Ex Parte MaschkeDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardOct 31, 201211058655 (P.T.A.B. Oct. 31, 2012) 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. 11/058,655 02/15/2005 Michael Maschke 2003P18594US 6989 7590 10/31/2012 SIEMENS CORPORATION INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY DEPARTMENT 170 WOOD AVENUE SOUTH ISELIN, NJ 08830 EXAMINER CWERN, JONATHAN ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3737 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 10/31/2012 PAPER 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. PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________ Ex parte MICHAEL MASCHKE ____________ Appeal 2010-006931 Application 11/058,655 Technology Center 3700 ____________ Before STEFAN STAICOVICI, JAMES P. CALVE, and SCOTT A. DANIELS, Administrative Patent Judges. CALVE, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE Appellant appeals under 35 U.S.C. § 134 from the rejection of claims 9-11, 13-16, and 18. App. Br. 2. Claims 1-8, 12, and 17 were cancelled. Id. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We AFFIRM. Appeal 2010-006931 Application 11/058,655 2 CLAIMED SUBJECT MATTER Claim 9 is representative of the claimed subject matter on appeal: 9. A device for applying and monitoring medical rotablation, comprising: a rotablation catheter device; an intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) catheter device having an IVUS sensor and an IVUS signaling line connected to the IVUS sensor for monitoring the rotablation, the rotablation catheter device and the IVUS catheter device integrated into one catheter unit having a catheter tip; the rotablation catheter device having a rotatable drill head including particles for grinding distributed on a working surface of the drill head, the drill head having an oval shape and being arranged at the catheter tip for removing vascular plaque, the drill head sized and configured to deflect normal vascular tissue while removing plaque from a vascular wall affected by plaque, wherein the drill head is operatively connected to the IVUS sensor, wherein the working surface of the drill head is arranged to rotate at a rotational speed in a range from 20,000 revolutions-per minute to 150,000 revolutions per minute, wherein the monitoring of the rotablation with the IVUS sensor and the plaque removal are performed simultaneously, wherein the IVUS sensor is disposed in an interior portion of the drill head; a hollow catheter jacket for accommodating the catheter unit, wherein the catheter jacket is configured to receive a hollow drive shaft coaxially extending along an interior of the hollow catheter jacket, the drive shaft coupled to rotate the working surface of the drill head and the IVUS sensor disposed in the interior portion of the drill head; and a micro gear unit for rotatably interconnecting the drive shaft to the working surface of the drill head and to the IVUS sensor disposed in the interior portion of the drill head, said micro gear unit configured so that a rotation speed of Appeal 2010-006931 Application 11/058,655 3 the working surface of the drill head is different from a rotation speed of the IVUS sensor, wherein the rotation speed of the IVUS sensor is a lower speed relative to the speed of the working surface of the drill head, wherein the rotation speed of the IVUS sensor is regulated with an electronic drive to provide a constant rotation speed to the IVUS sensor disposed in the interior portion of the drill head. REJECTIONS Claims 9-11 and 15 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Snow (US 6,299,622 B1; iss. Oct. 9, 2001), Hammerslag (US 5,287,858; iss. Feb. 22, 1994), Sher (US 2006/0015126 A1; pub. Jan. 19, 2006), Kawabuchi (US 4,895,158; iss. Jan. 23, 1990), and Brown (US 6,027,450; iss. Feb. 22, 2000). Claims 13 and 14 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Snow, Hammerslag, Sher, Kawabuchi, Brown, and Hastings (US 2002/0019644 A1; pub. Feb. 14, 2002). Claim 16 is rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Snow, Hammerslag, Sher, Kawabuchi, Brown, and Corvi (US 5,879,499; iss. Mar. 9, 1999). Claim 18 is rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Snow, Hammerslag, Sher, Kawabuchi, Brown, and Ponzi (US 5,897,529; iss. Apr. 27, 1999). ANALYSIS Claims 9-11 and 15 as unpatentable over Snow, Hammerslag, Sher, Kawabuchi, and Brown Appellant argues claims 9-11 and 15 as a group. App. Br. 4-8. We select claim 9 as representative. See 37 C.F.R. 41.37(c)(1)(vii) (2011). Appeal 2010-006931 Application 11/058,655 4 The Examiner found that Snow discloses an atherectomy catheter that uses a cutting blade and a material imaging device that can be an ultrasonic transducer array to excise and image material in a body lumen. Ans. 3-4. The Examiner found that Snow lacks a drill-type cutting instrument, but that Hammerslag discloses a rotational atherectomy guidewire that has an oval shaped drill head with particles for grinding and that operates at speeds up to 200,000 rpm. Ans. 4 (citing col. 4, ll. 25-34; fig. 1a). The Examiner found that Sher discloses an atherectomy system with an OCT sensor in a drill type cutting head, balloons, an imaging guidewire, and a controller that controls rotation of the imaging components. Ans. 4. The Examiner also found that Kawabuchi discloses an ultrasonic probe that uses a microgear to reduce the rotational speed of the imaging element relative to the rotational speed of the motor, and Brown discloses the placement of an IVUS sensor in a drill head. Ans. 4-5. The Examiner determined that it would have been obvious to substitute a drill-type cutter of Hammerslag for Snow’s cutting component. Ans. 5. The Examiner reasoned that because Sher illustrates drill type heads with imaging systems (Ans. 5), it would have been obvious to combine the known atherectomy tools of Sher with Snow and Hammerslag (Ans. 9). The Examiner determined that it would have been obvious to use Kawabuchi’s microgear in the combined system of Snow, Hammerslag, and Sher to modify the rotational speed of the imaging sensor relative to the high speed cutting element so the imaging element can be rotated at a speed suitable for imaging and the cutting element can rotate at a higher speed to efficiently remove plaque. Ans. 5. Appellant argues that it would not have been obvious to combine the teachings of Snow and Hammerslag because Snow uses cutting knives that Appeal 2010-006931 Application 11/058,655 5 run at lower rotational speed than Hammerslag, which rotates at speeds of about 150,000 rpm. App. Br. 5. Appellant also argues that the Examiner has not provided a reasonable explanation as to how the rotablation speeds of Hammerslag would be congruous with the low-speed cutting knives of Snow. Id. These arguments are not persuasive because the Examiner has proposed to substitute a drill-type cutter of Hammerslag for Snow’s cutting components rather than combining the features as Appellant argues. Ans. 5. The Examiner reasoned that a variety of atherectomy tools are known in the art and a skilled artisan would select appropriate cutting elements based on a desired objective of removing particular types of plaque from different body locations to include substituting Hammerslag’s drill-type cutter for Snow’s cutting knives. Ans. 8. To the extent Appellant is arguing that Hammerslag cannot be incorporated bodily into Snow, that is not the test for obviousness. Appellant argues that Sher does not use a microgear because it rotates at a speed of not more than 100 rpm and thus teaches away from higher rpm operations of a rotablator. App. Br. 6. Appellant also argues that Sher deprecates higher rpm rotation devices so combining Sher with Snow and Hammerslag would render the combination unsuitable for the objective purported by the Examiner. Reply Br. 2; App. Br. 6. This argument is not persuasive because the Examiner relied on Hammerslag to disclose a high speed rotatable drill and Sher to disclose an imaging guidewire, positioning balloons, optical fiber in a catheter, OCT sensor in a drill head (Ans. 4) and example of a drill-type head with an imaging sensor (Ans. 8). Appellant has not explained why Sher’s lower speed teaches away from combining these features with Snow and Hammerslag, or how these features would render the device of Snow and Hammerslag unsuitable for medical rotablation. Appeal 2010-006931 Application 11/058,655 6 Appellant further argues that it would not have been obvious to combine Kawabuchi’s probe, which is a large, bulky device useful for a body coelum, with a drill head to be manipulated inside a vascular vessel of a human as proposed by the Examiner. App. Br. 7. Appellant contends that “the Examiner errs in trivializing the substantially different problems faced by the artisan regarding a device designed for insertion into a blood vessel (claimed invention) versus a device designed for vaginal or rectal insertion (Kawabuchi).†Reply Br. 2. This argument is not persuasive because the Examiner does not propose to combine the device of Kawabuchi with the devices of Snow or Hammerslag or Sher. Instead, the Examiner proposes to use a microgear of Kawabuchi’s device in the device of Snow, Hammerslag, and Sher so the imaging element can be rotated at a speed more suitable for imaging and the cutting element can efficiently remove plaque at a different rotational speed. Ans. 5. Kawabuchi uses the microgear 12 to reduce the rotational speed of a transducer element 15 relative to the rotational speed of a pulse motor 11 to allow a sector scan. Col. 3, ll. 14-23. Appellant’s argument that the combination of Snow, Hammerslag, Sher, Kawabuchi, and Brown does not establish the prima facie obviousness of claim 9 in view of the foregoing considerations (App. Br. 8) does not persuade us of error in the Examiner’s findings or conclusion of obviousness as to claim 9. As such, we sustain the rejection of claims 9-11 and 15. Claims 13, 14, 16, and 18 as unpatentable over Snow, Hammerslag, Sher, Kawabuchi, Brown, and Hastings / Corvi / Ponzi Appellant argues that Hastings, Corvi, and Ponzi, which are relied upon in the rejections of dependent claims 13, 14, 16, and 18, do not cure the deficiencies of the primary references as to claim 9. App. Br. 8. Because we sustain the rejection of claim 9 based on Snow, Hammerslag, Sher, Appeal 2010-006931 Application 11/058,655 7 Kawabuchi, and Brown, there are no deficiencies to cure for claim 9. We sustain the rejection of claims 13, 14, 16, and 18. DECISION We AFFIRM the rejection of claims 9-11, 13-16, and 18. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(1)(iv). AFFIRMED Klh Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation