cover image Dark Remedy: The Impact of Thalidomide and Its Revival as a Vital Medicine

Dark Remedy: The Impact of Thalidomide and Its Revival as a Vital Medicine

Trent D. Stephens. Perseus Publishing, $26 (228pp) ISBN 978-0-7382-0404-8

Thalidomide, the drug notorious for causing deformities in infants during the late 1950s and early '60s, has been back in the newsDamazingly, it has been found useful in treating a range of diseases from cancer and leprosy to AIDS. Combining Stephens's expertise as a scientist researching thalidomide and novelist and historian Brynner's (The Doomsday Report) firsthand experience as a thalidomide recipient (he was given the drug to treat t a rare inflammatory disease), this compelling tale documents the history of a drug originally offered as a ""safe"" alternative to barbiturates (which were used by suicides). Very soon, it came to be linked to nerve damage in adults and to ""flipper-like"" limbs in babies born to women who took the drug. An arduous legal battle ensued, and the authors nicely highlight such figures as the FDA's Frances Kelsey, who fought successfully against the drug being approved for use in the U.S., and pediatrician Widukind Lenz, who linked thalidomide to the birth defects. In particular, however, the authors successfully convey the necessity of placing an ""absolute commitment to truth"" ahead of all other considerations when testing, prescribing or selling a drug. ""The monster was never thalidomide itself,"" they claim of the drug that sparked FDA reform. While this moving account offers a chilling glimpse of how the profit motive can negatively affect many lives, it also includes a straightforward presentation of Stephens's pioneering research with thalidomideDresearch that he hopes will contribute to developing a truly safe alternative. (Feb.) Forecast: Brynner is the late actor Yul Brynner's son. That will undoubtedly help bring publicity to this title, which will draw a wide range of readers interested in the ethics and science of medical research.