News Roundup: Patent Reform Passes House, Human Provenance Project Pulled by UK

With so many developments at the intersection of genomics and the law, there is often a variety of interesting stories that, for one reason or another, don’t find their way into a full-length posting on the Genomics Law Report. In this post we recap several recent key developments and, at bottom, round up all of the recent tweets from @genomicslawyer.

Patent Reform Legislation Passes House. Several months after the U.S. Senate passed patent reform legislation that would make sweeping changes to America’ patent system, including a switch from a first-to-invent to a first-to-file system for awarding patents, the U.S. House of Representatives finally followed suit yesterday, passing a similar piece of legislation by a vote of 304-117. The version passed by the House, while similar to that passed by the Senate, contained a number of last-minute amendments (pdf).

One change of particular relevance to the personalized medicine community was the removal of a proposed safe harbor for second opinion genetic diagnostic testing, which was replaced by a requirement that the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) investigate the relationship between genetic diagnostic tests, gene patents and exclusive licenses. The USPTO would be given nine months to complete its investigation and to return to Congress recommendations for ensuring the availability of second opinion genetic diagnostic testing. (The USPTO study on genetic diagnostic testing was not included in the bill passed by the Senate in March.)

With both the House and the Senate having now passed patent reform legislation, the next step appears to be a House-Senate conference to resolve inconsistent provisions in the two bills, although according to The Hill it is unclear how soon such a conference will take place.

UK Government Pulls Plug on Human Provenance Project. Nearly two years after the Human Provenance Project was first unveiled (to substantial scientific criticism), the government agency responsible for the project, the UK Border Agency, has finally pulled the plug. The project would have used DNA and isotope analysis of tissues from asylum seekers in an attempt to evaluate their nationality and render immigration decisions. After a wave of criticism following the program′s announcement, and after spending more than $300,000 on screening, the UK Border Agency has scrapped the program in its entirety.

As we wrote back in 2009, the poorly conceived project threatened to disrupt what has been—in both the UK and in the United States—a slow and delicate process to craft legislation, regulation and policies that promote genomic science and the use of personalized genomic data while addressing concerns over the potential misuse of those data. As we wrote then, “with so much genomic science and policy yet to be written, even minor developments produce outsized effects, which makes the potential consequences of the Border Agency’s project so worrisome.”

Thankfully, the UK Border Agency quickly paused the project following initial concerns and, nearly two years later, it appears that no lasting damage has been done. Still, the Human Provenance Project should serve as a reminder to governments worldwide of the need to carefully and publicly vet state-directed personal genomics programs prior to their implementation.

Roundup of tweets from the intersection of genomics, personalized medicine and the law:

Filed under: General Interest, Genetic Testing/Screening, Genomic Policymaking, Genomics & Society, Industry News, International Developments, International News, Legal & Regulatory, Patents & IP, Pending Litigation, Privacy
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