Translations:Nifedipine/21/en: Difference between revisions

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Message definition (Nifedipine)
The use of nifedipine and related calcium channel antagonists was much reduced in response to 1995 trials that mortality was increased in patients with [[coronary artery disease]] who took nifedipine. This study was a meta-analysis, and demonstrated harm mainly in short-acting forms of nifedipine (that could cause large fluctuations in blood pressure) and at high doses of 80 mg a day and more.
[[File:Urkunde Otto-Bayer-Medaille für galenische Erfindung Copräzipitat.jpg|thumb|Official document Otto-Bayer prize, 1991]]
[[File:Letter Dr Knut Schauerte, patent rights Adalat, 1987.pdf|thumb|Letter Dr Knut Schauerte, patent rights Adalat tablets, 1987. Source: Family archive.]]
Adalat was the first German pharmaceutical to be awarded the prestigious [[Prix Galien]] in 1980. In the same year, [[Ahmed Hegazy (pharmacist)|Ahmed Hegazy]] <!--(1939-2021) -->submitted his invention (in collaboration with Klaus-Dieter Rämsch) of an extended release, solid medicinal preparation of nifedipine to the German Patent Office in Munich, patenting the “use of nifedipine crystals with a specific surface area of 1-4 m2/g for the production of solid medicinal formulations for achieving long-lasting blood levels for the oral treatment of hypertension by administration 1 to 2 times”, an invention that became known as ''Adalat retard'' from Bayer (see letter Dr Schauerte). In that formulation, the active ingredient is released over a period of up to 36 hours. With the increasing incidence of heart disease in that period—heart failure became the first cause of death in West Germany—and the new  formulation, the medication replaced [[Aspirin]] in the 1990s as the biggest single product of Bayer. As Alexander Mey noted, "[d]iese Maßnahmen führten dazu, dass der Umsatz im Jahr 2000 auf 1,7 Mrd. US-$ stieg, obwohl das Präparat bereits ein Vierteljahrhundert am Markt war."<!--"These measures resulted in sales increasing to US$1.7 billion in 2000, even though the preparation had already been on the market for a quarter of a century."--> On 14 October 1991, Hegazy was awarded the Otto Bayer Medal—no relation to the company founder—for his work solubilizing poorly soluble active ingredients such as nifedipine, a prize, that the Bayer Group has been using to honor excellent research since 1984. By 2020, 528 researchers had received the award. A 1995 US lawsuit, in which Hegazy defended his patent, found that Pfizer's Procardia XL product was also based on his European patent No. [https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/8c/e7/6b/65e124ccf4f4bd/EP0047899B2.pdf 0047899], United States Patent [https://patentimages.storage.googleapis.com/80/e0/2f/1e0ab56b05b557/US5264446.pdf 5264446].

The use of nifedipine and related calcium channel antagonists was much reduced in response to 1995 trials that mortality was increased in patients with coronary artery disease who took nifedipine. This study was a meta-analysis, and demonstrated harm mainly in short-acting forms of nifedipine (that could cause large fluctuations in blood pressure) and at high doses of 80 mg a day and more.

Official document Otto-Bayer prize, 1991
Letter Dr Knut Schauerte, patent rights Adalat tablets, 1987. Source: Family archive.

Adalat was the first German pharmaceutical to be awarded the prestigious Prix Galien in 1980. In the same year, Ahmed Hegazy submitted his invention (in collaboration with Klaus-Dieter Rämsch) of an extended release, solid medicinal preparation of nifedipine to the German Patent Office in Munich, patenting the “use of nifedipine crystals with a specific surface area of 1-4 m2/g for the production of solid medicinal formulations for achieving long-lasting blood levels for the oral treatment of hypertension by administration 1 to 2 times”, an invention that became known as Adalat retard from Bayer (see letter Dr Schauerte). In that formulation, the active ingredient is released over a period of up to 36 hours. With the increasing incidence of heart disease in that period—heart failure became the first cause of death in West Germany—and the new formulation, the medication replaced Aspirin in the 1990s as the biggest single product of Bayer. As Alexander Mey noted, "[d]iese Maßnahmen führten dazu, dass der Umsatz im Jahr 2000 auf 1,7 Mrd. US-$ stieg, obwohl das Präparat bereits ein Vierteljahrhundert am Markt war." On 14 October 1991, Hegazy was awarded the Otto Bayer Medal—no relation to the company founder—for his work solubilizing poorly soluble active ingredients such as nifedipine, a prize, that the Bayer Group has been using to honor excellent research since 1984. By 2020, 528 researchers had received the award. A 1995 US lawsuit, in which Hegazy defended his patent, found that Pfizer's Procardia XL product was also based on his European patent No. 0047899, United States Patent 5264446.