Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 2011-10-01

A short history of dapsone, or an alternative model of drug development.

Justin Barr

Index: J. Hist. Med. Allied Sci. 66(4) , 425-67, (2011)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

From 1936 until 1996, the drug dapsone treated a diverse array of diseases, including tuberculosis, leprosy, malaria, and AIDS-related pneumonia. This article explores how dapsone transformed from a cure for one disease into a treatment for a totally different malady. This process of reinvention in the clinic represents an alternative model of drug development that the historical literature, focused on success in the laboratory, has largely ignored. The core of the paper discusses the reinvention of dapsone as an antimalarial in the Vietnam War through trials led by Robert J. T. Joy, a physician and military officer. As a case study, it offers a fresh perspective on the clinic-as-laboratory approach that other scholars have addressed in a civilian context. Viewing the randomized clinical trial (RCT) through a military prism will demonstrate how a combat environment combined with the regimentation of the armed forces affected the standard methodology of the RCT.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

In Vitro Protective Effect and Antioxidant Mechanism of Resveratrol Induced by Dapsone Hydroxylamine in Human Cells.

2015-01-01

[PLoS ONE 10 , e0134768, (2015)]

Cheminformatics analysis of assertions mined from literature that describe drug-induced liver injury in different species.

2010-01-01

[Chem. Res. Toxicol. 23 , 171-83, (2010)]

Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).

2011-12-01

[J. Sci. Ind. Res. 65(10) , 808, (2006)]

Developing structure-activity relationships for the prediction of hepatotoxicity.

2010-07-19

[Chem. Res. Toxicol. 23 , 1215-22, (2010)]

A predictive ligand-based Bayesian model for human drug-induced liver injury.

2010-12-01

[Drug Metab. Dispos. 38 , 2302-8, (2010)]

More Articles...