Diagnostic Kits/IP Profile of Universities working in Kits: Difference between revisions

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==Answer the questions:==
==Answer the questions:==
'''(ADDED TO PAPER)'''<br>


# What are the 5 top Universities in this field?
# What are the 5 top Universities in this field?
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#* Identify what universities are the “Microsofts” of the field and what companies are the “IBMs” of the field (Use the questionnaire to guide your research when appropriate - Carol will select specific relevant questions)
#* Identify what universities are the “Microsofts” of the field and what companies are the “IBMs” of the field (Use the questionnaire to guide your research when appropriate - Carol will select specific relevant questions)


*Henry, M.R., Cho, M.K., Weaver, M.A., Merz, J.F. [http://www.bioethics.upenn.edu:16080/prog/ethicsgenes/ A pilot survey on the licensing of DNA inventions]. J. Law Med. Ethics, 31:442-449, 2003
Top Universities (holders of the largest number of DNA-based US Patents ([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]])
#University of California
#University of Texas
#Johns Hopkins University
#Harvard University
#Standford University
#Cornell University
#Columbia University
#University of Wisconsin
#MIT
#Washington University


2005 Data from ([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]]):
*Total DNA Patents (not just diagnostic  kits) 38,282
*Total DNA Patents (not just diagnostic  kits)owned by top 30 academic institutions 5,702


*Pressman, L. et al., 2006 The Pressman article reports on an interview which investigates DNA patents at Universities in the United States. The focus of the article is split between: ([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]])
 
**patenting and out-licensing strategies of
Add
Walsh, J. , Cho, C. & Cohen, W.M. Patents, Material Transfers and Access to Research Inputs in Biomedical Research (Final Report to the National Academy of Sciences' Committee [on] Intellectual Property Rights in Genomic and Protein-Related Research Inventions, 20 September 2005)....
 
[[Image:Top_30_entities_holding_US_DNA_Patents_(Pressman).jpg]]
*([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]])
 
Important Univ. Institution
The [[http://www.genome.duke.edu/centers/gelp/|Duke Center for Public Genomics is a Center of Excellence in Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications]] (ELSI) Research co-funded by the Department of Energy and the National Human Genome Research Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health.
 
Genes are tools and outputs of research
*Research tools: "ideas, data, materials or methods used to conduct research." ([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]])
*"The gene patent subset of DNA patents has also been drawn into the research tools debate because genes are not only inputs to developing genetic tests and therapeutic proteins, and thus directly relevant to medically important products and services, but are also crucially important tools for ongoing research." ([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]])
 
Licensing
*The National Institutes of Health is a major source of resource biomedical funding. 
*The funding power held by the National Institutes of Health has allowed it to create "guidelines for grantee institutions about how to license biomedical research resources arising from federally funded research." ([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]])
*Agreeing to comply with the licensing guidelines is a factor in receiving National Institutes of Health funding. 
*These guidelines apply to all genomic inventions and are published under: Best practices for the licensing of genomic inventions. Federal Register 70, 18413-18415 (2005).
*The guidelines favor "broad and nonexclusive" licenses
 
DNA Patent Ownership Data
*"Roughly 78% of US DNA patents are owned by for-profit entities and 22% by nonprofits." ([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]])
 
Research-Use Rights
Academic institutions involved in the research survey retained research-use rights for themselves (a shop right) and included a right to transfer these research-use rights to other nonprofit institutions in their license.
 
Academic Licensing Data
Of the 19 responding tech transfer offices, "approximately 70% of the 2,607 managed patents have either been licensed in the past or are still under license." ([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]])
 
Exclusivity
*two types were considered by the study described in the Pressman article: ([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]])
**exclusive, all fields of use
**exclusive, by field of use
*Data on exclusivity is unclear because it often does not differentiate between these two types. 
*Many times, company type, determines level of exclusivity
**"Startups have, in nearly all cases, exclusive licenses, although only about two-thirds have 'exclusive, all fields of use' licenses" ([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]])
**The larger the company, the less likely the license is to be exclusive
*Milestones (required showings of progress) are almost twice as likely in exclusive licenses as compared to non exclusive licenses. ([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]])
 
*A pilot survey on the licensing of DNA inventions focuses on the: ([[Diagnostic Kits/A pilot survey on the licensing of DNA inventions|(Henry, M.R., et al., 2003)]])
**patenting and out-licensing strategies
**licensing negotiations: exclusivity, uses, and terms
**licensing negotiations: exclusivity, uses, and terms
**Protection of non-patented technologies: MTAs, NDAs
**Protection of non-patented technologies: MTAs, NDAs
''' *"The high proportion of exclusive licenses by non-profits raises the implication that invention coming out of nonprofit institutions is more likely to be tied up with exclusive rights. However, our results, and those of Mowery et al.15 show that only 15 percent of university DNA sequence inventions are patented, suggesting that the bulk of such inventions will be made freely available upon scientific publication." ([[Diagnostic Kits/A pilot survey on the licensing of DNA inventions|(Henry, M.R., et al., 2003)]])'''


*Institutions chosen for the study had patents of inventions using human DNA and both for profit and non-profits were sampled.  The study found that for profit and non-profit entities approach patent and licenses differently:
*Institutions chosen for the study had patents of inventions using human DNA and both for profit and non-profits were sampled.  The study found that for profit and non-profit entities approach patent and licenses differently:
**Patenting Behavior ([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]])
**Patenting Behavior ([[Diagnostic Kits/A pilot survey on the licensing of DNA inventions|(Henry, M.R., et al., 2003)]])
***For profits more often fill patent applications for all new technologies and then deciding what to pursue based on commercial interest.   
***For profits more often fill patent applications for all new technologies and then deciding what to pursue based on commercial interest.   
***Non-profits were more selective about when to apply for a patent.   
***Non-profits were more selective about when to apply for a patent.   
**Licensing Behavior ([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]])
**Licensing Behavior ([[Diagnostic Kits/A pilot survey on the licensing of DNA inventions|(Henry, M.R., et al., 2003)]])
***For both entities, licensing was most often used as a method of commercialization.  Licensing for research was very infrequent.
***For both entities, licensing was most often used as a method of commercialization.  Licensing for research was very infrequent.
***One important difference found was that nonprofits were more than twice as likely to license exclusively as compared to for-profit companies.
***One important difference found was that nonprofits were more than twice as likely to license exclusively as compared to for-profit companies.
 
Exclusivity
*"Several reports from national and international bodies note that genetic testing applications require far less investment after initial gene discovery than development of therapeutic proteins, and so the rationale for exclusive intellectual property rights may be less compelling." ([[Diagnostic Kits/The licensing of DNA patents by US academic institutions|Pressman, L. et al., 2006]])


==Navigation==
==Navigation==

Latest revision as of 16:23, 15 December 2009

Answer the questions:

(ADDED TO PAPER)

  1. What are the 5 top Universities in this field?
    • Correlate them with their main outputs (Data. Narratives. Tools)
    • Understand and identify cases where these universities are “experimenting” or “adopting” commons based approach. Are they adopting OA policies, for instance? Are they adopting Social Responsible License approaches?
    • Identify these cases and treat them as entities that will also be placed in our mapping device (the quadrants)
    • Identify what universities are the “Microsofts” of the field and what companies are the “IBMs” of the field (Use the questionnaire to guide your research when appropriate - Carol will select specific relevant questions)

Top Universities (holders of the largest number of DNA-based US Patents (Pressman, L. et al., 2006)

  1. University of California
  2. University of Texas
  3. Johns Hopkins University
  4. Harvard University
  5. Standford University
  6. Cornell University
  7. Columbia University
  8. University of Wisconsin
  9. MIT
  10. Washington University

2005 Data from (Pressman, L. et al., 2006):

  • Total DNA Patents (not just diagnostic kits) 38,282
  • Total DNA Patents (not just diagnostic kits)owned by top 30 academic institutions 5,702


Add Walsh, J. , Cho, C. & Cohen, W.M. Patents, Material Transfers and Access to Research Inputs in Biomedical Research (Final Report to the National Academy of Sciences' Committee [on] Intellectual Property Rights in Genomic and Protein-Related Research Inventions, 20 September 2005)....

Top 30 entities holding US DNA Patents (Pressman).jpg

Important Univ. Institution The [Center for Public Genomics is a Center of Excellence in Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications] (ELSI) Research co-funded by the Department of Energy and the National Human Genome Research Institute, part of the National Institutes of Health.

Genes are tools and outputs of research

  • Research tools: "ideas, data, materials or methods used to conduct research." (Pressman, L. et al., 2006)
  • "The gene patent subset of DNA patents has also been drawn into the research tools debate because genes are not only inputs to developing genetic tests and therapeutic proteins, and thus directly relevant to medically important products and services, but are also crucially important tools for ongoing research." (Pressman, L. et al., 2006)

Licensing

  • The National Institutes of Health is a major source of resource biomedical funding.
  • The funding power held by the National Institutes of Health has allowed it to create "guidelines for grantee institutions about how to license biomedical research resources arising from federally funded research." (Pressman, L. et al., 2006)
  • Agreeing to comply with the licensing guidelines is a factor in receiving National Institutes of Health funding.
  • These guidelines apply to all genomic inventions and are published under: Best practices for the licensing of genomic inventions. Federal Register 70, 18413-18415 (2005).
  • The guidelines favor "broad and nonexclusive" licenses

DNA Patent Ownership Data

Research-Use Rights Academic institutions involved in the research survey retained research-use rights for themselves (a shop right) and included a right to transfer these research-use rights to other nonprofit institutions in their license.

Academic Licensing Data Of the 19 responding tech transfer offices, "approximately 70% of the 2,607 managed patents have either been licensed in the past or are still under license." (Pressman, L. et al., 2006)

Exclusivity

  • two types were considered by the study described in the Pressman article: (Pressman, L. et al., 2006)
    • exclusive, all fields of use
    • exclusive, by field of use
  • Data on exclusivity is unclear because it often does not differentiate between these two types.
  • Many times, company type, determines level of exclusivity
    • "Startups have, in nearly all cases, exclusive licenses, although only about two-thirds have 'exclusive, all fields of use' licenses" (Pressman, L. et al., 2006)
    • The larger the company, the less likely the license is to be exclusive
  • Milestones (required showings of progress) are almost twice as likely in exclusive licenses as compared to non exclusive licenses. (Pressman, L. et al., 2006)
  • A pilot survey on the licensing of DNA inventions focuses on the: ((Henry, M.R., et al., 2003))
    • patenting and out-licensing strategies
    • licensing negotiations: exclusivity, uses, and terms
    • Protection of non-patented technologies: MTAs, NDAs

*"The high proportion of exclusive licenses by non-profits raises the implication that invention coming out of nonprofit institutions is more likely to be tied up with exclusive rights. However, our results, and those of Mowery et al.15 show that only 15 percent of university DNA sequence inventions are patented, suggesting that the bulk of such inventions will be made freely available upon scientific publication." ((Henry, M.R., et al., 2003))

  • Institutions chosen for the study had patents of inventions using human DNA and both for profit and non-profits were sampled. The study found that for profit and non-profit entities approach patent and licenses differently:
    • Patenting Behavior ((Henry, M.R., et al., 2003))
      • For profits more often fill patent applications for all new technologies and then deciding what to pursue based on commercial interest.
      • Non-profits were more selective about when to apply for a patent.
    • Licensing Behavior ((Henry, M.R., et al., 2003))
      • For both entities, licensing was most often used as a method of commercialization. Licensing for research was very infrequent.
      • One important difference found was that nonprofits were more than twice as likely to license exclusively as compared to for-profit companies.

Navigation

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