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loanranger

08/02/13 8:40 PM

#37658 RE: Whooops #37656

Nice find.
The one cited in the search report ended in A2 while the one you found ends in A3. I don't know if one supersedes the other, but I guess that's what we might conclude.

Also, it's the priority date and not the publication date that establishes some kind of coverage, which as you can see was several years earlier.

I wish I knew more about this stuff.

Gratefullife

08/02/13 8:40 PM

#37659 RE: Whooops #37656

Bingo, #23 is expired. Patent looks better by the minute. Thanks Whoops, you beat me to that bit of research.

Just blew off some fireworks with the redhead and kids to celebrate, South Carolina tradition when patents are published!

Orion Nebula

08/03/13 1:46 AM

#37677 RE: Whooops #37656

I think there is some relevant info in the link Whooops provided. Click on the link and then look at the gray box on the right and you will see an "also published" # for the patent (CA 1340589C). Click on that and from there you can download a 42 page copy of the old patent, which happens to be the European version. At the top you can click through the pages. Go to page 5. Look at lines 26 and 38. 38 specifically notes psoriasis. Line 26 refers to a set of compounds labeled I that comprise the invention. Now back up to page 4. There you will see three variations of a hydroxy group (line 15) that attach at the R1 site of the molecule shown just above it. It has been 39 years since my college chem classes but "A" would seem to correspond to 23 as listed in the new Purisol patent. I think this may be the problem with 23.

It is kind of amazing that the inventor noted psoriasis in the old patent but never pursued it. If the new patent is granted we can all thank inventor Susan Mary Daluge for apparently being so focused on HIV etc. that it was not pursued. Wow. What a complete gift! Of course there are many more derivatives that Dr. M has pursued but it is pretty clear she thought there was applicability in psoriasis. Maybe this is the real surprise - not that it was just derived from a known molecule but the application was known or at least suspected.