Below are a few of the most important patent developments over the past year.
The USPTO made a number of updates — including to the systems most patent attorneys use every day and have been familiar with for many years.
Out with the old, in with the new
The Office announced in November that, as part of its IT modernization efforts, it was retiring the decades-old EFS-Web and Private PAIR systems. This follows the Office’s July 2022 retirement of the Public PAIR system. In their place, the Office is now using the Patent Center, a “one-stop-shop” for filing, application, and customer self-administration management. Patent Center offers several benefits for users, including:
Director Vidal states that Patent Center will also lead to better processing and greater efficiency for the Office.
USPTO releases COVID-19 diagnostics patents survey
In October, the Office released a study that examines innovation in COVID-19 diagnostics titled Diagnosing COVID-19: A perspective from U.S. patenting activity. The study made several key findings. First, COVID-19 diagnostic patents made up about 30% of all COVID-19 patents, and applications for such patents peaked in April, May, and June of 2020. Bucking the USPTO norm, in which large companies make up the bulk of patent filings, small companies and universities dominated in this space. While diagnostic technologies can implicate a wide range of technologies and scientific methods, nearly 80% of all COVID-19 diagnostic patents fell into just two CPC subclasses: G01N (Analyze materials by chemical/physical properties) and C12Q (Measuring enzymes, nucleic acids, microorganisms). The study is the first to focus specifically on COVID-19 diagnostic patents.
One millionth design patent issued
Design patents account for only 5.8% of all applications filed at the USPTO, according to Juristat data. Applicants in Technology Center 2900, which handles design patents, enjoy a 99% allowance rate — significantly higher than the USPTO’s overall allowance rate of 74%. In September, the Office announced that it had issued its one millionth design patent. Granted to Agustina Huckaby of Fort Worth, Texas, the patent claims an ornamental design for a dispensing comb. Huckaby is a cosmetologist who markets her products under the name Pomp and Powder.
USPTO releases five-year strategic plan
The USPTO released its 2022-2026 Strategic Plan in June. The Plan sets out five major goals:
Each of these goals encompasses one or more objectives (i.e., measurable, specific initiatives the USPTO will undertake to accomplish each goal), strategies (i.e., specific activities the USPTO will perform to accomplish those objectives), and key performance indicators (i.e., change indicators that allow the USPTO to measure its progress toward each objective objectively).
The Supreme Court decided a single patent case in 2023. However, there was no shortage of action elsewhere in the court system, including an unusually bitter and public dispute among colleagues at the Federal Circuit. The Supreme Court is also considering a number of petitions for certiorari in patent-related cases.
Amgen v. Sanofi
In Amgen, Inc. v. Sanofi, 598 US ___ (2023), the Court was asked to determine whether certain claims in two Amgen patent applications failed to satisfy the Patent Act’s enablement clause. Under 35 USC § 112(a), a patent specification “must contain a written description of the invention, and of the manner and process of making and using it, in such full, clear, concise, and exact terms as to enable any person skilled in the art to which it pertains, or with which it is most nearly connected, to make and use the same…”
The patent applications at issue contained claims for entire genuses of certain antibodies — specifically, antibodies that (1) “bind to specific amino acid residues on PCSK9,” and (2) “block PCSK9 from binding to [LDL receptors].” While the application’s specification identified 26 example antibodies that would meet the above definition, it clarified that the full genus it was claiming was much larger than those examples.
The Court held that the claims were not enabled within the meaning of § 112(a), explaining that If a patent claims an entire class of processes, machines, manufactures, or compositions of matter, the specification must enable a skilled artisan to make and use the entire class.
Petitions for certiorari
As of December 2023, the Supreme Court is considering petitions for certiorari in several patent-related cases. Those petitions, as well as the issues they present to the Court, are below:
Given that the Court hears very few of the cases presented to it, it is unlikely that the Court will grant certiorari in many of these cases — particularly in light of its recent history of declining to review cases presenting § 101 issues.
Update: Federal Circuit Judge Pauline Newman suspended from hearing cases for one year
A special committee of the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit had found that Judge Pauline Newman’s refusal to cooperate with certain orders of the committee constituted “serious misconduct” and that the committee was recommending a suspension of case assignments to Judge Newman for one year or until she ceases her misconduct.
Judge Newman, 96, has been accused by colleagues and staffers of being unfit to discharge her duties due to mental disabilities associated with her advanced age. According to an order of the Judicial Council, the special committee investigated a complaint against Judge Newman in March and, after conducting more than 20 interviews with court staff, determined that she may be experiencing “significant mental problems including memory loss, lack of comprehension, confusion, and an inability to perform basic tasks that she previously was able to perform with ease.” The committee ordered Judge Newman to undergo a neurological examination and a neuropsychological examination. Judge Newman refused to cooperate with the order, even going so far as to file suit against her colleagues.
Now, the Judicial Council has unanimously made the following findings:
Accordingly, the Judicial Council ordered that Judge Newman be barred from hearing any cases, either at the panel or en banc level, for a period of one year. The suspension may be renewed at the end of that period if Judge Newman continues to refuse to cooperate or may be modified or rescinded if she chooses to cooperate.
Three patent-related bills were introduced in Congress in 2023. As in previous years, a handful of legislators have been responsible for the bills, most notably Thom Tillis, Chris Coons, and Dick Durbin. The bills are bipartisan in nature and would make significant changes to both patent prosecution and post-grant practice.
The Patent Eligibility Restoration Act of 2023
The Patent Eligibility Restoration Act of 2023 was introduced by Senators Tillis (R-NC) and Coons (D-DE) in June. The bill would make significant, sweeping changes to patent eligibility law. Specifically, it would abolish all of the judicially created exceptions to § 101 (i.e., abstract ideas, laws of nature, and natural phenomena) and replace them with the following categories of inventions that would be ineligible for patent protection:
With regard to the fifth category, the bill clarifies that such processes include, for example, methods of doing business, performing dance moves, offering marriage proposals, and the like. Furthermore, adding a non-essential reference to a computer by merely stating “do it on a computer” is not enough to render a patent-ineligible process patent-eligible. However, any process that cannot be practically performed without the use of a machine is eligible for patent protection.
Senator Coons stated that he believes changes to patent eligibility law are necessary because “[c]ritical technologies like medical diagnostics and artificial intelligence can be protected with patents in Europe and China, but not in the United States.” Likewise, Senator Tillis believes that “our current Supreme Court’s patent eligibility jurisprudence is undermining American innovation and allowing foreign adversaries like China to overtake us in key technology innovations.”
The Interagency Patent Coordination and Improvement Act of 2023
The Interagency Patent Coordination and Improvement Act of 2023 was introduced by Senators Durbin (D-IL), Tillis (R-NC), Grassley (R-IA), Coons (D-DE), Welch (D-VT), and Feinstein (D-CA) in January. The bill would establish a task force to increase cooperation between the USPTO and the FDA on issues related to pharmaceutical patents. There is a significant degree of regulatory overlap between the USPTO and FDA when a product claimed in a patent application is also subject to FDA approval. For many years, industry experts have alleged that applicants frequently make contradictory statements to the two agencies or fail to act with complete candor in disclosing information perceived to be harmful to their respective applications.
To remedy such inefficiencies, the task force would carry out the following functions:
The PREVAIL Act
The PREVAIL Act (i.e., the Promoting and Respecting Economically Vital American Innovation Leadership Act) was introduced by Senators Coons (D-DE), Tillis (R-NC), Durbin (D-IL), and Hirono (D-HI) in July. Its purpose is to overhaul post-grant proceedings at the PTAB to remedy perceived abuses inherent in the current scheme and to even the playing field between petitioners and patent owners. The PTAB has long been viewed as a petitioner-friendly venue, with one judge famously referring to it as a “death squad for patents.”
The bill would make several changes to post-grant law and procedure, including:
The cumulative effect of the proposed changes likely would make it more difficult for patent challengers to succeed at the PTAB.
Regardless of how developments over the past year play out, the best way to ensure that your patent practice is prepared for the challenges ahead is to base your decisions on objective data. Want to understand how Juristat can help you understand how industry changes impact examiner behavior, response strategies, and more? Request a demo today.