Thanks, folks. Sorry for missing out on the discussion; it's been a bad few weeks here, and it's going to get worse before it gets better. Sigh.
Bartmans, I think I saw that suggestion (not to appeal) also on another site, not sure if from Mr. Noonan or whom; the problem is that while that would limit the damage to everyone else, it would leave Myriad significantly harmed, so I doubt that's going to happen.
Since the judge has already ruled the patents invalid, does this mean that everyone in the world can now claim interim rights, or will that part of the ruling be stayed while Myriad appeals? Will interim rights issues be in play even if/when the district court gets reversed?
Jim, one thing to keep in mind is that the claims were directed toward specific variants of the gene which Myriad had found were linked to an increased risk of certain cancers, primarily in certain population groups. Note also that these were tests for FUTURE RISK, not for detecting actual growing cancers, nor even about effectiveness of a given treatment. So, Myriad sampled a population that appeared to be at a high risk for certain cancers, figured out which genes triggered the cancers, and figured out which specific defective versions of the gene were the versions responsible for the increased risk. The patents weren't on "hey, you have a BRKA1 gene, pay up!" (which is how the media seemed to be playing it).
BTW, I sincerely hope you aren't using (dare I say infringing) these high-risk genes.
