An Ottawa hospital is challenging the legality of gene patents that hamper the ability of doctors to freely screen for potentially deadly genetic diseases without fear of being sued for patent violations.
On Monday, the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) started a legal process in Federal Court that could decide if human genes can be patented in Canada.
"It's about whether Canadian hospitals can provide genetic testing to Canadian patients and really give them the top quality of care," said Richard Gold, a lawyer and intellectual property expert at McGill University in Montreal, who is advising the hospital pro bono.
There is a concrete example of a U.S. patent holder trying to hold up Ontario labs and hospitals from being able to deliver a genetic test to patients, says lawyer Richard Gold. (CBC)
Currently, some genetic tests can't be done in Canada because U.S. companies hold patents on the tests and the genes and have threatened legal action if the patents are violated by doing the tests in Canada, rather than the U.S.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled last year that naturally occurring human genes can't be patented and threw out patents held by Myriad Genetics Inc. to look for mutations on the BRCA 1 and BRCA 2 genes associated with much greater risks of breast and ovarian cancer, including a mutation that actor Angelina Jolie revealed she inherited.
CHEO's case centres on patents for genes associated with long QT syndrome, an inherited heart rhythm disorder that typically presents for the first time as a fainting spell or seizure during exercise or tragically in sudden death, said Gail Graham, head of medicine genetics at the Ottawa hospital.
"Genetic technology is just exploding. It's increasingly embedding itself at the heart of medicine," Graham said in an interview.
"Genes are not inventions. They belong to all of us," she added during a news conference.
Long QT syndrome is treatable, but it often results in sudden death of a young person. With genetic screening, doctors aim to treat it before tragedy strikes.
The hospital is not allowed to screen for genes associated with long QT syndrome because a U.S. company has patented the test and the genes.
"One of the licensees that's holding these patents wrote a letter to Ontario and said, 'By the way, we have a patent here: stay away," said Gold. "So Ontario did stay away. And so we have a very concrete example of this patent holder trying to hold up Ontario labs and hospitals from being able to deliver this test."
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled last year that naturally-occurring human genes can't be patented but there's been no similar gene patent case in Canada.
Beyond the specific example of long QT syndrome, CHEO hopes the Canadian legal case will also clear the way to allow more advanced genetic testing that can screen thousands of genes linked to human genetic conditions.
For example, if a newborn in the neonatal intensive care is thought to have a genetic condition that can't be identified conventionally, it's now possible to take a blood sample from the baby and read through about 5,000 genes that are associated with genetic diseases.
"If we were to incidentally discover that that child would have long QT syndrome, that wasn't what we were looking for, but we found that it was there, we would be prevented from learning that information and prevented from transmitting it to the patient and the family because of the existing patents," Graham said.
"What we are trying to achieve from a broader perspective is a court ruling that says, 'No, these particular patents are invalid or would not be infringed by the type of testing we would like to do.'"
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