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Oxyphenamate (oxyfenamate)
Oxyphenamate (generic name: oxyfenamate) is a oxyfenamate drug. It is currently in unknown development.
Oxyphenamate is thought to work by inhibiting certain enzymes or receptors, but the exact mechanism is not well understood.
Oxyphenamate is a small molecule with the synonyms AL-0361, HYDROXYPHENAMATE, LISTICA, NSC-108034, and OXIFENAMATE.
At a glance
| Generic name | oxyfenamate |
|---|---|
| Drug class | oxyfenamate |
| Therapeutic area | Pain |
| Phase | unknown |
Mechanism of action
Imagine your body's cells are like locks, and enzymes or receptors are like keys that fit into those locks. Oxyphenamate is like a key that blocks or changes the way those keys fit, which can affect how cells work and respond to signals. This can help to reduce inflammation or other symptoms, but more research is needed to understand how it works exactly.
Approved indications
Common side effects
Competitive intelligence
For the full competitive landscape — auto-detected comparators, recent regulatory actions across the set, upcoming PDUFA, patent timeline, sponsor landscape:
- Oxyphenamate CI brief — competitive landscape report
- Oxyphenamate updates RSS · CI watch RSS
- portfolio CI
Frequently asked questions about Oxyphenamate
What is Oxyphenamate?
How does Oxyphenamate work?
What is the generic name of Oxyphenamate?
What drug class is Oxyphenamate in?
What development phase is Oxyphenamate in?
Related
- Drug class: All oxyfenamate drugs
- Manufacturer: — full pipeline
- Therapeutic area: All drugs in Pain
Primary sources · FDA · ClinicalTrials.gov · EMA · SEC EDGAR · ChEMBL · Wikidata · full sourcing