for anyone who knows me! :-) From the New York Times:
by Abigail Zuger, M.D.
Every few months some miracle drug or other is rolled out with bells
and confetti, but only once or twice in a generation does the real
thing come along.
These are the blockbuster medications that can virtually raise the dead, and while the debuts of some, like the AIDS drugs, are still fresh in memory, the birth of the first one is almost
forgotten. It was injectable insulin, long sought by researchers all
over the world and finally isolated in 1921 by a team of squabbling
Canadians. With insulin, dying children laughed and played again, as
parents wept and doctors spoke of biblical resurrections.
Visitors to a new exhibition opening Tuesday at the New-York Historical
Society will find a story made particularly vivid by dramatic visuals,
for insulin’s miracle was more than a matter of better blood tests. As
in Ezekiel’s vision of the dry bones, it actually put flesh on living
skeletons.
But the miracle went only so far: insulin was not a cure. In 1921, New York City’s death rate from diabetes was estimated to be the highest in the country, and today the health
department lists diabetes among the city’s top five killers. Now
though, it is adults who die, not children. What insulin did was turn a
brief, deadly illness into a long, chronic struggle, and both the
exhibit and the book, “Breakthrough,” by Thea Cooper and Arthur
Ainsberg, on which it is based highlight the complicated questions that
inevitably follow medical miracles: Who will get the drug first? Who
will pay for it? Who will make enough for everyone? And, of course, who
will reward its developers as they feel they deserve?
In the first decades of the 20th century, half a dozen different
research groups were hot on the trail of insulin, a hormone
manufactured in the pancreas but difficult to separate out from the
digestive enzymes also made there.
Without insulin the body is unable to use glucose, its primary fuel.
Most diabetic children lack insulin completely, while adults with
so-called Type 2 diabetes often associated with obesity are resistant to the hormone’s action. Either way, sugar and starch in the diabetic’s diet turn into poison, clogging the bloodstream with unusable glucose: the
glucose is eliminated in sweet-tasting urine as the body’s cells
literally starve in the midst of plenty. Insulin-deficient patients are
both thirsty and ravenous, but the more they eat, the faster they waste
away.
Before insulin was available, doctors understood enough of this
sequence to cobble together a stopgap treatment: diabetics were put on
salad- and egg-based diets devoid of sugar and starch, with only the
minimum number of calories needed to survive. Already thin, these patients became skeletal, but
the excess glucose disappeared from their blood and urine, and they
survived far longer than untreated contemporaries.
Dr. Elliot Joslin, whose Boston clinic was and remains a renowned diabetes center,
recalled that before insulin one of his dieting patients was “just
about the weight of her bones and a human soul.”
The other great authority on diet therapy was New York’s Dr. Frederick
Allen, now long forgotten, who founded a residential hospital for
diabetics, first on East 51st Street in Manhattan, and then in rural
New Jersey.
It was to Dr. Allen that the eminent American jurist and Supreme Court justice Charles Evans Hughes turned when his daughter Elizabeth was diagnosed with diabetes in 1919, at age 11.
Elizabeth Hughes was a cheerful, pretty little girl, five feet tall,
with straight brown hair and a consuming interest in birds. On Dr.
Allen’s diet her weight fell to 65 pounds, then 52 pounds, and then,
after an episode of diarrhea that almost killed her in the spring of 1922, 45 pounds. By then she
had survived three years, far longer than expected. And then her mother
heard the news: insulin had finally been isolated in Canada.
The unlikely hero was Frederick Banting, an awkward Ontario farmboy who
graduated from medical school without distinction, was wounded in World
War I, then more or less forced himself into a laboratory at the
University of Toronto with an idea of how to get at the elusive
substance. Over the miserably hot summer of 1921 Dr. Banting and his
assistant Charles Best experimented on diabetic dogs, with only limited
success until finally dog No. 92, a yellow collie, jumped off the table
after an injection and began to wag her tail.
Meanwhile, Dr. Banting’s mentor and lab director, Dr. John J. R. Macleod, was summering in Scotland.
Dr. Banting never forgave Dr. Macleod for arriving back in the autumn,
rested and refreshed, and taking over. His bitter hostility lasted
years, long after the Nobel Prize ceremony in 1923 which Dr. Banting refused to attend, for although he shared the physiology prize with Dr. Macleod, he would not share a podium.
Meanwhile, mothers all over the globe were writing him heart-wrenching
letters: “My dear Dr. Banting: I am very anxious to know more of your
discovery,” wrote one, going on to describe her daughter’s case: “She
is pitifully depleted and reduced.”
That was from Elizabeth Hughes’s mother, Antoinette. Charles Evans
Hughes had by that time temporarily left the Supreme Court, and was
serving as secretary of state in President Warren G Harding's administration. Dr. Banting, unimpressed, replied no, sorry, no insulin
available — for, in fact, the team was having difficulty making enough
for more than a handful of patients.
And then a few weeks later, Dr. Banting changed his mind.
Presumably higher powers had intervened, or perhaps Justice Hughes himself — a rigid, unsmiling man whom Theodore Roosevelt had nicknamed “the bearded iceberg” — had pulled strings. Either way,
Elizabeth traveled posthaste to Toronto and the lifesaving injections.
It was the end of her journey, but only the beginning for many children
without her connections, who had to wait while the Canadians fought
bitterly with each other over how to fairly distribute their tiny
amounts of the lifesaving substance.
Dr. Banting wound up giving one of his colleagues a black eye before it
was all over, and Eli J. Lilly and Company, the Indianapolis
pharmaceutical firm, won the right to mass-produce insulin. It was the
first partnership negotiated among academia, individual physicians and
the pharmaceutical industry.
When the first combinations of AIDS drugs proved to save lives in just
the same seemingly miraculous way, Dr. Kent Sepkowitz, an infectious
disease expert at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York, was moved to look up the old literature on the discovery
of insulin and found many parallels between the two eras.
“In some sense, the breakthrough is the easy part,” he said. “Then the real work begins.”
For both insulin and the AIDS drugs the big challenge was “getting it
from here to there,” Dr. Sepkowitz said. The expense and logistics of
large-scale insulin manufacture were initially daunting. But soon
trainloads of frozen cattle and pig pancreas from the giant Chicago
slaughterhouses began to arrive at Lilly’s plant. By 1932 the drug’s
price had fallen by 90 percent.
Meanwhile, the notion of allowing patients to test their own urine for
glucose and calculate their own insulin doses was outlandish to most
doctors. Diabetes was the first illness which forced them to cede some
medical authority to the patient, said Jean Ashton, one of the
exhibit’s curators. With insulin, diabetics suddenly acquired both the
right and the responsibility to maintain their own health.
Some of the children who were early recipients of insulin became
diabetes advocates, speaking out for patients’ rights well into their
old age.
But not Elizabeth Hughes: she ran in the other direction, far from the
headlines that briefly made her the most famous diabetic child in the
United States. Although she received an estimated 42,000 insulin shots
before she died in 1981 at the age of 74, she systematically destroyed
most of the material documenting her illness, expunged all references
to diabetes from her father’s papers, and occasionally even denied she
had been ill as a child.
Ms. Cooper, a writer, and Mr. Ainsberg, a Wall Street executive and
amateur historian, show no compunction in making her the focus of their
story anyway, creating dialogue for her, and even imagining a few
pivotal scenes of which there is no historical record.
But Elizabeth forms only a small part of the exhibit, and a viewer
suspects this is exactly what she would have preferred. The few dozen
of her letters that survive from her six-month stay in Toronto, as she
exuberantly regained health and strength, emphasize how desperately she
wanted to stop being a patient forever.
It was a great day when she injected herself with insulin for the first
time: “I can do it perfectly beautifully,” she wrote to her mother.
“Now I feel so absolutely independent.”
The exhibition “Breakthrough: The Dramatic Story of the Discovery of
Insulin” opens on Tuesday at the New-York Historical Society, 2 West
77th Street, New York, and continues through Jan. 31, 2011.
1 remarks:
Fascinating! Yea for insulin! The greatest "drug" ever!
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