By
Kevin E. Noonan —
In a
decision that should surprise no one, the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari
today in Association for Molecular Pathology
v. Myriad Genetics, Inc. The grant was limited to the first question presented, whether human genes are
patent-eligible, and the Court denied certiorari on the other two questions (thus letting stand
the Federal Circuit's determination that screening methods using genetically
transformed cells are patent-eligible under the Court's Mayo v. Prometheus
precedent, and that a declaratory judgment plaintiff must cite actual injury to
have standing).
The
decision is unsurprising in view of the (relative) specificity of the question
presented and the overwhelmingly one-sided nature of the amicus briefing (see "AMP v. Myriad Briefed and Distributed for Conference"). Later posts will discuss potential outcomes and stratagems for ensuring that
the Court is fully informed on the facts rather than the rhetoric of gene
patents. But one thing is certain: anyone with skin in this game who
sits on the sidelines should be ashamed.

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