Diagnostic Kits/Patents and the Progress of Personalized Medicine
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Herder, M., Patents & the Progress of Personalized Medicine: Biomarkers Research as Lens. SSRN eLibrary. Available at: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1435468 [Accessed October 1, 2009].
Types of biomarkers:
- Diagnostic biomarkers: "identify the presence of disease at the earliest stage, before clinical manifestation. (Wilson et al., 2007)
- Prognostic biomarkers "stratify risk of disease progression in patients undergoing definitive therapy." (Wilson et al., 2007)
- Predictive biomarkers: identify patients most likely to respond to specific interventions." (Wilson et al., 2007)
- Therapeutic biomarkers: "provide a quantifiable measure of response to therapy in patients undergoing treatment." (Wilson et al., 2007)
- Toxicity biomarkers: "biomarkers can be used to identify patients at risk for developing adverse reactions to individual therapeutics." (Wilson et al., 2007)
Types of "genetic testing" services
- Diagnostics: "companies can go to market as soon as they have phenotype-gene association information and the necessary genetic sequencing equipment in hand. (Herder, M., 2009)
- Pharmacogenomics(also pharmacogenetics): personalized medicine through incorporate genetic information into drug choice
- Theragnostics: focuses on "integration of information from a diverse set of biomarkers" (Herder, M., 2009)
Regulatory framework
- Regulation is carried out by the FDA and/or the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
- Testing requires both analytically and clinically valid
- Currently there is ambiguity in the process
Intellectual Property
- Case law
- Metabolite Laboratories, Inc. v. Laboratory Corp. of America Holdings
- Bayh-Dole Act
- developed as a result: technology transfer offices
- The Good:
- "joint decision of Stanford University and the University of California to license the Cohen-Boyer recombinant DNA technology--non-exclusively to any and all interested parties for a nominal fee--is widely credited with enabling a new era of molecular biology, and spawning the commercial biotech sector."
- The Bad
- The University of Utah identified a gene ("BRCA1") that is associated with breast and ovarian cancer. The University TTO spun-off Myriad Genetics Inc., with exclusively licensed the patent to BRCA1.
- Myriad also patented BRCA2.
Empirical Data Patents
- Jon F. Merz et al., Industry Opposes Genomic Legislation, 20 Nature Biotechnology 657 (2002).
- Mildred K. Cho et al., Effects of Patents and Licenses on the Provision of Clinical Genetic Testing
Services, 5 J. Molecular Diagnostics 3, 5 (2003). Researchers "actors are ignoring patents of others, and this allows research to continue" (page 215)