A Utah-based company was allowed to patent genes linked to an inherited form of breast cancer in a landmark ruling by a US federal appeals court on Friday.
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The lawsuit was filed in 2009 by a coalition of patient advocacy and medical groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union.
The plaintiffs had argued that the company was claiming an "illegal monopoly over "products of nature, laws of nature and/or natural phenomena, and abstract ideas or basic human knowledge or thought."
But the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit decided such patents on isolated DNA molecules could be held, in accordance with the "longstanding practice of the PTO," or the Patent and Trademark Office, one of the defendants.
"The Supreme Court has repeatedly stated that changes to longstanding practice should come from Congress, not the courts," said the ruling.
Backed by pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly, Myriad obtained nine US patents in the mid-1990s on two genes -- BRCA1 and BRCA2 -- strongly associated with hereditary forms of breast and ovarian cancer in women.
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Source-AFP