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ABBOTT LABORATORIES, AND FOURNIER INDUSTRIE ET SANTÉ AND LABORATOIRES FOURNIER S.A. v. NOVOPHARM LIMITED

Federal CircuitApril 30, 2003No. 02-1387Cited 24 times
Defendant WinNOVOPHARM LIMITED

Case Details

Judge(s)
Michel, Lourie, Bryson
Status
Published
Procedural Posture
appeal
Circuit
Federal Circuit

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

The Court of Appeals affirmed summary judgment of noninfringement in favor of Novopharm, holding that Novopharm's fenofibrate formulation process does not infringe the '726 patent because it does not involve co-micronization of fenofibrate and solid surfactant as required by the claims.

What This Ruling Means

**Abbott Laboratories v. Novopharm Limited** This case involved a patent dispute between pharmaceutical companies Abbott Laboratories and Novopharm Limited over a drug manufacturing process. Abbott claimed that Novopharm was illegally copying their patented method for making fenofibrate, a cholesterol-lowering medication. Abbott's patent covered a specific technique called "co-micronization" that combines the drug with other substances to make it work better in the body. The Court of Appeals ruled in favor of Novopharm, finding that the company was not violating Abbott's patent. The court determined that Novopharm's manufacturing process was different enough from Abbott's patented method because it didn't use the specific co-micronization technique that Abbott had exclusive rights to use. **Why This Matters for Workers:** While this was primarily a business dispute between companies, patent cases like this can affect workers in the pharmaceutical industry. When companies can successfully defend against patent claims, it often means they can continue operating their facilities and maintaining jobs. Patent disputes can sometimes lead to plant closures or layoffs if companies are forced to stop manufacturing certain products. In this case, Novopharm workers could continue their jobs producing the medication using their company's manufacturing method.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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