Aggregated News

Several months ago we reported that a group of Australian plaintiffs had initiated litigation challenging the validity of Myriad's Australian BRCA patents. Much like its U.S. counterpart, the Australian lawsuit represents a frontal attack on the patentability of genes.

Here in the U.S., the gene patent litigation shows no signs of reaching a swift resolution. Over the summer, Myriad appealed March's widely-discussed district court ruling invalidating several of its key BRCA patents and claims, and the current appeal is unlikely to be the last, regardless of the outcome. In Australia, however, Myriad appears to be taking a different tack: offering to surrender its BRCA patent.

An Offer to Surrender. The development was first reported by the Australian news program Four Corners, which earlier this month ran a program (transcript) on the gene patenting debate and its impact on the availability of genetic testing in Australia. The program concluded with the following:

Three weeks ago, lawyers acting on behalf of Myriad offered to surrender ownership of its Australian breast cancer patent. In a letter obtained by Four Corners, the company stated:...