It’s how all drugs are developed. It’s a long process where IP is developed to start with by academic institutions and then bought or licensed by a biotech to continue development and then bought or licensed by a large healthcare company to manufacture and distribute. Patent and IP law protect the investors so someone else cannot copy their product without all the development work so that they will have a return on investment. Patents are often for specific diseases. Drug development wouldn’t happen without it.I trust Drs Fluge and Mella but I'm a bit surprised that anyone can patent a drug for a specific application, including the pharma company that created it. What is the purpose?
I think in this case, it will create revenue for their institution and therefore will fund future work.