Ex Parte Sawhney et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardDec 14, 201211465791 (P.T.A.B. Dec. 14, 2012) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARKOFFICE 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. 11/465,791 08/18/2006 Amarpreet S. SAWHNEY 3516.24US02 1874 62274 7590 12/14/2012 DARDI & HERBERT, PLLC Moore Lake Plaza, Suite 205 1250 East Moore Lake Drive Fridley, MN 55432 EXAMINER BECKHARDT, LYNDSEY MARIE ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 1613 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 12/14/2012 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 AMARPREET S. SAWHNEY, STEVEN L. BENNETT, SURESH S. PAI, SCOTT R. SERSHEN, and FRED H. CO __________ Appeal 2012-001501 Application 11/465,791 Technology Center 1600 __________ Before MELANIE L. McCOLLUM, JEFFREY N. FREDMAN, and STEPHEN WALSH, Administrative Patent Judges. McCOLLUM, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL This is an appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134 involving claims to a method for making a hydrogel. The Examiner has rejected the claims as obvious. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We affirm-in-part. STATEMENT OF THE CASE Claims 1, 2, 4-9, 11, 13-16, and 46-56 are pending and on appeal (App. Br. 3). Claims 1, 6, and 11 are illustrative and read as follows: 1. A method for making superabsorbent hydrogel, comprising: forming a mixture by combining precursor components to initiate covalent crosslinking of the precursor components; Appeal 2012-001501 Application 11/465,791 2 freezing the mixture before the covalent crosslinking is complete; and freeze drying the frozen mixture to form the hydrogel, wherein the precursor components comprise a first electrophilic precursor that comprises electrophilic functional groups and a second nucleophilic precursor that comprises nucleophilic functional groups chosen from the group consisting of amines and thiols, with the electrophilic functional groups and nucleophilic functional groups chemically reacting with each other to form covalent bonds to crosslink the precursor components. 6. The method of claim 1, further comprising placing the combined precursor components onto a chilled tray or container before freezing the mixture. 11. The method of claim 1, wherein crosslinking of the precursor components is initiated in an aqueous phase. Claims 1, 2, 4-9, 11, 13-16, 46-51, 55, and 56 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Pathak et al. (US 2003/0012734 A1, Jan. 16, 2003) in view of Chang et al. (US 5,955,549, Sep. 21, 1999), Unger et al. (US 5,541,234, Jul. 30, 1996), and Delmotte (US 6,599,515 B1, Jul. 29, 2003) (Ans. 4). Claims 52-54 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious over Pathak in view of Chang, Unger, Delmotte, and Maa et al. (US 2002/0120228 A1, Aug. 29, 2002) (Ans. 9-10). I The Examiner relies on Pathak for teaching a hydrogel made by forming a mixture by combining precursor components to initiate covalent crosslinking of the precursor components . . . wherein the precursor components comprise a first electrophilic precursor that comprises electrophilic functional groups and a second nucleophilic precursor that comprises nucleophilic groups chosen from the group consisting of amines and thiols, with the electrophilic functional Appeal 2012-001501 Application 11/465,791 3 groups and the nucleophilic functional groups chemically reacting with each other to form . . . covalent bonds to crosslink the precursor components (4 arm succinimidyl glutarate PEG with di, tri or tetra lysine . . . ). (Ans. 4-5.) The Examiner relies on Chang for teaching “a method for making a superabsorbent hydrogel . . . comprising forming a mixture by combin[in]g precursor components to initiate covalent crosslinking of the precursor components, freezing the mixture before the covalent cross-linking is complete and freeze drying the frozen mixture to form the hydrogel” (id. at 5). The Examiner relies on Unger for teaching “placing the freeze dried hydrogel in cross-linking solvent” (id. at 7). The Examiner also relies on Unger for teaching “that porous bodies exhibiting properties such as low density and high surface volume, high pore volume as well as excellent strength were known properties . . . and made by processes including gelling, freeze drying, followed by subsequent cross-linking” (id. at 11). The Examiner relies on Delmotte for teaching “making a porous structure having good resistance to compression and a porosity formed by large cells . . . made by a process of partially cross-linking followed by freeze drying” (id.). The Examiner concludes: It would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art at the time the invention was made to subject the precursor hydrogel materials taught by [Pathak] to freeze drying after brief agitation as taught by [Chang] in order to obtain a superabsorbent hydrogel containing porosity . . . because [Pathak] teaches the hydrogel [is] used for devices such as Appeal 2012-001501 Application 11/465,791 4 wound dressing, scaffold for cellular growth for tissue engineering and drug release . . . and [Delmotte] teaches larger pores can be used to support a skin layer and for the suitable attachment of cells on the structure. . . . One of ordinary skill in the art at the time the invention was made would have a reasonable expectation of success in using the process of freeze drying followed by further cross-linking . . . because [Chang, Unger, and Delmotte] . . . are all directed to hydrogels which are subjected to the freeze drying process. (Id. at 8-9.) The Examiner finds that “when the hydrogel taught by [Pathak] is subjected to the method steps taught by [Chang] superabsorbancy would result” (id. at 12). Findings of Fact 1. Pathak discloses “a hydrogel for use on a substrate such as a patient’s tissue,” wherein the “hydrogel has water . . . and reactive hydrophilic polymers that form a crosslinked hydrogel after contact with the tissue” (Pathak, ¶ [0009]). 2. In particular, Pathak discloses that “[m]ethods for using the polymeric compositions to coat a tissue include mixing hydrophilic precursor polymers with chemically distinct reactive functional groups such that they form crosslinks via nucleophilic-electrophilic reaction after mixing and contact with the tissue” (id. at ¶ [0012]). 3. Pathak also discloses: Preferably, each precursor comprises only nucleophilic or only electrophilic functional groups, so long as both nucleophilic and electrophilic precursors are used in the crosslinking reaction. Thus, for example, if a crosslinker has nucleophilic functional groups such as amines, the functional polymer may have electrophilic functional groups such as N-hydroxysuccinimides. On the other hand, if a crosslinker has electrophilic functional Appeal 2012-001501 Application 11/465,791 5 groups such as sulfosuccinimides, then the functional polymer may have nucleophilic functional groups such as amines or thiols. (Id. at ¶ [0057].) 4. In addition, Pathak discloses “methods for using biocompatible crosslinked polymers to form medically useful devices or implants for use as surgical adhesion prevention barriers, as implantable wound dressings, as scaffolds for cellular growth for tissue engineering or as surgical tissue adhesives or sealants” (id. at ¶ [0021]). 5. Pathak also discloses that the “biocompatible crosslinked polymers and their precursors described above may be used in a variety of applications, such as components of tissue adhesives, tissue sealants, drug delivery vehicles, wound covering agents, barriers in preventing postoperative adhesions, and others” (id. at ¶ [0133]). 6. Chang “relates to crosslinked poly(amino acids),” specifically “to the use of polyaziridines and polyepoxides as crosslinkers for poly (amino acids) to produce superabsorbent polymers under aqueous conditions without handling hydrogel intermediates” (Chang, col. 1, ll. 8-14). 7. To prepare the crosslinked poly(amino acids), Chang discloses: An aqueous solution of one or more poly(amino acid) backbone polymers, adjusted to the desired pH range, is placed in a reaction vessel and an aqueous solution of the crosslinking agent is added to the reaction mixture with agitation at ambient temperature . . . up to about 80° C. (step (a)). After brief agitation, the reaction mixture is then transferred to a drying apparatus, for example an oven or freeze-drying system, to remove volatile components (step (b)). Typically, the reaction mixture is frozen with an acetone- solid carbon dioxide (dry ice) mixture . . . and subjected to Appeal 2012-001501 Application 11/465,791 6 vacuum . . . for 2 to 24 hours to remove volatiles during which the temperature starts to approach ambient temperature. The solid reaction product is then broken into small particulates, preferably to a powder, and heat treated at 100 to 200° C., preferably from 100 to 180° C., for 15 to 90 minutes to complete the crosslinking reaction (step (c)). (Id. at col. 3, l. 64, to col. 4, l. 15.) 8. Chang also discloses that the “crosslinking reaction occurs between the side chain carboxylate groups of the backbone polymer and the reactive endgroups of the crosslinking agent” (id. at col. 3, ll. 21-24). 9. In addition, Chang discloses: The absorbency properties and degree of crosslinking are controlled by proper selection of the temperature, time and pH parameters used in the preparation of the crosslinked poly(amino acids). . . .While not wishing to be bound by theory, we believe that . . . the disclosed pH range allows protonation of the heteroatom in the 3-membered ring of the crosslinker, thus activating the ring towards ring-opening nucleophilic attack by the side chain carboxylate group of the backbone amino acid polymer; in addition, the disclosed pH range provides an environment where a sufficient fraction of the side chain carboxylic acid group exists in the carboxylate form which is required for the nucleophilic ring-opening reaction with the crosslinker while at the same time minimizing competing hydrolysis of the 3-membered ring in the aqueous environment. (Id. at col. 3, ll. 30-61.) 10. Unger discloses porous bodies which possess a low density and a high surface area as well as one or more other beneficial properties such as pore volume and strength characteristics, which makes them suitable for many industrial applications, such as insulating Appeal 2012-001501 Application 11/465,791 7 materials, fibers, absorbents, adsorbents, ion-exchange resins, membranes and support materials for a wide variety of uses. (Unger, col. 1, ll. 14-21.) 11. Unger also discloses a process for making a crosslinked, highly porous body comprising the steps of dissolving a hydrogel polymer in a gelling solvent, forming a gel from the dissolved polymer solution into a desired configuration, gradually replacing the gelling solvent with a crosslinking solvent . . . , adding a crosslinking agent to crosslink the gel, and isolating the crosslinked gel from the crosslinking solvent. (Id. at col. 2, ll. 25-33.) 12. In addition, Unger discloses: “Other techniques may be used to prepare the gel for crosslinking. . . . Illustrative of such alternate techniques are freeze-drying and supercritical fluid extraction.” (Id. at col. 9, ll. 15-22.) 13. Unger also discloses: “Freeze-drying is a well-known procedure. . . . The material to be freeze-dried is first cooled to below the freezing point of the solvent, followed by vacuum drying, as known in the art.” (Id. at col. 9, ll. 26-30.) 14. In addition, Unger discloses that, “[f]ollowing freeze-drying or supercritical extraction, the dried material is exposed to a crosslinking agent, which can be provided in solution or in the gas phase, to form a crosslinked porous body” (id. at col. 9, ll. 45-49). 15. Unger also discloses that “polymers suitable for [its] invention are hydroxyl group-containing natural and synthetic polymers and other synthetic polymers that form hydrogels when solubilized in water or other aqueous solvents” (id. at col. 4, ll. 56-59). Appeal 2012-001501 Application 11/465,791 8 16. Delmotte is directed to “a fibrin porous structure having good resistance to compression and a porosity formed by large cells” (Delmotte, col. 1, ll. 12-14). 17. Delmotte discloses that “[t]hese large pores are suitable for the attachment of cells of the structure” (id. at col. 1, ll. 62-64). 18. Delmotte also discloses that its structure “can be used as support for a skin layer” (id. at col. 2, ll. 19-22). 19. In addition, Delmotte discloses a process for preparing the porous structure, comprising: “(1) providing a solution containing fibrin or fibrinogen materials . . . , (2) polymerizing the fibrin or fibrinogen, preferably a polymerization with at least partial cross-linking of the fibrin or fibrinogen materials in the presence of a calcium blocking or inhibiting agent (preferably an anticoagulant), and (3) lyophilizing the polymerized fibrin or fibrinogen.” (Id. at col. 2, ll. 30-38.) 20. Delmotte also discloses that, “after the partial polymerization with at least partial cross-linking of the fibrin or fibrinogen materials, but before the lyophilization step, the polymerized material . . . advantageously forms a hydrogel” (id. at col. 11, ll. 26-29). 21. In addition, Delmotte discloses that the polymerization is conducted in the presence of thrombin, which acts as a catalyst (id. at col. 14, ll. 47-49, & col. 1, ll. 25-26). Analysis Claim 1 is directed to a method for making superabsorbent hydrogel. However, the body of the claim suggests that this is merely the intended Appeal 2012-001501 Application 11/465,791 9 result of performing the claimed steps. Thus, we agree with the Examiner’s conclusion to give the preamble no patentable weight (Ans. 12). Pathak discloses a method for making a hydrogel comprising forming a mixture by combining precursor components comprising an electrophilic precursor that comprises electrophilic functional groups and a nucleophilic precursor that comprises nucleophilic functional groups chosen from amines and thiols, with the electrophilic functional groups and nucleophilic functional groups chemically reacting with each other to form covalent bonds to crosslink the precursor (Finding of Fact (FF) 1-3). Chang, Unger, and Delmotte each disclose freeze drying a hydrogel before crosslinking is complete (FF 6-7, 11-14, & 19-20). In addition, Unger and Delmotte both teach the use of freeze drying to form a porous structure (FF 10 & 16). We conclude that the Examiner has set forth a prima facie case that it would have been obvious to freeze Pathak’s mixture before the covalent crosslinking is complete and freeze dry the frozen mixture in order to form a porous structure. Appellants argue: [T]he Examiner merely assumes that the [Pathak] materials will be mixed to initiate crosslinking and then be frozen before crosslinking is complete. For instance, the Examiner assumes that, if precursors are chosen from [Pathak], and, if a freezing step is desired, then the freezing step would be performed not before, not after, but during crosslinking. Nothing in the references, however, leads the artisan to such a process. (App. Br. 14.) Appellants also argue that Chang “does not teach and thus does not motivate stopping cross-linking by freezing” (Reply Br. 10). We are not persuaded. Appeal 2012-001501 Application 11/465,791 10 We agree with Appellants that Chang does not specifically recite that crosslinking occurs before freezing. However, Chang does state that the reaction product is heat treated in step (c) “to complete the crosslinking reaction” (FF 7 (emphasis added)), implying that some crosslinking occurs before step (c). Moreover, Delmotte clearly discloses freeze drying after partial crosslinking (FF 19). In addition, Appellants argue: Chang “teaches oven/freeze-drying to remove water because of [Chang]’s particular chemistry. The [Pathak] materials do not require oven/freeze-drying to remove water. Freezing at just the right time in the process is . . . even more gratuitous.” (App. Br. 14.) Appellants also argue that “the freeze-drying has no purpose when the chemistry of [Chang] is discarded” (id. at 15). We are not persuaded. As noted by the Examiner (Ans. 13), Unger and Delmotte provide the reason to freeze dry Pathak’s mixture, namely to provide a porous structure (FF 10 & 16). In addition, Delmotte specifically teaches freeze drying after partial crosslinking (FF 19). Furthermore, Appellants argue that the Examiner’s “re-engineering is . . . not found in the prior art but is merely hindsight reconstruction of the claimed method using the claims as a template” (App. Br. 16). Appellants also argue that “the idea that [Delmotte] motivates engineering the [Pathak] materials to be highly porous is purely speculative and does not meet the Patent Office’s burden of showing obviousness” (Reply Br. 7). We are not persuaded. As noted by the Examiner (Ans. 8), Pathak discloses a hydrogel having various uses, including as wound dressings, scaffolds for cellular Appeal 2012-001501 Application 11/465,791 11 growth for tissue engineering, and drug delivery vehicles (FF 1, 4, & 5). Delmotte, as well as Unger, teaches the use of hydrogel materials to form porous structures and that these structures have various uses (FF 16-20 & 10-11). Specifically, Delmotte discloses that its “pores are suitable for the attachment of cells of the structure” and that the structure “can be used as support for a skin layer” (FF 17-18). We agree with the Examiner that these teachings provide sufficient basis to freeze dry Pathak’s materials, as disclosed in Delmotte, Chang, and Unger. In addition, Appellants argue that Delmotte does not teach cross- linking after lyophilization (Reply Br. 7). We are not persuaded. We note initially that claim 1 does not require crosslinking after lyophilization. Moreover, both Chang and Unger teach crosslinking after lyophilization (FF 7 & 14). Appellants also argue that “the enzymatic processes of [Delmotte] are not even remotely suggestive of how to suitably manipulate the claimed electrophilic-nucleophilic covalent crosslinking chemical reactions” (Reply Br. 8). We are not persuaded. We recognize that Delmotte is specifically directed to the catalytic polymerization of a fibrin or fibrinogen material (FF 19 & 21). However, Unger discloses the use of freeze drying on a broad range of hydrogels to provide a porous material (FF 11 & 15). In addition, Chang specifically discloses freeze drying a hydrogel that undergoes crosslinking via carboxylate groups, which are nucleophilic (FF 8-9). Thus, we agree with the Examiner that it would have been obvious to utilize the known method of freezing the mixture before the covalent crosslinking is complete and Appeal 2012-001501 Application 11/465,791 12 freeze drying the frozen mixture on Pathak’s composition in order to form a porous material. With regard to claims 6 and 16, Appellants additionally argue that the Examiner has not set forth a prima facie case that the applied references, in particular, Chang, which is relied on by the Examiner (Ans. 5), “does not teach or suggest contact with a chilled tray or container” (App. Br. 17; see also id. at 18-19). We agree. In particular, we are not persuaded by the Examiner’s conclusory argument that the “selection of steps is prima facie obvious in the absence of new or unexpected results” (Ans. 16). With regard to claim 11, Appellants additionally argue that Chang teaches “mixing the crosslinker in an aqueous phase, not actually cross- linking in the aqueous phase” (App. Br. 18). We are not persuaded. As discussed above, we agree with Appellants that Chang does not specifically recite that crosslinking occurs (in the aqueous phase) before freezing, but that Delmotte clearly discloses freeze drying after partial crosslinking (FF 19). In addition, it is undisputed that Pathak discloses crosslinking in an aqueous solution (Ans. 17). Conclusion The evidence supports the Examiner’s conclusion that claims 1 and 11 would have been obvious. We therefore affirm the obviousness rejection of claims 1 and 11. Claims 2, 4, 5, and 13-15 are not separately argued and therefore fall with claim 1. 37 C.F.R. § 41.37(c)(1)(vii). However, the Examiner has not set forth a prima facie case that claims 6 and 16 would have been obvious. We therefore reverse the Appeal 2012-001501 Application 11/465,791 13 obviousness rejection of claims 6 and 16 and of claims 7-9, 46-51, 55, and 56, which depend from claims 6 or 16. II In the second rejection, the Examiner additionally relies on Maa for teaching the features of claims 52-54 (Ans. 10). However, the Examiner does not find that Maa overcomes the deficiencies discussed above with regard to claim 16, on which claims 52-54 depend. Thus, we conclude that the Examiner has not set forth a prima facie case that claims 52-54 would have been obvious. We therefore reverse the obviousness rejection of claims 52-54. SUMMARY We affirm the rejection of claims 1, 2, 4, 5, 11, and 13-15. However, we reverse the rejections of claims 6-9, 16, and 46-56. 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 dm Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation