Thursday, December 28, 2006

Serendipity - the antidepressant crapshoot

From BusinessWeek:

German drugmaker Boehringer Ingelheim didn't set out to create a Viagra-like drug for women.

The company was simply trying to develop a fast-acting antidepressant, one that patients would respond to in a matter of days, not weeks as in most current treatments. By the late 1990s the company had developed a molecule called flibanserin that seemed to relieve stress in rats. But like many promising drugs, it flopped in human trials. Says Dr. Lutz Hilbrich, the company's executive director of general medicine: "We did not see the effect we were expecting."

But what they did see surprised them.


Like all companies working on antidepressants, Boehringer surveyed patients in its clinical trial to assess dampening of libido, a well-established side effect.

Far from complaining about a drop in sexual desire and arousal, many of the women in the trial reported a surge.

The men had no such response—and neither group showed any improvement in mood.

"It is an interesting drug," says Dr. André T. Guay, director of the Center for Sexual Function at the Lahey Clinic Northshore, Peabody, Mass., and assistant professor at Harvard Medical School.

"These things come about in strange ways."

Insider's view: How true, André, how true.

Let's not forget that Viagra's discovery was serendipitous too!

More at BusinessWeek

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I wouldn't be surprised if Pfizer start sniffing around BI. They need another aquisition now and this could tip it BI's way.

Anonymous said...

BI would be smart to sell out. They have reached their market cap. They mnay have waited even too long. Pfizer has an interest in Spiriva to boot. Makes sense. Alas they are Germans. They may turn away from reason once again.