The California-based challenge to WARF’s patent on human embryonic stem cells is headed for the United States Supreme Court.
The nation’s highest court is expected to be asked Friday to overturn
an earlier appellate court decision and allow two public interest groups to seek to cancel the patent held by WARF, the
Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation.
The specific issue is whether the California parties have the right to sue. But at the heart of the matter is the question of who profits from stem cell research along with whether the Wisconsin patents stifle scientific research.
Consumer Watchdog of Santa Monica, Ca., and
Jeanne Loring, head of the stem cell program at Scripps, are pushing the eight-year-old case along with the
Public Patent Foundation of New York, which is doing the legal lifting. In 2013, the patent foundation won
the famous Myriad case in which the Supreme Court ruled that genes cannot be patented because they occur naturally in nature.
In a statement about Friday’s appeal to the high court, Dan Ravicher, executive director of the
 |
Dan Ravicher and Jeanne Loring at Post Office when
they made the first filing in the WARF case in 2006. |
foundation, said,
“The Court of Appeals’ refusal to allow Consumer Watchdog to appeal the (Patent and Trademark Office’s) faulty decision to uphold a patent on human embryonic stem cells is a clear violation of the express language of statutes passed by Congress and signed by the President to empower the public to seek revocation of invalid patents.”
John M. Simpson, stem cell project director for Consumer Watchdog, said,
“The patent should clearly be rejected because it covers ineligible subject matter and was obvious in view of earlier research.”
Loring said,
“This is an important battle. Human embryonic stem cells hold great promise for advancing human health, and no one has the ethical right to own them,”
Others who have filed affidavits supporting the challenge include Douglas Melton and Chad Cowan of Harvard and Alan Trounson, who was then with Monash University. He later became president of the $3 billion California stem cell agency but left that organization earlier this year to return to Australia.
The research that led to the patents was performed by
Jamie Thomson at the
University of Wisconsin. Thomson has a lab at
UC Santa Barbara as well, where he is
also a professor.
Coincidentally the Supreme Court filing comes during the week when Jonas Salk, who developed the polio vaccine, would have turned 100. He famously commented in 1955 about patenting the vaccine.
In a televised interview, Salk was asked who owns the patent on the vaccine. Salk replied,
"Well, the people, I would say. There is no patent. Could you patent the sun?"
He quoted from a 2005 book on the vaccine that reported that Salk dissuaded his backers from seeking a patent because his techniques weren’t novel. He said his work was based on years of prior work by others.
The patent attorney looking into the matter for Salk and the backers said,
"If there were any patentable novelty to be found in this phase, it would lie within an extremely narrow scope and would be of doubtful value."
That is not much different than the argument being made by Loring, Consumer Watchdog and the Public Patent Foundation.
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