People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVII
No. 20 May 19, 2013 |
The
Lunacy of Gene Patenting &
Angelina
Jolie's Mastectomy
Prabir
Purkayastha
ANGELINA
Jolie's Op-Ed piece in the
Jolie
does mention in her Op-Ed, It has got to be a priority to
ensure that more
women can access gene testing and lifesaving preventive
treatment, whatever
their means and background, wherever they live. The cost of
testing for BRCA1
and BRCA2, at more than $3,000 in the
Not
surprisingly, the publicity over Jolie's action has given
enormous publicity to
genetic testing for inherited breast cancer. It has also
boosted Myriad's share
value it is up by 4 per cent already.
The
BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes have the ability to suppress cancer
producing cells in
the breast and ovaries. If these genes are faulty, the
chances of breast and
ovarian cancer rises sharply. Normally, there is no need for
any such gene
testing. But if there is a history of hereditary breast or
ovarian cancer in
family members over two generations, then such tests are
advised.
The
costs of these tests have gone up from $3,000 that Jolie
stated to $4,000
recently, despite all evidence that gene sequencing costs
have dropped
drastically. In the
PROFITS TRUMP
OVER LIFE
Consider
the consequences. A woman considering radical mastectomy or
removal of ovaries
and possible ability to have children, cannot get a second
opinion through
another test. And if she is not covered by suitable
insurance in the
The
issue is not only one of women's lives
and costs of such tests. All researchers are also barred
from any research on
BRCA1 and 2 genes. Only Myriad can conduct such research.
And if it permits you
to conduct such research, all the gains of this research
will also belong to
Myriad!
Myriad
did not get a patent for inventing the diagnostic method for
identifying these two
faulty genes; they instead patented the specific gene
sequence of BRCA1 and
BRCA2 as found in our bodies. And Myriad is not alone; the
USPTO has given
patents for a very large number of genes in the human body,
estimates varying
from 20 per cent to 40 per cent. According to USPTO, we are
walking repository
of other peoples' patented material and if we want to know
what we are
carrying, we have to pay huge sums to Myriads of the world
who hold these
patents.
Incidentally,
for all those arguing for greater incentive for private
research and therefore
such private monopolies, Myriad did not discover the BRCA1
and 2 genes. This
discovery was done by the
The
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and Public Patent
Foundation (PUBPAT)
filed a lawsuit in 2009 Association for Molecular
Pathology et al Vs.
USPTO, Myriad Genetics and others on behalf of
researchers, women
patients, cancer survivors, women's health groups,
geneticists, pathologists,
laboratory professionals, etc. The New York Federal Court
ruled in 2010 that
the patents on BRCA1 and 2 were invalid. The Federal Appeals
Court, which has
been very pro-patent and widely criticised for the major
distortions that have
taken place in the
MONOPOLY OF
GENE SEQUENCES
Obviously,
this case is of enormous importance. Monopoly of gene
sequences, if accepted,
would not only impose huge costs on patients but also be a
serious brake on
research.
Though
gene patenting is by no means universal, many countries
including
The
side arguing for stronger patent protection consist of
biotech companies and
those sections in the
Fortunately,
life form patents and gene patents are not universal. The
Indian patent law has
a specific provision 3(j) that excludes from patentability
of plants and
animals in whole or in part other than micro organisms. This
would preclude
gene patenting. In the European Union (EU), the European
Patent Office (EPO)
has interpreted the patent provisions similarly to the USPTO
though with
certain restrictions on life form patenting. However, the
individual country
laws still prevail over the EPO's interpretation and the
state of gene patenting
remains uncertain in the EU.
How
did this travesty of the patenting system start in the
Even
though the Chakrabarty case allowed for life form patenting,
it was still
limited to artificial life forms. Various genetically
modified organisms could
be patented after this decision, but it still was restricted
to only artificial
life forms. The
key change came when
USPTO started to accept patents on genes based on its
isolation from the
natural sequence. It means that if we cut a specific gene
sequence out of a
much longer sequence, it can now be treated as novel and
subject to patenting.
James Watson, one of the discoverers of the gene's double
helix structure, in
his affidavit in the US Supreme Court, called this lunacy.
After all, if the
gene sequence after isolation and within the body, codes for
the same set of
proteins, how can we treat the two as different?
ACLU's
challenge in the Supreme Court does not challenge life form
patents but only
patenting of naturally occurring genes. The larger issue of
life form patenting
is outside the scope of the current case. However, the
stakes of even this
limited challenge is enormous for both sides the people
and scientists on one
side and the corporations seeking monopoly over knowledge on
the other. The US
Supreme Court has recently corrected some of the most
obvious distortions of
the patent regime that even the high-tech industry in the US
were finding
problematic. It remains to be seen whether Court will stop
this lunacy of gene
patenting as well or continue with the private loot of
publicly generated
scientific knowledge.