in 1989, after it was approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration. In this initial trial Kane et al., 3 showed that clozapine was significantly more effective than chlorpromazine in patients who failed to respond to multiple adequate trials of different antipsychotics. 3 After this trial, use of Clozapine increased and its use was limited to patients with TRS. Over the years, the definition of TRS has been revised by different researchers, authors and organization. 4 Although these attempts have been towards increasing clozapine use in clinical practice, it is still considered to be underutilized. Available data suggests that starting of clozapine is often delayed by 1.5 to 2 years. 5 Over the years many reviews and meta-analysis have evaluated the effectiveness and side effect data for clozapine. [6][7][8][9][10][11][12] However, these publications do not provide information about the publication trends on clozapine. Bibliometrics can provide important information about the publication trends, authors involved in the research, country of origin of the authors ABSTRACT Aim: This study evaluates the research output on Clozapine included in Scopus database during 1970-2021. Materials and Methods: The quantitative and qualitative analysis of publications on "Clozapine" covered in Scopus database during 1970-2021 was undertaken. The results obtained were further analysed using additional features in Scopus database. Results: 7399 publications on "Clozapine" were obtained from Scopus international database and these publications received 189068 citations, averaging 25.55 citations per paper (CPP). There was initial rise in the number of publications per year from 1988 to 1995, after that the number of publications has remained relatively stable. Authors from USA, U.K. and Germany contributed to the largest number of publications (2136, 709 and 457 publications respectively), and publications with authors from USA, Canada and Germany registered the highest CPP and relative citation index (RCI).