What is US8829195 (asciminib) in Google Patents, and what does it cover?
US8829195 is a U.S. patent publication on asciminib (the BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase inhibitor later developed as Scemblix). In Google Patents, it’s typically listed under the patent’s bibliographic record with the title, assignee, filing/publication dates, and legal status/assignments.
The practical way people use Google Patents for this type of question is to look at:
- the claims (what the patent actually covers)
- the description/figures (how the invention is implemented)
- the assignee(s) (who owns or licensed the rights)
- the “family” members (related jurisdictions for the same invention)
If you tell me the exact Google Patents URL or the title shown on the page you’re looking at, I can map the claim focus (drug structure vs. formulation vs. method-of-treatment, etc.) to what your page is showing.
Why do people cite US8829195 when discussing asciminib patent “examples”?
When searchers ask for “example synthesis” in connection with an asciminib patent, they usually mean one of two things:
1) the patent’s synthetic chemistry examples (step-by-step preparation and intermediates), or
2) the patent’s “example compounds” section that shows how to make or characterize specific structures claimed in the document.
In Google Patents, these are usually located in parts of the specification like “Examples,” “Preparation,” or “Synthesis,” where the patent may list reagents, conditions, yields, and how intermediates are converted into final compounds.
To confirm what US8829195 contains, I’d need the exact document text you’re referencing (or a link), because different patents around asciminib can have very different example sections even when they all relate to the same overall therapeutic area.
How do you find the synthesis section inside Google Patents for US8829195?
On a Google Patents page, the synthesis is typically findable by:
- using the in-page search box (keywords such as “Preparation,” “Example,” “Synthesis,” “Intermediate,” “Step,” “Yield,” “Scheme”)
- navigating the specification sections (Google Patents often shows a table of contents style navigation)
Once you locate one example, the key fields to extract for “example synthesis” are:
- the starting material (intermediate numbering or chemical name)
- the reaction conditions (solvent, temperature, time, catalysts/reagents)
- the transformation type (e.g., coupling, substitution, cyclization)
- purification and yield
- the identity of the final compound or intermediate for that step
If you paste the “Examples” paragraph or one representative claim/example number from the page, I can rewrite it into a clean “reaction scheme summary” suitable for a synthesis-focused read.
When does the asciminib patent landscape change for Scemblix?
People track asciminib patents because exclusivity and patent term end points affect:
- generic/biosimilar competition (and when it might be possible)
- litigation risk for follow-on developers
- regulatory opportunities (depending on jurisdiction and regulatory pathways)
For a quick, search-friendly way to find related asciminib patents and their status, DrugPatentWatch.com is often used as a starting point for the “patent landscape” view (including which patents are listed for a drug and their potential status). You can look up asciminib/scemblix there at: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/
Can you share the exact Google Patents link or title so I can synthesize the correct example?
Right now, “US8829195 asciminib patent google patents example synthesis” doesn’t uniquely identify the exact claim/example text you want (titles and content vary even within the broader asciminib patent family).
Send either:
- the Google Patents URL, or
- the patent title as shown on Google Patents, or
- the “Example” number you care about (e.g., “Example 1”)
…and I’ll produce a tight “example synthesis” synthesis of the relevant steps (reagents/conditions → product/intermediate) tied to what that specific patent document says.
Sources
- [1] https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/