Ex Parte ZhouDownload PDFBoard of Patent Appeals and InterferencesJul 18, 201211478095 (B.P.A.I. Jul. 18, 2012) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE __________ BEFORE THE BOARD OF PATENT APPEALS AND INTERFERENCES __________ Ex parte PU ZHOU __________ Appeal 2012-001139 Application 11/478,095 Technology Center 1600 __________ Before TONI R. SCHEINER, STEPHEN WALSH, and ULRIKE W. JENKS, Administrative Patent Judges. JENKS, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL This is a decision on appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134 involving claims directed to an implantable intravascular stent comprising multiple coatings. The Examiner has rejected the claims as obvious. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We reverse. Appeal 2012-001139 Application 11/478,095 2 STATEMENT OF THE CASE Claims 2-4, 7, 8, 13-18, 20-22, 25-28, and 30-32 are on appeal, and can be found in the Appendix of the Appeal Brief (App. Br. 14-16). The claims are directed to a stent comprising two adjacent coatings, wherein each coating makes contact with the sent sidewall structure, and wherein one coating comprises a metallic material and the other coating is either a therapeutic agent, a polymer or mixture thereof. Claim 25 is the sole independent claim, and reads as follows (emphasis added): 25. An implantable intravascular stent comprising: (a) a stent sidewall structure defining a surface; and (b) a coating comprising (i) a first coating composition formed of a material selected from the group consisting of a one or more therapeutic agents and one or more polymers, the first coating composition contacting at least a portion of the surface of the stent sidewall structure wherein the first coating composition has a first thickness measured from the surface of the stent sidewall structure; and (ii) a second coating composition comprising a material different from the first coating composition, the second coating composition comprising a metallic material and being substantially free of any polymer, the second coating contacting at least a portion of the surface of the stent sidewall structure, at least a portion of the second coating composition being disposed adjacent to the first coating composition on the surface of the stent sidewall structure, wherein the second coating composition has a second thickness measured from the surface of the stent sidewall structure; and wherein the second thickness of the second coating composition is the same as or greater than the first thickness of the first coating composition. The following grounds of rejection are before us for review: Appeal 2012-001139 Application 11/478,095 3 The Examiner has rejected claims 25-27 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Lye1 and Helmus,2 as evidenced by Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary3 and Boyle.4 The Examiner has rejected claims 2-4, 7-8, 13-18, 20-22, 28, 31, and 32 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Lye and Helmus, as evidenced by Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary and Boyle. Appellant states that claim 25 is representative, and that the remaining claims will stand or fall with claim 25. (App. Br. 4 and 12.) ISSUE The Examiner found that Lye suggested disposing different coating patterns along the length of a stent, and that Helmus exemplified that it was well known to design layers adjacent to one another. (Ans. 6-7.) The Examiner concluded that it would have been obvious “to design the metallic and polymer layers of Lye adjacent to one another on the surface of the stent. One would have been motivated to do so particularly in view of Helmus which exemplifies that such coatings are a matter of design choice to be patterned longitudinally or vertically on stent surfaces.” (Id.) Appellant agrees that Lye did not describe a stent comprising two adjacent coating compositions, each contacting the same surface of a stent 1 Lye et al., US 2006/0121080 A1, published Jun. 8, 2006 2 Helmus, US 2006/0127443 A1, published Jun. 15, 2006 3 Merriam-Webster OnLine, accessed at www.merriam- webster.com/dictionary/strut on Nov. 20, 2009. 4 Boyle et al., US 2004/0102837 A1, published May 27, 2004 Appeal 2012-001139 Application 11/478,095 4 sidewall structure (App. Br. 6), and points out that instead, Lye’s polymer layer is atop, and not adjacent to, Lye’s porous metal layer (id. at 7). Appellant does not agree that Helmus remedied the deficiency in Lye’s disclosure, and contends that Helmus only taught that “nanoporous coating regions can be provided on the luminal surfaces, on the abluminal surfaces, on the lateral surfaces between the luminal and abluminal surfaces, patterned along the luminal or abluminal length of the devices, on the ends, and so forth.” (Id. at 11, quoting Helmus ¶ 16.) The dispositive issue, in Appellant’s phrasing, is whether Helmus’ use of the single word ‘pattern’ would . . . have made obvious appellant’s . . . first and second coating compositions as recited in claim 25, at least because it would not have been obvious for one skilled in the art to ‘pattern’ such that the first coating composition and at least a portion of the second coating composition are disposed adjacent to each other and contacting the same surface of a stent sidewall structure. (App. Br. 11.) FINDINGS OF FACT FF1. Lye disclosed using a nanoporous coating to improve adhesion of a polymer coating to the stent surface (Lye 15, ¶0094). The metallic nanoporous layer promotes adhesion of polymers or other material to the surface of the stent (Id. 16, ¶0105). FF2. The metallic coating serves to store therapeutic agents as well as provide an improved bonding surface for other drug elution coatings (Lye 16, ¶0105). A second porous layer of polymer or other material can store and release therapeutic agent (Id.). Appeal 2012-001139 Application 11/478,095 5 FF3. Lye disclosed that the pore size may range from 5 nanometers to nearly the thickness of the film (Lye 17, ¶0112). FF4. Helmus disclosed medical devices having two layers: one layer comprising a therapeutic agent and a second layer comprising a metallic nanoporous coating deposited over top of the therapeutic layer on a medical device (Helmus 1, ¶0005, ¶0010). The metallic nanoporous layer may cover all or just a portion of the device (Helmus 2, ¶0016). FF5. Boyle disclosed patterning a metal onto a substrate; the pattern can be made using masking or etching techniques. (Boyle 5, ¶0040, ¶0042.) The substrate serves as the mold onto which the stent metal material is deposited. Once formed, the metal stent is removed from the substrate (Id. ¶0043). FF6. The Examiner finds that in Lye “[t]he polymer is either bonded or adhered to the metallic nanoporous coating” (Ans. 13). FF7. The Examiner finds that Lye suggests that both porous layers can contain therapeutic agents, therefore the drug and polymer carrier in Lye are not disposed in the pores of the porous metal layer only. In fact, both porous coating layers may contain active agents. Additionally, paragraph 0105 of Lye does not disclose the layers as being on top of one another, but merely being adhered or bonded to the metallic coating. (Ans 15.) PRINCIPLES OF LAW “The Patent Office has the initial duty of supplying the factual basis for its rejection. It may not . . . resort to speculation, unfounded assumptions or hindsight reconstruction to supply deficiencies” in the cited references. In Appeal 2012-001139 Application 11/478,095 6 re Warner, 379 F.2d 1011, 1017 (CCPA 1967). “Rejections on obviousness grounds cannot be sustained by mere conclusory statements; instead, there must be some articulated reasoning with some rational underpinning to support the legal conclusion of obviousness.” In re Kahn, 441 F.3d 977, 988 (Fed. Cir. 2006), cited with approval in KSR Int’l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 417-18 (2007). ANALYSIS We begin our analysis by interpreting the limitations of claim 25. Claim 25 defines a stent comprising first and second coating compositions “contacting at least a portion of the stent sidewall structure.” We interpret this to mean that each coating material makes actual contact with the structure of the stent sidewall. A further requirement of the claim is that “the second coating composition being disposed adjacent to the first coating composition on the surface of the stent sidewall structure,” and we interpret this limitation to mean that the two coating materials make contact with each other while simultaneously making contact with the structure of the medical device. Thus, we interpret the claim to define a stent covered by two different coating materials, and each of the two coating materials makes contact with the surface of the stent itself as well as making contact with the other coating.5 5 We note that claim 25 contains one additional limitation directed to the thickness of the coating materials in relation to each other, however, we do reach this limitation in our analysis because we find that the cited art does not disclose two adjacent coating materials each making contact with the device structure. Appeal 2012-001139 Application 11/478,095 7 After reviewing the evidence, we agree with Appellant that the Examiner has not set out a prima facie case. We find that Lye disclosed two different coating materials, however, we find that only the metallic coating material makes contact with the surface of the medical device (FF1, FF2). The metal coating of Lye does not include pores that reach the surface of the medical device (FF3). Further, the Examiner admits that the purpose of Lye is to coat the medical device with a metal layer that serves to anchor the polymer layer to the medical device (FF6, FF7). The Examiner asserts that variation in the coating properties may be achieved using masking techniques (Ans. 15-16). We find no evidence in Lye that the masking technique prevents the metallic coating from reaching the surface of the medical device. We find that one of the elements of the claim is that both coating materials are in contact with the surface of the device, and it is undisputed that this limitation is missing in Lye. Helmus disclosed making patterns with the metallic coating using masking techniques. However, the metallic layer is laid over the top of a therapeutic layer and thereby the metal layer, even if applied in a pattern, would not reach the surface of the medical device (FF4). Thus, Helmus is also missing the limitation of having two adjacent coatings making contact with the medical device itself. In other words, the rejection’s finding that Helmus “exemplified” such adjacent coatings (Ans. 7) is not supported by evidence. Boyle does not show a medical device with two coatings. The metal coating in Boyle is placed onto a sacrificial structure, and this structure is removed from the metal once the stent is formed (FF5). Thus, Boyle does not disclose the limitation of a coating making contact with the device, let alone having two different Appeal 2012-001139 Application 11/478,095 8 coating materials adjacent to each other making contact with the device. Accordingly, we find that the Examiner has not set out a prima facie case, and for this reason we reverse the obviousness rejection. CONCLUSION OF LAW We conclude that the evidence of record does not support the Examiner’s conclusion that the combination of Lye and Helmus as evidenced by Webster’s and Boyle renders obvious the stent structure of claim 25. We thus reverse the rejection of claim 2-4, 7, 8, 13-18, 20-22, 25- 28, and 30-32 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being obvious. REVERSED dm Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation