Abbott (NYSE:ABT) and Edwards Lifesciences (NYSE:EW) said that they have agreed to settle all outstanding patent disputes related to transcatheter mitral and tricuspid repair products, and Edwards has apparently already made an undisclosed one-time payment to Abbott.
The
 agreement will result in the dismissal of all pending cases or appeals 
in courts and patent offices worldwide, and includes a provision that 
the parties will not litigate patent disputes with each other in the 
field of transcatheter mitral and tricuspid repair and replacement 
products for the next 10 years. Any injunctions currently in place will 
be lifted.
A judge in the England
 issued an injunction in April barring Edwards from selling its Pascal 
transcatheter mitral valve repair (TMVR) device in the U.K. Judge Colin 
Birss of the High Court of England and Wales also ruled that two patents
 held by Abbott unit Evalve for its MitraClip TMVR device were valid and
 that Edwards’ Pascal device infringed them.
In
 April, the U.S. Patent Trial and Review Board (PTAB) shot down an 
attempt by Edwards to invalidate the patents that Abbott holds on 
MitraClip. The PTAB said Edwards failed to show that it would prevail in
 at least one of the claims it made against the patents owned by Abbott 
subsidiary Evalve, which makes MitraClip. Abbott bought Evalve in 2009 
for $410 million.
Edwards filed 
the PTAB petition in July 2019, asking the board to review 25 claims 
that Evalve/Abbott hold on the MitraClip patent. Edwards had argued that
 the claims are unpatentable. Abbott responded that the patent claims 
Edwards challenged could be resolved in a trial that was scheduled to 
begin May 4, 2020. Abbott sued Edwards for patent infringement in U.S. 
District Court in Delaware in January 2019 over the same ‘493 patent on 
MitraClip.
In the settlement 
announced Yesterday, Edwards agreed to make ongoing payments to Abbott 
based on Edwards’ Pascal sales through 2025 as well as a potential sales
 milestone payment in 2026, according to Abbott. Edwards said it will 
record the one-time settlement expense in the quarter ended June 30, 
2020, and will “incur royalty expenses through May 2024.”
Although
 the companies declined to release other details of the settlement 
Edwards said in a statement that it “considers this agreement a positive
 development, as it allows the company to fully dedicate time and 
resources to helping patients.”
Abbott
 and Edwards have been going head-to-head on transcatheter tricuspid 
valve repair devices outside of court as well. In May, Edwards announced
 that it received CE Mark approval for its Pascal system for treating 
tricuspid regurgitation (TR). Pascal is not yet approved in the U.S., 
although it did receive CE Mark approval for treating mitral 
regurgitation in February 2019. Abbott won the CE Mark for its TriClip 
transcatheter tricuspid valve repair system in March.
Yesterday’s
 settlement deal could be yet another example of how medical device 
companies are trying to avoid unnecessary costs — including potentially 
money-draining litigation and IP cases — amid the COVID-19 pandemic and 
resulting recession. It comes just days after two major insulin pump 
makers — Medtronic (NYSE:MDT) and Tandem Diabetes Care (NSDQ:TNDM) — 
announced that they’ve inked a non-exclusive patent cross-license 
agreement related to diabetes treatment tech. The cross-license 
agreement involves Medtronic’s and Tandems’ existing products, as well 
as new products for at least the next five years. The two companies also
 promised not to clone each other’s products. No money is changing hands
 as part of the deal.
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