Title: Patenting Biomarker Inventions
1Patenting Biomarker Inventions
Richard A. Nakashima
December 7, 2004
2Technology Areas
- Gene Expression Analysis
- E.g., sequence specific probes, chip
hybridization, sequence specific amplification,
differential display, etc. - Protein Arrays
- E.g., antibody chip, 2-D gel, antigen chip
(endogenous Abs), etc. - Genomic Analysis (individual/subpopulation
variation) - E.g., SNP, VNTR, STR, RFLP etc.
3Examples of Discoveries
- Marker for a present disease state
- E.g., cancer marker (P53, P21, PSA, CA125, etc.)
- Causal mutation
- Surrogate marker (e.g., marker in linkage
disequilibrium with causal mutation expression
of surrogate is determined by causal mutation,
etc.) - Predictor for a future disease state
- E.g., predisposing mutation, genotype, etc.
- Surrogate end point marker
- E.g., responsiveness to drug therapy
- Expression of particular protein/peptide/mRNA
- Levels of metabolite, cytokine, hormone, cell
type, etc.
4Types of Claims
- 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 therefore subject to
the conditions and requirements of this title.
35 U.S.C. 101 - - claims to process (method), machine
(apparatus), manufacture or composition
5Barriers to Patentability
- Product of Nature doctrine
- Utility Requirement
- Prior Art
- Lack of novelty
- Obviousness
- Other statutory bars (public use prior invention
by another sale/offer for sale but not
licensing) - Section 112
- Enablement
- Written description
- Best mode requirement
6Product of Nature Doctrine
- Cant patent things that exist in nature (e.g.,
species of plant or animal, type of rock, etc.) - However, isolated (purified) nucleic acids,
proteins, eukaryotic cells, etc. do not exist in
nature - Transgenic cells, animals, plants, etc. also do
not exist in nature
7Utility Requirement
- Inventions in the biotech area must have a real
world use in order to be patentable - Cant patent a protein or nucleic acid sequence
unless there is a plausible use for it - E.g., use of EST sequence as a probe in order to
clone a complete gene is not a real world use
under the PTO guidelines - Typically, in order to patent a protein/nucleic
acid sequence, must know something about function
of gene/protein - Use as diagnostic/prognostic/drug
responsiveness/surrogate end point marker are all
real world uses
8Anticipation (lack of novelty)
- A single prior art publication discloses each
element of the claimed invention - Prior art is anything that was publicly known
before patent application filing date (priority
date) - Inventors own publications can count as prior
art against a later-filed patent application - The standards for a public disclosure are
fairly low (reasonably accessible to person
interested in field of invention)
9Examples of publications
- A dissertation filed in a university or
departmental library - A published abstract
- A poster or slide show presented at a
national/regional/local meeting - A departmental seminar
- A funded federal grant application (Freedom of
Information Act) - A website pre-meeting compilation of abstracts
- A publication, including pre-printing
availability on a website - A published patent application or a patent
application laid open for inspection - A disclosure to a third party without
confidentiality obligation
10Obviousness
- Even if a single prior art publication does not
disclose each element of a claimed invention, if
two or more publications can be combined to
disclose all elements of the invention, then they
may preclude patentability due to obviousness - If the differences between what was publicly
known in the field and the elements of the
claimed invention are insubstantial, this may
also preclude patentability - E.g., performing a previously known technique at
a slightly different temperature, pH, etc. - E.g., performing PCR analysis on a known cancer
marker that had previously been examined only by
RFLP - Use of a previously characterized prostate cancer
marker as a diagnostic marker for testicular
cancer may or may not be considered obvious
11Enablement
- Disclosure of patent application, combined with
general knowledge in the field, must enable
another skilled worker in the field to make and
use the claimed invention without undue
experimentation - Routine experimentation is OK
- Must enable full scope of the patent claims
- A patent that disclosed the DNA sequence of rat
insulin and generally discussed methods for
cloning homologous sequences from other species
did not enable a human insulin sequence - The fact that a procedure/marker works in one
kind of cancer doesnt mean you have enabled it
for all types of cancer - Biotechnology as PTOs favorite example of an
unpredictable art - higher standards for enablement and written
description
12Written Description Requirement
- Disclosure in patent application must be
sufficient so that skilled worker in field,
reading the application, would conclude that the
inventor was in possession of the claimed
invention as of application filing date - University of Rochester v. G.D. Searle, Monsanto,
Pharmacia Pfizer - Issued patent claimed COX2 inhibitors and
described a method for preparing transgenic cells
containing COX2 protein and screening compounds
for COX2 inhibition, but disclosed no actual COX2
inhibitors - Patent was found invalid for lack of written
description - A separate patent that claimed the screening
method was not invalidated
13Best Mode Requirement
- A patent applicant must describe best way known
(or believed) to perform make and use claimed
invention - Cant hide the ball and still try to claim a 20
year monopoly on patented subject matter (quid
pro quo)
14Consequences for Biomarker Patent Applications
- Composition claims to nucleic acid/protein
sequences of use as markers may be anticipated
(GenBank, EMBL, human genome project data, etc.) - Example you discover that a protein (of
sequence SEQ ID NO1) is overexpressed in
cancer cells and/or is a surrogate end point
marker for drug response, etc. - SEQ ID NO1 has already been published as a
putative translation product of a gene, even
though it was not previously associated with
cancer - The publication of the sequence would preclude
patenting a composition comprising a protein of
SEQ ID NO1 - Under US patent law, composition claims are not
limited by the intended use of the composition - However, if the DNA sequence had been published,
but it was not known that it encoded a protein,
then composition claims to the protein would
likely be allowed - Also, if association with cancer was not
previously known, you can still claim methods of
use for detecting cancer and/or as surrogate end
point
15Publication before Patent Application May Result
in Loss of Patent Rights
- Immediate loss of patent rights in most foreign
countries - In US, 12-month window to file patent application
after publication - Usually, inventors own publications are the
worst prior art - Last sentence of abstract/poster/talk may support
obviousness rejection
16Example of Premature Publication
- A screening assay comparing leukemia and normal
cell lines identifies a marker overexpressed in
leukemia cells. No clinical data is available on
whether marker is found in blood of individuals
with leukemia is correlated with disease
progression or is decreased in response to
treatment with anti-cancer compounds. - Preliminary results are presented at a meeting,
the abstract states - Although the present results indicate that
marker X may be of use for diagnosis or prognosis
of leukaemia or as a surrogate marker for
therapeutic response to anti-leukemia agents,
further studies are required in order to validate
this marker in human cancer. - Likely to support obviousness rejection of later
filed patent application with clinical data
17Enablement/Written Description Problems with
Preliminary Data
- A patent application claiming use of a biomarker
for diagnosis or prognosis of cancer or as
surrogate marker for therapeutic response, based
only on cell line data with no clinical support,
may be rejected for lack of enablement and/or
written description support. - What is the solution?
18File Patent Applications in Stages
- A provisional US patent application may be filed
before publishing preliminary results on cell
line data - Good for 12 months, never examined, can not
result in issued patent - Protects against inventors public disclosure of
preliminary data - Within 12 months, need to filed regular
US/foreign patent application with any supporting
clinical data - Data acquired after 12 month period may be filed
as a supporting declaration or a
continuation-in-part patent application
19Process Claims
- Examples
- 1. A method of detecting a disease
state/predicting susceptibility or resistance to
a disease state comprising - a) obtaining a sample from a subject and
- b) testing the sample for the presence/concentra
tion/increase/decrease of marker X - A method of detecting response to a
drug/predicting responsiveness to a drug
comprising - a) treating a subject with compound Y and
- b) determining the presence/concentration/increa
se/decrease of marker X.
20Composition Claims
- Examples
- 1. An isolated nucleic acid comprising a sequence
selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID
NO1, SEQ ID NO2 and SEQ ID NO3. - SEQ ID NO1 AATGCGACGTAATTTGCAGCAG
- SEQ ID NO2 AATGCGACGTCATTTGCAGCAG
- SEQ ID NO3 CTAGCAGGCCTAGGGCTAGGCAAT
- An isolated protein comprising a sequence
selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NO1
and SEQ ID NO2. - An expression vector comprising an isolated
nucleic acid selected from the group consisting
of SEQ ID NO1, SEQ ID NO2 and SEQ ID NO3. - A cell line transformed with an expression vector
comprising an isolated nucleic acid selected from
the group consisting of SEQ ID NO1, SEQ ID NO2
and SEQ ID NO3. -
21Apparatus Claims
- Examples
- 1. An apparatus comprising
- a) a protein chip array and
- b) two or more antibodies attached to the array,
said antibodies selected from the group
consisting of MAb1, Mab2, Mab3, Mab4, Mab5 and
Mab6. - 2. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a
spectrophotometer designed to detect fluorescence
emissions from the protein array chip.