Ex Parte Yu et al - Page 10


             Appeal No. 2004-1761                                                  Page 10                     
             Application No. 10/044,807                                                                        

             an in vivo utility.”  Id.  On the facts of that case – successful in vitro testing                
             supplemented by similar in vitro and in vivo activities of structurally similar compounds –       
             the court held that in vitro activity was sufficient to meet the requirements of § 101.  See      
             id.                                                                                               
                   The Federal Circuit confirmed in In re Brana, 51 F.3d 1560, 34 USPQ2d 1436                  
             (Fed. Cir. 1995), that human testing is not necessary to establish utility for a method of        
             treatment.  The invention claimed in Brana was a group of compounds disclosed to                  
             have antitumor activity.  See id. at 1562, 34 USPQ2d at 1437-38.  The claimed                     
             compounds were disclosed to have higher antitumor activity than related compounds                 
             known to have antitumor activity, and the applicants provided declaratory evidence of in          
             vivo activity against tumors in a mouse model.  See id., 34 USPQ2d at 1438.  The court            
             held that these data were sufficient to satisfy § 101; usefulness in patent law does not          
             require that the invention be ready to be administered to humans.  See id. at 1567, 34            
             USPQ2d at 1442.                                                                                   
                   Several lessons can be drawn from Brenner and its progeny.  First,  § 101’s                 
             requirement that an invention be “useful” is not to be given its broadest reach, such that        
             little or nothing of a chemical nature would be found to lack utility.  See Brenner, 383          
             U.S. at 530, 148 USPQ at 694.  Thus, not every “use” that can be asserted will be                 
             sufficient to satisfy § 101.  For example, the steroid compound at issue in Brenner was           
             useful as a possible object of scientific inquiry, and the polypropylene claimed in Ziegler       
             was useful for pressing into a flexible film, yet both lacked sufficient utility to satisfy       
             § 101.  See Brenner, 383 U.S. at 529, 148 USPQ at 696; Ziegler, 992 F.2d at 1203, 26              
             USPQ2d at 1605.                                                                                   





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