November 16, 2010
The American Lawyer
After nearly four years of litigation and a three-week bench trial in August, Bristol-Myers and its partner Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co. finally convinced a federal district court judge in New Jersey to block Apotex, Novartis, Sun, and Teva from selling generic versions of the antipsychotic Abilify®, which generated nearly $2 billion in sales in the first nine months of 2010. Otsuka, which developed Abilify® and markets the drug in partnership with Bristol-Myers, sued the generics for patent infringement in early 2007, after they or their predecessor companies filed applications with the U.S. Food & Drug Administration to sell generic versions of Abilify® in the United States. The ruling states that generics will not be able sell their versions of Abilify® in the U.S. until an Otsuka patent on the drug expires in 2015.
Commentary
Patent Strategy Could Shape Financing, Valuation and Risk in Offshore Energy Projects
June 30, 2026
Award/Ranking
Finnegan’s European Practices and Attorneys Highlighted in 2026 Managing IP Rankings
June 25, 2026
Press Release
BMW Obtains Preliminary Injunction Against Zync; Federal Court Orders Zync to Halt ITC Trade Secret
June 23, 2026
Award/Ranking
Six Finnegan Partners Recognized in the 2026 Lawdragon 500 Leading Global IP Lawyers
June 22, 2026
Commentary
U.S. Judge Rules Forum-Selection Clause Bars Zync from Pursuing ITC Trade Secret Case
June 15, 2026
Due to international data regulations, we’ve updated our privacy policy. Click here to read our privacy policy in full.