Last Updated: June 23, 2026

Litigation Details for Array BioPharma Inc. v. Zydus Lifesciences Ltd. (D. Del. 2026)


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Small Molecule Drugs cited in Array BioPharma Inc. v. Zydus Lifesciences Ltd.
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Litigation summary and analysis for: Array BioPharma Inc. v. Zydus Lifesciences Ltd. (D. Del. 2026)

Last updated: June 17, 2026

Array BioPharma Inc. v. Zydus Lifesciences Ltd. (1:26-cv-00541): Litigation Summary, Patent Theories, and Commercial Risk Analysis

Executive summary

  • Case: Array BioPharma Inc. v. Zydus Lifesciences Ltd., 1:26-cv-00541 (filed in 2026 in the U.S. federal court system).
  • What matters commercially: The dispute is framed around patent rights covering an Array product and/or its protected drug substance, formulation, or use, with Zydus positioning for U.S. market entry likely through a generic or biosimilar-type pathway and using patent certifications that triggered the suit.
  • How to read the risk: The litigation outcome hinges on whether the asserted patents are found valid and infringed and whether any exclusivity shield (Orange Book listed exclusivity or other statutory exclusivity) delays Zydus’s effective launch date.

No further accurate, case-specific litigation facts (asserted patent numbers, claims, dates, procedural posture, and parties’ positions) are present in the prompt. Under these constraints, a complete and accurate litigation summary cannot be produced.

What patents protect Array BioPharma’s product in 1:26-cv-00541?

No asserted patent numbers, patent holders, claim sets, or Orange Book linkages are provided in the prompt.

Which Array BioPharma patents are typically asserted in Hatch-Waxman cases?

  • Composition-of-matter patents on the drug substance
  • Formulation or dosage form patents (including solid state forms)
  • Method-of-use patents tied to a specific indication, dosing regimen, or patient population
  • Manufacturing process patents
  • Secondary patents (crystallization polymorphs, salts, hydrates)

What is the litigation posture for Array v. Zydus Lifesciences 1:26-cv-00541?

No docket timeline (complaint date, answer date, TRO/MIT request, Rule 12 motions, Markman schedule, discovery milestones) is available in the prompt.

Key procedural milestones that drive launch timing

  • Early motions: dismissal (12(b)(6)), inequitable conduct allegations, venue/personal jurisdiction
  • Claim construction (Markman) determining infringement scope
  • Summary judgment on invalidity or non-infringement
  • Trial schedule and potential settlement window before merits rulings

When does Zydus’s generic entry risk peak in this case?

No Orange Book expiration dates, statutory exclusivity dates, or the FDA application pathway (ANDA vs 505(b)(2), and whether the certification is Paragraph IV) are provided.

What drives “peak risk” numerically

  • Earliest patent expiration date among asserted claims
  • Whether the asserted patents are core “first wave” patents (substance/formulation) or later “secondary” patents
  • Whether the case includes multiple patents with different expiration and exclusivity triggers
  • Whether a settlement includes launch date covenants or non-infringement stipulations

What is the Orange Book status of Array’s drug in this lawsuit?

No Orange Book listing details are included in the prompt.

Orange Book items that control eligibility and delay

  • Patent identifiers: U.S. patent numbers and listed expiration dates
  • Exclusivity codes (drug product, therapeutic, orphan, pediatric extensions where applicable)
  • Whether the asserted patents are “listed patents” for the specific strength and dosage form in the Zydus submission

Is this a Paragraph IV challenge or a different regulatory trigger in 1:26-cv-00541?

No Paragraph IV certification details are provided.

What litigation generally signals

  • If it is Hatch-Waxman: complaint typically follows an ANDA with Paragraph IV certifications
  • If it is other: there may be different triggers (such as 505(b)(2) or additional regulatory theories), but no specifics are available here.

How strong is the patent estate for Array BioPharma versus Zydus’s claimed defenses?

No asserted claims, validity defenses, prior art sets, prosecution histories, or expert positions are provided in the prompt.

Typical validity and infringement defenses in these cases

  • Non-infringement: design-around arguments targeting claim elements
  • Invalidity for anticipation/obviousness using prior art references
  • Indefiniteness or lack of enablement
  • Written description and best mode issues
  • Prosecution laches or inequitable conduct allegations (case-dependent)

What generic entry risks exist for Zydus if Array wins or loses?

No settlement posture or launch timelines are provided.

Scenario mapping used by market entrants

  • Case win for Array: Zydus launch blocked until final appellate resolution or settlement
  • Case loss for Array: Zydus may launch immediately or upon resolution of any remaining patents
  • Settlement: earliest covenanted launch date is negotiated, often coupled to dismissal terms

What settlement terms are likely in Array v. Zydus-style disputes?

No settlement agreement or record is provided in the prompt.

Settlement term patterns

  • A fixed “no-launch until” date
  • License (often nonexclusive) for specified patents
  • Carve-outs for minor changes, supply obligations, or label modifications
  • Dismissal with prejudice after the agreed launch window

How does Array’s litigation strategy in this case compare with other Array v. generic challenges?

No comparable cases or strategy details are provided in the prompt.

Benchmarking elements

  • Number of asserted patents
  • Share of method-of-use versus composition/formulation patents
  • Whether the case focuses on dominant expiration dates or multiple late-expiring patents
  • Whether the plaintiff seeks preliminary relief

Which jurisdictions are covered by the patent claims and enforcement in 1:26-cv-00541?

No court division, venue, or patent coverage geography is provided in the prompt.

U.S. enforcement scope

  • Patent litigation is enforceable within U.S. territory; U.S. regulatory actions determine market entry timing.
  • Court decisions apply to U.S. patents and the accused U.S. product.

What is the commercial exposure for Array tied to this specific case?

No revenue, product volume, or expected Zydus launch date is provided in the prompt.

Where exposure is usually concentrated

  • Revenue dependent on protection of:
    • drug substance patents
    • formulation/polymorph patents
    • indication-specific method patents
  • Or exclusivity dependent on:
    • orphan or pediatric exclusivity extensions
    • 180-day exclusivity tied to first-filer status (if applicable)

Key Takeaways

  • The prompt identifies the case caption and docket number (1:26-cv-00541) but provides no docket facts or no patent/regulatory specifics needed for a litigation summary that is complete and accurate.
  • A market-impact assessment depends on Orange Book listings, asserted patent numbers, certification type (Paragraph IV), and the procedural posture. Those inputs are not included.

FAQs

  1. What happens procedurally after the filing of a patent infringement complaint tied to an ANDA?
  2. How do Orange Book patent expirations translate into launch timing for a generic applicant?
  3. What are the most common claim construction dispute points in drug substance versus formulation patent cases?
  4. How does a settlement in Hatch-Waxman litigation typically affect a generic’s FDA approval and commercial launch?
  5. What factors determine whether a court stays an injunction pending appeal in pharma patent cases?

References (APA)

No sources were cited because no case-specific facts, docket documents, or regulatory filings were provided in the prompt.

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