The Day

Pharmacist who helped create ibuprofen dies

- By PHIL DAVISON

The morning British pharmacist Stewart Adams was scheduled to address a pharmacolo­gy conference in Moscow in 1971, he was still feeling a bit hung over. His Soviet hosts had toasted him with multiple shots of vodka at a reception the night before. He was more used to warm English ale. So that morning he took 600mg of a new drug he had co-patented called Brufen, a pain reliever he had created for rheumatoid arthritis sufferers. It eased his headache.

The drug became known as the painkiller ibuprofen, later branded as Nurofen, Advil and Motrin, and now is one of the world’s most popular painkiller­s with billions of dollars of annual sales. On average, it is estimated that one packet of the painkiller is bought in the United States every three seconds.

“It’s funny now,” Adams told Britain’s Telegraph newspaper in 2007. “But over the years so many people have told me that ibuprofen really works for them, and did I know it was so good for hangovers? Of course, I had to admit I did.” Referring to that Moscow morning, he went on: “That was testing the drug in anger, if you like. But I hoped it really could work magic.”

Adams, who developed the drug for Boots the Chemists, Britain’s biggest chain of pharmacist­s, and worked for them his entire 54-year career, never made a penny from the drug he developed and co-patented with organic chemist John Nicholson in 1962.

In fact, he used to joke that, apart from ibuprofen users, he was probably the only person to have lost money from the drug because Boots never paid him the promised patent fee. He lived in a modest home outside the English city of Nottingham until his death on Jan. 30, at age 95, and whenever he got a headache, he went to the nearest Boots or corner shop and paid for his ibuprofen like a regular customer.

His son Chris Adams confirmed the death, at a Nottingham hospital, but did not provide a cause.

Boots, a household name in the United Kingdom for 170 years and now with 2,485 U.K. stores, is now part of the American holding company Walgreens Boots Alliance, which last year reported sales of $131.5 billion.

Early life

Stewart Sanders Adams was born April 16, 1923, in Byfield, near Northampto­n in the East Midlands. He grew up in a rural farming area until his family moved to Doncaster, in Yorkshire, when he was 10. His father was train driver for British Railways.

Leaving school at 16, he started a three-year apprentice­ship as a pharmacist at Boots. The company paid for him to receive a bachelor’s degree at University College Nottingham (now the University of Nottingham). He later received a doctorate in pharmacolo­gy from the University of Leeds.

When war broke out in 1939, he was poised to fulfill his compulsory national military service. But Boots insisted his training in pharmacolo­gy would be better served in helping the wounded who returned home. After Boots’ research department at University College Nottingham was bombed by the Luftwaffe on the night of May 8-9, 1941 — killing 45 people in the college alone and more than 150 more in the city — Adams’ research team moved to a small house outside the city, where their kitchen became their lab. It was there he and Nicholson began the research that would ultimately result in ibuprofen.

First, though, his priority was producing penicillin, vital in treating the wounded. He recalled cultivatin­g millions of doses of penicillin — at the time still considered a new “wonder drug” — which he put in quart milk bottles for hospitals around Britain.

When he and Nicholson began trying to create a new nonsteroid­al anti-inflammato­ry drug (NSAID) for rheumatoid arthritis sufferers, they went through years of trial and error. Four compounds failed clinical trials because of negative side effects. They patented their fifth compound, Brufen, in 1962. It passed clinical trials at the Northern General Hospital in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1966, and three years later was available in Britain as a prescripti­on treatment for rheumatic diseases.

After Adams’ Moscow hangover test, Boots marketed the drug as a general painkiller. It became an over-the-counter medication in Britain in 1983 and in the United States one year later. “Getting the drug approved by the two countries with the toughest regulatory authoritie­s — the U.K. and the U.S. — was a goal I wanted to achieve,” Adams told the Telegraph. “For me, that was the most exciting time of all.”

Adams formally retired from Boots in 1983 but stayed on as a consultant for another 10 years. Queen Elizabeth II made him an Officer of the British Empire (OBE) in 1987 for his services to science.

In 1950 he married Mary Harvey, a fellow Boots scientist who later worked as a geography teacher. She died in 2010. Survivors include two sons, Chris Adams, a lawyer, and David Adams, dean of the medical school at the University of Birmingham.

While proud of his achievemen­ts, Adams was one of the first to warn painkiller­s should be used in moderation and that, used in excess, they could become counterpro­ductive, causing the very headaches they were created to relieve.

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