The Antibiotic Pipeline — Challenges, Costs, and Values
- 5 August 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 351 (6) , 523-526
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmp048093
Abstract
In 1941, Skinner and Keefer vividly chronicled an astonishing 82 percent mortality among 122 consecutive patients who had been treated for Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia in the preantibiotic era.1 Of the 41 patients older than 50 years of age, only 1 (2 percent) survived. Imagine the elation a few years later over the availability of penicillin, the prototype of a new therapeutic class of drugs (see page 524). In the next few decades, well-intentioned academic leaders predicted the demise of bacterial infections.(Figure)Such irrational exuberance over the sustained benefits of antibiotics should have been tempered by at least two . . .Keywords
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- Correlation Between in Vitro Studies and Response to Antibiotic Therapy in Staphylococcic BacteremiaArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1959
- SIGNIFICANCE OF BACTEREMIA CAUSED BY STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUSArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1941