Opinions critical of the decision The decision was controversial. Those opposed to it found the reasoning poor, considered the decision to be destabilizing of patent law, and expressed concern about long-term effects on medicine. Gene Quinn, a well-known pro-patent spokesman, blogging in
IP Watchdog, stated one view of the decision: "The sky is falling! Those who feel the Supreme Court's decision in
Mayo is terrible are right." He added: Those in the biotech, medical diagnostics and pharmaceutical industries have just been taken out behind the woodshed and summarily executed by the Supreme Court this morning. An enormous number of patents will now have no enforceable claims. Hundreds of billions of dollars in corporate value has been erased. Quinn then called for the Federal Circuit to overrule
Mayo, as he asserted it had done with other erroneous precedents and predicted that it would do so with
Mayo: How long will it take the Federal Circuit to overrule this inexplicable nonsense? . . . Those well acquainted with the industry know that the Supreme Court is not the final word on patentability, and while the claims at issue in this particular case are unfortunately lost, the Federal Circuit will work to moderate (and eventually overturn) this embarrassing display by the Supreme Court. This will eventually be accomplished the same as it was after the Supreme Court definitively ruled software is not patentable in
Gottschalk v. Benson, and the same as the ruling in
KSR v. Teleflex will be overruled. . . . [T]here is still a lot of work left to be done by the Federal Circuit to finally overrule the Supreme Court's
KSR decision. It took almost 10 years to overrule
Gottschalk v. Benson, so we are likely in for a decade of work to moderate the nonsense [
Mayo] thrust upon the industry this morning. Kevin Noonan, a
biotech patent lawyer and editor of the
Patent Docs blog, criticized this decision and the Supreme Court broadly, for undermining precedent and the stability of patent law, thus broadly undermining the biotech industry. Noonan wrote: It is also clear that the Court has little time for the specifics of patent law generally, not surprising from a Court who characterized
obviousness law as "gobbledygook" not so many years ago. . . . [T]he Court also signaled its willingness to credit their theories of what drives and sustains innovation against the arguments, based on actual experience, from groups and individuals who have created companies and been involved in innovation in the biotechnology industry. And the Court seems equally ready to be influenced by the consumers of innovation, such as
amicus the American Medical Association, who understandably wish to have the maximum freedom to have their patients benefit from new technology (and the minimum interference from patent holders who would reduce their opportunities to profit therefrom). Robert R. Sachs, a patent lawyer and co-founder of The Bilski Blog, wrote: The Court's analysis creates a framework for patent eligibility in which almost any method claim can be invalidated. . . . Reading the Court's treatment of Prometheus' claim, one would think that claims are some type of qualitative instruction manual, a recipe that speaks to "audiences" such as doctors, about which things are "relevant to their decision making." Claims are no such thing: they are definitions that articulate a specific combination of steps or structures. They are objective in form and design, not subjective or advisory. The notion that the claims here "trust" doctors to "use those laws" is at best silly, and at worst badly misguided. Reducing the claim to this "instruction manual" allows the Court to analogize the claim to Einstein "telling linear accelerator operators about his basic law"—a low point in modern legal reasoning. Hans Sauer, an attorney for the biotech industry trade group,
BIO, said, "We are troubled that the Court's opinion fails to appropriately recognize the importance of personalized medicine, and of the research and investment incentives needed to develop new individualized therapies for untreated diseases." Kendrew H. Colton, a Chicago patent attorney, said that, because the ruling applies to the thousands of diagnostic patents that have already issued and puts them at risk of being invalidated, investors in personalized medicine "may revisit the value proposition for investments already made and may curtail or redirect future investments in new projects." Dr. Robert Wah, Chairman for the
American Medical Association, said that the Supreme Court had "prevented irreparable harm to patient care with today's unanimous decision to invalidate two patents that gave Prometheus Laboratories exclusive rights over the body's natural responses to illness and medical treatment", and said that the decision was "a clear legal victory that ensures critical scientific data remain widely available for sound patient care and innovative medical research." Another commentator, Professor
Richard H. Stern, who teaches computer law at
The George Washington University Law School, praised the decision because in it "the court for the first time agreed upon a full harmonisation of its prior and at times seemingly inconsistent judgments on patent-eligibility and how to determine it." In the same vein, this commentator praised the decision for reaffirming earlier precedents such as ''
O'Reilly v. Morse and Neilson v. Harford, which the lower court in the Mayo'' case had ignored or seemingly misunderstood. A business-oriented commentator viewed the decision as seeking to strike a balance between competing policy considerations: While the collective groans of patent professionals the world over are hard to ignore after the decision in
Prometheus, it was a necessary evil to safeguard against the likely potential for financial posturing of companies with exclusive rights over processes of the human body. Ultimately, the conclusion in
Prometheus is premised upon the public policy consideration that certain types of medical and diagnostic findings should not be afforded patent protection, as the need for unencumbered access to critical scientific data and study in the medical community overwhelms any alleged monetary disincentive suffered by the patent applicant. The Court recognized that patent protection should not serve as a stumbling block for continued scientific innovation and improvement in medical treatment methodologies.
Response by the US Patent and Trademark Office Prior to the Mayo v Prometeus decision the
USPTO practice of patent eligibility of chemical diagnostic method was governed by the 2006
CAFC decision in
LabCorp v. Metabolite, Inc., which held such claims patent-ineligible based on
machine-or-transformation test. The
US Supreme Court dismissed its own
writ of certiorari for
LabCorp v. Metabolite, Inc. as improperly granted, but the minority opinion in that case suggested a test, which was eventually adopted in Mayo v. Prometeus. The Mayo decision made medical diagnostics methods a
patentable subject matter.
US Patent and Trademark Office released preliminary guidelines for patent examiners in light of this case on March 21, 2012. On July 3, 2012, it issued a more substantial set of "interim guidelines" for "process claims in which a law of nature, natural phenomenon, or naturally occurring relation or correlation is a limiting element or step" that replaced the preliminary guidelines. Soon after "Mayo" (in 2014) the Supreme Court decided another patentable subject matter case in
Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank International. In June 2020 the Office issued new guidelines on subject matter eligibility, which implement Mayo/Alice decisions and were incorporated into the
MPEP, particularly in Sections 2103 through 2106.07(c). ==See also==