19 May 2026

R 0010/25 - Petition for review cases

Key points

  • The petition for review was filed on  17.04.2025. 
  • Oral proceedings were held on 09.01.2026, i.e. within a year.
  • The written decision was issued on 07.05.2026 (about four months later). There is no official target for the written decision in petition for review cases, but still. 
  • Incidentally, the backlog of petition for review cases has been significantly cleared, and so far, there has been a dramatic drop in new cases in 2026. Case R 2/26 was filed on 11.05.2026. For comparison, 24 cases were filed in 2025.
    • My theory is that backlogs themselves made petitions for review attractive: one could easily buy two more years of 'pendency' for a patent (application) for a relatively modest fee, two years that allowed in-house counsel to tell upper management that there was still no final decision on the patent's fate. 
    • As I see it, the idea of the EPC 2000 legislator (Diplomatic Conference) was that a petitioner would receive a summons by return mail, with the term of the summons typically shorter than two months (as expressly provided in Rule 109(1) EPC) in the first ex parte stage of the procedure (with a three-member panel). 
  • Summons in case R 1/26 have already been issued on 26.03.2026, with the hearing scheduled for 05.11.2026.
  • One case from 2023 and two cases from 2024 are still pending. In one case, the oral proceedings were held on 06.10.2025; in another, on 08.12.2025, but there is no written decision yet in either. As said, there is no official target for the written decision.
  • The oldest case with no action yet by the EBA is R 7/25, which has been pending since 27.03.2025.
EPO 
The link to the decision is provided after the jump.

18 May 2026

T 1319/24 - How many ARs?

Key points

  • "The patent proprietor requested that the decision under appeal be set aside and that the patent be maintained as granted (main request) or on the basis of one of auxiliary requests 1 to 5, 6a, 6 to 17, 18a, 18 to 29, 30a, 30b, 30, 30c, 30d, 31 to 33, 34a, 34 to 46, 47a, 47, 48a, 48, 49a, 49, 50a, 50b, 50, 50c, 51a, 51, 52a, 52, 53a, 53, 54a, 54, 55a, 55b, 55, 55c, 56a, 56, 57a, 57, 58a, 58, 59a, 59, 60a, 60b, 60, 60c, 61a, 61, 62a, 62, 63a, 63, 64a, 64, 65a, 65b, 65, 65c, 66a, 66, 67a, 67, 68a, 68, 69a, 69, 70a, 70b, 70, 70c, 71a and 71.

    Auxiliary requests 1 to 29, 30a, 30b, 30, 30c, 31 to 49, 50a, 50b, 50, 50c, 51 to 54, 55a, 55b, 55, 55c, 56 to 59, 60a, 60b, 60, 60c, 61 to 64, 65a, 65b, 65, 65c, 66 to 69, 70a, 70b, 70, 70c and 71 were filed with the reply to the opponents' statements of grounds of appeal on 30 May 2025. Auxiliary requests 6a, 18a, 34a, 47a to 49a, 51a to 54a, 56a to 59a, 61a to 64a, 66a to 69a and 71a were filed with the letter dated 23 October 2025. Auxiliary request 30d was filed during the oral proceedings on 11 November 2025."

  • The patent is revoked. Key prior art is a Youtube video D3: "YouTube video of 28 June 2012 providing an overview of the INNOKIN iTaste VV device"

  • The Board: 'Whether D3 reflects the subjective impression of a test user, as the proprietor put it, is therefore of little relevance. What matters is the information that the test user, by showing and describing a tested device, conveys to the person skilled in the art in the video D3."

  • I guess that even higher numbers of ARs have been seen in EPO appeal cases. Questions to readers: What is the highest number of ARs in a case that you have seen?

EPO 
The link to the decision is provided after the jump.


15 May 2026

T 0676/24 - A company pays the SME appeal fee

Key points

  • The proprietor, a company, appeals and pays the reduced appeal fee. 
  •   "With its communication of 17 June 2024, the board invited the patent proprietor to submit evidence that it was an entity referred to under Rule 6(4) and (5) EPC as mentioned in the above EPO Form 1038. Reference was made to point 4 of the decision of 14 February 2023 in case T 1678/21."
  • The proprietor must file the balance sheet and official statements about the parent company and other group companies. 
  • The Board:  "There is no provision corresponding to former Rule 6(5) EPC concerning the definition of micro, small and medium-sized enterprises in the Implementing Regulations amended by the Decision. However, section II.7 of the "Notice from the European Patent Office dated 25 January 2024 concerning fee-related support measures for small entities" (Official Journal EPO, 2024, A8) corresponds to former Rule 6(5) EPC. "
  • The Board applies the guidance from the Notice of the EPO (which is not binding on the Boards by the way).
  • " Number of employees - The board is satisfied that the patent proprietor's submissions in this regard are supported by the evidence on file. They cover the relevant periods 2022 and 2023 (see point (b) below). For the board it has thus been established that the patent proprietor, even including both companies in which it is a shareholder (Q-Services and Coim Tech) employs far fewer than 250 employees."
  • "The proprietor has also established that no more than 25% of the capital of the three companies is held directly or indirectly by another company that is not an SME. The reason being that Q-TECH S.r.l. is owned by three natural persons. " (the owners are mentioned by name in the decision).
  •  Turning to the declaration: "Rule 7b(1) EPC requires no declaration of eligibility for a reduction of the appeal fee. Nor is there any such requirement in the item 11 of Article 2 RFees specifying the reduced fee. Nor has the board detected any other legal basis. Cf. the analogous conclusion for former Rule 6(6) EPC in T 1678/21, point C.3.1 and the conclusion in T 553/25 for Rules 7a and 7b EPC." 
  • "It follows from the previous section (b) that the requirement of a declaration in the section entitled "Declaration of entitlement" of the Notice (points 3 to 5) has no legal basis. "
  • The appeal is also allowed. The OD apparently did not decide on the latest amended set of claims.
  • "The board concludes from the above that the decision under appeal is based, inter alia, on a request relating to the patent as granted rather than on the request filed by the patent proprietor during the oral proceedings before the opposition division." 
  • The appealed decision is set aside, the case is remitted, and the appeal fee is refunded.
EPO 
The link to the decision is provided after the jump.

13 May 2026

T 1844/23 - Sufficiency of second medical use claim

Key points

  • Filing date 15.03.20052025, revocation in opposition appeal on 02.12.2025, written decision 24.02.2026. Filing as a divisional application in March 2010 (just before the amendments of Rule 36, indeed).
  • The Board, in machine translation: "The patent in suit lapsed in all contracting states during the appeal proceedings because the patent term of 20 years from the filing date, as defined in Article 63(1) EPC, expired on March 14, 2025. According to Article 76(1) EPC, the filing date is the filing date of the parent application. Following a corresponding notification from the Board, both the patent proprietor and several opponents requested, within the prescribed time limit, that the proceedings be continued in accordance with Rule 84(1) EPC."
  • "Claim 1 of the patent is formulated in the form of a second medical use under Article 54(5) EPC and reads as follows: "Pharmaceutical composition comprising an effective content of antioxidants, for use in a method for protecting the skin from damage caused by infrared radiation, wherein the damage is caused by activation of the formation of matrix metalloproteinase-1."
    • The alleged surprising insight is that IR radiation in sunlight, not only UV light, causes the formation of matrix metalloproteinase-1 through reactive oxygen species, as I understand it.
  • The claim illustrates that a second medical use claim does not identify the compound by name or in any chemical way. It just says "antioxidant".
  • The Board: "In the area of ​​patent claims formulated as medical use claims under Article 54(5) EPC, case law has developed such that the mere possibility of replicating the use is insufficient [under Article 83]. "
    "In the present case, it is therefore not sufficient if, as the appellant [proprietor] argues, the person skilled in the art could have achieved the claimed prophylactic effect more or less automatically on the filing date by applying a sunscreen conforming to the claim. Rather, it is required that, for the claimed invention to be sufficiently disclosed, the therapeutic or prophylactic activity of the substances or mixtures defined in the claim must be demonstrated or substantiated to the person skilled in the art in some way in the patent application itself. How exactly this is to be done—whether by direct experimental proof, by technically verifiable reasoning, or in another suitable manner—may then depend on the individual case. The reference made by the Opposition Division to the statements in point 77 of G 2/21 and the decisions of the Boards summarized therein is in any case justified."
    • This body of case law also supports the novelty of some second medical use claims, even when a clinical trial directed to exactly the claimed medical indication had been published as prior art (albeit without results). 
  • "This required proof or substantiation naturally refers to the therapeutic/prophylactic use defined in the claim as a whole, and not merely to parts of a mechanism postulated for the effect. This seems so self-evident that it is not even explicitly emphasized in the cited case law. In any case, the therapeutic effect mentioned in point 77 of G 2/21 obviously refers to the disease defined in the claim." 
    • In the case at hand, the following mechanism was known: UV light → reactive oxygen species → MMP-1 → skin damage. However, the alleged link between IR radiation (as recited in the claim) and reactive oxygen species was not known, and this step constituted step (i).
    • " Rather, proof or substantiation of a therapeutic or prophylactic effect of antioxidants in the skin damage defined in the claim must also relate to the fact that the entire postulated mechanism, i.e., also step (i), is actually present in the disease to be treated. "
  • "Therefore, contrary to the appellant's submissions, the patent application does not disclose a technically comprehensible concept for the claimed further medical use of the antioxidants with regard to the claimed medical use. "
  • "the appellant [proprietor] referred to various technical literature, scientific publications, test data, and advertising brochures concerning some of the products distributed by the opponents, in which the teaching described and claimed in the patent had subsequently been confirmed. 
  • The Board: " The requirement of sufficient disclosure must, however, be met on the filing date. A lack of disclosure on the filing date cannot be remedied by subsequent information; see, for example, G 02/03, point 2.5.3 of the grounds for the decision. It was undisputed that, in the present case, subsequently submitted data cannot be used to remedy a deficiency in the disclosure of the patent in suit or the corresponding patent application that existed on the filing date. "
EPO 
The link to the decision is provided after the jump.

11 May 2026

BoA Report 2025

Key points

  • A bit hidden on the EPO website, the Boards' annual report for 2025 was published.
  • "The number of pending cases older than 24 months decreased from 729 at the end of December 2024 to 234 at the end of December 2025." In 2020, there were 4208 pending cases older than 24 months. The share of backlog cases (older than 24 months) decreased from ~ 50 % in 2021 to 10.5% in December 2025.
  • "The technical boards of appeal received 1,477 cases in 2025 (20 fewer than in 2024) and settled 2,646 cases". The number of incoming cases was stable.
    • The improvement in timeliness and the backlog clearance is absolutely impressive. 
  • "In the context of his reappointment, the PBoA outlined the following priorities for what will be his third term: addressing the challenges arising from the incoming workload level, ensuring the smooth relocation of the BoA to the centre of Munich, modernising the BoA's case management system and fostering the harmonisation of procedural and patent law."
  • "The PBoA has mandated a task force to propose timeliness objectives applicable as of 2027. The task force is composed of members and chairpersons of the BoA, as well as representatives from Administrative Services"
    • I hope that user organisations will be involved in a later stage. 
    • For example, it may be good to set a target for clearing cases older than 24 months, e.g., that all cases older than 30 or 36 months are individually monitored at the BoA management level for progress. 
    • The report contains no information about the pendency's starting point. It may be the receipt of the respondent's reply in inter partes opposition cases, but I don't know for sure. 
  • The report contains only a brief statement about the EBA's handling of petition for review cases: more cases were cleared than were received. That was indeed quite an achievement last year. 
  • On a separate note, 4.0% of cases are in French, and about 20-25% are in German.
EPO 
The link to the document is provided after the jump.

08 May 2026

R 0013/25 - Decision TBA to hold AR inadmissible

Key points

  • The EBA considers a petition for review inadmissible because no timely objection was raised under Rule 106 EPC.
  • The EBA, in the German original:  "Gemäß dem Protokoll der mündlichen Verhandlung wurde die Entscheidung der Beschwerdekammer, die Hilfsanträge 9-11 nicht in das Verfahren zuzulassen, während der mündlichen Verhandlung verkündet, bevor die Ausführbarkeit der Erfindung gemäß Anspruch 1 des Hilfsantrags 5 diskutiert wurde (Seite 3 des Protokolls). Bereits zu diesem Zeitpunkt, spätestens aber vor Ende der mündlichen Verhandlung, hätte die Antragstellerin die angebliche Verletzung des rechtlichen Gehörs rügen müssen."
    • As a comment, suppose the TBA announces a "decision" (as opposed to a conclusion) to hold a submission admissible in the course of oral proceedings. Can the TBA subsequently change its decision if a party thereafter -  but still during the oral proceedings -  raises an objection under Rule 106? 
    • I admit that the text of Rule 106 does not clearly distinguish between these situations. It requires that "an objection in respect of the procedural defect was raised during the appeal proceedings and dismissed by the Board of Appeal". That is, of course, still possible, even if the orally announced decision to hold the submission inadmissible is already res judicata.
    • Of course, a TBA may also announce a "conclusion" that a submission is not admitted during oral proceedings (the difference being that after a conclusion, the debate may still be reopened in certain circumstances).
EPO 
The link to the decision is provided after the jump.

06 May 2026

T 0257/24 - Amended description, support under Art. 84

Key points

  • A case with description amendments, Art. 123(2) and the support requirement of Art. 84. 
  • This is an appeal against a decision to refuse a patent application.
  • "The main request was filed with a letter dated 11 August 2021. It includes an added figure 4 which is based figure 3 as originally filed, but in which the parallel inductor/capacitor (LC) resonant circuit is modified to a series LC resonant circuit. The main request further includes amended pages 12 to 14 of the description in which, additionally, new figure 4 is described in a manner identical to originally filed figure 3, albeit replacing parallel LC resonant circuit with series LC resonant circuit."
  • "The Board is not persuaded by the appellant's argument that page 13, lines 6 to 11 of the application as filed directly and unambiguously discloses, as an alternative to the embodiment of figure 3, a complete embodiment in which the resonant circuit comprises a capacitor and an inductor connected in series."
  • "The Board also does not agree with the appellant that the original application contains an evident error in figure 3 and page 10 whose correction necessarily yields a resonant circuit comprising a capacitor and an inductor connected in series. "
  • "It follows that the new figure 4 and description passages of the main request and of auxiliary requests 3, 6, 9, 13 and 14, as well as the claims of auxiliary request 12, insofar as they introduce a concrete series-LC embodiment, add subject-matter extending beyond the content of the application as filed.  
  • "Auxiliary request 15 corresponds to the application documents as published. The objections under Article 123(2) EPC directed to added figure 4 and the amended description are therefore irrelevant for that request. However, the objections under Article 84 EPC [see below] remain valid. The published claims still define the grounding merely as comprising a "resonant circuit ... resonating at the first undesired frequency", without specifying the technical features necessary to delimit the claimed solution in a manner supported by the description. Since the description as published discloses only the specific parallel-LC embodiment, auxiliary request 15 likewise lacks support in the description and omits essential features. "
  • Regarding Art. 84: "The Board agrees with the examining division that, in the context of the claimed invention, the broad term "resonant circuit" is not supported by the description and that essential technical features are missing from the independent claims, contrary to Article 84 EPC. The application as filed describes only one detailed embodiment of the resonant circuit, namely a circuit with a capacitor and an inductor arranged in parallel. No further concrete example of a resonant circuit at the claimed grounding location is disclosed. The claims, however, are not restricted accordingly and cover an unjustifiably broad range of possible resonant circuits. It is therefore not clear from the claim wording which specific circuit realisation is meant to solve the identified technical problem."
  • "Nor can an unduly broad claim be rendered compliant with Article 84 EPC merely if the skilled person disregarded certain embodiments as unsuitable. The requirement of support by the description is not met where the claims extend far beyond what the description teaches as a concrete realisation of the invention."
EPO 
The link to the decision is provided after the jump.