Biomedical Synergies, Inc.Download PDFPatent Trials and Appeals BoardJul 22, 20202019005491 (P.T.A.B. Jul. 22, 2020) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE United States Patent and Trademark Office Address: COMMISSIONER FOR PATENTS P.O. Box 1450 Alexandria, Virginia 22313-1450 www.uspto.gov APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE FIRST NAMED INVENTOR ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. 14/192,542 02/27/2014 Duke O. Kasprisin 52914.007 8724 25005 7590 07/22/2020 Intellectual Property Dept. DeWitt LLP 2 East Mifflin Street Suite 600 Madison, WI 53703-2865 EXAMINER TOMASZEWSKI, MICHAEL ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3686 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 07/22/2020 ELECTRONIC Please find below and/or attached an Office communication concerning this application or proceeding. The time period for reply, if any, is set in the attached communication. Notice of the Office communication was sent electronically on above-indicated "Notification Date" to the following e-mail address(es): IP-DOCKET@dewittllp.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________ Ex parte DUKE O. KASPRISIN, PAUL E. KOZLOSKI, SUSAN A. KOZLOSKI, AGNES VERCILLO, and JEFFREY K. WINSTEAD ____________ Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 Technology Center 3600 ____________ Before ANTON W. FETTING, BRUCE T. WIEDER, and AMEE A. SHAH, Administrative Patent Judges. SHAH, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 134(a), the Appellant1 appeals from the Examiner’s decision to reject claims 1–22, which are all of the pending claims. The Appellant’s representative appeared for Oral Argument on July 7, 2020. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We AFFIRM. 1 We use the word “Appellant” to refer to “applicant” as defined in 37 C.F.R. § 1.42. The Appellant identifies the real party in interest as Biomedical Synergies, Inc. Appeal Br. 2. Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 2 CLAIMED SUBJECT MATTER The Appellant states that their invention relates “to a computer software-based system for ensuring the safe and appropriate handling of such TM [transplantable materials] and NBI [non-biologic implant materials] from receipt to their use in surgical procedures and tracing such TM and NBI later in response to an adverse reaction investigation or recall.” Spec. 1, ll. 18–20. Claims 1 and 10 are the independent claims on appeal. Claim 1 is illustrative of the subject matter on appeal and is reproduced below: 1. A method for tracking the internal processing by a medical establishment of a piece of transplantable material provided by a supplier for subsequent transplantation or implantation into a patient, wherein a computer database, processor, and software program containing an organized set of instructions in coded language and having a plurality of graphical user interfaces are provided for storing and processing information, such method comprising the steps of: (a) assigning a unique identification code to the transplantable material upon its receipt by the medical establishment from the supplier; (b) inspecting the transplantable material upon its receipt from the supplier for an unsafe condition; (c) providing a comprehensive set of standard operating procedures adopted by the specific medical establishment covering at least one step for the login, handling, storage conditions, reconstitution, or surgical use of the transplantable material by staff members of the medical establishment in a manner compliant with prevailing safety regulations and industry mandates; (d) entering into the database via a graphical user interface data required by the standard operating procedures concerning how the at least one processing step for the login, handling, Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 3 storage conditions, reconstitution or surgical use of the transplantable material by the staff member was carried out; (e) processing such data entered into the graphical user interface by the software program which incorporates the standard operating procedures to ensure that the step for the login, handling, storage conditions, reconstitution, or surgical use of the transplantable material was conducted strictly in a manner compliant with the standard operating procedures by: (i) comparing the content of the entered data field against the contents of the corresponding standard operating procedures for that processing step for the login, handling, storage conditions, reconstitution, or surgical use processing step to determine if compliance with the standard operating procedure exists, including whether the data field was not completed; (ii) if compliance exists, then the software allowing the staff member access to the next graphical user interface relating to the next processing step for the login, handling, storage conditions, reconstitution, or surgical use of the transplantable material; and (iii) if compliance does not exist, then the software not allowing the staff member to access the next graphical user interface relating to the next step for the login, handling, storage conditions, reconstitution, or surgical use of the transplantable material; (f) assessing the patient after transplantation or implantation of the transplantable material for evidence of an adverse effect; (g) investigating any such adverse effect discovered in the patient to determine whether it constitutes an adverse reaction; (h) reporting any such adverse reaction to the supplier that supplied the transplant material to the medical establishment; (i) wherein the transplantable material is chosen from the group consisting of human cells, tissue, or organs intended for implantation, transplantation, infusion, or transfer to a patient, including, but not limited to: musculoskeletal tissues like bone, Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 4 tendons, fascia, ligaments, cartilage, and bioengineered bone products; skin; cardiovascular tissues like heart valves, arteries, veins, and pericardium; reproductive cells like sperm, semen, oocytes, fertilized eggs, and embryos; cellular therapies like stem cells, progenitor cells, cord blood, chondrocytes, bone marrow, and neural cells; dura mater; breast milk; eyes; corneas; organs; islet cells; parathyroids; autologous tissue; and synthetic and xenographic tissue used as replacements for human tissue; as well as non-biologic implants, including but not limited to: titanium screws, titanium or carbon-fiber cages or resorbable cages, fixation systems, saline or silicone breast implants, synthetic polymers, prosthetic hips, knees and other joint combinations thereof; as well as surgical instruments, equipment, reagents, and supplies associated with the transplanting or implanting of any transplant material into a patient; and; (j) wherein the medical establishment is an organization directed to the storage, research, transplantation, or implantation of transplantable materials chosen from the group consisting of hospitals, medical clinics, surgical centers, fertility clinics, tissue banks, organ donor banks, university and research facilities, diagnostic laboratories, and willed body programs. Appeal Br. 17–19 (Claims App.). THE REJECTION Claims 1–22 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 101 as being directed to a judicial exception without significantly more. OPINION The Appellant argues independent claims 1 and 10 and the dependent claims together. See Appeal Br. 8–15. We thus group these claims together and select claim 1 as representative of this group, with claims 2–22 standing or falling therewith. See 37 C.F.R. § 41.37(c)(1)(iv) (2017). Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 5 35 U.S.C. § 101 Framework A. Section 101 An invention is patent-eligible if it claims a “new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter.” 35 U.S.C. § 101. However, the U.S. Supreme Court has long interpreted 35 U.S.C. § 101 to include implicit exceptions: “[l]aws of nature, natural phenomena, and abstract ideas” are not patentable. E.g., Alice Corp. v. CLS Bank Int’l, 573 U.S. 208, 216 (2014). In determining whether a claim falls within an excluded category, we are guided by the Court’s two-part framework, described in Mayo and Alice. Alice, 573 U.S. at 217–18 (citing Mayo Collaborative Servs. v. Prometheus Labs., Inc., 566 U.S. 66, 75–77 (2012)). In accordance with that framework, we first determine what concept the claim is “directed to.” See Alice, 573 U.S. at 219 (“On their face, the claims before us are drawn to the concept of intermediated settlement, i.e., the use of a third party to mitigate settlement risk.”); see also Bilski v. Kappos, 561 U.S. 593, 611 (2010) (“Claims 1 and 4 in petitioners’ application explain the basic concept of hedging, or protecting against risk.”). Concepts determined to be abstract ideas, and thus patent ineligible, include certain methods of organizing human activity, such as fundamental economic practices (Alice, 573 U.S. at 219–20; Bilski, 561 U.S. at 611); mathematical formulas (Parker v. Flook, 437 U.S. 584, 594–95 (1978)); and mental processes (Gottschalk v. Benson, 409 U.S. 63, 67 (1972)). Concepts determined to be patent eligible include physical and chemical processes, such as “molding rubber products” (Diamond v. Diehr, 450 U.S. 175, 191 (1981)); “tanning, dyeing, making waterproof cloth, vulcanizing India Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 6 rubber, smelting ores” (id. at 182 n.7 (quoting Corning v. Burden, 56 U.S. 252, 267–68 (1853))); and manufacturing flour (Benson, 409 U.S. at 69 (citing Cochrane v. Deener, 94 U.S. 780, 785 (1876))). In Diehr, the claim at issue recited a mathematical formula, but the Court held that “a claim drawn to subject matter otherwise statutory does not become nonstatutory simply because it uses a mathematical formula.” Diehr, 450 U.S. at 187; see also id. at 191 (“We view respondents’ claims as nothing more than a process for molding rubber products and not as an attempt to patent a mathematical formula.”). Having said that, the Court also indicated that a claim “seeking patent protection for that formula in the abstract . . . is not accorded the protection of our patent laws, and this principle cannot be circumvented by attempting to limit the use of the formula to a particular technological environment.” Id. (citation omitted) (citing Benson and Flook); see, e.g., id. at 187 (“It is now commonplace that an application of a law of nature or mathematical formula to a known structure or process may well be deserving of patent protection.”). If the claim is “directed to” an abstract idea, we turn to the second step of the Alice and Mayo framework, where “we must examine the elements of the claim to determine whether it contains an ‘inventive concept’ sufficient to ‘transform’ the claimed abstract idea into a patent- eligible application.” Alice, 573 U.S. at 221 (quotation marks omitted). “A claim that recites an abstract idea must include ‘additional features’ to ensure ‘that the [claim] is more than a drafting effort designed to monopolize the [abstract idea].’” Id. (alterations in original) (quoting Mayo, 566 U.S. at 77). “[M]erely requir[ing] generic computer implementation[] fail[s] to transform that abstract idea into a patent-eligible invention.” Id. Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 7 B. USPTO Section 101 Guidance In January 2019, after the Examiner’s Final Rejection and Answer were mailed and the Appellant’s Appeal and Reply Briefs filed, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) published revised guidance on the application of § 101. 2019 Revised Patent Subject Matter Eligibility Guidance, 84 Fed. Reg. 50 (Jan. 7, 2019) (“2019 Revised Guidance”).2 “All USPTO personnel are, as a matter of internal agency management, expected to follow the guidance.” Id. at 51; see also October 2019 Update at 1. The 2019 Revised Guidance, by its terms, applies to all applications, and to all patents resulting from applications, filed before, on, or after January 7, 2019. 84 Fed. Reg. at 50.3 Under the 2019 Revised Guidance and the October 2019 Update, we first look to whether the claim recites: (1) any judicial exceptions, including certain groupings of abstract ideas (i.e., mathematical concepts, certain methods of organizing human activity such as a fundamental economic practice, or mental processes) (“Step 2A, Prong One”); and (2) additional elements that integrate the judicial exception into a practical application (see 2 In response to received public comments, the Office issued further guidance on October 17, 2019, clarifying the 2019 Revised Guidance. USPTO, October 2019 Update: Subject Matter Eligibility (the “October 2019 Update”) (available at https://www.uspto.gov/sites/default/files/ documents/peg_oct_2019_update.pdf). 3 The 2019 Revised Guidance supersedes MPEP § 2106.04(II) and also supersedes all versions of the USPTO’s “Eligibility Quick Reference Sheet Identifying Abstract Ideas.” See 2019 Revised Guidance, 84 Fed. Reg. at 51 (“Eligibility-related guidance issued prior to the Ninth Edition, R-08.2017, of the MPEP (published Jan. 2018) should not be relied upon.”). Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 8 MPEP § 2106.05(a)–(c), (e)–(h) (9th ed. Rev. 08.2017, Jan. 2018)) (“Step 2A, Prong Two”).4 2019 Revised Guidance, 84 Fed. Reg. at 52–55. Only if a claim (1) recites a judicial exception and (2) does not integrate that exception into a practical application, do we then look, under Step 2B, to whether the additional elements, individually or in combination, provide an inventive concept. 2019 Revised Guidance, 84 Fed. Reg. at 55. Among the considerations in determining whether the additional elements, individually or in combination, amount to significantly more than the exception itself, we look to whether they add a specific limitation beyond the judicial exception that is not “well-understood, routine, conventional” in the field or simply append well-understood, routine, conventional activities previously known to the industry, specified at a high level of generality, to the judicial exception. Id. at 56. Step One of the Mayo/Alice Framework Under the first step of the Mayo/Alice framework and Step 2A of USPTO guidance, the Examiner determines that independent claim 1 is directed to “a method for tracking the internal processing by a medical establishment of a piece of transplantable material provided by a supplier for subsequent transplantation or implantation into a patient by assigning” a code, inspecting material, providing a set of procedures, entering data, documenting data, assessing a patient, investigating and reporting adverse 4 This evaluation is performed by (a) identifying whether there are any additional elements recited in the claim beyond the judicial exception, and (b) evaluating those additional elements individually and in combination to determine whether the claim as a whole integrates the exception into a practical application. See 2019 Revised Guidance - Section III(A)(2), 84 Fed. Reg. at 54–55. Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 9 effects, and tracing the material back to the supplier, i.e., collecting information, analyzing the information, and displaying results of the collecting and analyzing. Final Act. 2–3 (comparing the claim to Electric Power Grp., LLC v. Alstom S.A., 830 F.3d 1350 (Fed. Cir. 2016)). When viewed through the lens of the 2019 Revised Guidance, the Examiner’s analysis depicts the claimed limitations as subject matter comprising “[m]ental processes—concepts performed in the human mind (including an observation, evaluation, judgment, opinion)” under Prong One of Revised Step 2A. 84 Fed. Reg. at 52; see also October 2019 Update 7. The Examiner further determines that the additional elements of the claim beyond the abstract idea “amount to no more than a recitation of . . . a generic computer structure(s) that serves to perform generic computer functions that serve to merely link the abstract idea to a particular technological environment (i.e., computers)” and do not “improve[] the functioning of a computer or improve[] any other technology.” Final Act. 3–4; see also Ans. 5–6. When viewed through the lens of the 2019 Revised Guidance, Prong Two of Revised Step 2A, the Examiner’s determinations indicate that the claim’s additional elements do not integrate the judicial exception into a practical application because they “do[] no more than generally link the use of a judicial exception to a particular technological environment or field of use.” 84 Fed. Reg. at 55. The Appellant disagrees with the Examiner’s characterization and contends that claim 1 “constitutes a comprehensive tissue management business method for transplantable materials like tissues and organs stored or used within a ‘medical establishment’” (Reply Br. 1–2) and Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 10 provide[s] a method in which the software program manipulates the computer to turn it into a compliance monitor for ensuring that the staff member is complying with the standard operating procedures adopted by the hospital or tissue bank employer for safely processing the transplantable material and properly documenting those process steps to enable the hospital or tissue bank to respond to a patient adverse reaction to the transplantable material or product recall within the industry. Appeal Br. 8 (emphasis omitted). The Appellant also contends that the claim “represents a significant advance over the prior art” (id.; see also id., e.g., at 11, 12), “improve[s] upon previous known technology for tracking and tracing transplantable materials” (id. at 13; see also id. at 14; Reply Br. 2), and “produces a result that could not be achieved via a paper and pencil tracking system that would have no lockout functionality or self- auditing feature” (id. at 9; see also id., e.g., at 11, 12). When viewed through the lens of the 2019 Revised Guidance, the Appellant’s arguments indicate that the Appellant contends that claim 1 does not recite a mental process under Prong One and “integrates a judicial exception into a practical application” under Prong Two because it includes an additional element or combination of elements that “reflects an improvement in the functioning of a computer, or an improvement to other technology or technical field.” 84 Fed. Reg. at 54–55. For at least the following reasons, we disagree. Under the first step of the Mayo/Alice framework and Step 2A USPTO guidance, we first determine to what claim 1 is directed, i.e., whether claim 1 recites an abstract idea and if so, whether claim 1 is directed to that abstract idea. The Federal Circuit has explained that “the ‘directed to’ inquiry applies a stage-one filter to claims, considered in light of the specification, based on whether ‘their character as a whole is directed to excluded subject matter.’” Enfish, LLC v. Microsoft Corp., 822 F.3d 1327, Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 11 1335 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (quoting Internet Patents Corp. v. Active Network, Inc., 790 F.3d 1343, 1346 (Fed. Cir. 2015)). It asks whether the focus of the claim is on a specific improvement in relevant technology or on a process that itself qualifies as an “abstract idea” for which computers are invoked merely as a tool. See id. at 1335–36. Here, it is clear from the Specification, including the claim language, that claim 1 focuses on an abstract idea, and not on any improvement to technology and/or a technical field. Reciting a Judicial Exception The Specification provides for “TISSUE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM.” Spec., Title (emphases omitted). In the Field of the Invention section, the Specification provides that the invention relates “more specifically to a computer software-based system for ensuring the safe and appropriate handling of such TM and NBI from receipt to their use in surgical procedures and tracing such TM and NBI later in response to an adverse reaction investigation or recall.” Spec. 1, ll. 15–20. The system “provides for tracking the movement of NBI from receipt into a medical establishment facility to their use in a surgical procedure.” Id. at 1, ll. 21–22. In the Background of the Invention section, the Specification discusses that when incidents related to infections, illness, and/or death in a transplant patient occurs, “good medical practice and public health policy requires an immediate investigation of the patient’s condition to determine whether the infection, illness or death was caused by the tissue, organ, NBI, or surgical procedure, as opposed to an independent condition in the patient.” Id. at 4, l. 28–5, l. 12. The investigation can comprise tracing a faulty surgical procedure to the surgeons and nurses, operating room, and equipment involved, or tracing a faulty NBI or TM to a supplier or donor. Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 12 See id. at 5, ll. 12–20. “Yet, such a tracing process is frequently impossible because many hospitals fail to log in the TM and NBI that they receive from suppliers and track their use in surgical procedures,” leading to patients receiving contaminated products. Id. at 5, ll. 20–26. Tissue usage information cards returned by a hospital to an issuing tissue bank allow the tissue bank to monitor usage of tissue and notify everyone of a recall, but “hospitals only return 50-85%, of these cards to the tissue banks.” Id. at 5, ll. 9–13. “Because of these abuses and other safety problems within hospital and tissue bank environments, regulatory and standard setting agents . . . are currently implementing mandates for the safe handling, storage, use, and tracing of TM,” but “provide no instructions or guidelines to the hospital or tissue bank for how to comply,” leaving to the hospitals and tissue banks “regulatory and legal liability for their failure to comply, but no tools to use to comply.” Id. at 6, l. 31–7, l. 8. The Specification discusses prior art systems of an organ procurement and transfer system, an organ donor exchange system, a transportation container, systems that keep track of samples with a laboratory, and systems for keeping track of the location of supplies that “do not address the proper handling and storage of those products.” Spec. 7, l. 9–8, l. 12. Further, the Specification discusses prior art computer systems that “store, monitor, and track patient information,” “assist[] the administration of medical care,” “permit[] a user to carry his personal medical records with him,” “monitor a patient in the field,” “collect data for [a] patient and communicate it back to a server at the home office for use by a doctor or nurse to tell the field practitioner what steps to take to treat the patient,” “permit[] a medical practitioner to carry a patient’s medical records with him in image form in Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 13 the field, consult medical on-line databases, and communicate remotely with other members of the medical staff,” and “track and monitor the patient’s symptoms to indicate how the administered drug is affecting the patient.” Id. at 8, l. 20–10, l. 10. However, these prior systems do not “address the safety of the organ or organ match for the patient,” “track[] the safe receipt, handling, or use of the organ, or tracing its use after surgery,” “prevent unsafe handling, storage, or treatment by the hospital of the organ,” “ensure the safe handling, storage, and treatment of the sample within the lab,” and “do not address the proper handling and storage of those products.” Spec. 7, l. 12–8, l. 12. Further, these systems can be complex and expensive (see id. at 8, ll. 30–33) and do not “permit queries directed to TM data,” do not “track the healthcare institution’s processing and handling of the TM,” “provide[] no mechanism for prompting or enabling the healthcare institution to investigate an adverse reaction occurring in the patient,” and are “without any functionality for tracking the processing and handling of the blood samples” (id. at 10, ll. 15–25). Thus, the invention aims to provide “a comprehensive computerized system that permits the tracking of the appropriate handling, processing, storage, and use of tissues throughout the tissue bank’s or hospital’s chain of custody of the materials” that would provide benefits and advantages of “prompt[ing] staff members of the tissue bank or hospital to record necessary data and properly handle, process, store, and use the tissue or organ product,” and of provid[ing] a search or query functionality that reliably enables the tracing back of tissues from patient to supplier after an adverse reaction is detected, or the tracing forward of the TM or Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 14 NBI material from supplier to patient or hospital in the event of a product recall that is issued by the supplier or the Food and Drug Administration. Spec. 10, ll. 26–35. To accomplish this aim, the invention “provides a comprehensive tissue management system for transplant materials like tissues, organs, and non-biologic implants” with a tracking portion that “verifies that staff members of a medical establishment like a hospital have handled, stored, transported, reconstituted, and used the tissue, non-biologic implant, or organ materials in a safe and regulatory-compliant manner from the point of receipt to the point of issuance or surgical use throughout the hospital’s organization” and that “is preferably computer-based,” “structured to provide appropriate prompts to the staff members to take the necessary actions to handle, store, transport, reconstitute and use the tissue or organ materials in a safe or appropriate manner,” and “will not permit such staff members to carry out a critical step for handling, storing, transporting, reconstituting or using such tissue, non-biologic implant, or organ material unless data has already been entered into the system to verify that a prior critical step has been taken.” Id. at 11, ll. 7–19. Corresponding with the disclosure, claim 1 recites “[a] method for tracking the internal processing by a medical establishment of a piece of transplantable material provided by a supplier for subsequent transplantation or implantation into a patient.” Appeal Br. 17 (Claims App.). We consider Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 15 claim 1 as a whole5 giving it the broadest reasonable construction6 as one of ordinary skill in the art would have interpreted it in light of the Specification7 at the time of filing. The method of claim 1 comprises the steps of: (1) assigning a code to material, i.e., “(a) assigning a unique identification code to the transplantable material upon its receipt by the medical establishment from the supplier”; (2) inspecting the material, i.e., “(b) inspecting the transplantable material upon its receipt from the supplier for an unsafe condition”; (3) providing procedures data, i.e., (c) providing a comprehensive set of standard operating procedures adopted by the specific medical establishment covering at least one step for the login, handling, storage conditions, reconstitution, or surgical use of the transplantable material by staff members of the medical establishment in a manner compliant with prevailing safety regulations and industry mandates; (4) entering data into a database, i.e., “(d) entering into the database via a graphical user interface data required by the standard operating procedures concerning how the at least one processing step for the login, handling, storage conditions, reconstitution or surgical use of the transplantable 5 “In determining the eligibility of respondents’ claimed process for patent protection under § 101, their claims must be considered as a whole.” Diehr, 450 U.S. at 188. 6 2019 Revised 101 Guidance, page 52, footnote 14 (“If a claim, under its broadest reasonable interpretation . . . .”) (Emphasis added.) 7 “First, it is always important to look at the actual language of the claims. . . . Second, in considering the roles played by individual limitations, it is important to read the claims ‘in light of the specification.’” Smart Sys. Innovations, LLC v. Chicago Transit Auth., 873 F.3d 1364, 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (J. Linn, dissenting in part and concurring in part), citing Enfish, 822 F.3d at 1335, among others. Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 16 material by the staff member was carried out”; (5) processing data by comparing information and allowing or disallowing access to data based on the comparison, (e) processing such data entered into the graphical user interface by the software program which incorporates the standard operating procedures to ensure that the step for the login, handling, storage conditions, reconstitution, or surgical use of the transplantable material was conducted strictly in a manner compliant with the standard operating procedures by: (i) comparing the content of the entered data field against the contents of the corresponding standard operating procedures for that processing step for the login, handling, storage conditions, reconstitution, or surgical use processing step to determine if compliance with the standard operating procedure exists, including whether the data field was not completed; (ii) if compliance exists, then the software allowing the staff member access to the next graphical user interface relating to the next processing step for the login, handling, storage conditions, reconstitution, or surgical use of the transplantable material; and (iii) if compliance does not exist, then the software not allowing the staff member to access the next graphical user interface relating to the next step for the login, handling, storage conditions, reconstitution, or surgical use of the transplantable material; (6) assessing the patient, i.e., “(f) assessing the patient after transplantation or implantation of the transplantable material for evidence of an adverse effect”; (7) investigating results of the assessment, i.e., “(g) investigating any such adverse effect discovered in the patient to determine whether it constitutes an adverse reaction”; and (8) reporting the results of the investigation, i.e., “(h) reporting any such adverse reaction to the supplier Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 17 that supplied the transplant material to the medical establishment.” See id. at 17–19 (Claims App.). Limitations (i) and (j) of claim 1 simply narrow the type of transplantable material and the type of medical establishment. The preamble provides for “a computer database, processor, and software program containing an organized set of instructions in coded language and having a plurality of graphical user interfaces are provided for storing and processing information.” Appeal Br. 17. Other than limitation (e) of processing data by the software program, the remaining limitations of assigning, inspecting, providing, entering, assessing, investigating, and reporting are not recited as being performed by a computer. These limitations are recited functionally without any implementation details on how, technologically or by what algorithm, the assigning, inspecting, entering, assessing, investigating, and reporting steps are performed, and can all be performed manually and mentally. The Specification supports this finding. For example, the Specification discusses that a supplier can assign a unique identification number (see Spec. 26, l. 15), and hospital staff perform the actions of logging in material that “includes a unique identification number for each piece . . . (specially assigned where necessary)” (id. at 25, ll. 5–7), entering information into the system (see id. at 25, l. 20–26, l. 14), inspecting the material (see id. at 26, l. 24–27, l. 9), “creat[ing] specific policies and procedures regarding how it should handle, store, and transplant the transplantable material” (id. at 27, ll. 10–12), and performing a post- operative assessment and determining whether an adverse effect has occurred, after which the hospital notifies the tissue bank and enters data into a system (see id. at 16, ll. 5–14; 17, ll. 9–15). See also id. at 31, Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 18 ll. 19–29; 33, ll. 10–15. The Specification makes clear, “[a] critical component for the comprehensive tissue management method 26 of the present invention is the hospital staff 202. As shown in Fig, 3, a trained staff member must be designated with responsibility for each of the process steps described above.” Spec. 30, ll. 8–10; see also id. at 38, ll. 21–25. When considered collectively and under the broadest reasonable interpretation, the limitations of claim 1 recite a method for tracking processing of transplantable material to ensure compliance with procedures by assigning, providing, entering, processing, and limiting access to data, inspecting the material, assessing a patient, investigating the results of the assessment, and reporting the results of the investigation.8 This is an abstract idea comprising “[m]ental processes—concepts performed in the human mind (including an observation, evaluation, judgment, opinion)” and a “[c]ertain method[] of organizing human activity— . . . managing personal behavior or relationships or interactions between people (including social activities, teaching, and following rules or instructions).” 2019 Revised Guidance, 84 Fed. Reg. at 52. We note that under the Appellant’s characterization of claim 1 reciting a method for compliance (see Appeal Br. 8), the claim still recites an abstract idea of a mental process and a method of organizing human activity of managing personal behavior. The courts have held similar concepts to be abstract. For example, the Federal Circuit has held abstract the concepts of the “simple information 8 We note that this characterization is similar to the Examiner’s, and that “[a]n abstract idea can generally be described at different levels of abstraction.” Apple, Inc. v. Ameranth, Inc., 842 F.3d 1229, 1240 (Fed. Cir. 2016). The Board’s “slight revision of its abstract idea analysis does not impact the patentability analysis.” Id. at 1241. Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 19 exchange” of “keeping track of deadlines for clients and carrying out two- way communications with clients relevant to meeting those deadlines [and] using computers and networks to do so” in WhitServe LLC v. Donuts Inc., 809 F. App’x 929, 933 (Fed. Cir. 2020), “collecting information, analyzing it, and displaying certain results of the collection and analysis” in Electric Power, 830 F.3d at 1353, “cataloging labor data” to ensure compliance with jurisdictional rules in Shortridge v. Found. Constr. Payroll Serv., LLC, 655 F. App’x 848, 850–52 (Fed. Cir. 2016), tracking and storing information on financial transactions for budgeting purposes in Intellectual Ventures I LLC v. Capital One Bank (USA), 792 F.3d 1363, 1365–67 (Fed. Cir. 2015), and “controlling access to resources” in Ericsson Inc. v. TCL Commc’n Tech. Holdings Ltd., 955 F.3d 1317, 1327 (Fed. Cir. 2020). As such, we disagree with the Appellant’s contentions that claim 1 does not recite an abstract idea similar to that of Electric Power. See Appeal Br. 7; Reply Br. 4–5. Having concluded that claim 1 recites a judicial exception, i.e., an abstract idea, in determining whether the claim is directed to this abstract idea, we next consider whether the claim recites additional elements that integrate the judicial exception into a practical application. Integration into a Practical Application Under Step 2A, Prong Two of the 2019 Revised Guidance (84 Fed. Reg. at 54), we look to whether the claim “appl[ies], rel[ies] on, or use[s] the judicial exception in a manner that imposes a meaningful limit on the judicial exception, such that the claim is more than a drafting effort designed to monopolize the judicial exception,” i.e., “integrates a judicial exception into a practical application.” Here, the only additional elements recited in claim 1 beyond the abstract idea are “a computer database, processor, and Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 20 software program containing an organized set of instructions in coded language and having a plurality of graphical user interfaces,” elements that, as the Examiner observes (see Final Act. 4), are described in the Specification as generic computing elements. For example, the Specification describes a system that “comprises a general programmable computer 42 having a central processing unit (“CPU”) 44 controlling a memory unit 46, a storage unit 48, an input/output (“I/O”) control unit 50, and at least one monitor 52,” and “may also include clock circuitry, a data interface, a network controller, and an internal bus,” along with “other peripheral components such as printers, drives, keyboards, mice, barcode scanners, and the like.” Spec. 16, ll. 26–33; Fig. 2. “Additionally, one skilled in the art will recognize that the programmable computer 42 can utilize known hardware, software, and the like configurations of varying computer components to optimize the storage and manipulation of the data and other information contained within the comprehensive tissue management system 10.” Id. at 16, l. 34–17, l. 7. The computer system also “includes a software program 54 having a plurality of graphic user interfaces (“GUIs”) that permit the input of data” and the display of data. Id. at 17, ll. 9–11, 21. “The computer system on which the system resides may be a standard PC, laptop, server, handheld wireless device, or any automated data processing equipment capable of running software for monitoring the progress of the transplantable material.” Id. at 18, ll. 12–14. See also id. at 18, ll. 14–31 (describing generic computer components). We find no indication in the Specification, nor does the Appellant direct us to any indication, that the operations recited in claim 1 require any specialized computer hardware or other inventive computer components, Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 21 i.e., a particular machine, invoke any asserted inventive programming, or that the claimed invention is implemented using other than generic computer components to perform generic computer functions. See DDR Holdings, LLC v. Hotels.com, L.P., 773 F.3d 1245, 1256 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (“[A]fter Alice, there can remain no doubt: recitation of generic computer limitations does not make an otherwise ineligible claim patent-eligible.”). The Appellant contends that claim 1 “provide[s] a method in which the software program manipulates the computer to turn it into a compliance monitor for ensuring that the staff member is complying with the standard operating procedures adopted by the hospital or tissue bank employer for safely processing the transplantable material and properly documenting those process steps to enable the hospital or tissue bank to respond to a patient adverse reaction to the transplantable material or product recall within the industry.” Appeal Br. 8; see also Reply Br. 5. We disagree. Rather, the claim recites steps that are mostly performed manually/mentally and uses a computer in its ordinary capacity to receive, process, and display information. At best, the additional elements outside the abstract idea link the need for complying with the use of standard operating procedures (id.) to the particular technological environment of the Internet and computers. See Alice, 573 U.S. at 223 (holding that attempting to limit the use of an abstract idea to a particular technological environment does not make a claim patent- eligible) (quoting Bilski, 561 U.S. at 610–11); Affinity Labs of Tex., LLC v. DIRECTV, LLC, 838 F.3d 1253, 1259 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (“[M]erely limiting the field of use of the abstract idea to a particular existing technological environment does not render the claim[] any less abstract”). Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 22 The Appellant also contends that claim 1’s “software program with its ‘lock-out’ functionality makes the methods for properly tracking and tracing the transplantable materials self-auditing,” and “elevates the methods to something more than an abstract idea” and improves a “computerized system.” Appeal Br. 8, 11.9 We disagree. Claim 1 does not recite limitations reciting tracing, a “lock-out” function, or “self-auditing.” To the extent the Appellant relies on limitation (e) reciting the conditional allowing of a staff member to the next graphical interface (see Reply Br. 4), we note that controlling access to data based on criteria is part of the abstract idea, i.e., not an additional element, and is an abstract idea itself. Dropbox, Inc. v. Synchronoss Techs., Inc., No. 2019-1765, 2020 WL 3400682, at *3 (Fed. Cir. June 19, 2020); Smartflash LLC v. Apple Inc., 680 F. App’x 977, 982 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (holding abstract controlling access to content data). Ericsson, 955 F.3d at 1327 (holding that controlling access to resources is a process that “can be performed in the human mind, or by a human using a pen and paper” that long predates the claimed invention and “is pervasive in human activity”). To the extent the Appellant relies on limitations (d) and (e) reciting entering into a database data regarding how the processing of login, handling, storage, reconstitution, or surgical use was carried out by a staff member, and processing the data by comparing it to standard auditing procedures, entering and comparing data are also part of the abstract idea and do not recite steps describing “self-auditing.” 9 We acknowledge that many of the Appellant’s arguments may be properly evaluated under Step 2 of Alice/Mayo (Step 2B of 2019 Revised Guidance). Solely for purposes of maintaining consistent treatment within the Office, we evaluate these arguments under Step 1 of Alice/Mayo (Step 2A of 2019 Revised Guidance). See 2019 Revised Guidance, 84 Fed. Reg. at 55. Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 23 The Appellant argues that, similar to DDR Holdings, claim 1 does not “recite the performance of a business practice known from the pre-Internet world along with the requirement that it be performed on the Internet,” but rather recites “an innovative computer-implemented software system that produces a result that could not be achieved via a paper and pencil tracking system that would have no lock-out functionality or self-auditing feature.” Appeal Br. 9; Reply Br. 6. However, the Appellant does not provide reasoning or evidence, and we do not see from the claim, how the limitations claim a technological solution to computer-based problem, i.e., a solution “necessarily rooted in computer technology in order to overcome a problem specifically arising in the realm of computer networks.” DDR Holdings, 773 F.3d at 1257; cf. Appeal Br. 9, 15. The Appellant does not specify what problem is being addressed by the inventors. See Appeal Br. 9–15. At best, the Appellant contends, and the Specification indicates, that the invention addresses the problems of “individual hospitals and tissue banks all too often ignor[ing] these mandates [regarding documentation] in practice, and their staff members ignor[ing] the necessary steps for properly handling and documenting transplantable materials through ignorance or lack of commitment.” Appeal Br. 15. Further, “employer institutions had to rely upon periodic human auditing of their human staff members’ actions for treating the transplantable materials and documenting such steps to ensure compliance with their standard operating procedures (to the extent that they even existed).” Id.; see also Reply Br. 11–12 (discussing previous problems related to infections and recall difficulties); Spec. 8, l. 13–10, l. 25; supra. However, as the Appellant acknowledges, ensuring compliance with standard procedures and providing adequate documentation are not problems Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 24 rooted in technology, but existed prior to the internet. See Appeal Br. 15; Spec. 8, l. 13–10, l. 25. Further, the purported solution comprises a generic computer operating in its ordinary and conventional capacity. See supra; see also Alice, 573 U.S. at 224–26. The Appellant does not contend that they invented any of the claimed components or their basic functions or that those components, claimed generally, were unknown in the art as of time of the invention. See Affinity Labs, 838 F.3d at 1270. The “focus” of the claim is not “on the specific asserted improvement in computer capabilities” (Enfish, 822 F.3d at 1336), but rather on using a computer to implement the abstract idea of tracking the processing of a transplantable material to ensure compliance to procedures. Regarding the Appellant’s references to McRO, Inc. v. Bandai Namco Games Am. Inc., 837 F.3d 1299 (Fed. Cir. 2016) and Thales Visionix Inc. v. United States, 850 F.3d 1343 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (see Appeal Br. 10, 13–14; Reply Br. 10–11), the claims there were directed to a specific improvement in computer technology. In McRO, the claims were directed to computer animation and used rules to automate a subjective task of humans to create a sequence of synchronized, animated characters. See McRO, 837 F.3d at 1314–15. Unlike Flook, Bilski, and Alice, it was not the use of the computer, but the incorporation of the rules that improved an existing technological process. Id. at 1314. In finding the claims patent-eligible, McRO noted that the “abstract idea exception has been applied to prevent patenting of claims that abstractly cover results where ‘it matters not by what process or machinery the result is accomplished.’ [O’Reilly v. Morse, 56 U.S. (15 How.) 62, 113 (1853)]; see also Mayo, [566 U.S. at 85].” Id. In Thales, the Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 25 claims were directed to a physical tracking system that used mathematical equations that were “dictated by the placement of the inertial sensors and application of laws of physics” to determine the orientation of a tracked object relative to a moving platform. Thales, 850 F.3d at 1348. In other words, the improvement was to the technology in a physical tracking system. Here, there is no such improvement to technology or a technological process. The Appellant does not assert an improvement in the technical or technological aspects of the assigning, inspecting, providing, entering, processing/comparing, assessing, investigating, and reporting steps. Here, the steps are not limited to how they are accomplished, but rather recite the result of whatever process is used to generate (i.e., assign), organize (i.e., enter), and analyze (i.e., inspect, process, and assess) data, and perform an action based on the results of the analyses (i.e., investigate and report). As discussed above, these limitations say little about how these functions are performed. See SAP Am., Inc. v. InvestPic, LLC, 898 F.3d 1161, 1167 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (explaining that the claims in McRO “avoided being ‘abstract’ in another sense reflected repeatedly in our cases” because “they had the specificity required to transform a claim from one claiming only a result to one claiming a way of achieving it”). Although the Appellant states the claim incorporates “rules” (Appeal Br. 12), these rules are part of the analysis of comparing data and allowing access based on that comparison. The Appellant also does not direct our attention to anything in the Specification to indicate that the invention provides a technical improvement, such as incorporating rules to automate a subjective task of Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 26 humans to improve a technical field, similar to those in McRO, or to an improvement to a physical tracking system as in Thales. The Appellant’s comparisons with Enfish (see Appeal Br. 10–11) are also unpersuasive of Examiner error. In Enfish, the court held that the focus of the claims was to “a specific improvement to the way computers operate, embodied in the self-referential table.” 822 F.3d at 1336. Specifically, “the claims [were] not simply directed to any form of storing tabular data, but instead [were] specifically directed to a self-referential table for a computer database.” Id. at 1337. The Specification provided that “the self-referential table function[ed] differently than conventional database structures” (id.) and improved “the way a computer stores and retrieves data in memory” (id. at 1339). Here, however, the claim receives information and at best, organizes it into a conventional database, but does not use or create an unconventional database structure. The focus of the claim is unrelated to how databases and tables function, and the Appellant does not purport to have invented the claimed database. The claim does not recite any improvement to the way in which the database stores or organizes information analogous to the self-referential table in Enfish. The Appellant repeatedly argues that claim 1 is not directed to an abstract idea because it improves prior art systems. See Appeal Br. 8 (arguing the invention “represents a significant advance over the prior art known before 2006 in the medical industry where staff members had to rely upon standard operating procedures written down on paper (to the extent that they existed at all), and in many cases failed to adhere to those standard operating procedures in their own actions and paper documentation with the result that adverse reaction investigations and product recalls floundered”); Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 27 9 (citing DDR Holdings and arguing that the invention “incorporat[es] instead an innovative computer-implemented software system that produces a result that could not be achieved via a paper and pencil tracking system that would have no lock-out functionality or self-auditing feature.”); 11–12 (citing BASCOM Glob. Internet Servs., Inc. v. AT&T Mobility LLC, 827 F.3d 1341 (Fed. Cir. 2016) and arguing claim 1 “define[s] the associated tissue tracking and tracing system via the lock-out functionality and self-auditing features of the software run on a computer system that makes significant improvements over the prior art computer inventory control systems . . . and certainly over pen and paper systems otherwise known in the prior art”); 12 (citing Trading Tech. Int'l, Inc. v. CQG, INC., 675 F. App’x 1001 (Fed. Cir. 2017) and arguing “[h]ere, Applicant’s method claims are directed to a software-implemented computerized tissue tracking and tracing system that adds compliance monitoring via the lock-out functionality and self-auditing features that were previously unavailable in and improve upon prior art systems. [The] Examiner . . . has already determined that Applicant’s method claims are patentable under Sections 102 and 103, so the claims should be patent-eligible under Section 101 too.”); 13–14 (arguing “Applicant has improved upon previous known technology for tracking or tracing transplantable materials by providing a method embodying software that both teaches the staff member what needs to be properly done with regard to the piece of transplantable material, and self-monitors and enforces the follow through by that staff member in accordance with the standard operating procedures.”); Reply Br. 5–6, 8, 11. However, a claim is not abstract and does not “integrate the [abstract idea] into a practical application” (as the term is used in the 2019 Revised Guidance, 84 Fed. Reg. Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 28 at 55) just because the prior art does not disclose or suggest it. See Mayo, 566 U.S. at 78. “Groundbreaking, innovative, or even brilliant discovery does not by itself satisfy the § 101 inquiry.” Ass’n for Molecular Pathology v. Myriad Genetics, Inc., 569 U.S. 576, 591 (2013). Indeed, “[t]he ‘novelty’ of any element or steps in a process, or even of the process itself, is of no relevance in determining whether the subject matter of a claim falls within the § 101 categories of possibly patentable subject matter.” Diehr, 450 U.S. at 188–89; see also Mayo, 566 U.S. at 91 (rejecting “the Government’s invitation to substitute §§ 102, 103, and 112 inquiries for the better established inquiry under § 101”). As discussed above, the claim does not purport to improve a technological system or technical area, but simply uses a computer to implement a process that was previously performed manually and mentally. We disagree that claim 1 here is similar to those of Trading Technologies. See Appeal Br. 12; see also Reply Br. 9. In Trading Technologies, the Federal Circuit affirmed the district court’s denial of CQG’s motion for judgment as a matter of law and determined that “the claimed subject matter is ‘directed to a specific improvement to the way computers operate,’ . . . for the claimed graphical user interface method imparts a specific functionality to a trading system ‘directed to a specific implementation of a solution to a problem in the software arts.’” 675 F. App’x at 1006 (citations omitted). Specifically, the Federal Circuit held that the district court’s conclusion that “the specific structure and concordant functionality of the graphical user interface are removed from abstract ideas, as compared to conventional computer implementations of known procedures” was in “accord with precedent.” Id. at 1004. In contrast, here, Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 29 the Appellant does not identify how the claim solves a problem in the software arts. Here, a generic computer is used to receive and present data, claim 1 provides no details on the technological specifics of the graphical user interface(s), and there is no indication that claim 1 improves the functioning of the computer, makes it operate more efficiently, or solves a technological problem with a solution rooted in computer technology. Here, there is no improvement to the existing display or graphical user interface. Rather, the claim here is similar to those of Trading Tech. Int’l., Inc. v. IBG LLC, 921 F.3d 1084, 1095 (Fed. Cir. 2019) that did not “solve any purported technological problem.” Regarding the Appellant’s further argument that the claim is similar to those of BASCOM (see Appeal Br. 1–12; Reply Br. 9), the Appellant does not show how the claim here is similar to BASCOM’s “particular arrangement of elements [that] is a technical improvement over prior art ways of filtering such content” (827 F.3d at 1350). The patent at issue in BASCOM “claim[ed] a technology-based solution (not an abstract-idea- based solution implemented with generic technical components in a conventional way) to filter content on the Internet that overcomes existing problems with other Internet filtering systems.” Id. at 1351. The court determined that “[b]y taking a prior art filter solution (one-size-fits-all filter at the ISP server) and making it more dynamic and efficient (providing individualized filtering at the ISP server), the claimed invention represents a ‘software-based invention[ ] that improve[s] the performance of the computer system itself.’” Id. Here, there is no such improvement. Although the claim recites the structural element of a computer with a database, processor, and program, as discussed above, there is no claimed Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 30 technological improvement to these structures or arrangement of these structures. Any improvement in the invention lies in the abstract idea itself, i.e., tracking processing of transplantable material to ensure compliance with procedures. The Appellant further argues that claim 1 is similar to the claims held patent-eligible in Finjan, Inc. v. Blue Coat Systems, Inc., 879 F.3d 1299 (Fed. Cir. 2018) and Core Wireless Licensing, S.A.R.L. v. LG Electronics, Inc., 880 F.3d 1356 (Fed. Cir. 2018). Reply Br. 7–8. However, in both of those cases, as the Appellant acknowledges (id.), the court found that the claims recited a specific improvement in computer technology – by “employ[ing] a new kind of file that enables a computer security system to do things it could not do before” in Finjan (879 F.3d at 1305) and “an improved user interface for electronic devices, particularly those with small screens” in Core Wireless (880 F.3d at 1363). Here, as discussed above, there is no improvement to computer technology; rather, claim 1 merely uses a computer as a tool to apply the “comprehensive tissue management business method for transplantable materials” (Reply Br. 1–2). Accordingly, we conclude claim 1 does not contain an element or combination of elements that imposes a meaningful limit on the abstract idea that integrates the abstract idea into a practical application. Thus, we are not persuaded of error in the Examiner’s determination that claim 1 is directed to an abstract idea. Step Two of the Mayo/Alice Framework Under the second step in the Mayo/Alice framework (corresponding to Step 2B of the 2019 Revised Guidance), we find supported the Examiner’s determination that claim 1’s limitations, taken individually or as an ordered Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 31 combination, do not amount to significantly more than the judicial exception. See Final Act. 3–4. The Appellant contends that claim 1 “require[s] a computer software program that incorporates those adopted standard operating procedures for leading the staff member user through those steps” (Appeal Br. 13) and “produce[s] real-time compliance monitoring and enforcement of specific standard operating procedures” (Reply Br. 13). However, simply requiring a computer for “real-time” processing is not enough to transform an abstract idea into a patent-eligible invention. See Ultramercial, Inc. v. Hulu, LLC, 772 F.3d 709, 722–23 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (claims requiring “a substantial and meaningful role for the computer” did no more than instruct the practitioner to implement the abstract idea on a generic computer); Customedia Techs., LLC v. Dish Network Corp., 951 F.3d 1359, 1364 (Fed. Cir. 2020) (“We have held that it is not enough, however, to merely improve a fundamental practice or abstract process by invoking a computer merely as a tool.”) (citing cases). The Appellant also argues that claim 1’s features of lock-out functionality and self-auditing “provide that ‘something extra’ that converts the system, even should it be determined to represent an abstract idea, into subject matter that is eligible for patent protection under Section 101,” similar to Berkheimer v. HP, Inc., 881 F.3d 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2018). Appeal Br. 14. The Berkheimer decision arose in the context of District Court patent infringement litigation and stands for the unremarkable proposition that 35 U.S.C. § 101 eligibility issues are not always amenable to disposition in district court on pre-trial motions under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure such as Rule 56 motions for summary judgment due to the need to Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 32 resolve disputed issues of fact. In Berkheimer, the parties disputed whether there were improvements to computer functionality captured in the claims. Berkheimer, 881 F.3d at 1369. For some claims, the court held that conventional limitations of “parsing data, analyzing and comparing the data to previously stored data, and presenting the data for reconciliation when there is a variance . . . amount to no more than performing the abstract idea of parsing and comparing data with conventional computer components” and do not capture an inventive concept. Id. at 1369–70. However, for some claims, the Specification provided support for purported “benefits that improve computer functionality” and thus, a genuine issue of material fact existed to make summary judgment inappropriate for these claims. Id. at 1370. In contrast, as discussed above, here there is no support in the Appellant’s Specification that the claim, including the features of lock-out functionality and self-auditing, captures improvements to computer technology. As discussed above, under Step 2B, we look to whether the additional elements beyond the abstract idea, individually or in combination, provide an inventive concept. 84 Fed. Reg. at 55. Alice is clear, as described above, that under step two of the Mayo/Alice framework, the elements of each claim are considered both individually and “as an ordered combination” to determine whether the additional elements, i.e., the elements other than the abstract idea itself, “transform the nature of the claim” into a patent-eligible application. Alice, 573 U.S. at 217; see also Mayo, 566 U.S. at 72–73 (requiring that “a process that focuses upon the use of a natural law also contain other elements or a combination of elements, sometimes referred to as an ‘inventive concept,’ sufficient to ensure that the patent in practice Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 33 amounts to significantly more than a patent upon the natural law itself”). In other words, the inventive concept under step two of the Mayo/Alice framework cannot be the abstract idea itself: “It is clear from Mayo that the ‘inventive concept’ cannot be the abstract idea itself, and Berkheimer . . . leave[s] untouched the numerous cases from this court which have held claims ineligible because the only alleged ‘inventive concept’ is the abstract idea.” Berkheimer v. HP Inc., 890 F.3d 1369, 1374 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (Moore, J., concurring); see also BSG Tech LLC v. Buyseasons, Inc., 899 F.3d 1281, 1290 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (“It has been clear since Alice that a claimed invention’s use of the ineligible concept to which it is directed cannot supply the inventive concept that renders the invention ‘significantly more’ than that ineligible concept.”) (citation omitted). To the extent the Appellant argues that claim 1 recites elements that amount to significantly more than the abstract idea because the claim is novel over the prior art (see supra; Appeal Br. 15 (“there were no previously well-known business practices or technology available within the industry for achieving these laudable goals”), as discussed above, an abstract idea does not transform into an inventive concept just because the prior art does not disclose or suggest it. See Mayo, 566 U.S. at 78. Here, the Examiner considers the only additional element beyond the abstract idea to be the computer database, processor, and software program. See Final Act. 4. We note that, as discussed above with respect to Step 1 of the Alice/Mayo framework, claim 1 simply recites the functional results to be achieved manually or by a conventional computing system. The claims “provide[] only a result-oriented solution[] with insufficient detail for how a computer accomplishes it. Our law demands more.” Intellectual Ventures I Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 34 LLC v. Capital One Fin. Corp., 850 F.3d 1332, 1342 (Fed. Cir. 2017). The claimed functions of providing procedures, entering data, processing data by comparing it, allowing access based on the results of the comparison, i.e., the “lock-out functionality” (see, e.g., Appeal Br. 15) are part of the abstract idea itself; they are not additional elements to be considered when determining whether claim 1 includes additional elements or a combination of elements that is sufficient to amount to significantly more than the judicial exception. As discussed above, the only claim elements beyond the abstract idea are the computer database, processor, and software program with graphical user interfaces, recited generally, and that the Specification indisputably shows were conventional at the time of filing. See supra; Spec. 16, l. 26–18, l. 31; Fig. 2. The Appellant does not provide any supported reasoning or explanation that the functions of assigning a code, inspecting material, providing procedures data, entering data, processing data by comparing data, allowing or disallowing access to data based on the comparison, assessing a patient, investigating based on the assessment, and reporting the results of the investigation are not well-understood, routine, and conventional. Cf. Intellectual Ventures I LLC, 792 F.3d at 1369–71 (holding that “the entry of data into a computer database, the breakdown and organization of that data according to some criteria, . . . and the transmission of information derived from that entered data to a computer user, all through the use of conventional computer components, such as a database and processors, operation in a conventional manner” did not transform a patent- ineligible process into something more); Elec. Power, 830 F.3d at 1355 (gathering, sending, monitoring, analyzing, selecting, and presenting Appeal 2019-005491 Application 14/192,542 35 information does not transform the abstract process into a patent-eligible invention); FairWarning IP, LLC v. Iatric Sys., Inc., 839 F.3d 1089, 1095 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (generating a rule related to accessing information, applying the rule, and storing and announcing the result did not transform the abstract idea into a patent-eligible invention). Thus, we are not persuaded of error in the Examiner’s determination that the limitations of claim 1 do not transform the claim into significantly more than the abstract idea. For at least the reasons above, we sustain the Examiner’s rejection under 35 U.S.C. § 101 of independent claim 1 and of claims 2–22, the rejection of which stands with claim 1. CONCLUSION The Examiner’s decision to reject claims 1–22 under 35 U.S.C. § 101 is sustained. In summary: Claims Rejected 35 U.S.C. § Reference(s)/Basis Affirmed Reversed 1–22 101 Eligibility 1–22 TIME PERIOD FOR RESPONSE No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a). See 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(l)(iv). AFFIRMED Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation