foreign patents, including patents issued in China, Japan, France, Italy, Germany, Spain and the United Kingdom, and 13 pending foreign patent applications, including patent applications pending in Australia, Canada, China, Europe and Japan, all co-owned with BCM. Tvardi owns four issued U.S. patents, four pending U.S. non-provisional patent applications, two pending U.S. provisional applications, one issued Eurasia patent, 32 foreign patent applications, including patent applications pending in Australia, Canada, China, Europe and Japan, and four pending PCT applications.
The patent portfolios of Tvardi’s product candidates as of September 30, 2024, are summarized below.
TTI-101 is protected by twelve patent families.
Four patent families are in-licensed from BCM.
The first patent family in-licensed from BCM relates to methods of using TTI-101 to treat certain specific cancers and pulmonary fibrosis. The first patent family includes one issued U.S. patent expiring on November 13, 2030, and 11 issued foreign patents in Australia, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, all expiring on June 3, 2029.
The second patent family in-licensed from BCM relates to methods of using TTI-101 to treat cachexia, muscle wasting and muscle weakness. This family includes two issued U.S. patents and 15 issued foreign patents in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, the United Kingdom and Hong Kong, all expiring on July 18, 2034.
The third patent family in-licensed from BCM relates to methods of using TTI-101 to treat fibrosis, excluding pulmonary fibrosis and myelofibrosis. This family includes one issued U.S. patent and 22 issued foreign patents in Australia, Canada, Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, the United Kingdom and Hong Kong, all expiring on July 18, 2034.
The fourth patent family in-licensed from BCM relates to methods of using TTI-101 to reduce the risk or severity of or prevent allergic reaction. This family includes one pending U.S. patent application and 14 issued foreign patents in Australia, Canada, Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, United Kingdom and Hong Kong, all expiring on July 18, 2034.
Tvardi co-owns one patent family with BCM. This family is directed to methods of using TTI-101 to treat insulin resistance. This patent family includes one pending U.S. patent application and four pending foreign patent application in Canada, China, Europe and Japan. If issued, the patent applications in this patent family are expected to expire on December 3, 2040.
In addition to the above, TTI-101 is protected by seven patent families owned by Tvardi.
The first patent family Tvardi owns relates to self-emulsifying drug dispersion formulation of TTI-101 and includes three issued U.S. patents and one issued foreign patent in Eurasia, all expiring on January 22, 2041, and three pending foreign patent applications in China, Europe and Hong Kong.
The second patent family Tvardi owns relates to spray-dried dispersion tablets of TTI-101 and includes one pending U.S. patent application and 15 pending patent applications in Argentina, Pakistan, Taiwan, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Eurasia, Europe, India, Israel, Japan, Korea, Mexico, New Zealand and Singapore. If issued, patents in this family are expected to expire on March 1, 2043.
The third patent family Tvardi owns relates to highly pure compositions of TTI-101 and includes one pending U.S. patent application, three pending foreign patent applications in Argentina, Pakistan and Taiwan, and one pending PCT application. If issued, patents in this family are expected to expire on July 18, 2043.
The fourth patent family Tvardi owns relates to methods of treating cancer using a combination of TTI-101 and an immune checkpoint inhibitor such as anti-PD-1 antibody and anti-PD-L1 antibody and includes one pending U.S. patent application and 8 pending foreign patent applications in Australia, Canada, Eurasia, Europe, Japan, Mexico, New Zealand and Singapore. If issued, patents in this family are expected to expire on March 3, 2043.