Work for Others Agreement No. 45658, R2 between Battelle Memorial Institute, Pacific Northwest Division which operates the PACIFIC NORTHWEST NATIONAL LABORATORY under Prime Contract No. DE-AC06-76RL01830 for the U.S. Department of Energy and ISORAY...
Work
for Others Agreement No. 45658, R2
between
Battelle
Memorial Institute, Pacific Northwest Division
which
operates the
PACIFIC
NORTHWEST NATIONAL LABORATORY
under
Prime Xxxxxxxx Xx. XX-XX00-00XX00000
for
the U.S. Department of Energy
and
ISORAY
PRODUCTS LLC
The
obligations of the above-identified DOE Contractor shall apply to any successor
in interest to said Contractor continuing the operation of the DOE facility
involved in this Work for Others Agreement.
GENERAL
TERMS AND CONDITIONS
ARTICLE
I. PARTIES TO THE AGREEMENT
The
U.S.
Department of Energy’s
Contractor, Battelle Memorial Institute, Pacific Northwest Division, hereinafter
referred to as the “Contractor,”
has been
requested through DOE by IsoRay Products LLC hereinafter referred to as the
“Sponsor,”
to
perform the work set forth in the Statement of Work, attached hereto as Appendix
A. It is understood by the Parties that, except for the intellectual property
provisions of this Agreement, the Contractor is obligated to comply with
the
terms and conditions of its M&O contract with the United States Government
(hereinafter called the “Government”)
represented by the United States Department of Energy (hereinafter called
the
“Department”
or
“DOE”)
when
providing goods, services, products, processes, materials, or information
to the
Sponsor under this Agreement.
ARTICLE
II. TERM OF THE AGREEMENT
The
Contractor estimated period of performance for completion of the Statement
of
Work is Nineteen months, through September
30, 2005.
The
term of this Agreement shall be effective as of the latter date of (1) the
date
on which it is signed by the last of the Parties thereto, or (2) the date
on
which it is approved.
ARTICLE
III. COSTS
A.
The
Contractor estimated cost for the work to be performed under this Agreement
is
$861,217.
B.
The
Contractor has no obligation to continue or complete performance of the work
at
a cost in
excess
of
the original estimated cost or any subsequent amendment(s).
C.
The
Contractor agrees to provide at least 30 days notice to the Sponsor if the
actual cost to
complete
performance is expected to exceed its estimated cost.
ARTICLE
IV. FUNDING AND PAYMENT
The
Sponsor shall provide sufficient funds in advance to maintain approximately
a
90-day period that is funded in advance. This advance shall also cover the
anticipated termination cost that the Contractor would incur if the Agreement
were terminated.
The
Sponsor shall pay the Contractor as follows:
A.
|
Advance
Payment.
The Sponsor shall advance Eighty
Thousand dollars ($80,000) payable
upon execution of the Agreement. Advance payment shall be recorded
in the
Contractor’s
account.
|
B.
|
Monthly
Payments.
The Sponsor shall pay monthly thereafter upon submittal of
invoices
representing
actual costs incurred until the last three months of the
Agreement term.
At this time, the advance payment account shall be liquidated
by charging
costs incurred during this last period. Advance payment in
excess of total
costs incurred by the Contractor under this Agreement shall
be refunded to
the Sponsor at the conclusion of the
project.
|
1.
|
Invoices
will be submitted to the Sponsor at the following
address:
|
IsoRay
Products LLC
000
Xxxxx
Xxxxxx, Xxxxx 000
Xxxxxxxx,
XX 00000
2.
|
Payments
by the Sponsor will be directed as
follows:
|
Check
Payment: Wire
Transfer:
Battelle U.S.
Bank
For
Project Number. 45648 Xxxxxxxx,
XX 00000
X.X.
Xxx
00000, XXXX:
Cashier ABA
No.
Seattle,
WA 98124-5691
Account
No.
SWIFT
Code:
For
check
payments, include Project Number 45658 and all invoice numbers being paid
on the
check. For wire transfers, include contract number and invoice number on
the
receiver info-line and list all invoice numbers being paid on the sender
info-line.
C.
|
Applicable
Currency.
All payments due the Contractor under this Agreement, including
cost
estimates and obligations of funds, shall be in United States dollars
($
U.S.).
|
ARTICLE
V. SOURCE OF FUNDS
The
Sponsor hereby warrants and represents that, if the funding it brings to this
Agreement has been secured through other agreements or is being secured through
existing international agreements, such other agreements do not have any
terms
and conditions (including intellectual property) that conflict with the terms
of
this Agreement. If this Work for Others Agreement entered into conflicts
with
existing International Agreements, the International Agreement terms and
conditions will take precedence.
ARTICLE
VI. PROPERTY
Upon
termination of this Agreement, property or equipment produced or acquired
in
conducting the work under this Agreement shall be owned as follows: Property
or
equipment supplied by Sponsor shall remain property of Sponsor. Miscellaneous
materials and supplies purchased by Contractor shall remain property of
Contractor. No Federal funds will be used to purchase property or equipment
for
this agreement. Property or equipment produced or acquired as part of this
Agreement will be accounted for and maintained during the term of the Agreement
in the same manner as Department property or equipment. Disposition of
contamination existing on Contractor’s
facility or equipment prior to the performance of this Contract will be the
responsibility of the Contractor. Disposition of Sponsor-caused contamination
during the performance of this contract, including any decontamination and
disposal, will be the responsibility of Sponsor.
ARTICLE
VII. PUBLICATION MATTERS
The
publishing Party shall provide the other Party a 30-day period in which to
review and comment on proposed publications that either disclose technical
developments and/or research findings generated in the course of this agreement,
or identify Proprietary Information (as defined in paragraph 1.B of Article
XV).
The publishing Party shall not publish or otherwise disclose Proprietary
Information identified by the other Party, except as provided by
law.
ARTICLE
VIII. LEGAL NOTICE
The
Parties agree that the following Legal Disclaimer Notice shall be affixed
to
each report furnished to the Sponsor under this Agreement and to any report
resulting from this Agreement which may be distributed by the
Sponsor.
DISCLAIMER
This
report was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United
States Government. Neither the United States Government nor any agency thereof,
nor Battelle Memorial Institute, nor any of their employees, makes any warranty,
express or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for
the
accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product,
or
process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately
owned
rights. Reference herein to any specific commercial product process, or service
by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise does not necessarily
constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the United
States Government or any agency thereof, or Battelle Memorial Institute.
The
views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or
reflect those of the United States Government or any agency
thereof.
PACIFIC
NORTHWEST NATIONAL LABORATORY
operated
by
BATTELLE
for
the
UNITED
STATES DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
under
Contract DE-AC06-76RL01830
ARTICLE
IX. DISCLAIMER
THE
GOVERNMENT AND THE CONTRACTOR MAKE NO EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTY AS TO THE
CONDITIONS OF THE RESEARCH OR ANY INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, GENERATED INFORMATION,
OR PRODUCT MADE OR DEVELOPED UNDER THIS WORK FOR OTHERS AGREEMENT, OR THE
OWNERSHIP, MERCHANTABILITY, OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OF THE RESEARCH
OR RESULTING PRODUCT; THAT THE GOODS, SERVICES MATERIALS, PRODUCTS, PROCESSES,
INFORMATION, OR DATA TO BE FURNISHED HEREUNDER WILL ACCOMPLISH INTENDED RESULTS
OR ARE SAFE FOR ANY PURPOSE INCLUDING THE INTENDED PURPOSE; OR THAT ANY OF
THE
ABOVE WILL NOT INTERFERE WITH PRIVATELY OWNED RIGHTS OF OTHERS. NEITHER THE
GOVERNMENT NOR THE CONTRACTOR SHALL BE LIABLE FOR SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL,
OR
INCIDENTAL DAMAGES ATTRIBUTED TO SUCH RESEARCH OR RESULTING PRODUCT,
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, GENERATED INFORMATION, OR PRODUCT MADE OR DELIVERED
UNDER
THIS WORK FOR OTHERS AGREEMENT.
ARTICLE
X. GENERAL INDEMNITY
The
Sponsor agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Government, the Department,
the Contractor, and persons acting on their behalf from all liability, including
costs and expenses incurred, to any person, including the Sponsor, for injury
to
or death of persons or other living things or injury to or destruction of
property arising out of the performance of the Agreement by the Government,
the
Department, the Contractor, or persons acting on their behalf, or arising
out of
the use of the services performed, materials supplied, or information given
hereunder by any person including the Sponsor, and not directly resulting
from
the fault or negligence of the Government, the Department, the Contractor,
or
persons acting on their behalf.
ARTICLE
XI. PRODUCT LIABILITY INDEMNITY
Except
for any liability resulting from any negligent acts or omissions of the
Government or the Contractor, the Sponsor agrees to indemnify the Government
and
the Contractor for all damages, costs, and expenses, including
attorney’s
fees,
arising from personal injury or property damage occurring as a result of
the
making, using, or selling of a product, process, or service by or on behalf
of
the Sponsor, its assignees, or licensees, which was derived from the work
performed under this Work for Others Agreement. In respect to this Article,
neither the Government nor the Contractor shall be considered assignees or
licensees of the Sponsor, as a result of reserved Government and Contractor
rights. The indemnity set forth in this paragraph shall apply only if the
Sponsor shall have been informed as soon and as completely as practical by
the
Contractor and/or the Government of the action alleging such claim and shall
have been given an opportunity, to the maximum extent afforded by applicable
laws, rules, or regulations, to participate in and control its defense, and
the
Contractor and/or Government shall have provided all reasonably available
information and reasonable assistance requested by the Sponsor. No settlement
for which the Sponsor would be responsible shall be made without the
Sponsor’s
consent, unless required by final decree of a court of competent
jurisdiction.
The
Sponsor agrees to obtain and maintain product liability insurance in the
minimum
amount
of Five
Million Dollars ($5,000,000)
during
the life of this Agreement and subsequently for the life of any products,
processes, or services resulting from work under the Agreement. The Government
and the Contractor shall be covered against any claims for product liability
as
a result of this insurance. A copy of this product liability insurance policy
shall be provided to both the Government and the Contractor, including any
material modifications thereto, including any notices of termination. Such
insurance shall provide that it cannot be materially reduced or cancelled
without prior written notice to the Government and the Contractor of at least
thirty (30) days.
The
cost
for this insurance shall not be charged directly or indirectly to the
Government.
ARTICLE
XII. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY INDEMBITY -
LIMITED
The
Sponsor shall indemnify the Government and the Contractor and their officers,
agents, and employees against liability, including costs, for infringement
of
any United States patent, copyright, or other intellectual property arising
out
of any acts required or directed by the Sponsor to be performed under this
Agreement to the extent such acts are not already performed at the facility.
Such indemnity shall not apply to a claimed infringement that is settled
without
the consent of the Sponsor unless required by a court of competent
jurisdiction.
ARTICLE
XIII. NOTICE AND ASSISTANCE REGARDING PATENT AND
COPYRIGHT
INFRINGEMENT
The
Sponsor shall report to the Department and the Contractor, promptly and in
reasonable written detail, each claim of patent or copyright infringement
based
on the performance of this Agreement of which the Sponsor has knowledge.
The
Sponsor shall furnish to the Department and the Contractor, when requested
by
the Department or the Contractor, all evidence and information in the possession
of the Sponsor pertaining to such claim.
ARTICLE
XIV. PATENT RIGHTS -
USE OF FACILITIES
1. Definitions.
A.
|
“Subject
Invention”
means any invention or discovery of the Contractor, or, to the
extent the
Sponsor is performing any work under this Agreement, of the Sponsor,
conceived in the course of or under this Agreement, or, in the
case of an
invention previously conceived by the Sponsor, first actually reduced
to
practice in the course of or under this Agreement. “Subject
Invention”
includes any art, method, process, machine, manufacture, design
or
composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof,
or any
variety of plant, whether patented under the patent laws of the
United
States of America or any foreign country, or
unpatented.
|
B.
|
“Patent
Counsel”
means the DOE Patent Counsel assisting the procuring activity which
has
the administrative responsibility for the facility where the work
under
this Agreement is to be performed.
|
2. Rights
of
the Sponsor; election to retain rights.
Subject
to the provisions of paragraph 3 with respect to any Subject Invention reported
and elected in accordance with paragraph 4 of this article, the Sponsor may
elect to obtain the entire right, title, and interest throughout the world
to
each Subject Invention and any patent application filed in any country on
a
Subject Invention and in any resulting patent secured by the Sponsor. Where
appropriate, the filing of patent applications by the Sponsor is subject
to DOE
and other Government security regulations and requirements.
3. Rights
of
Contractor and Government
A. Assignment
to either the Contractor or the Government.
The
Sponsor agrees to assign to either the Contractor or the Government, as
requested by the Contractor, the entire right, title, and interest in any
country to each Subject Invention of the Sponsor and to each Subject Invention
of the Contractor, where the Sponsor: does not elect pursuant to this article
to
retain such rights; or elects to obtain title to a Subject Invention pursuant
to
paragraph 2 but fails to have a patent application filed in that country
on the
Subject Invention or decides not to continue prosecution or not to pay any
maintenance fees covering the invention.
B. Terms
and
Conditions of Waived Rights.
1.
|
To
preserve the Contractor’s
and the Government’s
residual rights to Subject Inventions, and in patent applications
and
patents on Subject Inventions, the Sponsor shall take all actions
in
reporting, electing, filing on, prosecuting, and maintaining invention
rights promptly, but in any event, in sufficient time to satisfy
domestic
and foreign statutory and regulatory time requirements, or, if
the Sponsor
decides not to take appropriate steps to protect the invention
rights, it
shall notify the Contractor in sufficient time to permit either
the
Contractor or the Government to file, prosecute, and maintain patent
applications and any resulting patents prior to the end of such
domestic
or foreign statutory or regulatory time
requirements.
|
2.
|
The
Sponsor shall convey or ensure the conveyance of any executed instruments
necessary to vest in either the Contractor or the Government the
rights
set forth in this article.
|
3.
|
With
respect to any Subject Invention in which the Sponsor obtains title,
the
Sponsor hereby grants to the Government a non-exclusive, nontransferable,
irrevocable, paid-up license to practice or have practiced by or
on behalf
of the United States the Subject Invention throughout the
world.
|
4.
|
The
Sponsor shall provide the Government a copy of any patent application
filed on a Subject Invention within 6 months after such application
is
filed, including its serial number and filing
date.
|
5.
|
Preference for U.S. Industry. Notwithstanding any other provision of this article, the Sponsor agrees that neither it nor any assignee will grant to any person the exclusive right to use or sell any Subject Invention in the United States unless such person agrees that any products embodying the Subject Invention or produced through the use of the Subject Invention will be manufactured substantially in the United States. However, in individual cases, the requirement for such an agreement may be waived by DOE upon a showing by the Sponsor or its assignee that reasonable by unsuccessful efforts have been made to grant licenses on similar terms to potential licensees that would be likely to manufacture substantially in the United States or that under the circumstances domestic manufacture is not commercially feasible. |
6.
|
March-In
Rights. The Sponsor agrees that with respect to any Subject Invention
of
the Contractor in which it has acquired title, the DOE shall retain
the
right to require the Sponsor to grant a responsible applicant a
nonexclusive, partially exclusive, or exclusive license to use
the Subject
Invention in any field of use, on terms that are reasonable under
the
circumstances, or if the Sponsor fails to grant such a license,
to grant
the license itself. DOE may exercise this right only in exceptional
circumstances and only if DOE determines
that:
|
a.
|
the
action is necessary to meet health or safety needs that are not
reasonably
satisfied by the Sponsor; or
|
b.
|
the
action is necessary to meet the requirements for public use specified
by
Federal regulations and such requirements are not reasonably satisfied
by
the Sponsor; or
|
c.
|
such
action is necessary because a licensee of the exclusive right to
use or
sell any Subject Invention in the United States is in breach of
the
agreement required by paragraph
B(5).
|
7.
|
The
Sponsor agrees to refund any amounts received as royalty charges
on any
Subject Invention in procurement by or on behalf of the Government
and to
provide for that refund in any instrument transferring rights to
my party
in the invention.
|
8.
|
The
Sponsor agrees to include, within the specification of any U.S.
patent
applications and any patent issuing thereon covering a Subject
Invention,
the following statement. “The
Government has rights in this invention pursuant to (specify this
underlying Agreement).”
|
4. Invention,
Identification, Disclosures, and Reports.
A.
|
The
Sponsor shall furnish the Patent Counsel a written report containing
full
and complete technical information concerning each Subject Invention
it
makes within 6 months after conception or first actual reduction
to
practice, whichever occurs first, in the course of or under this
Agreement, but in any event prior to any on sale, public use, or
public
disclosure of such invention known to the Sponsor. The report shall
identify the contract and inventor and shall be sufficiently complete
in
technical detail and appropriately illustrated by sketch or diagram
to
convey to one skilled in the art to which the invention pertains
a clear
understanding to the extent known at the time of disclosure, of
the
nature, purpose, operation, and the physical, chemical, biological,
or
electrical characteristics of the invention. The report should
also
include any election of invention rights under this article. When
an
invention is reported under this paragraph 4.A, it shall be presumed
to
have been made in the manner specified in Section (a)(1) and (2)
of 42
U.S.C. 5908.
|
B.
|
The
Contractor shall report Subject Inventions it makes in accordance
with the
procedures set forth in contract DE-AC06-76RL01830. In addition,
the
Contractor shall disclose to the Sponsor at the same time as disclosure
to
the Department any Subject Inventions made by the Contractor under
this
Agreement and the Sponsor shall notify the Department within 6
months of
receipt of such disclosure by the Sponsor of any election of patent
rights
under this article.
|
C.
|
Requests
for extension of time for election under subparagraphs A and B
may be
granted by Patent Counsel for good cause shown in
writing.
|
5. Limitation
of Rights.
Nothing
contained in this patent rights article shall be deemed to give the Government
any rights with respect to any invention other than a Subject Invention except
as set forth in the Facilities License of paragraph 6.
6. Facilities
License.
In
addition to the rights of the Parties with respect to inventions or discoveries
conceived or first actually reduced to practice in the course of or under
this
Agreement, the Sponsor agrees to and does hereby grant to the Government
an
irrevocable, non-exclusive, paid-up license in and to any inventions or
discoveries regardless of when conceived or first actually reduced to practice
or acquired by the Sponsor, which at any time, through completion of this
Agreement, are owned or controlled by the Sponsor and are incorporated in
the
facility as a result of this Agreement to such an extent that the facility
is
not restored to the condition existing prior to the Agreement (1) to practice
or
to have practiced by or for the Government at the facility, and (2) to transfer
such license with the transfer of the facility. The acceptance or exercise
by
the Government of the aforesaid rights and license shall not prevent the
Government at any time from contesting the enforceability, validity, or scope
of, or title to, any rights or patents herein licensed.
7. Early
Termination of Agreement.
The
terms
and conditions of this article shall survive the Agreement, in the event
that
the Agreement is terminated before completion of the Statement of
Work.
ARTICLE
XV. RIGHTS IN TECHNICAL DATA -
USE OF FACILITY
1.
|
The
following definitions shall be
used.
|
A.
|
“Generated
Information”
means information produced in the performance of this
Agreement.
|
B.
|
“Proprietary
Information”
means information which is developed at private expense, is marked
as
Proprietary Information, and embodies (1) trade secrets or (2)
commercial
or financial information which is privileged or confidential under
the
Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C.
552(b)(4)).
|
C.
|
“Unlimited
Rights”
means the right to use, disclose, reproduce, prepare derivative
works,
distribute copies to the public, and perform publicly and display
publicly, in any manner and for any purpose, and to have or permit
others
to do so.
|
2.
|
The
Sponsor agrees to furnish to the Contractor or leave at the facility
that
information, if any, which is (1) essential to the performance
of work by
the Contractor personnel or (2) necessary for the health and safety
of
such personnel in the performance of the work. Any information
furnished
to the Contractor shall be deemed to have been delivered with Unlimited
Rights unless marked as Proprietary Information. The Sponsor agrees
that
it has the sole responsibility for appropriately identifying and
marking
all documents containing Proprietary Information, whether such
documents
are furnished by the Sponsor or produced under this Agreement and made
available to the Sponsor for
review.
|
3.
|
The
Sponsor may designate as Proprietary Information any Generated
Information
where such data would embody trade secrets or would comprise commercial
or
financial information that is privileged or confidential if it
were
obtained from the Sponsor. Such Proprietary Information will, to
the
extent permitted by law, be maintained in confidence and disclosed
or used
by the Contractor (under suitable protective conditions) only for
the
purpose of carrying out the Contractor’s
responsibilities under this Agreement. Upon completion of activities
under
this Agreement, such Proprietary Information will be disposed of
as
requested by the Sponsor. Before the Contractor releases data associated
with this Agreement to anyone, the Sponsor will be afforded the
opportunity to review that data to ascertain whether it is Proprietary
Information and if so, to xxxx it as
such.
|
4.
|
The
Government and Contractor agree not to disclose properly marked
Proprietary Information to anyone other than the Sponsor without
written
approval of the Sponsor, except to Government employees who are
subject to
the statutory provisions against disclosure of confidential information
set forth in the Trade Secrets Act (18 U.S.C. 1905). The Government
and
Contractor shall have the right, at reasonable times up to 3 years
after
the termination or completion of the Agreement, to inspect any
information
designated as Proprietary Information by the Sponsor, for the purpose
of
verifying that such information has been properly identified as
Proprietary Information.
|
5.
|
The
Sponsor is solely responsible for the removal of all of its Proprietary
Information from the facility by or before termination of this
Agreement.
The Government and Contractor shall have Unlimited Rights in any
information which is not removed from the facility by termination
of this
Agreement. The Government and Contractor shall have Unlimited Rights
in
any Proprietary Information which is incorporated into the facility
or
equipment under this Agreement to such extent that the facility
or
equipment is not restored to the condition existing prior to such
incorporation.
|
6.
|
The
Sponsor agrees that the Contractor will provide to the Department
a
nonproprietary description of the work performed under this
Agreement.
|
7.
|
The
Government shall have Unlimited Rights in all Generated Information
produced or information provided by the Parties under this Agreement,
except for information which is disclosed in a Subject Invention
disclosure being considered for patent protection, or which is
marked as
being Proprietary Information.
|
8.
|
Copyrights.
The Sponsor may assert copyright in any of its Generated Information,
and
may also require the Contractor, at the Sponsor’s
expense, to register copyright and assign copyright in any Generated
Information produced by the Contractor which the Sponsor wishes
to
copyright. Subject to the other provisions of this article, and
to the
extent that copyright is asserted, the Government reserves for
itself a
royalty-free, worldwide, irrevocable, non-exclusive license for
Governmental purposes to publish, disclose, distribute, translate,
duplicate, exhibit, prepare derivative works, and perform any such
data
assigned to the Sponsor.
|
9.
|
The
terms and conditions of this article shall survive the Agreement,
in the
event that the Agreement is terminated before completion of the
Statement
of Work.
|
ARTICLE
XVI. ASSIGNMENT
Neither
this Agreement nor any interest therein or claim thereunder shall be assigned
or
transferred by either Party, except as authorized in writing by the other
Party
to this Agreement, provided, the Contractor may transfer it to the Department,
or its designee, with notice of such transfer to the Sponsor, and the Contractor
shall have no further responsibilities except for the confidentiality, use,
and/or non-disclosure obligations of this Agreement.
ARTICLE
XVII. SIMILAR OR IDENTICAL SERVICES
The
Government and/or Contractor shall have the right to perform similar or
identical services in the Statement of Work for other Sponsors as long as
the
Sponsor’s
Proprietary Information is not utilized.
ARTICLE
XVIII. LIST OF SPONSOR’S
BACKGROUND
INTELLECTUAL
PROPERTY
U.S.
Patent No. 6,066,302 (Method of Separation of Cs-131 from Barium)
Pending
U.S. Patent Application, Serial No. xx/yyyyyyy, entitled “Methods
of Fabricating Brachytherapy implant Seeds, Methods of Fabricating Brachytherapy
Implant Seed Cores, and Brachytherapy implant Seeds,”
(inventors Bales, Bray, Brown, Draper, Lawrence, Madsen, and Xxxxxxxx), filed
by
Sponsor November 13, 2003. A determination of whether this patent application
is
actually Sponsor’s
solely
owned Background IP is pending an analysis to assess if this patent application
teaches or claims Subject Inventions, if any, that arose under the terms
and
conditions of CRADAs No. PNNL/174, 186, or 208. If so, then Contractor and
the
Government may have certain rights in the patent application. Such determination
will be made by Contractor after Sponsor provides notification to Contractor
of
the publication of the patent application.
ARTICLE
XIX. EXPORT CONTROL
Each
Party is responsible for its own compliance with laws and regulations governing
export control.
ARTICLE
XX. FORCE MAJEURE
Neither
the Government, the Contractor, nor the Sponsor shall be liable in any way
for
failure to perform any provision of this Agreement (except payment of monetary
obligations) if such failure is caused by any law, rule, or regulation, or
any
cause beyond the control of the party in default.
ARTICLE
XXI. TERMINATION
Performance
of work under this Agreement may be terminated at any time by either Party,
without liability, except as provided above, upon giving a 60-day written
notice
to the other Party. The Contractor shall terminate this Agreement only when
the
Contractor determines, after direction from DOE, that such termination is
in the
best interest of the Government, provided however, that the Contractor shall
have the right to terminate unilaterally if the Sponsor shall have failed
to
advance the funds required by Article IV. In the event of termination, the
Sponsor shall be responsible for the Contractor’s
costs
(including closeout costs) through the effective date of termination, but,
except as provided in Articles X, XI, and XII, in no event shall the
Sponsor’s
cost
responsibility exceed the total cost to the Sponsor as described in Article
III,
above.
It
is
agreed that any obligations of the Parties regarding Proprietary Information
or
other intellectual property will remain in effect, despite early termination
of
the Agreement.
ARTICLE
XXII. ALTERNATE DISPUTE RESOLUTION
Step
1.
NEGOTIATION
The
Parties shall attempt in good faith to resolve any dispute arising out of
or
relating to this Agreement by negotiating between executives and/or officials
who have authority to settle the controversy and who are at a higher level
of
management than the persons with direct responsibility for administration
of
this contract. Either Party may give the other Party written notice of any
dispute not resolved in the normal course of business. Within 15 days after
delivery of the notice, the receiving Party shall submit to the other a written
response. The notice and the response shall include (a) a statement of each
Party’s
position and a summary of arguments supporting that position, and (b) the
name
and title of the executive or official who will represent that Party and
of any
other person(s) who will accompany the executive or official. Within 30 days
after delivery of the disputing Party’s
notice,
the executives of both Parties shall meet at a mutually acceptable time and
place, and thereafter as often as they reasonably deem necessary, to attempt
to
resolve the dispute. All reasonable requests for information made by one
Party
to the other will be honored.
If
the
matter has not been resolved within 60 days of the disputing Party’s
notice,
or if the Parties fail to meet within 30 days, either party may mediation
of the
controversy or claim as provided hereafter.
All
negotiations pursuant to this Agreement are confidential and shall be treated
as
compromise and settlement negotiations for purposes of the Federal Rules
of
Evidence and State rules of evidence.
Step
2.
MEDIATION
In
the
event the dispute has not been resolved by negotiation as provided herein,
the
Parties agree to participate in at lease 4 hours of mediation, using a mutually
agreed-upon mediator. The mediator will not render a decision, but will assist
the Parties in reaching a mutually satisfactory agreement.
The
Parties agree to equally split the costs of the mediation. The first mediation
session shall commence within 30 days from the agreement. The Parties may
contact the DOE Office of Dispute Resolution with questions, or for assistance
with selection of neutrals or samples of Agreements to mediate.
All
meditations are confidential and shall be treated as compromise and settlement
negotiations for purposes of the Federal Rules of Evidence and State rules
of
evidence.
Step
3.
ARBITRATION
Any
dispute not otherwise satisfactorily resolved may be submitted to arbitration
through the American Arbitration Association.
ARTICLE
XXIII. GOVERNMENT FACILITY AVAILABILITY
Work
will
be performed in the Radiochemical Processing Laboratory (RPL) at Richland,
Washington. Sponsor acknowledges, by signature below, that they have been
advised that in the event of conflict with Government work at that facility,
the
Government work will take precedence, and in the event that future Government
decisions render the RPL unavailable for further performance under this
Agreement, neither the Government nor the Contractor shall be liable for
any
resultant damage to Sponsor’s
business.
In
witness whereof, the Parties hereto have executed this
Agreement.
BATTELLE MEMORIAL INSTITUTE | ISORAY PRODUCTS LLC |
PACIFIC NORTHWEST DIVISION | |
Name /s/ Xxxx Xxxxx | Name /s/ Xxxxxx Xxxxx |
Title Contracting Officer | Title PRESIDENT |
Date 4-27-04 |
Date
4/27/04
|
APPENDIX
A -
STATEMENT OF WORK 45658, R2
dated
April 7, 2004
PACIFIC
NORTHWEST NATIONAL LABORATORY (PNNL)
AND
ISORAY
PRODUCTS LLC. (IsoRay)
Medical
Isotope Support for IsoRay
During
the past five years, PNNL supported IsoRay in the development of brachytherapy
seeds containing Cesium 131. IsoRay subsequently received FDA approval for
use
of their seeds and now requires additional support from PNNL for a limited
production of seeds in order to fine-tune the manufacturing process for scale
up
and training of IsoRay personnel for the transfer of manufacturing to IsoRay
facilities.
IsoRay
has requested support from PNNL in the limited area of performing the chemical
separations required to obtain the Cs-131 for IsoRay’s
insertion into the seeds. IsoRay has developed a novel technique for the
separation of Cs-131 that is not currently available in the private sector,
and
PNNL staff are uniquely qualified to perform this work due to our previous
experience with IsoRay. That capability, combined with the unique hot cell
facilities, related equipment and advanced instrumentation available in
DOE’s
Radiochemical Processing Laboratory (RPL) will be critical to the development
of
the standards and protocols needed for IsoRay to successfully transfer and
perform the separations work in the private sector. PNNL will not be responsible
for the packaging or testing of the final seeds.
I.
PURPOSE
The
IsoRay project work scope, which PNNL will be supporting, includes the
preparation, assembly, quality control, and distribution of a limited number
of
IsoRay Brachytherapy seeds. The seeds are rice grain sized sealed radioactive
medical devices designed for permanent placement in cancer patients. The
seeds
contain Cs-131, a short-lived radioisotope which radiates localized energy,
killed cancerous cells. PNNL’s
work
scope will be to purify Cs-131 from irradiated targets owned and provided
by
IsoRay and to provide radiological facilities so that IsoRay can manufacture
the
seeds. Additional PNNL support will be limited to those activities as discussed
in this statement of work, in accordance with IsoRay direction.
Brachytherapy
is a rapidly growing technology for treating various types of cancer. Several
companies are currently producing seeds with different configurations and
isotopes than the IsoRay Seed. The IsoRay Seed is expected to provide improved
effectiveness for the treatment of certain cancers, with reduced side effects
compared to existing seeds.
The
ultimate objective of the IsoRay project is the production and distribution
of
seeds to a select and limited patient population (approximately 300 patients).
The seeds will be distributed to urologists or radiation oncologists selected
by
IsoRay at nationally recognized medical research and brachytherapy treatment
facilities. To meet this objective, irradiated targets will be received by
PNNL
and the short-lived isotope will be separated, purified and assayed by PNNL
staff. The resulting radiochemical solution will be chemically bound to a
proprietary core. The cores will be placed into titanium cans which will
be
hermetically sealed with a laser welder by IsoRay in PNNL facilities. IsoRay
will test the seeds to confirm leak-tightness, assay for strength of therapeutic
radiation emission, and distribute to the physicians.
Work
has
conducted by PNNL previously for IsoRay under CRADA Nos. PNNL/174, PNNL/186,
and
PNNL/208. This previous work included testing of isotope separations methods,
evaluation of internal seed configurations, isotope attachment methods,
production of prototype seeds by precision laser welding, and collection
of
near-surface dosimetry data for regulatory approval.
II.
APPROACH
PNNL
will
provide isotope separation and analytical services using existing hot cells
and
equipment at the RPL. IsoRay will utilize laboratory space and equipment
within
the RPL to fabricate the seeds using IsoRay personnel. IsoRay will conduct
all
work according to RPL safety, training, and regulatory requirements. PNNL
will
provide certified radioactive shipper and radiation control technician (RCT)
services to support IsoRay work within the facility. IsoRay will be responsible
for final fabrication, testing, assay, certifications, and quality assurance
of
the seeds. IsoRay will use this development phase for the verification and
fine-tuning of their manufacturing process. IsoRay will further train staff
in
preparation for the eventual transfer to their own facility. The transition
phase may include operations at both PNNL and a private facility until the
technology can be safely transferred and training has been
completed.
IsoRay
will provide unique materials and equipment for the performance of this project.
PNNL will make a best effort to make appropriate laboratory space (hot cell,
glovebox, fume hood, and lab space) available to IsoRay on a continuous basis.
However, IsoRay has been informed that DOE work must be given priority at
PNNL
and has the potential to disrupt their work. The 325 building currently operates
13 hot cells, 20 gloveboxes, and over 100 fume hoods such that the IsoRay
work
will have a negligible impact on our ability to perform DOE work. Furthermore,
IsoRay will pay to upgrade our hot cell and glovebox facilities for their
work.
However, in the unlikely event that laboratory facilities are required for
DOE
work, PNNL will provide IsoRay with reasonable advance notice of the disruption
to their work. PNNL will dedicate, segregate and control IsoRay materials,
data,
and equipment per IsoRay-approved operating procedures. This will include
chemicals (acetic acid, sodium carbonate, barium carbonate, isopropyl alcohol,
etc.), certain consumables (glassware, filters, pipette tips, etc.) and
equipment (pumps, pipettes, heat lamp, pH meter, balance, etc.), and data
records as required by procedures. Certain facilities (hot cell, fume hood,
storage cabinets) must be controlled in order to avoid cross-contamination
or
unauthorized access. IsoRay must comply with current good manufacturing
processes (cGMP) as required by 21 CFR Part 820. Requirements applicable
to PNNL
will be flowed-down through the IsoRay Quality Assurance Manual and
IsoRay-approved operating procedures.
In
turn,
any IsoRay-specific operating procedures will be consistent with requirements
for operations within the RPL including the Integrated Safety Management
System.
Materials
IsoRay
will supply materials and components for fabrication of the brachytherapy
seeds
including, but not limited to, titanium tubes/lids, pre-manufactured cores
for
isotope attachment, laboratory reagents, shipping materials, labels, etc.
IsoRay
will coordinate the transfer of barium carbonate targets to one or more reactors
for irradiation services and delivery of irradiated barium targets to PNNL
for
isotope separation. PNNL will supply laboratory reagents and supplies as
well as
radioactive standards per IsoRay specifications for the quality control
determination of radionuclidic and/or radiochemical purity of critical
reagents.
Equipment
IsoRay
will provide any specialized equipment for isotope separation from irradiated
targets, equipment for radioactive labeling (isotope attachment) of seed
cores,
laser and tooling equipment for seed welding, and laboratory equipment for
decontamination and leak testing. PNNL will provide shipping and receiving
services, laboratories, hot cells, glove box, fume hoods, and analytical
capabilities for radioactive work including seed assay dose calibrators and
gamma and liquid scintillation counters, per IsoRay specifications. IsoRay
will
fabricate a new hot cell airlock and pay for the installation on
PNNL’s
hot
cell. PNNL will provide a currently unused glovebox and IsoRay will pay for
the
installation in a selected laboratory.
Documentation
IsoRay
will provide operating procedures and batch records (test instructions with
data
collection sheets) for production and quality-related operations. IsoRay
will
submit Work Authorization Orders with scheduling approximately ten working
days
before initiation of each isotope separation/seed production cycle. PNNL
will
provide operating procedures and data sheets for analytical
equipment.
Quality
Control
IsoRay
has a Quality Assurance Program that is consistent with ISO-9000 requirements
to
ensure that work is adequately defined, that proper controls are in place
to
govern the work, and that the work is properly documented. Quality requirements
will be incorporated in operating procedures for this work. All analytical
work
performed by PNNL will be conducted according to ASO-QAP-001, as required
by
IsoRay.
Future
Work in the Radiochemical Processing Laboratory (RPL)
DOE
is
currently planning to issue a contract to clean up the 300 area where the
RPL is
sited. Current information is that the RPL may be closed as early as the
end of
2007. However, since the 300 area cleanup contract has not yet been issued,
PNNL
cannot guarantee that the RPL will be available to complete work as specified
in
this contract. PNNL plans to retain and move as many of our capabilities
as
possible prior to closure of the RPL. However, we cannot guarantee that we
will
be able to provide facilities for future work with IsoRay after closure of
the
RPL. IsoRay will be advised of changes as such information becomes available
in
the future.
Task
1. Process and Procedures Preparation
·
|
PNNL
and IsoRay personnel will identify laboratory space and equipment
appropriate for isotope separation and seed production. PNNL will
prepare
any required facility modification documentation.
|
·
|
A
mini-hot cell located in Xxxx 000 of the Shielded Analytical Laboratory
(XXX) in the RPL was used previously for Cs-131 isotope separation.
PNNL
will remove any existing equipment and decontaminate the hot cell
as
needed for IsoRay use. IsoRay will arrange for the fabrication
of a new
airlock using drawings approved by PNNL. IsoRay will pay for the
installation of the airlock.
|
·
|
Procedures
for isotope separations, isotope attachment, seed assembly, laser
welding,
seed decontamination/leak testing, seed assay will be updated as
necessary
to support larger quantity operations.
|
·
|
Radiological
work permits (RWPs) will be updated from the previous 5 to 10 seed
research and development phase to weekly isotope separation cycles
and
production lots of 100 to 1000 seeds. This work will be approved
for
completion in the 325 Building Radiochemical Processing Laboratory
(RPL).
|
·
|
This
task will include testing of updated equipment and seed components
for
safety, operability, and ALARA.
|
Task
2. Equipment Modification and Installation
·
|
Equipment
modifications identified in Task 1 will be conducted. This will
entail
installation of target transfer mechanism (air lock) in the mini
hot cell
in XXX 203 and installation or decontamination of a glove box for
housing
the seed welder. PNNL will provide a currently used glovebox. IsoRay
will
pay for the installation of the glovebox in XXX 203 or other laboratory
space provided by PNNL.
|
·
|
Glassware,
piping, pumps, hot plates, heat lamps, off-gas traps, etc, will
be
installed in the XXX mini-hot cell at IsoRay expense to support
the
isotope separation and purification
process.
|
Task
3. Isotope Separation and Seed Production
PNNL’s
task
will consist of separating Cs-131 from irradiated BaCO3
targets
and IsoRay will then use the purified isotope to produce brachytherpay seeds.
IsoRay will contract separately with reactor facilities for irradiation
services. Isotope separation will be conducted by PNNL personnel, while seed
production will be conducted by IsoRay personnel. Projected costs are based
on
labor and materials to be provided by PNNL on a per cycle basis, multiplied
by
the number of cycles during the period of performance. This task is divided
into
subtasks according to quantities of seeds produced and number of
cycles.
NOTE:
The
isotopes for this work have short half-lives and the rate of decay is key
to
this process. Activities within each isotope/seed production cycle must occur
in
sequence according to prescribed timelines. IsoRay will coordinate with PNNL
to
assure the appropriate resources are available prior to the start of each
cycle.
A
typical
isotope separation/seed production cycle will consist of the following
activities, to be conducted by PNNL personnel, except as noted:
·
|
Radiochemical
separations will be conducted in the XXX mini-hot cell. Each cycle
will
begin with receipt or irradiated barium carbonate targets. Targets
will be
processed in batches of approximately 200 to 500 g. Each target
will be
“milked”
for an average of four cycles.
|
·
|
Isotope
processing involves two separation and boil-down states followed
by
sampling and analysis to determine purity. Once separated from
the barium,
cesium-131 can be processed in a fume hood due to the relatively
low
energy of the radiation emissions (~
30
KeV X-Rays).
|
·
|
The
purity and activity of the cesium-131 product will be determined
by gamma
and/or X-ray spectroscopy and other analytical methods for quality
control. Purified isotope that meets IsoRay purity specifications
is then
ready for transfer to another location within the RPL for seed
production.
Requirements for radiochemical purity of the brachytherapy seeds
are as
indicated on the product labeling which has been reviewed and approved
by
the US Food and Drug Administration (>99.9% Cs-131, <0.01% other
isotopes). In addition, the brachytherapy seeds are considered
to be
sealed sources of therapeutic radiation. All seeds will be tested
for leak
tightness in accordance with ISO 9978, “Radiation
Protection -
Sealed Radioactive Sources -
Leakage Test Methods.”
The activity of the seeds will be determined by assay using a well
ionization chamber calibrated against a standard traceable to
NIST.
|
·
|
The
initial step in seed production will be loading cesium-131 onto
pre-manufactured seed cores. The cores will be loaded by contacting
with
cesium-bearing solution. The loaded cores will then be dried and
inserted
into pre-welded titanium “cans”
(tubes with one end welded) provided by IsoRay.
|
·
|
Cans
with cores inserted will be transferred to a welding station where
the
second end of the seed will be welded to form a sealed radioactive
source.
The last welding equipment will be similar to that used previously
at the
RPL to produce the prototype radioactive seeds. Personnel will
follow
approved laser safety procedures and radiation work permits at
all times.
The welding equipment will be provided, operated, and maintained
by
IsoRay. Welding will be performed by IsoRay personnel utilizing
an
IsoRay-developed procedure in a glove box provided by PNNL. The
procedure
will be reviewed by PNNL to ensure compliance with safe operations
and
requirements within the Radiochemical Processing Laboratory.
PNNL’s
support during welding of seeds will be limited to operational
oversight
to ensure compliance to PNNL procedures and operational protocol.
PNNL
will retain shutdown authority for any activity conducted by IsoRay
that
is deemed noncompliant with such procedures and
protocol.
|
·
|
Each
seed will be leak tested and decontaminated by IsoRay personnel
according
to established procedures developed by IsoRay. PNNL will review
such
procedures to ensure compliance with safe operations and requirements
within the Radiochemical Processing Laboratory. PNNL will provide
analytical support to IsoRay for leak testing and seed decontamination
activities. A representative number of seeds will be assayed for
apparent
activity using a dose calibrator and segregated based on assay
amount and
batch number. IsoRay, alone, will certify conformance to leak testing
and
decontamination requirements.
|
·
|
Following
certification by IsoRay, finished seeds will be packaged in shielded
containers for shipment to physicians and medical research centers.
IsoRay
will coordinate with users to determine quantities and seed delivery
dates. IsoRay will provide packaging and seed labeling materials
including
labeling of the final packages for shipment. PNNL will support
the
packaging/shipping activity by providing staff labor for packaging
and
radiation control. PNNL certified shipping personnel will provide
instructions and oversight to IsoRay in preparing materials for
shipment
and will approve the actual shipments.
|
·
|
All
regulated wastes associated with this project will be properly
disposed of
by PNNL personnel at IsoRay
expense.
|
NOTE:
Details of the specific activities, equipment, materials, personnel, and
other
resources required to accomplish these activities are included in operating
procedures for this project. Those procedures were developed previously to
support work under CRADA 208 between IsoRay and PNNL and will be modified
as
needed for the scale of operation anticipated under this project, under
IsoRay’s
guidance. The cost and schedule for this work is based on experience gained
from
the prior work.
Task
3
includes the following three phases, which are designed to increase the seed
production in three phases, as staff are trained and gain more experience
with
the procedures. The final phases will produce far lower seed quantities than
required for full scale commercial seed production (which is approximately
1,000
patients per day).
Task
3.a. Initial Isotope Separation and Seed Production
The
initial phase will consist of one to two isotope separation/seed production
cycles per month as describe above. Quantities sufficient for two to four
shipments of seeds per cycle at an average of 100 seeds per shipment will
be
produced. This period is expected to have a duration of three months with
six
isotope separation/seed production cycles occurring during that
time.
Task
3.b. Regular Isotope Separation and Seed Production
This
phase will consist of four isotope separation/seed production cycles per
month
as described above leading to quantities sufficient to produce up to 10
shipments of seeds per cycle at an average of 100 seeds per shipment. This
period is expected to have a duration of six months with 24 cycles occurring
during that time.
Task
3.c. Enhanced Isotope Separation and Seed Production
This
phase will consist of four isotope separation/seed production cycles per
month,
as described above, with two additional separation runs per month. This will
supply quantities sufficient to produce up to 20 shipments of seeds per week
at
an average of 100 seeds per shipment which is the standard quantity required
for
one patient. Seed shipments would occur up to four days per week. Costs are
estimated for the first three months of this period with 18 cycles occurring
during that time. Additional cycles would be estimated on a per-cycle or
per-month basis.