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Business News/ News / World/  Carl Djerassi, chemist behind birth-control pill, dies at 91
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Carl Djerassi, chemist behind birth-control pill, dies at 91

Djerassi died of complications of liver and bone cancer on Friday at his home in San Francisco, said a New York Times report

A file photo of Carl Djerassi. Photo: ReutersPremium
A file photo of Carl Djerassi. Photo: Reuters

Washington: Carl Djerassi, who provided the chemistry behind the sexual revolution by patenting the synthetic hormone used in the Pill, the oral contraceptive sold under various names in the US since 1960, has died. He was 91.

He died on Friday at his home in San Francisco, the New York Times reported, citing his son, Dale. The cause was complications of liver and bone cancer.

An Austrian-born research chemist, Djerassi crossed academic disciplines to study how the birth-control pill he helped create influenced women’s health, gender equality and global population.

“By separating the coital act from contraception, the Pill started one of the most monumental movements in recent times, the gradual divorce of sex from reproduction," he wrote in “This Man’s Pill: Reflections on the 50th Birthday of the Pill" (2001), the last of three autobiographies.

As a professor at Stanford University, he explored the human side of science and the moral conflicts scientists face in novels, non-fiction books, plays and short stories.

He took issue with the oft-repeated title “father of the Pill," saying it excluded others such as biologist Gregory Pincus and obstetrician-gynaecologist John Rock, who played key roles in the decades-long path toward an oral contraceptive.

In 1951, as associate director of chemical research at Syntex SA in Mexico City, Djerassi led work on a synthetic version of progesterone, a hormone secreted by the female reproductive system.

Drug discovery

Using diosgenin, a chemical abundant in Mexican yams, the Syntex team created a contraceptive steroid that could be taken orally. The drug, called norethindrone, was successfully synthesized on 15 October 1951, and patented by Djerassi along with Syntex colleagues George Rosenkranz, the chief chemist who would rise to chairman, and Luis Miramontes, a doctoral student in their lab.

The birth-control pill first approved by the US Food and Drug Administration—Enovid, in 1960—was developed not by Djerassi but by a competitor, Frank Colton at G.D. Searle & Co. In short order, though, Djerassi’s version was also approved and became an industry standard. Syntex then introduced its own pill, called Norinyl.

By 1965, seven US companies were marketing versions of the Pill, with sales reaching $65 million, according to Time magazine. Syntex—incorporated in Panama and operating largely in Mexico—was then the most heavily traded company on the American Stock Exchange, supplying the basic compound for its own version and for those made by Eli Lilly & Co., Johnson & Johnson, and Parke, Davis, now a unit of New York-based Pfizer Inc.

Syntex was acquired in 1994 by Basel, Switzerland-based Roche Holding AG, the world’s biggest maker of cancer drugs.

Policy implications

Starting with a 1969 piece for Science magazine on global implications of US contraceptive research, Djerassi waded into the public-policy debate spawned in part by his creation.

Hippie culture, rock ’n’ roll and women’s liberation would have triggered a sexual revolution even if the birth-control pill didn’t exist, he said. One sure effect of the Pill, he said, was fewer unwanted pregnancies and abortions.

“No one expected that women would accept oral contraceptives in the manner in which they did in the ’60s," Djerassi said in 2007, according to the Guardian newspaper in the UK. “The explosion was much faster than anyone expected."

In a 2010 interview, according to the Guardian, Djerassi cited one way in which the Pill worked against the best interests of women.

“Modern, intelligent men won’t take responsibility, wouldn’t even use condoms," he said. “They shrugged and said: ‘All women are now on the pill, I don’t need to bother.’ This has become another woman’s burden."

Turning ‘softer’

His role in creating the contraceptive, he wrote in his 2003 autobiography, turned him “from a ‘hard’ physical scientist to a much ‘softer’ chemist concerned with the deeper social ramifications of my work."

Carl Djerassi was born on 29 October 1923, in Vienna to two Jewish doctors: Bulgarian-born Samuel Djerassi, who specialized in venereal diseases, and the former Alice Friedmann, a Viennese dentist. They divorced when he was young.

Fleeing the Nazis in the late 1930s, Djerassi and his mother emigrated to the US, settling in New York City with little money. He graduated from Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, with a degree in organic chemistry in 1942.

While working as a research chemist at Ciba Pharmaceutical Co. in Summit, New Jersey, he began his graduate studies at Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, today’s Polytechnic Institute of New York University. In 1945, he received a Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin in Madison.

Steroid research

Djerassi spent four more years with Ciba, researching steroids, before joining Syntex in Mexico City, where, in addition to norethindrone, he worked on synthesizing cortisone.

He returned to the US in 1952 to teach at Wayne State University in Detroit while continuing his association with Syntex. From 1959 to 2002 he was a professor at Stanford, where he designed an undergraduate course called “Biosocial Aspects of Birth Control" and a graduate writing course on biomedical ethics.

He won the National Medal of Science in 1973, for his work on the Pill, and the National Medal of Technology in 1991, for his leadership at Zoecon Corp., a developer of environmentally friendly insect control products. He was inducted into the Inventors Hall of Fame in 1978 for research that led to antihistamines and anti-inflammatory drugs in addition to oral contraceptives.

Perhaps fittingly for a man associated with the sexual revolution, Djerassi was open about his own turbulent romantic history.

‘Ironic’ pregnancy

While married to his first wife, the former Virginia Jeremiah, he had an affair that resulted in the pregnancy of the woman who would become his second wife, Norma Lundholm. (He later acknowledged it was “ironic" that he of all people had contributed to an accidental pregnancy, which he attributed to failure of a condom. He had a vasectomy in his 50s.)

That pregnancy produced a daughter, Pamela Djerassi Bush, an artist who committed suicide in 1978, at 28. In her honour, her parents founded the Djerassi Resident Artists Program, an artists’ retreat near Woodside, California.

Dale Djerassi, his son by his second wife, is a filmmaker. That marriage, like his first, ended in divorce. Djerassi’s survivors also include a grandson and a stepdaughter, Leah Middlebrook, according to the Times.

His third wife, Diane Middlebrook, a biographer and English professor at Stanford, died in 2007. Bloomberg

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Published: 01 Feb 2015, 07:44 PM IST
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