DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES National Institutes of Health
PRINCIPLES FOR RECIPIENTS OF NIH RESEARCH GRANTS AND CONTRACTS ON OBTAINING AND DISSEMINATING BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH RESOURCES: REQUEST FOR COMMENTS
AGENCY: National Institutes of Health (NIH), Public Health Service, DHHS
ACTION: Notice
INTRODUCTION:
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is seeking comments on a proposed policy entitled
SHARING BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH RESOURCES: Principles and Guidelines for Recipients of NIH Research Grants and Contracts. This policy represents part of the overall implementation of recommendations made by the Advisory
Committee to the Director (ACD) to Dr. Harold Varmus, Director, NIH. Dr. Varmus requested that a Working Group of the
ACD look into problems encountered in the dissemination and use of proprietary research tools, the competing interests
of intellectual property owners and research users underlying these problems, and possible NIH responses. One of the
recommendations in the Report was that NIH issue guidance to the recipients of NIH funding.
PURPOSE:
This policy is a two-part document, consisting of Principles to set forth the fundamental
concepts and Guidelines to provide specific information to patent and license professionals for implementation.
The purpose of these Principles and Guidelines is to assist NIH funding recipients in determining 1) reasonable
terms and conditions for making NIH-funded research resources available to scientists in other institutions in the
public and private sectors (disseminating research tools), and 2) restrictions to accept as a condition of receiving
access to research tools for use in NIH-funded research (importing research tools). The intent is to help Recipients
ensure that the conditions they impose and accept on the transfer of research tools will facilitate further biomedical
research, consistent with the requirements of the Bayh-Dole Act and NIH funding agreements.
REQUEST FOR COMMENTS:
NIH is seeking comment not only from NIH grantees, but from the full
range of academic, not-for-profit, government, and private sector participants in biomedical
research and development. Widespread comment and participation by varied stakeholders in the
biomedical research and development enterprise is critical if these Principles, and their
implementing Guidelines, are to be effective in guiding the interactions of NIH funding
recipients with these sectors. It is also hoped that these Principles and Guidelines will
be adopted by the wider research community so that all biomedical research and development
can be synergistic and accelerated. The NIH welcomes public comment on the full text of the
Principles and Guidelines, set forth below. Comments should be addressed to: Research Tool
Guidelines Project, Ms. Barbara M. McGarey, J.D., NIH Office of Technology Transfer, 6011
Executive Boulevard, Suite 325, Rockville, MD 20852-3804. Comments may also be sent by
facsimile transmission to the Research Tool Guidelines Project, Ms. Barbara M. McGarey,
at (301) 402-3257, or by e-mail to nihott@od.nih.gov.
DATE: Comments must be received by NIH on or before August 23, 1999.
/s/ 18 May 1999B
Maria C. Freire, Ph.D.
Director, Office of Technology Transfer
National Institutes of Health
Certified to be a true copy of the original document
SHARING BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH RESOURCES:
Principles and Guidelines for Recipients of NIH Research Grants and Contracts
INTRODUCTION
The National Institutes of Health is dedicated to the advancement of health through
science. As a public sponsor of biomedical research, NIH has a dual interest in accelerating
scientific discovery and facilitating product development. In 1997, Dr. Harold Varmus,
Director, NIH requested that a Working Group of the Advisory Committee to the Director
look into problems encountered in the dissemination and use of unique research resources,
the competing interests of intellectual property owners and research tool users, and possible
NIH responses.1 The Working Group found that intellectual property restrictions can stifle
the broad dissemination of new discoveries and limit future avenues of research and
product development. At the same time, reasonable restrictions on the dissemination
of research tools are sometimes necessary to protect legitimate proprietary interests
and to preserve incentives for commercial development. One of the recommendations of
the Working Group was that NIH issue guidance to its funding recipients to assist them
achieve the appropriate balance. This two-part document, consisting of
Principles to set forth the fundamental
concepts and Guidelines to provide specific information to
patent and license professionals for implementation, represents that guidance.
A copy of the full Report of the Working Group, with more detailed background information,
is available at the NIH web site, www.nih.gov/welcome/forum,
or from the NIH Office of the Director.
1 The term "unique research resource" is used in its broadest sense to embrace the full range of tools that scientists use in the laboratory, including cell lines, monoclonal antibodies, reagents, animal models, growth factors, combinatorial chemistry and DNA libraries, clones and cloning tools (such as PCR), methods, laboratory equipment and machines. The terms "research tools" and "materials" are used throughout this document interchangeably with "unique research resources." Databases and materials subject to copyright, such as software, are also research tools in many contexts. Although the information provided here may be applicable to such resources, the NIH recognizes that databases and software present unique questions which cannot be fully explored in this document.
PRINCIPLES
1. Ensure Academic Freedom and Publication
Academic research freedom based upon collaboration, and the scrutiny of research
findings within the scientific community, are at the heart of the scientific enterprise.
Institutions that receive NIH research funding through grants or contracts ("Recipients")
have an obligation to preserve research freedom and ensure timely disclosure of their
scientists' research findings through, for example, publications and presentations at
scientific meetings. Recipients are expected to avoid signing agreements that unduly
limit the freedom of investigators to collaborate and publish.
Reasonable restrictions on collaboration by academic researchers involved in sponsored research
agreements with an industrial partner that avoid conflicting obligations to other industrial
partners, are understood and accepted. Similarly, brief delays in publication may be appropriate
to permit the filing of patent applications and to ensure that confidential information obtained
from a sponsor or the provider of a research tool is not inadvertently disclosed. However, excessive
publication delays or requirements for editorial control, approval of publications, or
withholding of data all undermine the credibility of research results and are unacceptable.
2. Ensure Appropriate Implementation of the Bayh-Dole Act
When a Recipient's research work is funded by NIH, the activity is subject to
various laws and regulations, including the Bayh-Dole Act (Public Law 96-517).
Generally, Recipients must maximize the use of their research findings by making
them available to the research community and the public, and through their timely
transfer to industry for commercialization.
The right of Recipients to retain title to inventions made with NIH funds comes
with the corresponding obligations to promote utilization, commercialization, and
public availability of these inventions. The Bayh-Dole Act encourages Recipients
to patent and license subject inventions as one means of fulfilling these obligations.
However, the use of patents and exclusive licenses is not the only, nor in some
cases the most appropriate, means of implementing the Act. Where the subject
invention is useful primarily as a research tool, inappropriate licensing practices
are likely to thwart rather than promote utilization, commercialization and public
availability of the invention.
Restrictive licensing, especially when coupled with indiscriminate use of the patent
system, can be antithetical to the goals of the Bayh-Dole Act, such as where these
are employed primarily for financial gain. Utilization, commercialization and public
availability of technologies that are useful primarily as research tools rarely require
patent protection; further research, development and private investment are not needed
to realize their usefulness as research tools. In such cases, the goals of the Act can
be met through publication, deposit in an appropriate databank or repository,
widespread non-exclusive licensing for nominal or cost-recovery fees, or any other
number of dissemination techniques.
In addition, commercialization and product development becomes more encumbered as the
number of stakeholders laying claim to prospective revenues increases. Proprietary rights
in research tools that do not require further development may function more as a tax on
commercial development than as a source of rights to preserve the viability of end products
and to motivate further investment. While such a tax may benefit the public by providing a
financial return on the research investment, it may not always represent the appropriate
valuation of a research tool and therefore serve as a disincentive to private sector use
of the invention.
3. Minimize Administrative Impediments to Academic Research
Each iteration in a negotiation over the terms of a license agreement or materials transfer
agreement delays the moment when a research tool may be put to use in the laboratory. Recipients
should take every reasonable step to streamline the process of transferring their own research
tools freely to other academic research institutions using either no formal agreement, a cover
letter, the Simple Letter Agreement of the Uniform Biological Materials Transfer Agreement
(UBMTA), or the UBMTA itself.
Recipients should also examine and, where possible and appropriate, simplify the transfer
of materials developed with NIH funds to for-profit institutions for internal use by those
institutions. NIH endorses distinguishing internal use by for-profit institutions from the
right to commercial development and sale or provision of services. Recipients are encouraged
to transfer research tools developed with NIH funding to for-profit institutions with the
fewest encumbrances possible in instances where the for-profit institution is seeking access
for internal use purposes. Examples of such internal uses are research, screening, and the
use of methods or devices for product development.
Where they have not already done so, Recipients should develop and implement clear policies
which articulate acceptable conditions for importing resources, and refuse to yield on
unacceptable conditions. NIH acknowledges the concern of some for-profit organizations
that the concept of purely academic research may be diluted by the close ties of some
not-for-profit organizations with for-profit entities, such as research sponsors and
spin-off companies in which such organizations take equity. Of concern to would-be
providers is the loss of control over a proprietary research tool that, once shared
with a not-for-profit Recipient for academic research, results in commercialization
gains to the providers' for-profit competitors. Recipients must be sensitive to this
legitimate concern if for-profit organizations are expected to share tools freely.
For-profit organizations, in turn, must minimize the encumbrances they seek to impose
upon not-for-profit organizations for the academic use of their tools. Reach-through
royalty or product rights, unreasonable restraints on publication and academic freedom,
and improper valuation of tools impede the scientific process whether imposed by a
not-for-profit or for-profit provider of research tools. While these Principles are
directly applicable only to recipients of NIH funding, it is hoped that other not-for-profit
and for-profit organizations will adopt similar policies and refrain from seeking unreasonable
restrictions or conditions when sharing materials.
4. Ensure Dissemination of Research Resources Developed with NIH Funds
Progress in science depends upon prompt access to the unique research resources that
arise from biomedical research laboratories throughout government, academia, and
industry. Ideally, these new resources flow to others conducting further research,
advancing science and serving as the new standard which itself will be improved upon
and ultimately replaced. This is accomplished by wide distribution on a nonexclusive
basis, although wide distribution on reasonable terms by an exclusive distributor may
meet these objectives as well. When research tools are used only within one or a small
number of institutions, there is a great risk that fruitful avenues of research will be neglected.
Unique research resources arising from NIH funded research must be made available
to the scientific research community. Recipients are expected to manage interactions
with third parties that have the potential to restrict Recipients' ability to disseminate
research tools developed with NIH funds. For example, a Recipient might co-mingle NIH funds
with funds from one or more third party sponsors, or import a research tool from a third
party provider for use in an NIH-funded research project. Either situation may result in
a Recipient incurring obligations to a third party that conflict with Recipient's
obligations to the NIH. To avoid inconsistent obligations, Recipients are encouraged
to share these Principles with potential co-sponsors of research projects and third
party providers of materials.
SUMMARY
Access to research tools is a prerequisite to continuing scientific advancement. Ensuring
broad access while preserving opportunities for product development requires thoughtful,
strategic implementation of the Bayh-Dole Act. The NIH urges Recipients to develop patent,
license, and material sharing policies with this goal in mind, realizing both product
development as well as the continuing availability of new research tools to the scientific community.
APPENDIX
GUIDELINES FOR IMPLEMENTATION
The following Guidelines provide specific information to patent and license professionals
at Recipient institutions for implementing the Principles on Obtaining and Disseminating Biomedical Resources.
Guidelines for Disseminating Research Resources Arising Out of NIH-Funded Research
- Recipients must ensure that unique research resources arising from NIH funded
research are made available to the scientific research community. Although some
licensing of research tools to for-profit companies is necessary and appropriate,
the majority of transfers, to both not-for-profit entities and for-profit entities,
should be implemented under terms no more restrictive than the UBMTA. In particular,
Recipients are expected to use the Simple Letter Agreement of the UBMTA (text below),
or other comparable document with no more restrictive terms, to readily transfer
unpatented tools developed with NIH funds to other Recipients for use in NIH funded
projects. If the materials are patented (or licensed to an exclusive provider), other
arrangements such as a simple license agreement may be used, but commercialization option
rights, royalty reach-through, or product reach-through rights back to the provider are
inappropriate.
Simple Letter Agreement for Transfer of Non-Proprietary Biological Material
PROVIDER
Authorized Official:_______________________________________
Organization:____________________________________________
Address:________________________________________________
RECIPIENT
Authorized Official:_______________________________________
Organization:____________________________________________
Address:________________________________________________
In response to the RECIPIENT's request for the BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL identified as
[insert description of material] the PROVIDER asks that the RECIPIENT and the RECIPIENT
SCIENTIST agree to the following before the RECIPIENT receives the BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL:
1. The above BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL is the property of the PROVIDER and is made available as a service to the research community.
2. The BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL will be used for teaching and academic research purposes only.
3. The BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL will not be further distributed to others without the PROVIDER's written consent. The RECIPIENT shall refer any request for the BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL to the PROVIDER. To the extent supplies are available, the PROVIDER or the PROVIDER SCIENTIST agrees to make the BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL available, under a separate Simple Letter Agreement, to other scientists (at least those at nonprofit organizations or government agencies) who wish to replicate the RECIPIENT SCIENTIST's research.
4. The RECIPIENT agrees to acknowledge the source of the BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL in any publications reporting use of it.
5. Any BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL delivered pursuant to this Simple Letter Agreement is understood to be experimental in nature and may have hazardous properties. The PROVIDER MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS AND EXTENDS NO WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED. THERE ARE NO EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, OR THAT THE USE OF THE BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY PATENT, COPYRIGHT, TRADEMARK, OR OTHER PROPRIETARY RIGHTS. Except to the extent prohibited by law, the RECIPIENT assumes all liability for damages which may arise from its use, storage or disposal of the BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL. The PROVIDER will not be liable to the RECIPIENT for any loss, claim or demand made by the RECIPIENT, or made against the RECIPIENT by any other party, due to or arising from the use of the MATERIAL by the RECIPIENT, except to the extent permitted by law when caused by the gross negligence or willful misconduct of the PROVIDER.
6. The RECIPIENT agrees to use the BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL in compliance with all applicable statutes and regulations, including, for example, those relating to research involving the use of human and animal subjects or recombinant DNA.
7. The BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL is provided at no cost, or with an optional transmittal fee solely to reimburse the PROVIDER for its preparation and distribution costs. If a fee is requested, the amount will be indicated here: [insert fee]
The RECIPIENT and the RECIPIENT SCIENTIST should sign both copies of this letter and return one
signed copy to the PROVIDER SCIENTIST. The PROVIDER will then forward the BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL.
The RECIPIENT and the RECIPIENT SCIENTIST should sign both copies of this letter and return one signed copy to the PROVIDER SCIENTIST. The PROVIDER will then forward the BIOLOGICAL MATERIAL.
PROVIDER SCIENTIST
Organization:____________________________________________
Address:________________________________________________
Name:__________________________________________________
Title:___________________________________________________
Signature:_______________________________________________
Date:___________________________________________________
RECIPIENT SCIENTIST
Organization:____________________________________________
Address:________________________________________________
Name:__________________________________________________
Title:___________________________________________________
Signature:_______________________________________________
Date:___________________________________________________
RECIPIENT ORGANIZATION APPROVAL
Authorized Official:_______________________________________
Title:___________________________________________________
Address:________________________________________________
Signature:_______________________________________________
Date:___________________________________________________
[Source: 60 FR 12771, 08 March 1995]
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Recipients must ensure that obligations to other sources of funding of projects in which NIH funds
are co-mingled are consistent with the Bayh-Dole Act and NIH funding requirements. Unique research resources
generated under such projects are expected to be made available to the research community. Recipients are
encouraged to share these Guidelines with potential co-sponsors. Any agreements covering projects in which
NIH funds will be used along with other funds are expected to contain language to address the issue of
dissemination of unique research resources. Examples of possible language follow. The paragraphs are
presented in a "mix and match" format:
"The project covered by this agreement is supported with funding from the National Institutes
of Health, which requires that unique research resources arising out of NIH-funded research be made
widely available to third parties for further research. Provider agrees that upon publication,
unpatented unique research resources arising out of this project may be freely redistributed."
"In the event an invention is primarily useful as a research tool, any option granted shall
either be limited to a non-exclusive license or the terms of any resulting exclusive license
shall include provisions that ensure that the research tool will be available to the academic
research community on reasonable terms."
"Provider agrees that Recipient shall have the right to make any materials and inventions
developed by Recipient in the course of the collaboration (including materials and inventions
developed jointly with Provider, but not including any Provider materials (or parts thereof) or
Provider sole inventions) available to other scientists at not-for-profit organizations for use
in research, subject to Provider's independent intellectual property rights."
"Subject to Recipient's obligations to the U.S. government, including 37 CFR 401, the PHS Grants
Policy Statement, and the NIH Guidelines for Obtaining and Disseminating Biomedical Research Resources,
Recipient grants to Sponsor the following rights: . . ."
-
Exclusive licenses for research tools should generally be avoided except in cases where the licensee
undertakes to make the research tool widely available at moderate cost to researchers through
unrestricted sale or the licensor retains rights to make the research tool widely available.
When an exclusive license is necessary to promote investment in commercial applications of a
subject invention that is also a research tool, the Recipient should ordinarily limit the exclusive
license to the commercial field of use, retaining rights regarding use and distribution as
a research tool. Examples of possible language include:
"Research License" means a nontransferable, nonexclusive license to make and to use the Licensed
Products or Licensed Processes as defined by the Licensed Patent Rights for purposes of research
and not for purposes of commercial manufacture, distribution, or provision of services, or in
lieu of purchase, or for developing a directly related secondary product that can be sold.
Licensor reserves the right to grant such nonexclusive Research Licenses directly or to require
Licensee to grant nonexclusive Research Licenses on reasonable terms. The purpose of this Research
License is to encourage basic research, whether conducted at an academic or corporate facility.
In order to safeguard the Licensed Patent Rights, however, Licensor shall consult with Licensee
before granting to commercial entities a Research License or providing to them research samples
of the materials."
"Licensor reserves the right to provide the Biological Materials and to grant licenses under Patent
Rights to not-for-profit and governmental institutions for their internal research and scholarly use."
"Notwithstanding anything above to the contrary, Licensor shall retain a paid-up, nonexclusive,
irrevocable license to practice, and to sublicense other not-for-profit research organizations to
practice, the Patent Rights for internal research use."
"The grant of rights provided herein is subject to the rights of the United States government and
limited by the right of the Licensor to use Patent Rights for its own research and educational
purposes and to freely distribute Materials to not-for-profit entities for internal research purposes."
"Licensor reserves the right to supply any or all of the Biological Materials to academic research
scientists, subject to limitation of use by such scientists for research purposes and restriction
from further distribution."
"Licensor reserves the right to practice under the Patent Rights and to use and distribute to third
parties the Tangible Property for Licensor's own internal research purposes."
Guidelines for Importing Research Resources for Use in NIH-Funded Research
-
Agreements importing materials for use in NIH funded research are expected to address the timely
dissemination of research results. Recipients should not agree to significant publication delays,
any interference with the full disclosure of research findings, or any undue influence on the objective
reporting of research results. A delay of thirty days to allow for patent filing or review for
confidential proprietary information is generally viewed as reasonable.
-
Under the Bayh-Dole Act and its implementing regulations, agreements importing materials for use
in NIH funded projects cannot require that title to resulting inventions be assigned to the provider.
For this reason, definitions of "materials" that include all derivatives or all modifications are
unacceptable. Conversely, it is important for providers of materials to be aware that a Recipient
does not gain any ownership or interest in a provider's material by virtue of the Recipient using
the material in an NIH-funded activity. Examples of acceptable definitions for "materials" include:
"Materials" means the materials provided as specified in this document."
""Materials" means the materials provided as specified in this document. Materials may also include
Unmodified Derivatives of the materials provided, defined as substances created by the Recipient
which constitute an unmodified functional subunit or product expressed by the original material,
such as subclones of unmodified cell lines, purified or fractionated subsets of the original material,
proteins expressed by DNA/RNA supplied by the Provider, or monoclonal antibodies secreted by a hybridoma cell line."
""Materials" means the materials provided as specified in this document. Materials may also include
Progeny and Unmodified Derivatives of the materials provided. Progeny is an unmodified descendant from
the original material, such as virus from virus, cell from cell, or organism from organism. Unmodified
Derivatives are substances created by the Recipient which constitute an unmodified functional subunit
or product expressed by the original material, such as subclones of unmodified cell lines, purified or
fractionated subsets of the original material, proteins expressed by DNA/RNA supplied by the Provider,
or monoclonal antibodies secreted by a hybridoma cell line."
""Materials" means the material being transferred as specified in this document. Materials shall not
include: (a) Modifications, or (b) other substances created by the recipient through the use of the
Material which are not Modifications, Progeny, or Unmodified Derivatives. Progeny is an unmodified
descendant from the Material, such as virus from virus, cell from cell, or organism from organism.
Unmodified Derivatives are substances created by the Recipient which constitute an unmodified
functional subunit or product expressed by the original Material, such as subclones of unmodified
cell lines, purified or fractionated subsets of the original Material, proteins expressed by DNA/RNA
supplied by the Provider, or monoclonal antibodies secreted by a hybridoma cell line." [Source:
Uniform Biological Materials Transfer Agreement; terms defined therein]
-
Recipients are expected to avoid signing agreements to import research tools that are likely to
restrict Recipients' ability to promote broad dissemination of additional tools that may arise
from the research. This might occur when an agreement gives a provider an exclusive license
option to any new intellectual property arising out of the project. A new transgenic mouse
developed during the project could fall under this license option and become unavailable to
third party scientists as a result. Examples of agreements to examine include material transfer
agreements (MTAs), memoranda of understanding (MOU), research or collaboration agreements, and
sponsored research agreements. Recipients should consider adopting standard language to place
in such agreements to address this issue. The following are examples of possible language to
include in MTAs, sponsored research agreements, and other agreements that either import materials
from or co-mingle funds with non-government sources. The paragraphs are presented in a "mix and match" format:
"The project covered by this agreement is supported with funding from the National Institutes
of Health, which requires that unique research resources arising out of NIH-funded research be
made widely available to third parties for further research. Provider agrees that after publication,
unpatented unique research resources arising out of this project may be freely redistributed."
"In the event an invention is primarily useful as a research tool, any option granted shall either
be limited to a non-exclusive license or the terms of any resulting exclusive license shall include
provisions which insure that the research tool will be available to the academic research community
on reasonable terms."
"Provider agrees that Recipient shall have the right to make any materials and inventions developed
by Recipient in the course of the collaboration (including materials and inventions developed jointly
with Provider, but not including any Provider materials (or parts thereof) or Provider sole inventions)
available to other scientists at not-for-profit organizations for use in research, subject to Provider's
independent intellectual property rights."
"Subject to Recipient's obligations to the U.S. government, including 37 CFR 401, the PHS Grants
Policy Statement, and the NIH Guidelines for Obtaining and Disseminating Biomedical Research Resources,
Recipient grants to Sponsor the following rights: . . ."
-
Agreements importing materials from for-profit entities for use in NIH funded research may provide
a grant back of non-exclusive, royalty-free rights to the provider to use improvements and new uses
of the material that, if patented, would infringe any patent claims held by the provider. They may
also provide an option for an exclusive or non-exclusive license to new inventions arising directly
from use of the material. These should be limited to circumstances where the material sought to be
imported is unique, such as a patented proprietary material, and not reasonably available from any
other source. A non-exclusive "grant-back" might be used, for example, to protect a for-profit entity
that provides a proprietary compound from being blocked from using new uses of that compound discovered
during the NIH-funded project. In providing license options, Recipients must ensure that licenses granted
to providers under such options are consistent with Bayh-Dole requirements, including the preference for
U.S. industry requirements and reservation of government rights under 37 C.F.R. Part 401.
-
In determining the scope of license or option rights that are granted in advance to a provider of materials,
Recipient should balance the relative value of the provider's contribution against the value of the rights
granted, cost of the research, and importance of the research results. The rights granted to providers
should be limited to inventions that have been made directly through the use of the materials provided.
In addition, Recipients should reserve the right to negotiate license terms that will ensure: 1) continuing
availability to the research community if the new invention is a unique research resource; 2) that the
provider has the technical and financial capability and commitment to bring all potential applications to
the marketplace in a timely manner; and 3) that if an exclusive license is granted, the provider will
provide a commercial development plan and agree to benchmarks and milestones for any fields of use granted.
-
It is expected that agreements importing NIH-funded materials from not-for-profit entities for use in
NIH funded research will not provide commercialization option rights, royalty reach-through, or product
reach-through rights back to the provider. Such materials should be imported under the UBMTA, or, if the
materials are patented, a simple license agreement that does not request reach-through to either future
products or royalties. If the providing not-for-profit organization is constrained in sharing the material
due to a pre-existing sponsored research agreement or license, NIH expects the not-for-profit provider to
negotiate a suitable resolution with the private research sponsor or licensee. The co-mingling of NIH and
sponsored research funds is allowed, however, Recipient is responsible for ensuring that the sponsored funds
do not interfere with NIH funding requirements such as open dissemination of research tools.
May 1999
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