Drug Discovery: A Casebook and Analysis

“Drug Discovery: A Casebook and Analysis” by Robert A. Maxwell, published by Humana on October 2, 1990, spans 463 pages and is presented in English. This book explores the active process of discovering new drugs, particularly innovative therapeutic agents, challenging the notion that such discoveries are merely a byproduct of investigative research. The author argues that the process requires dedicated attention and is not a passive outcome of understanding diseases.
Readers will find a critical examination of the prevailing beliefs surrounding drug discovery, emphasizing the need for a more realistic perspective on the development of therapeutic agents. The text addresses the lack of quantitative information regarding how innovative drugs are discovered, highlighting the reliance on anecdotal accounts that can support various viewpoints. Topics such as drugs and pharmacy are central to the discussion, providing insight into the complexities of drug development and the misconceptions that often accompany it.
Official synopsis Publisher
This treatise had its origins in the authors’ strong opinion that the discovery of new drugs, especially of innovative therapeutic agents, really does not happen as a spontaneous sequel to investiga tive research, no matter how penetrating such research may be. Rather, it seemed to us that the discovery of innovative therapeutic agents was a very active process, existing in and of itself, and demanding full attention-it was not simply a passive, dependent by-process of investigative research. And yet, many researchers some close confreres of the authors, others more distant-believed otherwise. We felt that their view reflected unrealistic thinking and that reality probably lay closer to what Beyer” maintained: We are taught to believe that if we can understand a disease it should be easy enough to figure out, say, the molecular configuration of a definitive receptor mechanism somewhere along the line and to design a specific drug . . . . And so we start out to understand the disease but never get around to doing much about therapy. The authors very soon realized that there was essentially no quantitive information available on just where and how innovative therapeutic agents were discovered. There were only anecdotal accounts, and these were able to be selected and presented in ways that could be used to defend any point of view.
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