Controversy Over Bayer Aspirin
The first written account of Bayer’s development of aspirin is a footnote in a 1934 history of chemical engineering. This footnote credits Bayer chemist Felix Hoffmann with developing aspirin and claims he was inspired by his father’s struggle with chronic pain to create a drug that eased pain yet was easier on the stomach than existing remedies.
Hoffmann’s synthesis relied on a process that German chemist Hermann Kolbe had developed to convert benzene into phenol then phenol into salicylic acid. In 1897, Hoffmann used salicylic acid created through this process to produce acetylsalicylic acid, or aspirin. Yet Schwarcz says that’s not the whole story.
“It was actually [Arthur] Eichengrün”—Hoffmann’s boss—“who told Hoffmann to try to convert salicylic acid into a substance that was more acceptable in terms of intestinal upset,” Schwarcz says. Eichengrün was Jewish, and this might explain why the 1934 footnote, published a year after Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party seized power in Germany, doesn’t mention him.
Eichengrün later wrote a letter to Bayer from a concentration camp “where he described exactly the progress of events and how he had told Hoffmann to synthesize aspirin,” Schwarcz says. In 1949, Eichengrün published a paper in Pharmazie repeating his claims that he had instructed Hoffmann to synthesize aspirin and that Hoffmann had not independently come up with the idea.
Modern scholarship has since affirmed Eichengrün’s role in the creation of aspirin.
Discovery that Aspirin Is a Blood-Thinner, and Modern Guidance
Since aspirin’s invention, scientists have continued to learn new things about its effects on the human body. In the 1950s, California doctor Lawrence Craven published papers arguing that aspirin is an anticoagulant that can prevent blood clots. Further studies confirmed that aspirin is a blood-thinner and an anti-inflammatory drug. In 1982, British pharmacologist John R. Vane won a Nobel Prize for his research into how aspirin works.
Scientists have also discovered some negative effects of aspirin. Taking too much of it can lead to gastrointestinal problems like ulcers. In recent years, medical experts have switched from recommending that older adults regularly take low-dose aspirin to avoid blood clots, to recommending that only older adults with certain risk factors for cardiovascular disease regularly take low-dose aspirin. Basically, the current guidance varies from person to person.
As aspirin is something that scientists continue to study, there will likely be new things we learn about it in the future.