Inventor · Fairfield, CT, US

Stephen Boyer

15Patents
6h-index
73Co-inventors
65Inventor score

Filing activity: Aug 10, 2000 → Nov 7, 2011

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US7557129B2 Cyanopyridine derivatives useful in the treatment of cancer and other disorders Chemistry; Metallurgy 14 Expired
US8637553B2 Fluoro substituted omega-carboxyaryl diphenyl urea for the treatment and prevention of diseases and conditions Chemistry; Metallurgy 11 Active
US7928227B2 2-oxo-1,3,5-perhydrotriazapine derivatives useful in the treatment of hyper-proliferative, angiogenesis, and inflammatory disorders Chemistry; Metallurgy 9 Expired
US8076488B2 Bicyclic urea derivatives useful in the treatment of cancer and other disorders Chemistry; Metallurgy 8 Expired
US6689883B1 Substituted pyridines and pyridazines with angiogenesis inhibiting activity Chemistry; Metallurgy 7 Expired
US6903101B1 Substituted pyridazines and fused pyridazines with angiogenesis inhibiting activity Chemistry; Metallurgy 7 Expired
US6930114B2 Pyrrolo (2.1a)dihydroisoquinolines and their use as phosphodiesterase 10a inhibitors Human Necessities 5 Expired
US6924290B2 Rho-kinase inhibitors Chemistry; Metallurgy 5 Expired
US9073926B2 Heterocyclic compounds containing a pyrrolopyridine or benzimidazole core Chemistry; Metallurgy 4 Active
US9150577B2 Heterocyclic compounds containing an indole core Chemistry; Metallurgy 4 Active
US6943172B2 Rho-kinase inhibitors Chemistry; Metallurgy 3 Expired
US8722709B2 Mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists Chemistry; Metallurgy 3 Active
US7645878B2 Process for preparing quinazoline Rho-kinase inhibitors and intermediates thereof Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Expired
US8796253B2 Heteroaryl substituted pyrazole derivatives useful for treating hyper-proliferative disorders and diseases associated with angiogenesis Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US7977333B2 Substituted pyridines and pyridazines with angiogenesis inhibiting activity Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active

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