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Do you want to know how to beat an Examiner’s 35 U.S.C. §103 obviousness rejection at the the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB)? Then it helps to read decisions where the PTAB reversed an Examiner’s obviousness rejection. Today the PTAB did exactly that in the Ostrovsky decision, which involved catheters.

In today’s Ex Parte Issac Ostrovsky (Appeal No. 2011-009091) decision, the claims involved an imaging catheter having distal and proximal ends and a lumen. The Examiner’s argument went as follows: The Examiner asserted that the Ben Hain reference “discloses an imaging catheter for use in intracardiac drug delivery including an imaging element at the distal end.” The Examiner also noted that Ben-Haim “fails to disclose the use of a coaxial cable for running the system in parallel with the sensor.” Furthermore, the Examiner found that Sieben “teaches the use of a coaxial cabling, wherein the sensor and the imaging transducer are electrically coupled in a parallel configuration.” The Examiner went on to conclude that “[i]t would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art at the time of the invention to have included the connection components of Sieben with the system of Ben-Haim et al for the purpose of providing the best signal and clearest diagnostic image possible with very little loss or distortion from noise or crosstalk.”

The Appellant argued that “Sieben does not teach or suggest a sensor adapted to communicate with a medical positioning system and an imaging transducer in a parallel electrical configuration with respect to the sensor as recited in claim 1.” The Appellants also asserted that the “CCD arrays of Siben are not ‘adapted to communicate with a medical positioning system’ as recited in claim 1,” but are “used to receive the signals from the ultrasound transducer. Appellants thus asserted that the “CCD arrays do not correspond to the claimed sensor and any teaching regarding them is irrelevant to the invention of claim 1.”

The Board agreed with the Appellants that the Examiner had failed to set forth a prima facie case of obviousness. Specifically, the Board held:

“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.

Source: http://rss.justia.com/~r/FloridaPatentLawyerBlogCom/~3/Eaot9ex9Gz8/rejections-on-non-obviousness.html