Inventor · Montpellier, FR

Jean-Philippe Ducoux

12Patents
2h-index
10Co-inventors
47Inventor score

Filing activity: Nov 29, 1995 → Mar 25, 2010

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US6642233B1 1-Phenacyl-3-phenyl-3-(piperidylethyl)piperidine derivatives, process for the preparation thereof and pharmaceutical compositions containing them Chemistry; Metallurgy 4 Expired
US6506750B1 Morpholine derivatives, method for the production thereof and pharmaceutical preparations containing said derivatives Human Necessities 3 Expired
US6951940B2 Piperidine derivatives, process for obtaining them and pharmaceutical compositions containing them Chemistry; Metallurgy 2 Expired
US5830906A Piperidine derivatives, process for obtaining them and pharmaceutical compositions containing them Chemistry; Metallurgy 2 Expired
US7687537B2 N-[(4,5-diphenyl-2-thienyl)methyl]amine derivatives, their preparation and their therapeutic application Human Necessities 2 Active
US7462631B2 Thiophene-2-carboxamide derivatives, preparation and therapeutic application thereof Chemistry; Metallurgy 2 Active
US7589120B2 N-[(4,5-diphenyl-2-thienyl)methyl]sulfonamide derivatives, preparation thereof and their therapeutic application Chemistry; Metallurgy 1 Active
US5965580A Piperidine derivatives, process for obtaining them and pharmaceutical compositions containing them Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Expired
US5939411A Piperidine derivatives process for obtaining them and pharmaceutical compositions containing them Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Expired
US8410137B2 Thiophene-2-carboxamide derivatives, preparation thereof and therapeutic use thereof Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US8486971B2 Derivatives of 3-alkoxy-4,5-diarylthiophene-2-carboxamide, preparation thereof, and therapeutic use thereof Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US5726313A Substituted arylaliphatic compounds, method of preparing them and pharmaceutical compositions in which they are present Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Expired

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.