Transcript Document
Patent Eligible Subject Matter in the United States Jorge A. Goldstein, Ph.D., Esq. Washington, DC, USA July 21, 2015International Judicial Academy Washington DC March 26, 2010 1091840.1 March 25, 2010 Outline • • • • Patents in multiple dimensions Patent “eligibility” vs. “ability.” The US statutory scheme Eligibility: from Chakrabarty to Bilski • Cutting edge issues: Diagnostic genetics 1055839.2 2 Patents In Six Dimensions Historical: Venetian Code; Statute of Monopolies; French Assembly; Thomas Jefferson Constitutional - legal: U.S. Constitution Art I, Section 8 “…to promote the progress of science and the useful arts…” Human: Creative ideas belong to creator Technological: Exclusivity promotes disclosure Commercial: Exclusivity promotes investment in risky enterprises Political - economic: The developing world 1055839.2 3 Examples from the Extremes • Ideal: A synthetic drug patented worldwide by Merck (or, after US Bayh Dole Act, by the Harvard Chemistry Department and licensed to Merck), and used in France. • Cutting edge: An online business method patented worldwide by the Harvard Business School, and used in Gambia. 1055839.2 4 Patent Eligibility • What subject matter is eligible? – Easy: • Machines, synthetic drugs, methods of industrial manufacture – Harder: • Purified natural products (antibiotics, genes?); Live products? (microbes, plants, animals?) • Software? Algorithms? • New methods of doing business? • Natural phenomena in disguise? (genetic correlations?) 1055839.2 5 Patentability What are the universal requirements for obtaining patent protection on an eligible invention? – Usefulness / industrial applicability – Novelty – Non obviousness / inventive step – A proper filing with full disclosure • Full description • Reproducibility • (In the US: Best mode) 1055839.2 6 U.S. Statute on Eligibility • 35 U.S.C. § 101 – Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and requirements of this title. 1055839.2 7 Legal Precedents in the U.S. : Eligible Products of Nature • Such patents claim isolated molecules not their natural form: – 1912: Adrenalin… practically free from gland tissue – 1970: Prostaglandin… in sufficiently pure form… – 1979: Strawberry flavoring comprising... substantially pure 2-methyl-2-pentanoic acid 1055839.2 8 Legal Precedents in the US: Eligible Live Inventions • 1977: Biologically pure culture of Streptomyces vellosus • 1980: Diamond v. Chakrabarty (Supreme Ct) – Human-made micro-organisms eligible. – Broad dicta: “…anything under the sun made by man…” • 1985: Ex Parte Hibberd (USPTO Board) – Plants eligible (in addition to plant patents and the UPOV-based PVPA.) • 1987: Ex Parte Allen (USPTO Commissioner) – Higher animals eligible – 1988: First animal patent issued to Harvard University for a cancer-susceptible transgenic mouse (the “onco-mouse”) 1055839.2 9 Patents for Human Therapeutic Genes: Human Erythropoietin Amgen’s US Patent 4,703,008 Issued Oct 1987. Claim 1: 1. A purified and isolated DNA sequence encoding erythropoietin, said DNA sequence selected from the group consisting of: (a) the DNA sequences set out in FIGS. 5 and 6 or their complementary strands [the human erythropoietin gene] … 1055839.2 10 First Detour Q: A: Who “owns” your genes? Depends if they are: (1)in your body (you do) or (2)having been extracted, and now in a test tube (the hospital or lab) See: Moore v. Regents of U. of California (1990) 1055839.2 11 Detour (II) Q: A: 1055839.2 If you arrange with the lab for you to preserve ownership of your genes after isolation, who owns them? You do. 12 Detour (III) Q: A: 1055839.2 If I have a patent on your isolated genes, can you commercialize them? No. You own the tangible, personal property, but I own the intangible, intellectual property. 13 Detour (IV) Q: A: 1055839.2 Can I use my patent on the isolated genes I now own to stop you from metabolizing? Of course not! Patents cover isolated genes not the genes in the natural context. 14 Patents for Methods of Human Genetic Diagnoses • Genetic diagnoses use correlations between isolated human gene sequence variants (e.g. mutants or SNPs) and disease. – Examples: Huntington’s (MGH) or Cystic Fibrosis (U Michigan and HSC Toronto); BRCA1 and BRCA2 breast cancer (U Utah) 1055839.2 15 Second Detour: In re Bilski (2008) Eligibility of Abstract Methods A method for managing the consumption risk costs of a commodity sold by a commodity provider at a fixed price comprising the steps of: (a) initiating a series of transactions between said commodity provider and consumers of said commodity wherein said consumers purchase said commodity at a fixed rate based upon historical averages, said fixed rate corresponding to a risk position of said consumer; (b) identifying market participants for said commodity having a counter-risk position to said consumers; and (c) initiating a series of transactions between said commodity provider and said market participants at a second fixed rate such that said series of market participant transactions balances the risk position of said series of consumer transactions. This is a method of hedging risk, i.e., a business method 1055839.2 16 Bilski: Court of Appeals Analysis • Bilski’s claim is clearly to a process • Although claim meets the dictionary definition of a process, that definition has been limited by the U.S. Supreme Court, e.g., – Eligible processes cannot include laws of nature, natural phenomena, or abstract ideas. – Eligibility requires a two step test: That the process be tied to (A) a machine or (B) to transformation of an article 1055839.2 17 Analysis of the “Machine or Transformation” Test • (A) Machine: Is the Bilski claim to a financial process tied to a particular machine? – • No, Bilski admitted their claim is not limited to a particular machine or apparatus (B) Transformation: What type of things constitute “articles of matter”? – – Physical objects or substances? YES, “articles” Electronic signals and data? MAYBE • • 1055839.2 If data represents a physical object, e.g., transformation of data representing body tissues into a visual depiction on a display? YES, “article.” Gathering data and making a determination based on that data? NO, not “article.” 18 Application Of “Transformation” Sub-Test to Bilski facts So, does the Bilski claim transform an article of matter? The data in Bilski’s claims represents legal relationships and business risks, which are not physical objects or substances The data itself is not representative of physical objects or substances Thus the claims neither involve the transformation of any physical object or substance, nor an electronic signal representative of any physical object or substance. Conclusion: Hedge process not eligible under either machine or transformation 1055839.2 19 In October 2009 Bilski was argued before the Supreme Court • • • • • The USPTO argued for affirmance. Mr. Bilski argued for reversal. Case is under advisement. 20 amicus curiae briefs were filed. One from the American Medical Association and the American College of Medical Genetics…why? – Patents in the fields of diagnostic genetics and personalized medicine 1055839.2 20 1989: Pure Diagnostic Algorithms not Eligible - In re Grams • 1. A method of diagnosing an abnormal condition in an individual…[with] data resulting from a plurality of …chemical and biological constituents… comprising • [a] performing [a] plurality of clinical laboratory tests on the individual… • [b] producing…a first quantity representative of the condition of the individual; • [c] comparing the first quantity to a first predetermined value… • [d] upon determining…that the individual's condition is abnormal, successively testing…; and • [e] identifying…a subset of parameters corresponding… to [the] abnormal condition… 1055839.2 21 2009: Pharmacodiagnostics Claim Eligible - Prometheus v Mayo • A method of optimizing therapeutic efficacy for treatment of an immune mediated gastrointestinal disorder, comprising: • (a) administering a drug providing 6thioguanine to a subject…; and • (b) determining the level of 6-thioguanine in said subject…, • wherein the level of 6-thioguanine less than about 230 pmol per 8x108 red blood cells indicates a need to increase the amount of said drug subsequently administered to said subject and • wherein the level of 6-thioguanine greater than about 400 pmol per 8x108 red blood cells indicates a need to decrease the amount of said drug subsequently administered… 1055839.2 22 Prometheus v Mayo (2009) (cont’d) • Court of Appeals held that both the steps: – “(a) administering a drug…” and – “(b) determining the level…” are transformative. The steps are neither just natural correlations nor data gathering steps In contrast, the ineligible claims in Grams were data-gathering steps followed by an algorithm Conclusion: Eligible 1055839.2 23 2009: Bio-Reference Labs v Ipsogen • U.S.Patent No.7,429,456, Claim 1: An in vitro method to determine the presence of the G1849T mutation in the JAK2 gene in a human patient comprising: a) obtaining and analyzing a nucleic acid sample from the human patient; b) detecting a T in the JAK2 gene at position 2343 of SEQ ID NO 2 in the sample; and c) recording the presence of a T in the JAK2 gene at position 2343 of SEQ ID NO 2 in the sample. Is this claim patent eligible under Bilski and Grams? Stay tuned… 1055839.2 24 2009: Association for Molecular Pathology et al v US PTO • BRCA1/2 gene patent case brought by the ACLU in the U.S. District Ct in New York • November 1, 2009: Case survived a motion to dismiss • Judge Sweet said: – “The patents [might] grant Myriad ownership rights over products of nature, laws of nature, natural phenomena, abstract ideas and basic human knowledge and thought in violation of the First Amendment ‘s protection over freedom of thought. Myriad’s ownership of correlations between certain BRCA1/2 mutations and an increased risk of breast and/or ovarian cancer [might have] inhibited further research on BRCA1/2 as well as genes that interact with BRCA1/2.” 1055839.2 25 Conclusions • Thirty years of expansion of patent eligibility: animals, plants, genes, genetic diagnostics, software, business methods. • Courts are now being asked to draw sharper lines • So far the legislature (Congress) has stayed out of it 1055839.2 26 Contact Information Jorge A. Goldstein, Ph.D., Esq. Sterne Kessler Goldstein & Fox PLLC 1100 New York Ave Washington DC 20005 Tel 202-772-8609 (direct) Fax 202 371 2540 E Mail : [email protected] 1055839.2 27