Wednesday, June 8, 2011

CAS REGISTRY Keeps Pace with Rapid Growth of Chemical Research, Registers 60 Millionth Substance

 Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) announced that a patent application claiming compounds with potential therapeutic activity submitted to the State Intellectual Property Office of the People’s Republic of China (SIPO) included the 60 millionth substance recorded in CAS REGISTRY.


CAS observed in 2009 that China surpassed all other nations as the top producer of chemical patent applications. China still maintains the lead today, and finding that the 60 millionth substance registered is from a SIPO application reconfirms that observation.


Coming less than two years after CAS REGISTRY crossed the 50 million mark, this second major milestone shows the continued acceleration of chemical and scientific output across the globe. CAS scientists keep up with this growth daily, by analyzing, organizing, and curating the output of worldwide research in their native languages to maintain the completeness and quality of CAS’ premier substance collection.


The 60 millionth substance, a potential antiviral compound, was assigned the CAS Registry Number® 1298016-92-8. The substance was discovered by the Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, which is one of the key drug research institutions in China. In the patent application, a team of inventors prepared derivatives of 2-amino-1,3,4-thiadiazine.


“Our organization relies on CAS’ research tool, SciFinder®, as a critical asset to our research team, helping to educate our R&D teams along every step of the research process,” said Pei Cheng Zhang, a professor at Materia Medica. “Its database’s rapid growth demonstrates its leadership within the industry and breadth of coverage, making it paramount to our success.”


“It seems fitting that the 60 millionth substance in CAS REGISTRY would originate from within an Asian country, given the region’s growing and significant impact on scientific discovery in recent years,” said Christine McCue, Vice President of Marketing at CAS. “This growth is illustrated not only in the patent arena, but also with respect to journal literature, and led CAS to expand coverage of Asian chemistry through the analysis of more than 300 additional journal titles in the past three years from China, Japan, and Korea alone.”


 

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