What patent is “inavolisib” tied to?
“Inavolisib” (also written as inavolisib) is a drug candidate in the class of PI3K/mTOR-pathway agents, and patent protection typically covers one or more of the following: the compound itself, specific formulations, and/or specific medical uses (for example, treating a particular disease or patient population). The exact “which patent” depends on the country and the patent family you mean.
What does “patent wo” likely mean?
“Patent wo” is commonly used by searchers as a shorthand for a WIPO filing, where documents are published under the “WO” number format (for example, “WO202x…”). If that’s what you meant, you would need the specific WO publication number or a jurisdiction (US, EP, WO, UK, JP, etc.) to determine:
- the scope of the claims,
- the listed assignees/owners,
- the priority date,
- and the expected lifespan.
How can I find the exact inavolisib WO patent number?
To identify the correct WO patent record, you generally search in a patent database (or WIPO’s PATENTSCOPE) by one of these terms:
- “inavolisib” (or spelling variants)
- the developer name (assignee/company)
- the chemical name (if known)
- or key related terms (for the mechanism/targets)
Once you have the WO number, you can read the “claims” section to see what exactly is protected (compound vs. method of treatment vs. formulations).
How long do inavolisib patents last?
For most pharmaceutical patents filed with a priority date, the standard maximum term is typically 20 years from the earliest priority date, but the real “time on the clock” for market exclusivity can be shortened or extended by:
- patent term adjustments/extensions (depending on country),
- regulatory data exclusivity periods,
- and whether there are multiple patents covering different aspects of the product.
To give a precise end date, I would need the specific patent’s priority date (or its WO/US/EP number).
Can you tell me which “inavolisib patent wo” you mean?
Reply with any one of the following and I can give a focused answer (scope, assignee, priority date, and expected expiry):
- the WO number you saw (e.g., “WO202…”)
- a link to the patent page
- the country/jurisdiction (WO/EP/US/UK, etc.)
- the company name listed on the patent