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Supreme Court Remands Myriad for Reconsideration in Light of Mayo
Posted in Litigation, Patents

Following close on the heels of last week’s controversial decision in Mayo Collaborative Services v. Prometheus Laboratories, the United States Supreme Court sent another hotly contested biotech case back down for further consideration by a lower federal court. In Association for Molecular Pathology v. Myriad Genetics, the Supreme Court granted certiorari to the parties in the Myriad case, vacated the decision of the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, and then promptly remanded the case to the Federal Circuit for reconsideration in accordance with the Supreme Court’s March 20th decision in the Mayo case, which held that a diagnostic method claim that simply recites a law of nature is unpatentable subject matter under 35 U.S.C. §101.

The patents being challenged in the Myriad case also contain diagnostic method claims. These claims, which recite “comparing” or “analyzing” BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene sequences, had been deemed ineligible for patent protection by the Federal Circuit. This conclusion is unlikely to change upon remand.

However, the Myriad case raises several other issues. Also at issue in Myriad are method claims for screening of therapeutics and composition of matter claims for isolated DNA. Prior to the remand, the Federal Circuit had found these claims to be patentable subject matter, holding that the claimed screening methods were also patentable because they include the transformative step of “growing cells” and that isolated DNA is patentable subject matter since it is chemically distinct from native DNA. The Federal Circuit’s reconsideration of and application of the Mayo decision to the screening method claims and to the composition of matter claims will be worth watching.

The Federal Circuit will have to review the method claims for screening of therapeutics to determine whether the step of “growing cells” in the presence of a potential cancer therapeutic is still transformative in light of the Mayo decision. The question will be whether the step “transformed the process into an inventive application of the [law of nature].”

How the Federal Circuit applies the Mayo case to Myriad’s claims on isolated gene sequences will also be of great interest to the biotechnology community. One consideration from the Mayo decision that will likely be important to the analysis of isolated gene claims is whether the term “isolated” is a “feature[] that provide[s] practical assurance that the process is more than a drafting effort.” The Federal Circuit’s earlier detailed discussion that these “isolated DNA molecules do not exist as in nature” and must be “chemically cleaved” from their natural environment, and thus are “distinct chemical entit[ies],” may indicate one basis by which the Federal Circuit can distinguish these claims from Mayo. A second, countervailing, consideration from Mayo may be whether the “isolation” of DNA should be considered a “well-understood, routine, conventional activity previously engaged in by scientists who work in the field.” While this argument was unpersuasively made before the Federal Circuit in 2011, it may now garner more support.

The Federal Circuit’s treatment of the Myriad claims on remand may provide better guidance on how to ensure that biotechnology patent claims survive future patentability challenges. Both Mayo and Myriad will undoubtedly have long-term ramifications in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries. Any potentially affected or interested parties should continue to follow the developments in this area, but it seems this may be just the beginning of a much longer conversation.

This advisory was prepared by the Life Sciences and Intellectual Property practice groups at Nutter McClennen & Fish LLP. For more information, please contact your Nutter attorney at 617-439-2000.

This advisory is for information purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice on any specific facts or circumstances. Under the rules of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, this material may be considered as advertising.

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