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Antimicrobial Drugs This page intentionally left blank Antimicrobial Drugs Chronicle of a Twentieth Century Medical Triumph David Greenwood Emeritus Professor of Antimicrobial Science University of Nottingham Medical School, UK 1 1 Great Clarendon Street,Oxford OX2 6DP Oxford University Press is a department ofthe University ofOxford. It furthers the University’s objective ofexcellence in research,scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide in Oxford New York Auckland Cape Town Dar es Salaam Hong Kong Karachi Kuala Lumpur Madrid Melbourne Mexico City Nairobi New Delhi Shanghai Taipei Toronto With offices in Argentina Austria Brazil Chile Czech Republic France Greece Guatemala Hungary Italy Japan Poland Portugal Singapore South Korea Switzerland Thailand Turkey Ukraine Vietnam Oxford is a registered trade mark ofOxford University Press in the UK and in certain other countries Published in the United States by Oxford University Press Inc.,New York © Oxford University Press 2008 The moral rights ofthe authors have been asserted Database right Oxford University Press (maker) First published 2008 All rights reserved.No part ofthis publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system,or transmitted,in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing ofOxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law,or under terms agreed with the appropriate reprographics rights organization.Enquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope ofthe above should be sent to the Rights Department, Oxford University Press,at the address above You must not circulate this book in any other binding or cover and you must impose this same condition on any acquirer A catalogue record for this title is available from the British Library Data available Library ofCongress Cataloging in Publication Data Greenwood,David,1935- Antimicrobial drugs :chronicle ofa twentieth century medical triumph / David Greenwood. p.;cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13:978-0-19-953484-5 (alk.paper) 1. Anti-infective agents— History—20th century. [DNLM:1. Anti-Infective Agents—history.2. History,20th Century. QV 250 G816a 2008] I.Title. RM263.G74 2008 615′.1—dc22 2007041196 Typeset by Cepha Imaging Private Ltd.,Bangalore,India Printed in Great Britain on acid-free paper by Biddles Ltd.,King’s Lynn,Norfolk,UK ISBN 978-0-19-953484-5 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Whilst every effort has been made to ensure that the contents ofthis book are as complete, accurate and-up-to-date as possible at the date ofwriting.Oxford University Press is not able to give any guarantee or assurance that such is the case.Readers are urged to take appropriately qualified medical advice in all cases.The information in this book is intended to be useful to the general reader,but should not be used as a means ofself-diagnosis or for the prescription of medication. “Well,”said Pooh,“we keep looking for Home and not finding it, so I thought that if we looked for this Pit,we’d be sure notto find it, which would be a Good Thing,because then we might find something that we weren’t looking for,which might be just what we’re looking for really. A.A.Milne,The House at Pooh Corner,Chapter 7 For the incomparable Hanni, with love and gratitude Preface In a remarkable decade between 1935 and 1944—a period more notorious for the spread ofdictatorships,the Holocaust,and the prosecution ofhorrific wars in Europe and the Far East—a revolution took place that must rank as among the most important in history. Within those 10 years the face ofmedical practice was changed by the demonstration of the extraordinary antibacterial properties ofProntosil,the first ofthe sulphonamides (in Germany),penicillin (in Britain),and streptomycin (in the United States).The period has a particular poignancy for me since 1935 was the year in which I was born.It was in February of that year that details of Prontosil,the first really effective antimicrobial agent,were published in the Deutsche Medizinische Wochenschrift(1).Later in the year the discovery was described to a British audience at a meeting of the Royal Society of Medicine in London (2).Fleming’s original description ofpenicillin had been published in 1929 (3),but was not followed up with any conviction at the time.The seminal paper by Howard Florey and his colleagues at Oxford outlining the amazing potential of Fleming’s discovery appeared in The Lancetin August 1940 (4) and the Oxford team’s dramatic report ofpenicillin’s unparalleled ability to alter the course ofinfection in seri- ously ill patients appeared in the same journal almost exactly one year later (5).Selman Waksman’s paper describing streptomycin followed in 1944 (6). The discovery ofsulphonamides,penicillin,and streptomycin triggered a frantic hunt for more antimicrobial drugs that was to yield an abundant harvest in an astonishingly short space oftime.By the early 1960s more than 50 antibacterial agents were available to the prescribing physician and,largely by a process ofchemical modification ofexisting compounds,this number has more than tripled today.So used have we become to the ready availability ofthese relatively safe and highly effective ‘miracle drugs’(the popular epithet seems,for once,appropriate),that it is now hard to grasp how they transformed the treatment ofinfection.Before their introduction,serious systemic bacterial disease was virtually untreatable and millions died prematurely from pneumonia,tuberculosis, typhoid fever,meningitis,and many other bacterial infections.As Lawrence Paul Garrod observed in 1968,looking back on a lifetime in medicine: No one recently qualified,even with the liveliest imagination,can picture the ravages ofbacterial infection which continued until little more than thirty years ago (7). To take just one example:in the mid-1930s maternal mortality in England and Wales stood at around 40 per 10,000 births,a figure that had remained essentially unchanged for a century (8).About half these deaths were due to childbed fever caused by the highly virulent bacterium,Streptococcus pyogenes(9).The introduction ofsulphonamides in 1935 had an immediate effect in saving the lives ofyoung mothers (see Chapter 3). The subsequent development of penicillin,which has phenomenal activity against viii PREFACE Streptococcus pyogenes—the microbe is killed by a concentration ofaround one hundred- millionth ofa gram ofpenicillin per millilitre ofsolution (0.01 µg/ml)—completed the triumphso that by 1970 maternal death due to perinatal streptococcal infection was a very uncommon event,at least in the developed world.Other bacterial diseases similarly responded to the new drugs:the availability ofsulphonamides and penicillin gave doc- tors the means to treat most ofthe common life-threatening bacterial pathogens except tuberculosis.In 1944,with the report ofthe discovery ofstreptomycin this devastating condition was added to the list and victory over bacterial disease seemed complete. Ofcourse,the introduction ofeffective antibacterial chemotherapy is only one part of the story.For one thing,bacteria are not the only infectious enemies ofmankind;many viruses,fungi,protozoa,and helminths can cause equally serious disease.The antimalar- ial drug quinine has been available in the form ofcinchona bark since the seventeenth century and several anthelminthic agents have been known since antiquity.Moreover, the incidence ofmany bacterial diseases including scarlet fever,diphtheria,typhoid fever, and tuberculosis,was declining in the richer nations long before sulphonamides appeared.It is likely that improved nutrition,housing,and general hygiene standards were largely responsible for this decline;in the case oftuberculosis the removal ofinfected patients from the community into sanatoria also contributed greatly.Vaccination against smallpox,diphtheria,and a number ofother diseases similarly played a crucial role in the fight against infection. Today,much is heard ofan impending ‘post-antibiotic’era,owing to an inexorable rise ofmicrobial drug resistance that some predict will undermine all that has been achieved. While there is little doubt that the unrestrained use ofantibiotics has led to grave problems that we are only now seriously beginning to face,fear ofsuch a gloomy prognosis should be tempered by the fact that there is little chance that we will return to that pre-antibiotic age in which doctors had daily to stand helpless by the bedside ofchildren dying from the ravages ofinfectious diseases. The story ofantibiotics and other antimicrobial agents is a fascinating one.Discoveries have sometimes been made by pure serendipity;sometimes by logical experimentation that produced the right result for what turned out to be the wrong reason;sometimes by a process ofrandom screening that might be described as ‘planned serendipity’.Certainly, Lady Luck was never far from the scene,as she has been in many other therapeutic break- throughs (10).But luck is sterile without the wit and invention needed to recognize and exploit it.As Louis Pasteur memorably put it, Dans les champs de l’observation le hasard ne favorise que les esprits préparés.* This book offers a comprehensive account ofthe development ofantimicrobial agents of all kinds:antibacterial,antiviral,antifungal,antiprotozoal,and antihelminthic compounds. But it is more than just a chronology ofantimicrobial chemotherapy;it is also a celebration * In the field ofobservation,chance favours only the prepared mind. PREFACE ix ofa twentieth century miracle and ofthe men and women who made it happen.And cele- bration there should certainly be—with trumpets,drums,flags,and fireworks;for antimi- crobial agents,with their ability to achieve not only palliative effects,but also permanent cure (still an uncommon outcome ofmost pharmacological intervention),have surely led to the reliefofmore human and animal suffering than any other class ofdrugs in the history ofmedical endeavour.They are truly the stuffthat dreams are made on. References 1.Domagk G (1935).Ein Beitrag zur Chemotherapie der bakteriellen Infektionen.Dtsch Med Wochenschr61,250–3. 2.Hörlein H (1935).The chemotherapy ofinfectious diseases caused by protozoa and bacteria. Proceedings ofthe Royal Society ofMedicine29,313–24. 3.Fleming A (1929).On the antibacterial action ofcultures ofa penicillium,with special reference to their use in the isolation ofB.influenzae.British Journal ofExperimental Pathology10,226–36. 4.Chain E,Florey HW,Gardner AD,et al.(1940).Penicillin as a chemotherapeutic agent.Lancet2, 226–8. 5.Abraham EP,Chain E,Fletcher CM,et al.(1941).Further observations on penicillin.Lancet2, 177–89. 6.Schatz A,Bugie E,Waksman SA (1944).Streptomycin,a substance exhibiting antibiotic activity against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria.Proceedings ofthe Society ofExperimental Biology and Medicine55,66–9. 7.Garrod LP,O’Grady F (1968).Antibiotic and chemotherapy,2nd ed.Churchill Livingstone, Edinburgh. 8.Loudon I (1992).Death in childbirth.Clarendon Press,Oxford. 9.Loudon I (2000).The tragedy ofchildbed fever.Oxford University Press,Oxford. 10.Le Fanu J (1999).The rise and fall ofmodern medicine.Little Brown & Co,London.

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Between 1935 and 1944 the field of microbiology, and by implication medicine as a whole, underwent dramatic advancement. The discovery of the extraordinary antibacterial properties of sulphonamides, penicillin, and streptomycin triggered a frantic hunt for more antimicrobial drugs that was to yield
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