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Term of patent in the United States

Under United States patent law, the term of patent, provided that maintenance fees are paid on time, is 20 years from the filing date of the earliest U.S. or international (PCT) application to which priority is claimed (excluding provisional applications).[1][2][3]

The patent term in the United States was changed in 1995 to bring U.S. patent law into conformity with the World Trade Organization's Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs) as negotiated in the Uruguay Round. As a side effect, it is no longer possible to maintain submarine patents in the U.S., since the patent term now depends on the filing date, not the issue date.

Design patents have a shorter term than utility patents. Design patents filed on or after May 13, 2015, have a term of 15 years from issuance.[4][5] Design patents filed prior to May 13, 2015, have a term of 14 years from issuance.[6]

History edit

The original patent term under the 1790 Patent Act was decided individually for each patent, but "not exceeding fourteen years". The 1836 Patent Act (5 Stat. 117, 119, 5) provided (in addition to the fourteen-year term) an extension "for the term of seven years from and after the expiration of the first term" in certain circumstances, when the inventor hasn't got "a reasonable remuneration for the time, ingenuity, and expense". In 1861 the seven-year extension was eliminated and the term changed to seventeen years (12 Stat. 246, 248). The enactment of the 1994 Uruguay Round Agreements Act then changed the patent term from seventeen years from the date of issue to the current twenty years from the earliest filing date.

Year filed Maximum term of validity Established by
-1789 - -
1790–1835 14 years from issuance Patent Act of 1790
1836–1860 21 years from issuance Patent Act of 1836
1861–1994 17 years from issuance Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 36–88 (12 Stat. 246)
1995- 20 years from filing Uruguay Round Agreements Act

Adjustments possible under current law edit

USPTO processing extension edit

If the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) fails to examine a patent application in time (deadlines for various steps are different), the patent term may be extended.[7] Extensions or other delay taken by the applicant can reduce or eliminate the extension.[7]

This extension is known as a patent term adjustment (PTA). Its intention is to accommodate for delays caused by the USPTO during the prosecution of a US patent application. The total PTA is an addition to the 20-year lifespan of a US patent. The delays are broadly classified into 4 types:

  • Type A - this delay is caused when USPTO fails to reply within the time period provided, which is 14 months from filing of a non-provisional application for the First Office action, and within 4 months of receipt of an applicant response for all subsequent actions. Failing to this condition, type A delay will accounted.
  • Type B - USPTO estimates the normal prosecution period of an application to be 3 years, i.e. between the date of filing a non-provisional application and the issue of the patent. If the prosecution exceeds this time, then Type B delay come into place. Type B delay will calculated if no RCE (Request For Continued Examination) is filed prior to completion of 3-year period. If the first RCE is filed after 3-year period then type B delay will be calculated up to the date of filing of RCE.
  • Type C - This type of delay is calculated in the events of secrecy orders or interferences.
  • Applicant delay - Applicant delay occurs when the applicant fails to respond to the office action within 3 months of mailing of an office action. Applicants delays are subtracted from the USPTO delays, when calculating the term adjustment.
  • Notably, patent term adjustment is not available for divisional (and other continuing) patents issued from the same priority application (see Mohsenzadeh v. Lee, 790 F. 3d 1377 - Court of Appeals, Federal Circuit 2015[8][9])

Calculation:

  • Type A delay = Date of issuance of office Action -(Date of receipt of applicant response + 4 months/14 months)
  • Type B delay = Date of issue of patent/Date of filing of first RCE - (Date of filing of application + 3 years)
  • Total PTA[10] =Type A+Type B + Type C - Applicant delay - overlapping delays
  • In the US, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) can provide additional market exclusivity (beyond the term of the patents) in cases where introduction of a product into a market was caused by the FDA approval process.

Reissue and reexamination edit

Even if the scope of a patent is narrowed, neither reissue nor reexamination changes the original expiration date. A reissued or reexamined patent expires on the day the original granted patent would have ordinarily expired. Example: The validity of a patent (filing: January 1, 2000; issue: January 1, 2002; end: January 1, 2020) is challenged. The USPTO issues a Certificate of Reexamination on January 1, 2004. The reexamined patent is in force until January 1, 2020, assuming payment of all maintenance fees.

FDA approval extension edit

The Drug Price Competition and Patent Term Restoration Act (Hatch-Waxman Act) of 1984 provides patent holders on approved patented products with an extended term of protection under the patent to compensate for the delay in obtaining Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval.

Merck & Co., Inc. v. Hi-Tech Pharmacal Co., Inc.[11] ruled that patents extended under Hatch-Waxman are still eligible to URAA[clarification needed] term extension. However, patents in force on June 8, 1995, solely because of the Hatch-Waxman term adjustment are not eligible.

Patent Term Adjustment (PTA) and Patent Term Extension (PTE) compensate a patent applicant for delays that occur during patent prosecution. Patent Term Adjustment (PTA) (see above) compensates applicants for USPTO-caused delays; Patent Term Extension (PTE) compensates a patent owner for delays caused by the regulatory review (e.g. by FDA) before a product can be commercially marketed. PTA and PTE lengthen the term of the patent, theoretically permitting patent owners to enjoy more than 20-year patent term from the time of first non-provisional filing.[12][better source needed]

Terminal disclaimer edit

A terminal disclaimer is a process by which a patent's term is shortened because it duplicates the claims of another patent which expires sooner. If any claim of a pending patent application would have been obvious in light of at least one claim of the applicant's issued patents, the USPTO may reject that claim for obviousness-type double patenting and require the applicant to disclaim a part of the term of the pending application. For example, an applicant's patent A expires on December 24, 2000. The applicant filed another patent application two years later. Under some conditions, the second patent might expire later than the first (based upon the respective earliest claimed priority dates). If the applicant is required to file, and does file, a terminal disclaimer in the later filed patent, then the later filed patent will expire at the same time as the earlier filed patent, the extra term having been disclaimed ("terminal disclaimer"). In filing the terminal disclaimer, the later filed patent and the earlier filed patent must be, and remain, commonly owned. In the case of co-pending applications, either or both of the applications may have claims rejected for obviousness-type double patenting, and a terminal disclaimer may be required in either or both, in which case the earlier expiration date will control.

After the Uruguay Round Agreements Act of 1994 (URAA), some patents with terminal disclaimers were eligible for a term adjustment because their referenced patents received a term adjustment under the URAA. Patents whose parents received extensions were eligible to file to receive a similar extension, because the claims they depended on were still protected. This has been discussed in the Manual of Patent Examining Procedure.[13]

A terminal disclaimer does not negate Patent Term Extension that has been granted under 35 U.S.C. 156.[14] In a pharmaceutical patent dispute, Teva argued that Wyeth's patent on zaleplon drug products (Sonata) had expired because of a terminal disclaimer. Wyeth (and its exclusive licensee King) argued that patent's term was ongoing because of a Patent Term Extension due to FDA regulatory review delay. Under 35 U.S.C. 156(a), the term of a patent "shall be extended" after a series of provisions are satisfied. The district court found the language of the statute unambiguous and gives the court "no discretion".

Thus, if the enumerated conditions are satisfied, the patentee is entitled to a term extension calculated pursuant to Section 156. Teva's motion to dismiss was consequently denied because "a terminally disclaimed patent is eligible for extension under [Section] 156." The case is interesting because the patentee in the first instance had expressly disclaimed term subsequent to 2003 to get the patent granted. However, the holding of this case does not apply to Patent Term Adjustment granted under 35 U.S.C. 154. Such term adjustments will be subject to any terminal disclaimer that has been filed.[15]

There is now a similar case wherein a company was given extension under S.156 and the generic entrant arguing against such extension between Merck and Hi-tech for the drug dorzolamide (Trusopt). Here too, the first company (Merck) had filed a standard form terminal disclaimer. This patent was later given an extension and became the crux of the litigation.[16]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ 35 U.S.C. § 154(a)(2)
  2. ^ 35 U.S.C. § 365(c)
  3. ^ 2701 Patent Term (R-2); - 2700 Patent Terms and Extensions
  4. ^ "Government Printing Office p. 126, stat. 1532"
  5. ^ "Price Heneveld" 2014-01-10 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ USPTO web site, MPEP - 2701 Patent Term (R-2)
  7. ^ a b 35 U.S.C. § 154(b); American Inventors Protection Act (AIPA), enacted on November 29, 1999.
  8. ^ "Mohsenzadeh v. Lee". scholar.google.com. June 25, 2015. from the original on 2023-05-14. Retrieved 14 May 2023.
  9. ^ CHRISTOPHER M. HOLMAN. Patent Term Adjustment: Recent Developments at the Federal Circuit and PTO. 39 Biotechnology Law Report 266 Number 4, 2020. DOI: 10.1089/blr.2020.29191.cmh
  10. ^ "EXPLANATION OF PATENT TERM ADJUSTMENT CALCULATION".
  11. ^ 80 F.3d 1543 (Fed. Cir. 1986)
  12. ^ https://www.finnegan.com/en/insights/blogs/prosecution-first/reclaiming-their-time-patent-term-adjustment-pta-and-patent-term-extension-pte-post-supernus-novartis-i-and-novartis-ii.html
  13. ^ USPTO web site, MPEP, 2701 Patent Term (R-2) - 2700 Patent Terms and Extensions
  14. ^ King Pharma v. Teva, 78 USPQ2d 1237 (D.N.J. 2006)
  15. ^ See 35 U.S.C. § 154(b)(2)(B) ("No patent the term of which has been disclaimed beyond a specified date may be adjusted under this section beyond the expiration date specified in the disclaimer").
  16. ^ "Opinion - USCA – #30 in MERCK & CO., INC. v. HI-TECH PHARMACAL CO., INC. (D.N.J., 3:06-cv-00266)". CourtListener. Retrieved 2022-11-13.

Further reading edit

  • For a detailed description of the laws and rules governing patent terms in the U.S., see the Manual of Patent Examining Procedure, Chapter 2700.
  • Lemley, Mark A. (1994). "An Empirical Study of the Twenty-Year Patent Term". AIPLA Quarterly Journal. 22 (3&4): 369–424. SSRN 2127292.

External links edit

  • 35 U.S.C. § 154 - Contents and term of patent; provisional rights
  • 2701 Patent Term - 2700 Patent Terms and Extensions in Manual of Patent Examining Procedure (MPEP), USPTO
  • USPTO PTA calculation
  • Calculating Patent Term Adjustment Post-Novartis
  • PTA determination

term, patent, united, states, under, united, states, patent, term, patent, provided, that, maintenance, fees, paid, time, years, from, filing, date, earliest, international, application, which, priority, claimed, excluding, provisional, applications, patent, t. Under United States patent law the term of patent provided that maintenance fees are paid on time is 20 years from the filing date of the earliest U S or international PCT application to which priority is claimed excluding provisional applications 1 2 3 The patent term in the United States was changed in 1995 to bring U S patent law into conformity with the World Trade Organization s Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights TRIPs as negotiated in the Uruguay Round As a side effect it is no longer possible to maintain submarine patents in the U S since the patent term now depends on the filing date not the issue date Design patents have a shorter term than utility patents Design patents filed on or after May 13 2015 have a term of 15 years from issuance 4 5 Design patents filed prior to May 13 2015 have a term of 14 years from issuance 6 Contents 1 History 2 Adjustments possible under current law 2 1 USPTO processing extension 2 2 Reissue and reexamination 2 3 FDA approval extension 2 4 Terminal disclaimer 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory editThe original patent term under the 1790 Patent Act was decided individually for each patent but not exceeding fourteen years The 1836 Patent Act 5 Stat 117 119 5 provided in addition to the fourteen year term an extension for the term of seven years from and after the expiration of the first term in certain circumstances when the inventor hasn t got a reasonable remuneration for the time ingenuity and expense In 1861 the seven year extension was eliminated and the term changed to seventeen years 12 Stat 246 248 The enactment of the 1994 Uruguay Round Agreements Act then changed the patent term from seventeen years from the date of issue to the current twenty years from the earliest filing date Year filed Maximum term of validity Established by 1789 1790 1835 14 years from issuance Patent Act of 17901836 1860 21 years from issuance Patent Act of 18361861 1994 17 years from issuance Pub L Tooltip Public Law United States 36 88 12 Stat 246 1995 20 years from filing Uruguay Round Agreements ActAdjustments possible under current law editUSPTO processing extension edit If the United States Patent and Trademark Office USPTO fails to examine a patent application in time deadlines for various steps are different the patent term may be extended 7 Extensions or other delay taken by the applicant can reduce or eliminate the extension 7 This extension is known as a patent term adjustment PTA Its intention is to accommodate for delays caused by the USPTO during the prosecution of a US patent application The total PTA is an addition to the 20 year lifespan of a US patent The delays are broadly classified into 4 types Type A this delay is caused when USPTO fails to reply within the time period provided which is 14 months from filing of a non provisional application for the First Office action and within 4 months of receipt of an applicant response for all subsequent actions Failing to this condition type A delay will accounted Type B USPTO estimates the normal prosecution period of an application to be 3 years i e between the date of filing a non provisional application and the issue of the patent If the prosecution exceeds this time then Type B delay come into place Type B delay will calculated if no RCE Request For Continued Examination is filed prior to completion of 3 year period If the first RCE is filed after 3 year period then type B delay will be calculated up to the date of filing of RCE Type C This type of delay is calculated in the events of secrecy orders or interferences Applicant delay Applicant delay occurs when the applicant fails to respond to the office action within 3 months of mailing of an office action Applicants delays are subtracted from the USPTO delays when calculating the term adjustment Notably patent term adjustment is not available for divisional and other continuing patents issued from the same priority application see Mohsenzadeh v Lee 790 F 3d 1377 Court of Appeals Federal Circuit 2015 8 9 Calculation Type A delay Date of issuance of office Action Date of receipt of applicant response 4 months 14 months Type B delay Date of issue of patent Date of filing of first RCE Date of filing of application 3 years Total PTA 10 Type A Type B Type C Applicant delay overlapping delays In the US the Food and Drug Administration FDA can provide additional market exclusivity beyond the term of the patents in cases where introduction of a product into a market was caused by the FDA approval process Reissue and reexamination edit Even if the scope of a patent is narrowed neither reissue nor reexamination changes the original expiration date A reissued or reexamined patent expires on the day the original granted patent would have ordinarily expired Example The validity of a patent filing January 1 2000 issue January 1 2002 end January 1 2020 is challenged The USPTO issues a Certificate of Reexamination on January 1 2004 The reexamined patent is in force until January 1 2020 assuming payment of all maintenance fees FDA approval extension edit The Drug Price Competition and Patent Term Restoration Act Hatch Waxman Act of 1984 provides patent holders on approved patented products with an extended term of protection under the patent to compensate for the delay in obtaining Food and Drug Administration FDA approval Merck amp Co Inc v Hi Tech Pharmacal Co Inc 11 ruled that patents extended under Hatch Waxman are still eligible to URAA clarification needed term extension However patents in force on June 8 1995 solely because of the Hatch Waxman term adjustment are not eligible Patent Term Adjustment PTA and Patent Term Extension PTE compensate a patent applicant for delays that occur during patent prosecution Patent Term Adjustment PTA see above compensates applicants for USPTO caused delays Patent Term Extension PTE compensates a patent owner for delays caused by the regulatory review e g by FDA before a product can be commercially marketed PTA and PTE lengthen the term of the patent theoretically permitting patent owners to enjoy more than 20 year patent term from the time of first non provisional filing 12 better source needed Terminal disclaimer edit A terminal disclaimer is a process by which a patent s term is shortened because it duplicates the claims of another patent which expires sooner If any claim of a pending patent application would have been obvious in light of at least one claim of the applicant s issued patents the USPTO may reject that claim for obviousness type double patenting and require the applicant to disclaim a part of the term of the pending application For example an applicant s patent A expires on December 24 2000 The applicant filed another patent application two years later Under some conditions the second patent might expire later than the first based upon the respective earliest claimed priority dates If the applicant is required to file and does file a terminal disclaimer in the later filed patent then the later filed patent will expire at the same time as the earlier filed patent the extra term having been disclaimed terminal disclaimer In filing the terminal disclaimer the later filed patent and the earlier filed patent must be and remain commonly owned In the case of co pending applications either or both of the applications may have claims rejected for obviousness type double patenting and a terminal disclaimer may be required in either or both in which case the earlier expiration date will control After the Uruguay Round Agreements Act of 1994 URAA some patents with terminal disclaimers were eligible for a term adjustment because their referenced patents received a term adjustment under the URAA Patents whose parents received extensions were eligible to file to receive a similar extension because the claims they depended on were still protected This has been discussed in the Manual of Patent Examining Procedure 13 A terminal disclaimer does not negate Patent Term Extension that has been granted under 35 U S C 156 14 In a pharmaceutical patent dispute Teva argued that Wyeth s patent on zaleplon drug products Sonata had expired because of a terminal disclaimer Wyeth and its exclusive licensee King argued that patent s term was ongoing because of a Patent Term Extension due to FDA regulatory review delay Under 35 U S C 156 a the term of a patent shall be extended after a series of provisions are satisfied The district court found the language of the statute unambiguous and gives the court no discretion Thus if the enumerated conditions are satisfied the patentee is entitled to a term extension calculated pursuant to Section 156 Teva s motion to dismiss was consequently denied because a terminally disclaimed patent is eligible for extension under Section 156 The case is interesting because the patentee in the first instance had expressly disclaimed term subsequent to 2003 to get the patent granted However the holding of this case does not apply to Patent Term Adjustment granted under 35 U S C 154 Such term adjustments will be subject to any terminal disclaimer that has been filed 15 There is now a similar case wherein a company was given extension under S 156 and the generic entrant arguing against such extension between Merck and Hi tech for the drug dorzolamide Trusopt Here too the first company Merck had filed a standard form terminal disclaimer This patent was later given an extension and became the crux of the litigation 16 See also editSupplementary protection certificateReferences edit 35 U S C 154 a 2 35 U S C 365 c 2701 Patent Term R 2 2700 Patent Terms and Extensions Government Printing Office p 126 stat 1532 Price Heneveld Archived 2014 01 10 at the Wayback Machine USPTO web site MPEP 2701 Patent Term R 2 a b 35 U S C 154 b American Inventors Protection Act AIPA enacted on November 29 1999 Mohsenzadeh v Lee scholar google com June 25 2015 Archived from the original on 2023 05 14 Retrieved 14 May 2023 CHRISTOPHER M HOLMAN Patent Term Adjustment Recent Developments at the Federal Circuit and PTO 39 Biotechnology Law Report 266 Number 4 2020 DOI 10 1089 blr 2020 29191 cmh EXPLANATION OF PATENT TERM ADJUSTMENT CALCULATION 80 F 3d 1543 Fed Cir 1986 https www finnegan com en insights blogs prosecution first reclaiming their time patent term adjustment pta and patent term extension pte post supernus novartis i and novartis ii html USPTO web site MPEP 2701 Patent Term R 2 2700 Patent Terms and Extensions King Pharma v Teva 78 USPQ2d 1237 D N J 2006 See 35 U S C 154 b 2 B No patent the term of which has been disclaimed beyond a specified date may be adjusted under this section beyond the expiration date specified in the disclaimer Opinion USCA 30 in MERCK amp CO INC v HI TECH PHARMACAL CO INC D N J 3 06 cv 00266 CourtListener Retrieved 2022 11 13 Further reading editFor a detailed description of the laws and rules governing patent terms in the U S see the Manual of Patent Examining Procedure Chapter 2700 Lemley Mark A 1994 An Empirical Study of the Twenty Year Patent Term AIPLA Quarterly Journal 22 3 amp 4 369 424 SSRN 2127292 External links edit35 U S C 154 Contents and term of patent provisional rights 2701 Patent Term 2700 Patent Terms and Extensions in Manual of Patent Examining Procedure MPEP USPTO USPTO PTA calculation Calculating Patent Term Adjustment Post Novartis PTA determination Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Term of patent in the United States amp oldid 1165646373, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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