Rydapt (midostaurin)
Patent portfolio
Family-by-family interpretation: which family anchors composition, which add lifecycle, when each expires.
The Rydapt (midostaurin) patent estate comprises two Orange Book-listed patents corresponding to two distinct patent families. The global footprint includes 96 international documents across 30 countries, representing a notable 48x multiplier of international documents to US Orange Book patents.
Orange Book patent stack
2 unique patents listed against this drug. All mapped to BigQuery patent families.
| Patent | Family | Claim type | Use code | US expiry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US 8575146 | 33539193 | — | U-2008 | Dec 2, 2030 |
| US 7973031 | 26991080 | — | U-2007 | Oct 9, 2028 |
Patent families — global footprint
Family-deduplicated portfolio across all jurisdictions. Each family represents a single invention with related filings in multiple countries.
International vs US — composition family
Most jurisdictions follow priority + 20 years. US adds Patent Term Adjustment (PTA); EU adds Supplementary Protection Certificate (SPC); Japan adds Patent Term Extension (PTE). Latest US Orange Book expiry includes these extensions.
Coverage status
What this page covers, what's coming in a future refresh, and what's out of scope.
| Category | What's covered | Status | |
|---|---|---|---|
| ✓ | Orange Book patents | 2 unique patents listed; 2 resolved to BigQuery families (100%) | Complete |
| ✓ | Same-family international | 96 documents across 30 countries via BigQuery family expansion | Complete |
| ✓ | Nominal international expiry | Priority date + 20 years computed per family. Composition family nominal expiry: 2021-10-30. | Complete |
| ✓ | Estate analysis | LLM-generated structural analysis, constrained to patent data only — no commercial, financial, or litigation claims included | Complete |
| ○ | Country-specific extensions | EU SPC, JP PTE, KR PTE not modeled. US Orange Book expiry already includes US PTA. Most ex-US jurisdictions follow priority + 20 years (shown). | Known limitation |
| ✕ | Hatch-Waxman / BPCIA settlement terms | Specific settlement terms (royalty %, launch dates) are confidential between parties | Out of scope |
| ✕ | Commercial / M&A history | Deal terms, royalty stacks, contingent value rights — not in patent data | Out of scope |
Frequently asked
Common questions about Rydapt's patent landscape
- When will generics enter the market for Rydapt?
- Rydapt's foundational composition patent already expired (Oct 30, 2021), so the cliff window is open. The cliff closes Dec 1, 2030 when the last US OB patent falls. Whether generics have actually entered depends on the strength of secondary patents (formulations, methods of use, manufacturing) and whether settlements were reached — Hatch-Waxman settlements often produce delayed-entry agreements between the brand and the first ANDA filer, typically trading a 180-day exclusivity for an entry date months to years past the patent.
- What's the difference between "cliff opens" and "cliff closes"?
- Cliff opens (Oct 30, 2021) marks Rydapt's foundational composition patent expiry — the earliest theoretical date for generic entry. Cliff closes (Dec 1, 2030) is when the last US patent in the thicket finally falls — after which the market has no patent-based barriers. The gap between these two dates is the lifecycle-extension window: secondary patents (formulations, methods of use, manufacturing) that can block generics even after the composition patent has expired.
- Why is Rydapt in the Orange Book?
- Rydapt is regulated via the FDA 505(b) NDA pathway for small-molecule drugs and listed in the FDA Orange Book (small molecules). Small-molecule NDA holders must list approved-use patents in the Orange Book under Hatch-Waxman. The patents shown here come directly from FDA Orange Book listings.
- What's a patent family and why does it matter?
- A patent family is a group of patent applications and grants worldwide that share the same priority filing (the earliest invention disclosure). One US patent often expands to 20–40+ filings across different jurisdictions — each grant in a different country protecting the same underlying invention. Rydapt has 2 families that resolve to 96 international documents across 30 countries. Families matter because generic entry requires clearing patent barriers in each market separately — a US generic launch is independent of EU or Japan launches.
- How were these Rydapt patents identified?
- Rydapt's 2 US patents come directly from the FDA Orange Book, which small-molecule NDA holders are required to list under Hatch-Waxman. We then expand each Orange Book patent to its full international family using the BigQuery patent family graph (priority date + global jurisdictions). The US patent list is FDA-authoritative.
- What does the "Multiplier" stat mean?
- The multiplier shows how many international patent documents exist for every US patent in Rydapt's thicket — calculated as 96 international documents ÷ 2 US patents = 48×. A high multiplier (>10×) indicates an aggressive global filing strategy — the sponsor has filed in many countries to maximize geographic protection. A low multiplier suggests the patent estate is US-centric, with limited international protection.
Methodology & data sources
- Orange Book patents: FDA Orange Book via TheraRadar's
fetch-orange-book.js, refreshed 2026-05-26. - Patent families & international docs: BigQuery
patents-public-data.patents.publications, queried 2026-05-15. Seed lookup → family expansion → priority date aggregation. - Nominal global expiry: earliest priority_date per family + 20 years. Does not include country-specific extensions (US PTA, EU SPC, JP PTE).
- Estate analysis: generated by gemini-3-pro-preview, constrained to structural patent data only. No commercial, financial, or litigation claims included.
TheraRadar Pro — patent intelligence
Free covers what's publicly listed: Orange Book patents, basic stats, composition expiry. Pro adds the deeper view: LLM-driven estate analysis, full international family thicket, and (coming soon) alerts + exports.
Always free
- • Orange Book patent table (every patent, family, use code, expiry)
- • Stat strip — OB count, families, global doc footprint, multiplier
- • Composition family priority + nominal global expiry
- • International vs US expiry comparison
- • Coverage status + methodology
- • Cross-link to mechanism / class landscape
What Pro adds today
- Estate analysis (sections 2-5) — Composition anchor, lifecycle layers, international vs US, strategic outlook
- Full patent families table — Country lists, doc counts, priority dates per family
- International nominal expiries — Priority + 20 years per family with global vs US gap