Quake v. Lo

928 F.3d 1365
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJuly 10, 2019
Docket2018-1779, 2018-1780, 2018-1782
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 928 F.3d 1365 (Quake v. Lo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quake v. Lo, 928 F.3d 1365 (Fed. Cir. 2019).

Opinion

Chen, Circuit Judge.

*1367 This appeal arises from a decision of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office Patent Trial and Appeal Board (Board) finding the four claims of Dr. Stephen Quake and Dr. Christina Fan's (collectively, Quake) U.S. Patent No. 8,008,018 and Claim 25 of their U.S. Patent Application No. 12/393,833 unpatentable for lack of written description under 35 U.S.C. § 112 as part of three interference proceedings.

The claims cover a method of determining the presence of a chromosomal abnormality (called aneuploidy ) in fetuses by using massively parallel sequencing (MPS) technology to sequence deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) fragments from a sample of the mother's blood that contains both maternal and fetal DNA, identifying what chromosomes those DNA fragments come from based on their sequences, and determining if the test chromosome is over- or under-represented in the sample as compared to a reference chromosome. The claims recite a random MPS method for the detection step, meaning that all of the DNA in the sample is sequenced, as opposed to sequencing specific, targeted sequences. Quake's specification (shared by the '018 patent and the '833 application), however, only expressly describes detection of target sequences in its thirty-plus column specification.

The Board issued a first decision in 2015, finding the random MPS claims at issue invalid for lack of written description. That decision was appealed to this court. This court remanded to the Board to correct three errors and redo its § 112 analysis. On remand, the Board found that a citation to a reference and a single sentence in Quake's specification support random sequencing, but that the two, on their own, are insufficient to describe the claimed method of determining fetal aneuploidy through random MPS. The Board also found that the specification did not describe the final claimed comparison step in terms that would be applicable to random MPS, namely adjusting/normalizing for chromosome size before assessing the over- or under-representation of a chromosome. In this fact-specific case, substantial evidence supports the Board's findings on lack of adequate written description. The Board also did not reopen the record to admit expert testimony from another proceeding, and we find that the Board did not abuse its discretion in not doing so. Accordingly, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

The primary issue on appeal is whether the patent specification shared by the '018 patent and the '833 application sufficiently describes using random MPS to determine fetal aneuploidy, such that it meets the requirements of § 112.

A. Technology and Patents

Humans are normally born with twenty-three pairs of chromosomes. Chromosomal aneuploidy describes the condition where a fetus is born with either an abnormally high or low number of chromosomes. For example, Down syndrome is the presence of an extra chromosome 21. Historically, testing for fetal aneuploidy required invasive and risky procedures. One such procedure, amniocentesis, involves sampling amniotic fluid from the womb with a needle. Alternative non-invasive methods existed, but their accuracy was suboptimal.

*1368 The two competing inventors in the underlying interferences on appeal-Stanford Professor Quake and Chinese University of Hong Kong Professor Dennis Lo-both developed methods for diagnosing aneuploidies using cell-free fetal DNA (cff-DNA) from maternal blood samples. In 1997, Lo and a colleague discovered that cff-DNA circulates in maternal blood in small amounts. This discovery made possible new prenatal screening techniques for chromosomal and other abnormalities, but researchers developing techniques for assaying cff-DNA had to overcome interference from maternal DNA in the maternal blood sample.

Both Quake's and Lo's inventions, which are at the center of the interferences here, involve successful use of mixed maternal and fetal DNA samples to determine fetal aneuploidy. Assuming the mother does not have aneuploidy, aneuploidy in the fetus would affect the mother's blood sample such that the ratio between the amount of any given normal chromosome to the abnormal chromosome would no longer be 1:1.

Additionally, both inventions incorporate MPS technology, which allows for sequencing of large amounts of DNA samples simultaneously. When a sequence is long enough, it can be uniquely identified as originating from a certain chromosome. Counting how many sequences come from various chromosomes is useful for determining over- or under-representation of a chromosome, thereby determining the presence of fetal aneuploidy. MPS can be performed by "random" or "targeted" methods. In the random format, all DNA in a sample is amplified, then sequenced. In the targeted format, only the target sequence(s) are amplified, then sequenced.

Quake is the named inventor of the '018 patent. The patent's "Brief Summary of the Invention" states that the "present invention is directed to a method of differential detection of target sequences in a mixture of maternal and fetal genetic material." '018 patent, col. 4 ll. 43-45 (emphasis added). The '018 patent specification outlines four steps in the method: (1) obtaining a maternal tissue sample, preferably blood; (2) distributing single DNA molecules from this sample to a number of discrete reaction samples; (3) "[d]etecting the presence of the target in the DNA in a large number of reaction samples"; and (4) performing "[q]uantitative analysis of the detection of the maternal and fetal target sequences." Id. at col. 8 l. 35-col. 9 l. 6 (emphasis added); see also id . at col. 4 l. 39-col. 6 l. 60 ("Brief Summary of Invention").

The '018 patent specification consistently focuses on detection of targeted sequences, using the term "target" more than sixty times throughout the patent. See, e.g. , id. at col. 7 l. 62-col. 8 l. 17 (In Fig. 1A, "[s]hown in the wells are targets representing chromosome 21 and 22," "no target DNA is found" in well 2A, "[a] single run will have numerous random variations, such as wells that have no target sequence," "samples with no target will clearly result in no peak at all," and "wells with two or more targets [ ] will give peaks significantly higher.") (emphases added); col. 8 l. 35-col. 9 l. 6 ("[T]he number of reaction samples is selected to give a statistically significant result for the number of copies of a target in the DNA molecules;" "[d]etecting the presence of the target

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Bluebook (online)
928 F.3d 1365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quake-v-lo-cafc-2019.