Using PCT Work Products for Fast Examination

The international phase of a Patent Cooperation Treaty application is often misunderstood as a waiting period designed only to defer cost. In practice, the international phase generates legally persuasive work products that can materially compress prosecution timelines across multiple jurisdictions.

When used correctly, PCT work products convert time into leverage.

Strategic Leverage of the International Phase for Global Acceleration

PCT as a Compression Tool Rather Than a Deferral Tool

The international phase produces substantive examination outputs before national offices invest examination resources. This creates a unique opportunity to front-load patentability analysis and reuse it globally.

Acceleration is achieved not by speed alone, but by reducing examiner friction downstream.

Core PCT Work Products and Their Legal Significance

The principal PCT work products are:

·         International Search Report (ISR)

·         Written Opinion of the ISA (WOISA)

·         International Preliminary Report on Patentability (IPRP), if Chapter II is invoked

These documents are non-binding but highly persuasive. Their legal weight increases when issued by established authorities such as the EPO or USPTO.

Using WOISA and IPRP to Trigger Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH)

Eligibility Conditions for PCT-PPH Requests

A PCT-PPH request typically requires:

  1. At least one claim found novel, inventive, and industrially applicable
  2. Issuance of WOISA or IPRP by a participating ISA or IPEA
  3. Sufficient claim correspondence between PCT and national claims
  4. A PPH agreement between the issuing authority and the national office

Eligibility is jurisdiction-specific and must be confirmed before entry.

Claim Correspondence and Scope Discipline

Claim correspondence is the most common failure point.

National claims must not exceed the scope of claims indicated as allowable internationally. Broader claims invalidate the PPH request.

This often requires pre-entry claim pruning.

Examiner Behaviour Under PPH Workflows

Under PPH, examiners do not conduct a de novo search. They validate peer findings.

Based on observed prosecution trends, this typically results in:

·         Fewer office actions

·         Higher allowance rates

·         Reduced pendency

Acceleration Pathways in the Indian Patent Office

Rule 24C Expedited Examination Based on PCT Status

India does not participate in the Global PPH, but Rule 24C provides an alternative route.

Expedited examination is available where:

·         India was selected as ISA or IPEA

·         The applicant qualifies under additional Rule 24C categories

Form 18A must be filed with supporting evidence.

Strategic Selection of ISA for Indian Applicants

Selecting IPO as ISA offers:

·         Lower search fees

·         Eligibility for Rule 24C acceleration

·         Alignment with Indian examination approach

This is particularly relevant for India-first commercial strategies.

Interaction Between PCT Work Products and Indian Examination Practice

While not binding, Indian examiners frequently rely on ISR citations as a baseline. Clean international records correlate strongly with smoother First Examination Reports.

Leveraging PCT Work Products in the USPTO and EPO

USPTO PCT-PPH Versus Track One Prioritised Examination

PCT-PPH in the US:

·         No government fee

·         Requires claim correspondence

·         Slower than Track One but far cheaper

Track One offers speed but not examination deference.

EPO Entry Strategy Following EPO-ISA Searches

When EPO acts as ISA:

·         International search replaces supplementary European search

·         Rule 70(2) EPC can be waived

·         Examination can commence immediately upon entry

This can eliminate several procedural months.

Procedural Shortcuts Enabled by Positive International Opinions

Positive international opinions enable:

·         Early examination requests

·         Waiver of procedural communications

·         Streamlined prosecution sequencing

Tactical Use of Article 19 and Article 34 Amendments

Article 19 Claim Amendments for Publication-Stage Cleanup

Article 19 allows a single post-ISR claim amendment.

This is a public-facing cleanup tool, not an examination dialogue.

Chapter II Demand and Article 34 for IPRP Engineering

Article 34 permits:

·         Claim, description, and drawing amendments

·         Examiner engagement

·         Issuance of IPRP Chapter II

This is the primary route to engineering a PPH-ready record.

Timing Risks and Estoppel Considerations

Unnecessary narrowing creates prosecution history estoppel, particularly in the US and Europe. Amend only where patentability requires it.

Comparative Analysis of Acceleration Mechanisms

PCT-PPH Versus Domestic Accelerated Examination Routes

Parameter

PCT-PPH

Domestic Acceleration

Fee

Usually nil

Often substantial

Examiner deference

High

None

Claim flexibility

Limited

Broad

Risk

Lower

Higher

Cost, Speed, and Scope Trade-Offs

PCT-PPH optimises predictability. Domestic acceleration optimises speed.

Risk Management: Avoiding the Negative Record Trap

Consequences of Unaddressed Negative WOISA

Unaddressed WOISA objections become part of the public record and are routinely adopted by national examiners.

International File Wrapper Contamination Risks

National examiners frequently review the PCT file wrapper. Silence is interpreted as concession.

Operational Checklist for PCT-to-National Phase Acceleration

·         Confirm PPH eligibility per jurisdiction

·         Audit WOISA and IPRP status

·         Align national claims before entry

·         File PPH request before substantive examination

·         Verify translation accuracy for claim correspondence

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Does a positive WOISA guarantee grant?
No. It increases probability, not certainty.

Can India accept PPH from EPO?
No. Only JPO under current pilots.

Is Article 34 always preferable to Article 19?
For acceleration, yes.

Can rejected claims be pursued later?
Yes, via divisional applications.

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