Conflict Avoidance and the March of Science
In today's Los Angeles Times, columnist Michael Hiltzik rightly worries that Investor Funded Research Could Bring the March of Science to a Standstill. The story used to highlight the problem goes like this:
Dr. Philip H. Schwartz spent six years providing university researchers with neural stem cells cultured by a method he had helped invent at the Salk Institute in La Jolla.
. . . . His technique provided biomedical scientists with live tissue, an improvement over the dead cells, harvested from the brains of deceased patients, that had been the standard fare. . . .
Then his employer, Children’s Hospital of Orange County, got a letter from Palo Alto-based StemCells Inc. [warning] that Schwartz's program infringed its patents in the neural stem cell field and it wished to, er, discuss a licensing arrangement.
The hospital's lawyers advised Schwartz to stop sending out cells until they could make a deal with the company.
That was two years ago. There's still no licensing deal, and there haven't even been talks for more than a year.
Here's the part where one could rail against lawyers and litigation and the use of patent portfolios as revenue-generation tools impeding the progress of science. But that's an argument destined for failure (read: years of litigation; the potential for trial; and, an unhappy settlement by everyone involved).
When reading a story like this, the mediator in me looks for the human or institutional problem burdened by a legal issue of interest primarily to lawyers and academics. Here it is:
As it happens, StemCells has good reason to support the needs of academic researchers. For one thing, progress in fundamental stem cell research is likely to "improve the value of their [patent] portfolio," Schwartz observes.
For another, the company's founders include three leading academic stem cell scientists: Irving L. Weissman of Stanford University, David J. Anderson of Caltech and Fred Gage of Salk -- in whose very lab Schwartz developed his method.
None of the three appears to have gotten directly involved in the discussions, although one might think they would be especially sensitive to the need to balance the interests of private enterprise and academia. (None answered my requests for comment.)
So there has been no progress. The company says it did not explicitly threaten a lawsuit or even demand that CHOC cease distributing neural stem cells. But considering the firm's access to litigation firepower -- it's been waging a patent battle in court with another firm, Neuralstem Inc., since 2006 -- Dethlefs is probably wise to see its letter as a "veiled threat" and CHOC's lawyers prudent in suspending Schwartz's program.
Each side says it's waiting for the other to make an offer, but things may be moving backward. On Jan. 23, Dethlefs sent out a memo explaining to researchers that because of the "unresolved legal issue," it wouldn't be distributing cell lines that might come under the StemCells patents for the foreseeable future.
The people most vitally interested -- the scientists whose interests overlap -- haven't gotten involved in the discussions and "[e]ach side says it's waiting for the other to make an offer."
In other words, the dispute resolution mechanism chosen by the parties to a commercial problem that is impeding the progress of science and which could result in an economic benefit to one, all or none of the parties in the hundreds of millions if not billions of dollars, is to avoid addressing the problem at all.
Though stem cell research might be akin to rocket science, conflict resolution is not. I have personally seen the "parties with the problem" -- the inventors on either side of a patent infringement action -- walk into a joint session as if the other were the spawn of Satan, only to emerge less than an hour later talking about their shared engineering or design or scientific problems, slapping one another on the back and, in at least one instance, calling their evil adversary "bro."
To unstick the sticky legal problems impeding the progress of scientific inquiry, the parties with the problem -- who are invariably also the parties with the solution -- need to get together. Now. Period. With or without the assistance of someone trained in the art of dispute resolution.
The big policy issues can be left to the big policy guys while the stem cell researchers figure out how to keep the next huge elderly generation from the suffering and expense of Alzheimers and Parkinsons.
Get it together. Please.
