, dip coating, dispense coating, pad printing and the like.” Id. In sum, the Examiner’s determination that the claimed “at least partially radiopaque tube” reads on Allex’s coating layer is consistent with the Specification’s disclosure that the radiopaque tube is not limited to a particular material or rigidity, but may, like Allex’s coating layer, be a flexible layer of a material such as nylon. For the above reasons, and those stated in the Non-Final Office Action and the Answer, we sustain the rejections of claims 11 and 16 as anticipated by Allex, and of claim 37 as obvious in view of Allex. b. Claims 14 and 17 Claims 14 and 17 require that the medical balloon includes first and second shoulders between which the first layer is positioned (claim 14) and for retaining the radiopaque tube against longitudinal movement (claim 17). Appeal Br. 22, 23 (Claims App.). The Appellant cites Figure 15 in support of an interpretation of the term “shoulder” as meaning “a raised abutment.” Appeal Br. 7. The Appellant also cites a dictionary definition of the term “shoulder,” as meaning “[t]he area of an item or object that serves as an abutment or surrounds a projection. American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, © 2018.” Appeal Br. 8. As to claim 17, the Appellant Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 13 further argues that the Examiner has not explained how Allex meets the requirement that “the shoulders serv[e] to retain the radiopaque tube against movement in a longitudinal direction. Id. at 10–11. In response, the Examiner explains that “while Appellant’s Figure 15, instance 12a illustrates a raised portion, . . . it is improper to import limitations from the specification into the claims.” Ans. 28. The Examiner also refers back to a prior final office action which quotes the Merriam- Webster Dictionary’s definition of “shoulder,” Ans. 28: “a rounded or sloping part (as of a stringed instrument or bottle) where the neck joins the body,” Final Office Action mailed Dec. 12, 2018, at 17. As to claim 17, the Examiner finds that because Allex’s tubular layer is “bonded to the shoulders, the shoulders serve to retain the tubular coating layer from any longitudinal movement. In other words, bonding a material to substrate holds the material in place.” We disagree with the Examiner that the ordinary artisan, upon reviewing the Specification and Drawings, would have understood that the claim term “shoulder” encompasses Allex’s structure. Application Figure 10 depicts an embodiment of the inventive medical balloon having a shape similar to Allex’s balloon shape, see Alex ¶ 28, Fig. 1. The Specification does not describe this embodiment as including shoulders. See, e.g., Spec. pp. 4–5. Rather, “with reference to Figure[] 15,” Spec. 5:31, the Specification describes “a further embodiment,” id. at 3:9, in which “the mold cavity may be adapted . . . to form shoulders 12a on the balloon 12 once blown.” Spec. 5:31–33. As to claim 17’s requirement that “the shoulders serv[e] to retain the radiopaque tube against movement in a Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 14 longitudinal direction,” we likewise determine that the Examiner’s interpretation of this phrase as encompassing adhesive bonding of the tube is inconsistent with the Specification. The Specification distinguishes between retaining outer tube 52 on inner tube 50 via shoulders 12a, frictional engagement, and an adhesive. See Spec. 5:33–6:5. In sum, because the Examiner’s rejections of claims 14 and 17 are based on overly broad interpretations, we do not sustain the rejections of these claims as anticipated by Allex. c. Claims 10, 12, 15, and 18 The Appellant does not separately argue the patentability of claims 10, 12, 15, or 18. As we have sustained the rejections of the claims from which these claims depend, we also sustain the rejection of claims 10, 12, 15, and 18 as anticipated by Allex. Rejections based on Durcan The Examiner rejected claims 9–12, 14–18, 36, and 37 as unpatentable over Durcan in view of Allex, and claims 9–12, 14–18, and 36– 38 as unpatentable over Durcan in view of Burton and Allex. Non-Final Act. 9–22. The Examiner found that “Durcan, Burton, and Allex are directed toward inflatable medical balloons for use with catheters for angioplasty procedures.” Id. at 19. The Examiner found that Durcan discloses the invention of claims 9 and 36 except for a functional modification on the first tubular layer. Id. at 9, 16. The Examiner determined that at the time of the invention, the ordinary artisan would have coated Durcan’s medical balloon “with a radiopaque coating [i.e., a functional modification], as taught by Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 15 Allex, in order to facilitate the accurate and safe intraluminal placement and inflation of the inflatable medical balloon in a patient utilizing a visualization technique such as fluoroscopy.” Id. at 12, 19. The Examiner also determined that the ordinary artisan would have modified Durcan’s balloon to include protuberances (i.e., a functional modification) as “an integral feature of the outer surface of the wall of the inflatable medical balloon, taught by Burton, in order to form a balloon that would have been sufficient at fracturing plaque from a stenosed vessel wall during angioplasty.” Id. at 19. The Appellant argues that the Examiner did not articulate a sufficient reason for combining the teachings of Durcan and Allex. See Appeal Br. 14– 16. The Appellant quotes various Federal Circuit decisions for the proposition that a reason to combine is necessary to establish a prima facie case of obviousness. See id. But the Appellant does not explain why the Examiner’s reasons for combining the prior art teachings do not comport with case law standards. See, e.g., Non-Final Act. 11–12 (citing Allex ¶¶ 5– 7, 13). The Appellant argues that “[p]roviding the Durcan balloon with a radiopaque coating over its entire length, as proposed, would serve no useful purpose, given that it is covered by a stent that already identifies its location under fluoroscopy.” Appeal Br. 16; see also id. at 19. The Appellant contends that “making the entire balloon radiopaque would obscure the margins of the stent 16, actually hindering proper placement.” Id. at 16. The Appellant’s argument is not persuasive because it is based on an unsupported contention that Durcan’s disclosure is limited to medical Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 16 balloons used with metal stents. See Ans. 33. Although a stent is shown in the depicted embodiment, see Durcan ¶ 22 (describing Figure 1 as “an over- the-wire type stent delivery balloon catheter embodying features of the invention”), Durcan discloses that “[v]arious designs for balloon catheters well known in the art may be used in the catheter system of the invention[, f]or example, conventional over-the-wire balloon catheters for angioplasty or stent delivery,” id. ¶ 20 (emphasis added). See also id. ¶ 50 (“[A]lthough the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 1 is an over-the-wire type stent delivery balloon catheter, the catheter of this invention may comprise a variety of intravascular catheters, such as a rapid exchange type balloon catheter.”); ¶¶ 2–3 (“In percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty (PTCA) procedures . . . physicians frequently implant . . . a stent.”). In any event, as noted by the Examiner, Ans. 3, the Appellant has not identified persuasive evidence to support its contention that Durcan’s stent is metal. See Appeal Br. 16 (arguing that the Durcan’s stent 16 is depicted with “cross hatching for metal”). The Appellant argues that there would have been no reason to modify Durcan’s balloon to include protuberances as disclosed in Burton, because Durcan requires a stent that would cover the protuberances such that they could not serve their purpose of “fracturing plaque from a stenosed vessel during angioplasty.” Appeal Br. 19. As discussed above, we are not persuaded that Durcan’s medical balloons are designed for use only with metal stents. We sustain the rejection of claims 9 and 36 as unpatentable over (1) Durcan and Allex, and (2) Durcan, Burton, and Allex. Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 17 The Appellant also argues in support of patentability of each of claims 11, 14, 17, and 38. See Appeal Br. 17–21.6 As noted by the Examiner, Ans. 33, the Appellant’s arguments as to claim 11, see Appeal Br. 17, 19–20, are similar to those made in arguing the rejection over Allex, and are based on the same, overly narrow interpretation of the “working surface” as limited to the generally cylindrical barrel surface. For the reasons discussed above, these arguments are not persuasive, and we sustain the rejection of claim 11 as unpatentable over (1) Durcan and Allex, and (2) Durcan, Burton, and Allex. As to claims 14 and 17, the Examiner relies on the same overly broad interpretations discussed above in the rejections based on Allex. See Non-Final Act. 13–14, 21–22. Accordingly, for the same reasons discussed regarding the rejection based on Allex, we do not sustain the rejections of claims 14 and 17 as unpatentable over (1) Durcan and Allex, and (2) Durcan, Burton, and Allex. Claim 38 depends from claim 37 and requires that the balloon further include “first and second raised portions of the wall adjacent a proximal end and a distal end of the radiopaque tube.” Appeal Br. 23 (Claims App.). As noted above, the Examiner found that claim 36’s “first tubular layer having a functional modification” reads on Durcan’s outer layer, as modified based 6 The Appellant argues that because “the Examiner’s interpretation of the claim language is not in accord with clear legal precedent and Office policy, the rejections of claims 10 and 11 should be reversed.” Appeal Br. 17. As the Appellant has not explained why the interpretation of claim 10 is erroneous or unreasonable, or otherwise presented arguments directed to claim 10 limitations, we do not consider the Appeal Brief to raise a separate argument in support of patentability of claim 10. Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 18 on Burton to include protuberances. Non-Final Act. 19. The Examiner found that the protuberances in the Durcan/Burton combination would be “disposed along the length of the balloon from conical section to conical section, including over the cylindrical barrel section.” Id. at 20. The Examiner found that, when modified based on Allex’s teaching to include a radiopaque coating over the barrel section and extending substantially along only the working surface, the protuberances of the resultant structure would be adjacent to the proximal and distal end(s) of the radiopaque tube, as required by claim 38. Id. The Appellant argues that because the protuberances in the Durcan/Burton/Allex combination would extend along the entire length of the balloon, and claim 37 recites that the at least partially radiopaque tube extends substantially along only the working surface, which the Appellant interprets as the cylindrical barrel section, claim 38’s requirement that the protuberances are adjacent the radiopaque tube’s proximal and distal ends would not be met. The term “adjacent” is not defined in the Specification. Applying the ordinary meaning of the term “adjacent,” i.e., “lying near, close, or contiguous,” https://www.dictionary.com/browse/adjacent# (accessed July 28, 2021), we agree with the Examiner, Ans. 37, that regardless of whether the “working surface” is interpreted as limited to the balloon’s cylindrical barrel section, as argued by the Appellant, or as including the entire balloon, various points along the protuberances would be adjacent proximal and distal portions of a radiopaque coating that extends substantially along only the working surface. Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 19 Accordingly, we sustain the rejection of claim 38 as unpatentable over Durcan, Burton, and Allex. The remaining dependent claims were not separately argued. As we have sustained the rejections of the claims from which these claims depend, we also sustain the rejections of claims 10, 12, 15, 16, 18, and 37 as unpatentable over (1) Durcan and Allex, and (2) Durcan, Burton, and Allex. CONCLUSION The Appellant has not identified reversible error in the Examiner’s prior art rejections of claims 9–12, 15, 16, 18, and 36–38 for the reasons stated above, and in the Non-Final Office Action and the Answer. Any arguments made in the Appeal or Reply Briefs as to these claims, but not discussed in this Decision, have been fully addressed by the Examiner and are not persuasive of reversible error for the reasons stated in the Non-Final Office Action and the Answer. Accordingly, we sustain the rejections of claims 9–12, 15, 16, 18, and 36–38. The rejections of claims 14 and 17 are not sustained for the reasons discussed above. Appeal 2020-005174 Application 14/383,764 20 DECISION SUMMARY Claim(s) Rejected 35 U.S.C. § Reference(s)/Basis Affirmed Reversed 9–12, 14–18 102(b) Allex 9–12, 15, 16, 18 14, 17 36, 37 103(a) Allex 36, 37 9–12, 14– 18, 36, 37 103(a) Durcan, Allex 9–12, 15, 16, 18, 36, 37 14, 17 9–12, 14– 18, 36–38 103(a) Durcan, Burton, Allex, Tucker 9–12, 15, 16, 18, 36– 38 14, 17 Overall Outcome 9–12, 15, 16, 18, 36– 38 14, 17 TIME PERIOD FOR RESPONSE No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a). AFFIRMED IN PART Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation