posted on 2014-04-10, 00:00authored byElizabeth A. Ilardi, Edon Vitaku, Jon T. Njardarson
Among
carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen, sulfur and fluorine are both
leading constituents of the pharmaceuticals that comprise our medicinal
history. In efforts to stimulate the minds of both the general public
and expert scientist, statistics were collected from the trends associated
with therapeutics spanning 12 disease categories (a total of 1969
drugs) from our new graphical montage compilation: disease focused
pharmaceuticals posters. Each poster is a vibrant display of a collection
of pharmaceuticals (including structural image, Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) approval date, international nonproprietary name (INN), initial
market name, and a color-coded subclass of function) organized chronologically
and classified according to an association with a particular clinical
indication. Specifically, the evolution and structural diversity of
sulfur and the popular integration of fluorine into drugs introduced
over the past 50 years are evaluated. The presented qualitative conclusions
in this article aim to promote innovative insights into drug development.