96-5895. Notice of Hearings and Request for Comments on Issues Relating to Patent Protection for Therapeutic and Diagnostic Methods  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 50 (Wednesday, March 13, 1996)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 10320-10323]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-5895]
    
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    Patent and Trademark Office
    
    
    Notice of Hearings and Request for Comments on Issues Relating to 
    Patent Protection for Therapeutic and Diagnostic Methods
    
    AGENCY: Patent and Trademark Office, Commerce.
    
    ACTION: Notice of Hearings and Request for Comments.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) will hold public 
    hearings, and it requests comments, on issues relating to patent 
    protection for therapeutic and diagnostic methods. Interested members 
    of the public are invited to testify at public hearings and to present 
    written comments on any of the topics outlined in the supplementary 
    information section of this notice.
    
    DATES: A public hearing will be held on Thursday, May 2, 1996, starting 
    at 9:00 a.m. and ending no later than 5:00 p.m.
        Those wishing to present oral testimony at the hearing must request 
    an opportunity to do so no later than Friday, April 26, 1996.
        Written comments on the topics presented in the supplementary 
    information section of this notice will be accepted by the PTO until 
    Friday, May 17, 1996.
        Written comments and transcripts of the hearing will be available 
    for public inspection on or about June 14, 1996. They will be 
    maintained for public inspection in Room 902 of Crystal Park Two, 2121 
    Crystal Drive, Arlington, Virginia.
    
    ADDRESSES: The hearing will be held from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. in 
    Suite 912, Commissioner's Conference Room, Crystal Park Two, 2121 
    Crystal Drive, Arlington, Virginia.
        Requests to testify should be sent to Richard Wilder by telephone 
    at (703) 305-9300, by facsimile transmission at (703) 305-8885, or by 
    mail marked to his attention addressed to the U.S. Patent and Trademark 
    Office, Office of Legislative and International Affairs, Box 4, 
    Washington, D.C. 20231.
        Written comments should be addressed to Richard Wilder, U.S. patent 
    and Trademark Office, of Legislative and International Affairs, Box 4, 
    Washington, D.C. 20231. Comments may also be submitted by facsimile 
    transmission at (703) 305-8885, with a confirmation copy mailed to the 
    above address.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Richard Wilder by telephone at (703) 
    305-9300, by facsimile transmission to (703) 305-8885, or by mail 
    marked to his attention addressed to the Office of Legislative and 
    International Affairs, Box 4, Washington, D.C. 20231.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        On March 3, 1995, H.R. 1127, the ``Medical Procedures Innovation 
    and Affordability Act,'' was introduced. H.R. 1127 would exclude from 
    patentability any technique, method, or process for performing a 
    surgical or medical procedure, administering a surgical or medical 
    therapy, or making a medical diagnosis. In this notice, the foregoing 
    subject matter is referred to collectively as ``therapeutic and 
    diagnostic methods.'' The bill would, however, allow claims to such 
    techniques, methods, or processes that are performed by or as a 
    necessary component of a machine, manufacture, or composition of matter 
    that is otherwise patentable. On October 19, 1995, the Subcommittee on 
    Courts and Intellectual Property, Committee on the Judiciary, U.S. 
    House of Representatives (``Congressional Hearing'') held a hearing on 
    H.R. 1127.
        On October 18, 1995, S. 1334, the ``Medical Procedures Innovation 
    and Affordability Act'', was introduced. While S. 1334 would not 
    exclude subject matter from patentability, as would H.R. 1127, it would 
    grant limited immunity from patent infringement to certain persons. S. 
    1334 provides that a patient, physician, or other licensed health care 
    practitioner, or a health care entity with which a physician or 
    licensed health care practitioner is professionally affiliated, would 
    be free to use or induce others to use a patented technique, method, or 
    process for performing a surgical or medical procedure, administering a 
    surgical or medical therapy, or making a medical diagnosis. This 
    immunity would not extend, however, to the ``use of, or inducement to 
    use, such a patented technique, method, or process by any person 
    engaged in the commercial manufacture, sale, or offer for sale of a 
    drug, medical device, process, or other product that is subject to 
    regulation under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act or the Public 
    Health Service Act.''
        The critics of the patenting and/or enforcement of surgical and 
    medical procedure patents believe that ``it is unethical for physicians 
    to seek, secure or enforce patents on medical procedures.'' ``Report 1 
    of the Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs (A-95), Patenting of 
    Medical Procedures,'' p. 9, the American Medical Association (1995) 
    (``AMA Report''). The bases for this belief are that such patents 
    restrict access to patented procedures, increase costs of medical care, 
    and interfere with patient confidentiality. See, AMA Report, pp. 3-6.
        It is not the purpose of the PTO hearing to discuss the ethics of 
    patenting therapeutic and diagnostic method patents. Nor is it the 
    purpose of the hearing to consider economic analyses of patenting 
    therapeutic and diagnostic method patents. Rather, the purpose of the 
    hearing is to consider whether the problems identified by the 
    proponents of H.R. 1127 and S. 1334, some of which are discussed above, 
    can be solved administratively, rather than legislatively. In this 
    regard, the AMA Report draws a distinction between inventions in the 
    field of therapeutic and diagnostic methods that are ``worthy'' of 
    patent protection and those that are not. The Report states, at p. 8, 
    that
    
    rigorous application of the standard [of obviousness] would not only 
    remove the procedures which are currently causing an uproar in the 
    medical community from patent protection but would ensure that 
    procedures worthy of patent protection could come into existence. It 
    seems reasonable to assert that generally the producers which were 
    non-obvious would be the ones that required additional incentives 
    and economic investment.
    
    The requirement of non-obviousness, along with novelty, is one of the 
    basic requirements to be met prior to a patent being granted. The 
    novelty requirement ensures that a patent is not granted when the 
    claimed invention is identical to an invention found in the ``prior 
    art.'' The purpose of the obviousness standard is to ensure that an 
    invention, even though novel, is not granted patent protection if it 
    would have been obvious at the time the invention was made to a person 
    of ordinary skill in the art or technology to which the invention 
    pertains.
        Accordingly, at the Congressional Hearing, the Administration 
    offered to hold hearings at the PTO to determine the extent to which 
    and how the problems presented by the patenting of therapeutic and 
    diagnostic methods can be solved by changes in standards and practices 
    within the PTO. In a letter from The Honorable Carlos J. Moorhead, 
    Chairman of the Subcommittee on Courts and Intellectual Property, House 
    Committee on the Judiciary, to PTO Commissioner Bruce Lehman, Chairman 
    Moorhead requested the PTO to convene hearings ``to determine
    
    [[Page 10321]]
    whether the problems identified by the proponents of H.R. 1127 could be 
    solved administratively, rather than legislatively.'' Chairman Moorhead 
    suggested several areas of inquiry for such PTO hearings and those 
    areas of inquiry are identified in the following section.
    
    II. Issues for Public Comment
    
        Interested members of the public are invited to testify and/or 
    present written comments on issues they believe to be relevant to the 
    discussion topics outlined below. Questions following each topic are 
    included to identify specific issues upon which the PTO is interested 
    in obtaining public input.
        Information that is provided pursuant to this notice will be made 
    part of a public record. In view of this, parties should not provide 
    information that they do not wish to be publicly disclosed. Parties who 
    would like to rely on confidential information to illustrate a point 
    being made are requested to summarize or otherwise provide the 
    information in a way that will permit its public disclosure. 
    Individuals with questions regarding submission of such information may 
    contact Richard Wilder at the numbers listed above for further 
    information.
    
    A. Application of the Standards of Patentability, PTO Resources, and 
    Reexamination
    
        Chairman Moorhead, in his letter to Commissioner Lehman, stated the 
    following:
    
        (At the Congressional Hearing) there appeared to be a great deal 
    of concern that the PTO has issued patents in the field of 
    therapeutic and diagnostic methods that fail to meet current 
    patentability standards. This concern implies a need to inquire into 
    the standards applied by the PTO, including obviousness, in 
    determining whether or not to issue a patent. It also implies a need 
    to examine the resources available to the PTO to be used in the 
    examination process, including the prior art available to examiners. 
    It may also be worthwhile to consider whether changes to the patent 
    reexamination process may be useful.
    1. Application of Patentability Standards by the PTO
        In the field of therapeutic and diagnostic methods, as in any other 
    technical field, the PTO applies the statutory standards for 
    patentability, which include novelty, 35 U.S.C. 102, and non-
    obviousness, 35 U.S.C. 103. To receive a patent, an invention for which 
    patent protection is sought must comply with all statutory requirements 
    of patentability. The PTO examines each patent application on its own 
    merits and does not apply per se rules regarding novelty, obviousness, 
    or any other statutory requirement of patentability. Furthermore, the 
    PTO strives to ensure that its examining practices reflect appropriate 
    scientific and technological standards. The PTO thus seeks public input 
    to help ensure that it is properly construing and applying the 
    statutory requirements of patentability in the field of surgical and 
    medical methods.
    
        Are you aware of any problems related to the manner in which the 
    requirements under 35 U.S.C. 102 and 103 are administered by the PTO 
    for claims drawn to a therapeutic and diagnostic method? If so, 
    please identify those problems with particularity, citing, if 
    appropriate, specific situations or examples and providing steps 
    that may be taken to solve the problems.
    
        In responding to this question, you may wish to draw a distinction 
    between problems caused by a lack of clarity of the legal standards 
    governing 35 U.S.C. 102 and 103, as developed and interpreted by the 
    Federal courts, and those caused by how those legal standards are 
    applied by the PTO.
    2. PTO Resources for the Search and Examination of Applications 
    Directed to Therapeutic and Diagnostic Methods
        In making a determination as to patentability under 35 U.S.C. 102 
    and 103, the examiner must compare the claimed invention with the prior 
    art. The prior art can, inter alia, comprise knowledge, use, offer for 
    sale, or a sale in the United States or U.S. or foreign patents or 
    publications. Proponents of H.R. 1127 and S. 1334 argue that the PTO 
    does not have access to all materials that comprise the prior art in 
    the field of therapeutic and diagnostic methods. This is particularly 
    so, they argue, in the case of prior uses of inventions that are not 
    reported in journals, patents, or other publications. In this regard, 
    testimony is solicited on the following points:
    
        Do you believe that the prior art collection relating to 
    therapeutic and diagnostic methods to which examiners in the PTO 
    have access is deficient? If so, please suggest ways in which the 
    prior art collection may be improved.
        In responding to this question you may wish to draw a 
    distinction between prior art that may not be included in a printed 
    publication (including, for example, prior uses, including 
    procedures performed in operating rooms and physicians' offices, 
    prior knowledge, and prior sales) and prior art that is embodied in 
    a printed publication. You may wish to comment on how the PTO can 
    obtain access to obscure papers and other hard-to-obtain technical 
    publications.
    3. Reexamination of Patents in the Field of Therapeutic and Diagnostic 
    Methods
        A person may conclude that a patent is invalid and want to 
    challenge its validity on the basis of a ``prior art'' reference that 
    was not considered by the PTO during the original examination. 
    Proponents of H.R. 1127 and S. 1334 argue that it can be costly to 
    challenge the validity of a patent in court. An alternative to 
    challenging such a patent in court is to request that the patent be 
    reexamined in the PTO on the basis of that newly discovered reference. 
    35 U.S.C. 301. The bases upon which reexamination may be sought and the 
    degree of participation of a person seeking reexamination are currently 
    quite limited. Proponents of H.R. 1127 and S. 1334 cite these 
    limitations as dissuading third parties from seeking reexamination and 
    relying on litigation instead when a patent they consider invalid is 
    asserted against them.
        Another bill before Congress, H.R. 1732, would provide a more 
    effective reexamination procedure by permitting greater participation 
    by reexamination requestors throughout a reexamination proceeding, with 
    a right of appeal for the requester. The bill would also allow the PTO 
    to consider matters under 35 U.S.C. 112, first paragraph, except for 
    best mode affecting patent validity, in addition to those based on the 
    prior art. Some persons practicing in the field of therapeutic and 
    diagnostic methods suggest that the changes contemplated in H.R. 1732 
    are not sufficient. In particular, they suggest that the basis upon 
    which reexamination may be requested should be expanded to include 
    prior art consisting of unpublished prior use, including medical 
    procedures performed in operating rooms and physicians' offices. This 
    gives rise to the following question:
    
        Do you think the current reexamination statute requires 
    modification to solve the concerns of persons practicing in the 
    field of therapeutic and diagnostic methods beyond those 
    contemplated in H.R. 1732? If so,
        (a) please identify with specificity the modifications deemed 
    necessary to solve the concerns; and
        (b) explain the implications of such modifications, not only for 
    patent owners, but for the PTO.
    
    B. Publication of Patent Information
    
        Chairman Moorhead, in his letter to Commissioner Lehman, stated the 
    following:
    
        We also heard from witnesses that patent protection in the field 
    of therapeutic and diagnostic methods exercises a chilling effect on 
    the publication or dissemination of knowledge in the field. I 
    believe it would be worthwhile at the hearings you have
    
    [[Page 10322]]
    proposed to look into ways in which information contained in patent 
    documents could be made more easily and widely available to the 
    medical community. Perhaps a discussion on the role of early 
    publication of patent applications would be useful here.
    
        Proponents of H.R. 1127 and S. 1334 contend that patenting 
    therapeutic and diagnostic methods may have a chilling effect on the 
    development of new medical knowledge by creating an atmosphere of 
    secrecy among physicians to protect their proprietary interests. One of 
    the basic requirements of the patent law is that an applicant must 
    disclose his or her invention in a manner sufficiently clear so that 
    others skilled in the art are taught how to make and use it. Once 
    issued, a patent is published, and thus, the public can read the 
    information and learn from it. Another bill before Congress, H.R. 1733, 
    would improve the information-dissemination function of patent 
    documents. H.R. 1733 would require the PTO to publish patent 
    applications no later than 18 months after the earliest effective 
    filing date claimed by the patent applicant.
    
        1. Does the medical community use information in granted U.S. 
    patents or published foreign applications or patents, in particular 
    such information concerning therapeutic and diagnostic methods?
        (a) if not why not? if so, in what way is that information used?
        (b) In either case, are there ways in which the dissemination of 
    such information can be improved, both in terms of the form in which 
    it is presented and its channels of distribution? For example, would 
    the publication of patent applications as contemplated by H.R. 1733 
    improve the information-dissemination function of patent documents?
    
        2. Would the absence of patent protection for inventions of 
    therapeutic and diagnostic methods lead to a reduction in the 
    dissemination of information in that field due to a desire to protect 
    such inventions as trade secrets?
        3. Does the availability of patent protection for inventions in the 
    field of therapeutic and diagnostic methods inhibit the publication or 
    dissemination of knowledge in the field? If so, in what way and to what 
    extent?
    
    C. Experimental Use
    
        Chairman Moorhead, in his letter to Commissioner Lehman, stated the 
    following:
    
        The medical community has expressed concern that patent 
    protection for therapeutic and diagnostic methods will have a 
    chilling effect on the ``peer review'' of such procedures. Some of 
    the proponents of H.R. 1127 have suggested that this concern may be 
    overcome through a more expansive application of the ``experimental 
    use doctrine.'' An inquiry into this matter may be useful at the 
    hearings that the Administration has proposed.
    
        Note: The PTO has solicited written comments on the experimental 
    use defense to patent infringement. See, Public Hearings and Request 
    for Comments on Economic Aspects of the U.S. Patent System, 58 FR 
    68394 (December 27, 1993); Cancellation of Public Hearings on 
    Economic Aspects of the U.S. Patent System, 59 FR 1935 (January 12, 
    1994); and Notice of Public Hearings and Request for Comments on 
    Patent Protection for Biotechnological Inventions, 59 FR 45267, 
    (September 1, 1994).
    
        A concern among medical professionals is that the existence of 
    patents on therapeutic and diagnostic methods has a chilling effect on 
    the study of such procedures. In particular, there is concern that the 
    need to seek and obtain a license to practice a patented procedure will 
    restrict ``peer review'' whereby experimentation and testing of such 
    procedures are carried out to assess their quality and safety. It has 
    been suggested that some of these concerns could be avoided by 
    expansion of the ``experimental use doctrine.'' See, AMA Report, p. 5. 
    This doctrine would exempt from infringement certain acts considered 
    purely experimental, unrelated to any commercial use of the patented 
    invention. Yet, other than limited provisions allowing for testing of 
    patented pharmaceutical products for purposes of regulatory approval 
    (e.g., section 271 (e)(1) of title 35, United States Code), existing 
    law does not provide a general, statutory defense against a charge of 
    infringement for experimental use of patented technology.
        Despite this, the Federal courts have recognized a limited defense 
    to a charge of patent infringement based on use of the patented 
    technology for experimental purposes. This defense, referred to as the 
    experimental use defense, has been raised infrequently, and when 
    considered has been construed very narrowly. There are few cases 
    elaborating the nature of the defense, primarily because patent rights 
    are not frequently enforced against members of the public that use the 
    patented technology for purely experimental purposes. In these cases, 
    the courts have not recognized the defense where the accused infringer 
    has engaged in use of the patented invention for purposes of 
    commercially exploiting the invention, rather than for increasing his 
    or her understanding of the invention. In cases in which the defense 
    has been raised successfully, the experimental use in question was to 
    ascertain how the invention functioned or for purely philosophical or 
    academic reasons.
        Proponents of H.R. 1127 and S. 1334 contend that the need for an 
    experimental use exception in the field of therapeutic and diagnostic 
    methods is greater than in other fields of technology, including the 
    fields of pharmaceuticals or medical devices. They argue first that, 
    while the Food and Drug Administration has responsibility for 
    regulating pharmaceuticals or medical devices, peer review serves as 
    the primary regulatory mechanism for therapeutic and diagnostic 
    methods. Second, they argue that a patent on a surgical or medical 
    procedure acts as a barrier to peer review that could lead to a 
    decrease in the quality and safety of such procedures. Given these two 
    postulates, proponents of H.R. 1127 and 1334 conclude that an expanded 
    form of the experimental use doctrine is needed.
        The foregoing discussion raises the following questions:
    
        1. Does the grant of patent protection for therapeutic and 
    diagnostic methods impose a ``chilling'' effect on the peer review 
    of such procedures?
        2. If the answer to question 1 is ``yes,'' explain how such 
    patents have such a ``chilling'' effect.
        3. If the answer to question 1 is ``yes,'' do you think 
    modification of the present experimental use exception would reduce 
    or eliminate such a ``chilling'' effect?
        4. If the answer to question 3 is ``yes,'' how should the 
    experimental use exception be modified to reduce or eliminate such a 
    ``chilling'' effect? In particular,
        (a) What activities involving a patented invention should be 
    exempted from infringement under the experimental use exception?
        (b) Which entities should be able to take advantage of such an 
    experimental use exception? That is, should it be limited to 
    physicians or health care providers or should it extend to legal 
    entities with which physicians or health care providers are 
    affiliated?
        (c) What gains or losses to levels of basic research, inventive 
    activity, and investment in research-intensive industries, if any, 
    would you expect to occur if the nature of the present experimental 
    use defense to infringement was modified as you suggest?
    
    D. Foreign and International Experience
    
        Chairman Moorhead, in his letter to Commissioner Lehman, stated the 
    following:
    
        As you know, many countries, including developed industrialized 
    countries, exclude therapeutic and diagnostic methods from 
    patentability. I think it would be useful to invite testimony on the 
    way in which exceptions from patentability of therapeutic and 
    diagnostic methods are provided for in the laws of other countries, 
    the ways in which those exclusions are implemented,
    
    [[Page 10323]]
    and the effect such exclusions have on the medical community and 
    industry.
    
        The proponents of H.R. 1127 and S. 1334 have argued that many 
    countries exclude therapeutic and diagnostic methods from patent 
    protection and that the United States should follow their lead and 
    ``harmonize'' our law with theirs. Testimony is invited in this regard 
    in response to the following questions:
    
        1. Identify countries that exclude therapeutic and diagnostic 
    methods from patentability. As to such exclusions, identify:
        (a) the way in which exceptions from patentability of 
    therapeutic and diagnostic methods are provided for in the laws of 
    other countries (for example, whether they are specifically excluded 
    or defined as not being industrially applicable);
        (b) the ways in which those exclusions are implemented (for 
    example, whether they are strictly or liberally construed by offices 
    in those countries that grant patents);
        (c) the effect such exclusions have on the medical community and 
    industry in countries that maintain them;
        (d) any international obligations that would prevent such 
    countries from continuing such exclusions; and
        (e) the rationale for providing such exclusions.
        2. Identify countries that grant limited immunity from patent 
    infringement to certain persons that practice therapeutic and 
    diagnostic methods. As to such limited immunity, identify:
        (a) the way in which such limited immunity is provided for in 
    the laws of other countries (for example, whether it is part of such 
    countries' patent law or general tort law);
        (b) the ways in which such limited immunity is implemented in 
    practice;
        (c) the effect such limited immunity has on the medical 
    community and industry in countries that provide for such immunity;
        (d) any international obligations that would prevent such 
    countries from continuing such limited immunity; and
        (e) the rationale for providing such limited immunity from 
    patent infringement.
    
    III. Guidelines for Oral Testimony
    
        Individuals wishing to testify must adhere to the following 
    guidelines:
        1. Anyone wishing to testify at the hearings must request an 
    opportunity to do so no later than Friday, April 26, 1996. Requests to 
    testify may be accepted on the date of the hearing if sufficient time 
    is available on the schedule. No one will be permitted to testify 
    without prior approval.
        2. Requests to testify must include the speaker's name, 
    affiliation, and title, phone number, fax number, and mailing address.
        3. Speakers will be provided between 5 and 15 minutes to present 
    their remarks. The exact amount of time allocated per speaker will be 
    determined after the final number of parties testifying has been 
    determined. All efforts will be made to accommodate requests for 
    additional time for testimony presented before the day of the hearing.
        4. Speakers may provide a written copy of their testimony for 
    inclusion in the record of the proceedings. These remarks should be 
    provided no later than Friday, May 17, 1996.
        5. Speakers must adhere to guidelines established for testimony. 
    These guidelines will be provided to all speakers on or before 
    Wednesday, May 1, 1996. A schedule providing approximate times for 
    testimony will be provided to each speaker prior to the hearing. 
    Speakers are advised that the schedule for testimony will be subject to 
    change during the course of the hearings.
    
    (Authority: 35 U.S.C. 6(a))
    
        Dated: March 7, 1996.
    Bruce Lehman,
    Assistant Secretary of Commerce and Commissioner of Patents and 
    Trademarks.
    [FR Doc. 96-5895 Filed 3-12-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-16-M
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/13/1996
Department:
Patent and Trademark Office
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of Hearings and Request for Comments.
Document Number:
96-5895
Dates:
A public hearing will be held on Thursday, May 2, 1996, starting at 9:00 a.m. and ending no later than 5:00 p.m.
Pages:
10320-10323 (4 pages)
PDF File:
96-5895.pdf