In the modern era of AI-driven in silico approaches for target selection and lead compound identification, companies must navigate nuanced and unresolved patentability issues, centred on inventorship, disclosure, novelty and non-obviousness. In parallel, regulatory agencies are scrutinising AI algorithms, data provenance and transparency within MA dossiers. To combat this, companies must tightly align their IP and regulatory strategies to secure defensible IP and exclusivity positions for their AI-assisted inventions.
This session will address the key unanswered questions surrounding AI patentability and examine the strategies available to you for securing comprehensive patent protection and straightforward regulatory approval for your latest AI-assisted inventions.
- Should you disclose the use of AI in generating a lead compound on a patent application?
- What are the potential consequences of not disclosing AI use for downstream litigation?
- How are patent offices evaluating key issues around inventorship, disclosure, novelty and non-obviousness for AI-assisted inventions?
- How are regulatory authorities handling AI use during drug discovery processes?
- How should patent drafting strategies for AI-assisted invention be shaped to align with downstream regulatory requirements?
- To what extent should human decision-making be documented during the AI-assisted drug discovery process?
- How and to what extent should IP and Regulatory leads brief R&D teams on their use of AI?

Daphné Derouane

Frank Landolt
Frank Landolt is Chief Counsel, Intellectual Property and Legal at Confo Therapeutics, a privately held biopharmaceutical start-up based in Ghent, Belgium specializing in GPCR-targeted therapeutics.
After studying chemistry and law at the University of Leiden in the Netherlands, Frank worked for almost ten years on pharmaceutical and biotechological patents and licensing in private practice in the Netherlands, where his clients included major pharmaceutical companies as well as some of the top biotech firms and research institutions in the Netherlands.
Prior to joining Confo in 2018, Frank worked for fifteen years in Ablynx N.V. (now a wholly owned Sanofi company), where he was a member of the management team and headed an integrated IP and legal group of four lawyers and five patent professionals. At Ablynx, Frank was involved in negotiating Ablynx’s strategic partnerships and licensing deals with AbbVie, Boehringer-Ingelheim, MSD, Merck-Serono, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, Sanofi and Wyeth.
From 2000 to 2004, Frank was director of IP and legal counsel at Devgen N.V. (now part of Syngenta), another Ghent-based biotechnology company, where he was involved in negotiating Devgen’s strategic collaborations with Sumitomo, Monsanto and DuPont Pioneer.
Frank is a Dutch and European patent attorney, and also holds a degree in business law from the University of Antwerp. He is a member of the Dutch association of patent attorneys (where he is a tutor for the professional qualification course), EPI and LES Benelux (where he is involved in the LES Licensing Course). He is a regular speaker on a range of topics relating to IP and licensing in the (bio)pharmaceutical sector. Frank was named as one of Managing IP’s ‘Corporate IP stars’ for four years in a row (2015-2018).
