Patents by Inventor Janet Hardin Young

Janet Hardin Young has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Publication number: 20180252719
    Abstract: Finding biologically relevant cancer markers is key to developing an effective treatment. Once specific antigens have been identified that are present on the cell population responsible for propagating tumors, T cells can be genetically altered to target these antigens and then used for personalized T cell therapy. A method to identify and select peptide antigens that effectively associate with and are presented by host HLA surface molecules originating from tumor cells responsible for the persistence and propagation of a cancer has been developed. The system of using these data to produce T cells engineered to express T cell receptors recognizing the peptide antigens is used in the production of a personalized adoptive T cell therapy for cancer that eliminates the cells capable of tumor propagation and cancer progression. The system is especially useful in the production of cancer treatments to achieve complete durable remission of cancers of epithelial origin.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 8, 2018
    Publication date: September 6, 2018
    Inventors: Nancy L. Parenteau, Joseph Charles Laning, Janet Hardin Young
  • Patent number: 7909886
    Abstract: This invention is directed to prosthesis, which, when implanted into a mammalian patient, serves as a functioning replacement for a body part, or tissue structure, and will undergo controlled biodegradation occurring concomitantly with bioremodeling by the patient's living cells. The prosthesis is treated so that it is rendered non-antigenic so as not to elicit a significant humoral immune response. The prosthesis of this invention, in its various embodiments, thus has dual properties. First, it functions as a substitute body part, and second, it functions as bioremodeling template for the ingrowth of host cells.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 24, 2006
    Date of Patent: March 22, 2011
    Assignee: Organogenesis, Inc.
    Inventors: Robert M. Carr, Jr., Kimberlie D. Condon, Paul L. Termin, Janet Hardin Young
  • Patent number: 7060103
    Abstract: A prosthesis, which, when implanted into a mammalian patient, serves as a functioning replacement for a body part, or tissue structure, and will undergo controlled biodegradation occurring concomitantly with bioremodeling by the patients living cells. The prosthesis is treated so that it is rendered non-antigenic so as not to elicit a significant humoral immune response. The prosthesis, in its various embodiments, thus has dual properties. First, it functions as a substitute body part, and second, it functions as bioremodeling template for the ingrowth of host cells.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 28, 2003
    Date of Patent: June 13, 2006
    Assignee: Organogenesis Inc.
    Inventors: Robert M. Carr, Jr., Kimberlie D. Condon, Paul L. Termin, Janet Hardin Young
  • Publication number: 20030158607
    Abstract: This invention is directed to prosthesis, which, when implanted into a mammalian patient, serves as a functioning replacement for a body part, or tissue structure, and will undergo controlled biodegradation occurring concomitantly with bioremodeling by the patient's living cells. The prosthesis is treated so that it is rendered non-antigenic so as not to elicit a significant humoral immune response. The prosthesis of this invention, in its various embodiments, thus has dual properties. First, it functions as a substitute body part, and second, it functions as bioremodeling template for the ingrowth of host cells.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 28, 2003
    Publication date: August 21, 2003
    Inventors: Robert M. Carr, Kimberlie D. Condon, Paul L. Termin, Janet Hardin Young
  • Publication number: 20020095218
    Abstract: This invention is directed to prosthesis, which, when implanted into a mammalian patient, serves as a functioning replacement for a body part, or tissue structure, and will undergo controlled biodegradation occurring concomitantly with bioremodeling by the patient's living cells. The prosthesis is treated so that it is rendered non-antigenic so as not to elicit a significant humoral immune response. The prosthesis of this invention, in its various embodiments, thus has dual properties. First, it functions as a substitute body part, and second, it functions as bioremodeling template for the ingrowth of host cells.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 26, 2001
    Publication date: July 18, 2002
    Inventors: Robert M. Carr, Kimberlie D. Condon, Paul L. Termin, Janet Hardin Young