Guest guest Posted September 17, 2005 Report Share Posted September 17, 2005 Hi all, I first posted on the topic of naltrexone patents in: low dose naltrexone/message/28844 The history of LDN does not appear complete without knowing why for example the Patent Assignee: Baker Cummins Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Miami, FL) did not pursue naltrexone for its several patents including: Autoimmune-naltrexone Patent from 1989! : http://snipurl.com/hfux MS-naltrexone patent from 1991! : http://snipurl.com/hfv0 All 6 Patents with Assignee: Baker Cummins Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Miami, FL) : http://snipurl.com/hr4u So why not Baker? http://informagen.com/Resource_Informagen/report.php?mrn=902 : Subsidiary " Baker Norton is also engaged in the research, development and manufacture of pharmaceuticals. In brand name products, it focuses on new compounds that address unmet clinical needs. In generics, its strategy is to select difficult-to-formulate drugs with significant market potential. " If LDN/naltrexone protocols no longer fit its corporate strategy at some time, I'm still a bit surprised it did not find some other corporate entity with interest capable of utilizing it - particularly as their 1989 Naltrexone method of treatment for autoimmune diseases patent states: 1) " All of the currently practiced drug treatments' `have significant drawbacks' " 2) " Continuing therapy with any or all of the aforementioned categories of drugs can produce a variety of well-known adverse effects, and none of these drugs are significantly effective in achieving true remission of the disease in most patients. " 3) " The method of the present invention not only provides dramatic symptomatic relief for patients suffering from autoimmune diseases'but has been found to reduce the patient's systemic autoantibody level, potentially leading to a true remission in the course of the disease. " 4) " There have been few reports of any significant adverse effects with nalmefene or naltrexone therapy at the dosage levels proposed by the present invention, unlike many of the pharmaceutical agents which have been conventionally used to treat autoimmune diseases. " Anyone here know about this historical context? I suspect it possible Dr. Bihari may have communicated with them as his MS-naltrexone patent references their 1991 MS-naltrexone patent. Ideally any inquiry into this should be done diplomatically (perhaps someone already in touch with http://www.ldninfo.org or Dr. Bihari could be emailed first as we may have an adequate answer there). http://www.ivaxpharmaceuticals.com/aboutus.html http://www.ivaxpharmaceuticals.com/product_offering.html Compare aforementioned patent links to Dr. Bihari's naltrexone patents: http://snipurl.com/hr51 Note: Dosing range discrepancies Dr. Bihari appears to have shared more of his clinical experiences with this approach and may/likely represent/s a refinement of approach. Medical discoveries/leads are increasingly appearing more often first in patent databases (e.g. http://www.uspto.gov & http://ep.espacenet.com ) than in peer reviewed medical journal databases (e.g. http://pubmed.gov) perhaps because once it is widely published it can threaten patentability; and unfortunately the patent process can take years. Once the patent is finally published however it becomes accessible to the public although the patent holder has legal rights over its commercialization. {Note: I'm not a patent lawyer & this is just my current understanding.} Best Wishes to all & please share any interesting leads/thoughts, Josh Some References: US Patent #: 4,857,533 US Patent #: 4,994,466 US Patent #: 6,586,443 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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