Medtronic Challenges Masimo Patents
By BRAD PERRIELLO
Writer, Mass Device
WARSAW — Medtronic last week challenged a pair of Masimo patents covering pulse oximetry technology, filinginter partes reviews with the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office.
The petitions allege that claims in one of the patents, covering “signal processing apparatus,” are obvious due to prior art that the patent office “did not fully consider during prosecution as the prior art did not form the basis of a rejection.” Medtronic alleges obviousness and anticipation for the second patent, according to documents filed with the PTO’s Patent Trial & Appeal Board.
Medtronic acquired the patents this year when it bought Covidien, whose Nellcor subsidiary, itself a legacy from corporate predecessor Tyco Healthcare, lost a series of legal battles with Masimo over the same patents. In January, 2006, Covidien agreed to pay $330 million plus unspecified royalties to settle the beef after a federal appeals court upheld a $140 million anti-trust judgment against Nellcor.
Masimo said Medtronic threatened to halt royalties, “only when it feels it has reached an appropriate point in the process,” and vowed to fight the inter partes review petitions and any eventual patentability proceedings at the PTAB.
Medtronic is barred from from challenging one of the patents because of its prior win over Covidien, Masimo claimed.
Source: Mass Device