Assay Drug Dev Technol
May 2016
Patent applications provide unique opportunities for landscaping ongoing medical innovation. In this analysis of drug repurposing patent applications published under the international Patent Convention Treaty during the years 2011-2014, we discuss what categories in the World Health Organization's International Classification of Diseases provide drugs and drug candidates for potential second medical uses, and how these proposed repurposed uses relate to each other and the original ones. Also discussed are the geographic origin of the patent assignees and their type and size.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe are currently building a database of all patent documents that contain substantial information related to pharmacology, drug delivery, tissue technology, and molecular diagnostics in ophthalmology. The goal is to establish a 'patentome', a body of cleaned and annotated data where all text-based, chemistry and pharmacology information can be accessed and mined in its context. We provide metrics on patent convention treaty documents, which demonstrate that ocular-related patenting has shown stronger growth than general patent cooperation treaty patenting during the past 25 years, and, while the majority of applications of this type have always provided substantial biological data, both data support and objections by patent examiners have been increasing since 2006-2007.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe have used a focused and comprehensive ophthalmology patent database to characterize the international patenting landscape dedicated to the pharmacological treatment of cataract, corneal opacities and dystrophies, and complicated refractive errors. A total of 201 disclosures related to cataract or corneal clouding (published between 1982 and 2011), and 99 documents (published between 1991 and 2011) related to refractive or geometry errors were identified. Current applications for the treatment or prevention of primary cataract have ceased to address diabetic cataract specifically through the inhibition of glycation-specific mechanisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhile investigative ophthalmologists access peer-reviewed journals as part of their daily routine, and while they regularly visit scientific congresses, they rarely peruse patent documents as an information source. Among the reasons for this negligence are the incompatibility of patent search algorithms with those known from journal databases, a legalistic and frequently redundant language, and misconceptions about the nature of the patenting system. Here we present key data and analyses from the ophthalmology module of a patent database system that we are developing to address some of these problems.
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