The United States Patent and Trademark Office just handed Summit Biosciences Inc. a patent that could matter quite a bit in the naloxone market. The newly issued U.S. Patent No. 12,514,854 B2 covers Rezenopy, a 10mg naloxone nasal spray designed for emergency opioid overdose treatment.
Summit, which operates as a subsidiary of Kindeva Drug Delivery L.P., announced Wednesday that the patent takes effect January 6, 2026, and runs through February 5, 2041. That's nearly 16 years of potential market protection for the highest-dose naloxone spray currently approved by regulators.
The Scienture Connection
Here's where it gets interesting for penny stock watchers. Back in March 2025, Scienture LLC, the wholly owned subsidiary of Scienture Holdings Inc. (SCNX), struck a commercialization deal with Summit for exclusive U.S. rights to Rezenopy. The arrangement splits responsibilities in a fairly standard pharmaceutical partnership model.
Summit handles manufacturing and commercial supply. Meanwhile, Scienture takes ownership of the new drug application (pending certain commercial obligations) and manages sales, marketing, and distribution throughout the United States using its existing commercial infrastructure.
The FDA gave Rezenopy its blessing in April 2024, making it the highest-dosage naloxone nasal spray approved for emergency use. That distinction matters when dealing with increasingly potent synthetic opioids flooding illicit drug markets.
Understanding the Product
Rezenopy delivers naloxone hydrochloride as a 10mg nasal spray, functioning as an opioid antagonist for emergency treatment of known or suspected overdoses. It's indicated when respiratory depression or central nervous system depression signals potential opioid involvement, regardless of patient age.
The product is designed for immediate administration in any setting where opioids might be present. Each carton contains two blister packages with single-use spray devices for intranasal administration only.
The newly issued patent qualifies for listing in the FDA's Orange Book, which could provide additional intellectual property protection as Scienture builds out commercial operations. The spray uses the established naloxone hydrochloride molecule and familiar nasal spray delivery method, but packages it at higher concentrations to combat more potent opioid compounds.




