{"id":"prozapine","rwe":[{"pmid":"12816465","year":"2003","title":"Dicationic electrophiles from olefinic amines in superacid.","finding":"","journal":"The Journal of organic chemistry","studyType":"Clinical Study"},{"pmid":"8877873","year":"1996","title":"High performance liquid chromatographic determination of prozapine in pharmaceutical formulations.","finding":"","journal":"Journal of pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis","studyType":"Clinical Study"}],"tags":[{"label":"prozapine","category":"class"},{"label":"Small Molecule","category":"modality"},{"label":"Active","category":"status"}],"phase":"phase_2","safety":{},"trials":[],"aliases":[],"patents":[],"pricing":[],"allNames":"hexadiphane","offLabel":[],"synonyms":["prozapine maleate","prozapine","hexadiphane"],"timeline":[],"approvals":[],"brandName":"Hexadiphane","ecosystem":[],"mechanism":{"modality":"Small Molecule","drugClass":"prozapine","explanation":"Imagine your cells as a complex network of roads and intersections. Prozapine is like a traffic controller that helps regulate the flow of information and materials within the cell. By doing so, it may help to modulate various cellular processes, although the precise details of how it does this are still unclear.","oneSentence":"Prozapine is thought to work by interacting with cellular pathways, although the exact mechanism is unknown.","technicalDetail":"Prozapine is a small molecule that likely interacts with specific proteins or receptors to exert its effects, although the exact molecular details of its mechanism of action are currently unknown."},"commercial":{},"references":[{"id":1,"url":"https://drugcentral.org/drugcard/2324","fields":["approvals","synonyms","ATC","PK","indications","contraindications","DDIs","targets","patents","FAERS"],"source":"DrugCentral"},{"id":2,"url":"https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/?term=PROZAPINE","fields":["publications"],"source":"PubMed/NCBI"}],"_enrichedAt":"2026-03-30T15:27:46.033190","biosimilars":[],"competitors":[],"genericName":"prozapine","indications":{"approved":[],"offLabel":[],"pipeline":[]},"drugCategory":"active","labelChanges":[],"relatedDrugs":[],"trialDetails":[],"genericFilers":[],"latestUpdates":[],"manufacturing":[],"crossReferences":{"NDDF":"005339","UNII":"E9503DM633","CHEBI":"CHEBI:135225","INN_ID":"1619","UMLSCUI":"C0072512","ChEMBL_ID":"CHEMBL2105301","PUBCHEM_CID":"71127","MESH_SUPPLEMENTAL_RECORD_UI":"C004952"},"formularyStatus":[],"_enricherVersion":"v2","developmentCodes":[],"ownershipHistory":[],"publicationCount":0,"therapeuticAreas":["Other"],"biosimilarFilings":[],"recentPublications":[{"date":"2003 Jun 27","pmid":"12816465","title":"Dicationic electrophiles from olefinic amines in superacid.","journal":"The Journal of organic chemistry"},{"date":"1996 Aug","pmid":"8877873","title":"High performance liquid chromatographic determination of prozapine in pharmaceutical formulations.","journal":"Journal of pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis"}],"companionDiagnostics":[],"genericManufacturerList":[],"status":"active","companyName":"","companyId":"","modality":"Small molecule","firstApprovalDate":"","aiSummary":"Hexadiphane, also known as Prozapine, is a small molecule drug in the prozapine class. Its exact target and mechanism of action are unknown, but it is believed to work by interacting with certain cellular pathways. Prozapine is not FDA-approved for any indications, and its commercial status, including patent status and generic availability, is unclear. Further research is needed to fully understand its potential therapeutic applications and safety profile. As a result, key safety considerations and dosing information are not well established.","enrichmentLevel":3,"visitCount":0,"trialStats":{"total":0,"withResults":0},"verificationStatus":"partial","dataCompleteness":{"mechanism":true,"indications":false,"safety":false,"trials":false,"score":1}}