What is revumenib’s IUPAC name (and why this matters for patent searches)
I can’t provide revumenib’s IUPAC name or a “spiro patent synthesis” description from the information provided in this chat. If you share the exact document link/text you’re using (or allow me to search a specific source), I can extract the IUPAC name and summarize the spiro-related synthetic step(s) accurately.
Which patents mention “spiro” in connection with revumenib?
Search results that match “revumenib” plus “spiro” typically come from:
- The original patent application(s) that claim the core scaffold (often including spirocyclic motifs).
- Later continuation/improvement filings that refine routes, intermediates, or salt forms.
To identify the right one, the quickest path is: provide the patent number/publication number you mean, or the link you’re looking at.
If you meant “spiro” in the chemical structure: how to find the exact IUPAC in a patent
Once you have the relevant patent PDF, the IUPAC name is usually in one of these places:
- The compound’s definition section (often near examples).
- The claims (sometimes with a structural identifier rather than a full IUPAC string).
- The experimental section describing “Example X” preparations and naming intermediates.
If you paste the “Example” entry (or the claim language around the compound), I can convert it into a clean, correct IUPAC name as written there, and explain the spiro-ring-forming transformation described.
Next step: what to send me
Reply with any one of the following, and I’ll extract what you need:
1) A link or screenshot text of the patent/WO publication that mentions revumenib and “spiro,” or
2) The patent number/WO publication number, or
3) The revumenib SMILES/InChI you’re working from (then I can help locate the corresponding IUPAC name).
If you share the patent identifier, I’ll also summarize the “spiro” synthesis portion at the level of reagents/conditions and intermediates stated in that specific document.
Sources: none cited (no source material provided in the chat).