Supplementary Protection Certificates remain at the heart of pharmaceutical and biotechnology patent lifecycle strategies. Recent CJEU referrals, together with divergent decisions emerging from national courts, have raised crucial questions about key provisions of the SPC Regulation and how they are interpreted across European jurisdictions. The outcomes of these important cases hold significant strategic implications for the future pursuit, enforcement and opposition of SPC protection across the life science industry.
This session will review the past year’s most significant SPC-related decisions from the CJEU and national courts, bringing together private practitioners, senior in house counsel and representatives from European patent offices to explore their implications for future SPC practice. In addition, the discussion will consider how ongoing SPC-related policy developments, including draft measures under the EU Biotech Act and the proposed introduction of a unitary SPC system, may further reshape the strategic use of SPC protection within the broader European exclusivity framework.
- CJEU Referral C-456/24 (Halozyme): what qualifies as an “active ingredient” under Article 1(b)?
- CJEU referral C-15/26 (Boehringer Ingelheim v GPTO) concerning ciclesonide: can a later veterinary MA qualify as “the first authorisation to place a product on the market as a medicinal product” where an earlier human MA already exists for the same active ingredient? How strict is Article 3 (d) on this point?
- Conflicting European national case law concerning lisdexamfetamine and the recent CJEU referral C 794/25 (Stada v Takeda): what constitutes the “product” in a pro-drug scenario?

Imke Salmon

James Horgan

Dr Martijn de Lange
