HISTORY OF THE PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY

        The pharmaceutical industry, as we now know it, is barely 60 years old. From very modest beginnings it   has  grown  rapidly, reaching an estimated value of $100 billion by the mid-1980s. Its current value is likely double this figure or more. There are  well  in  excess of 10 000 pharmaceutical  companies  in  existence, although only about 100 of these can claim to be of true international significance. These  companies  manufacture  in  excess of  5000  individual  pharmaceutical substances used routinely in medicine.

        The first stages of development of the modern pharmaceutical industry can be traced back to the turn of the twentieth century. At that   time  (apart from   folk cures), the medical community had at their disposal only four drugs that were effective in treating specific diseases: digitalis; quinine; pecacuanha; mercury, for the treatment of syphilis.

        The lack of appropriate safe and effective medicines contributed in no small way to the low life expectancy characteristic of those times.

        Developments in biology (particularly the growing realization of the microbiological basis  of many diseases),  as  well  as  a  developing  appreciation  of  the principles of organic chemistry, helped underpin future innovation in  the  fledgling  pharmaceutical  industry. The  successful  synthesis  of  various  artificial  dyes, which proved to be therapeutically useful, led to the formation of pharmaceutical/chemical companies such as Bayer and Hoechst in the late 1800s, e.g. scientists at Bayer succeeded in synthesizing aspirin in 1895.

        Despite these early advances, it was not until the 1930s that the pharmaceutical industry began to develop in earnest. The initial landmark discovery of this era was probably the discovery and chemical synthesis of the sulpha drugs. These are a group of related molecules derived from the red  dye, Prontosil  rubrum.  These drugs proved effective in the treatment of a wide variety of bacterial infections (Figure 1.1). Although it was first used therapeutically in the early 1920s, large-scale industrial production of insulin also commenced in the 1930s.

        The medical success of these drugs gave new emphasis to the pharmaceutical industry, which was boosted further by  the  commencement  of  industrial-scale penicillin manufacture in the early 1940s. Around this time, many of the current leading pharmaceutical companies (or their forerunners)  were  founded. Examples include    Ciba  Geigy, Eli  Lilly, Wellcome, Glaxo  and  Roche. Over  the  next  two  to  three  decades, these  companies  developed  drugs  such as  tetracyclines, corticosteroids, oral contraceptives, antidepressants and many more. Most of these pharmaceutical substances are manufactured by direct chemical synthesis.

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