Tag Archives: Supreme Court

Mayo v. Prometheus – A European View

A Guest Post from Paul Cole, European Patent Attorney, Lucas & Co; Professor of IP law, Bournemouth University. Is a claim to an assay patent-eligible when all its features are known save for how it should be interpreted? The interpretation … Continue reading

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Legal Challenge To “ObamaCare” Threatens Generic Biologicals

What should not be lost on pharma/biotech patent attorneys or their clients, amidst all the attention given to the Supreme Court’s review of the “Patient Protection and Affordable Health Care Act” – public law 111-48, is that it contains the … Continue reading

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Supreme Court Remands In Myriad Appeal

Today, as predicted by many commentators, the Supreme Court set aside the ruling by the Fed. Cir. that claims to isolated DNA sequences that are the BRCA 1 or 2 gene, or fragments thereof, are patentable subject matter. The Supreme … Continue reading

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Unnatural Acts – Patenting Diagnostic Tests Post-Prometheus

The US Supreme Court case of Mayo v. Prometheus has generated a lot of interest precisely because it clouds the future of patent claims to diagnostic methodologies in general and to ‘personalized medicine’ in specific. The decision is likely to … Continue reading

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