I always wondered how pharma companies devise these exciting-sounding
brand names for their medications. This article in the NY Times sheds
some light on it:
The Science of Naming Drugs (Sorry, 'Z' Is Already Taken)
By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.
HEN British drug regulators told doctors recently to stop writing
prescriptions for six antidepressants for children under 18, the drugs
in question sounded like a "Star Wars" cast: Paxil, Effexor, Celexa,
Lexapro, Luvox and Zoloft. (A seventh, Prozac, was approved.)
It has often been noted that drug makers have favorite letters, and that
they run the gamut from X to Z. Think Nexium, Clarinex, Celebrex, Xanax,
Zyban and Zithromax. But why are these letters so popular?
"Some letters look better in print, make sounds people like saying and
are associated with innovation," said Steve Manning, the managing
director of Igor, a San Francisco branding company. "X is associated
with science fiction, high tech, computers, automobiles and drugs." As
in "The X Files" and "The Matrix," Xerox, the Lexus and the Microsoft X-box.
James L. Dettore, president of the Brand Institute, a branding company
based in Miami that has tested 8,400 drug names in the last seven years
(its successes include Lipitor, Clarinex, Sarafem and Allegra), said the
letters X, Z, C and D, according to what he called "phonologics,"
subliminally indicate that a drug is powerful. "The harder the tonality
of the name, the more efficacious the product in the mind of the
physician and the end user," he said.
If only it were that simple. In the neon wilderness of branding, where
almost everyone thinks Nike began life as a sneaker instead of a goddess
and almost nobody knows that Altria is a tobacco company, a drug is
probably the hardest thing to name.
Executives want something that will entice billions of dollars in sales.
Customers want a hint of what it does. The Food and Drug Administration
doesn't want implied medical claims. And if it sounds too much like
another drug, a pharmacist might accidentally kill the customer.
Mr. Dettore says he tests up to 15 names for each client's drug. First
he checks data banks in about 40 countries to see whether the names are
already copyrighted and to make sure they don't mean anything misleading
or vulgar in other languages.
He has focus groups talk about their feelings. For example, Sarafem - a
form of Prozac aimed at women with severe premenstrual irritability -
comes from angelic seraphim, "but with -fem from feminine and a very
soothing prefix," he said.
"Lipitor is 'lipid regulator' with the -tor of atorvastatin, the generic
name," Mr. Dettore added, with the plus that "-or is grounded as a
cardiovascular-sounding suffix." Levitra, the Viagra competitor, comes
from "elevate," he said, but "we tested and it sounds European, elegant,
with premium connotations." "Le'' indicates masculinity in French, he
noted, and 'vitra'' can allude to vitality. (Viagra is also said to make
men feel vital - and like mighty Niagara Falls.)
Mr. Dettore then recruits a test panel of doctors to scribble and phone
prescriptions to a panel of pharmacists to see if confusion ensues.
Finally, he submits the best two names to the F.D.A.
The agency rejects about a third of all applications, weeding out
dangerous sound-alikes. It frowns on syllables like "ultra," "max" or
"new." (Of the 1,035 drugs approved by the F.D.A. from 1989 to 2000,
about 700 were "me-too" drugs with virtually the same ingredients as
previously approved ones.) The same goes for names that sound like
generic drugs. Prozac and Paxil, for example, are fluoxetine and
paroxetine, and so "-oxetine" endings are forbidden because they will
eventually compete with the generics.
The agency also turns down faddish suffixes: does "SR" mean "sustained
release" or "senior"? Does "XL" imply "extra long" or "excellent"?
"The original name proposed for Rogaine was Regain, as in you regain
your hair," said Bill Trombetta, a professor of pharmaceutical marketing
at St. Joseph's University in Philadelphia. "But the F.D.A. said 'You
can't use that name - it promises too much.' "
Mr. Manning of Igor sounded cynical about phonologics. "Do I think
Zoloft could have been Claritin and vice versa?" he said. "Absolutely. I
mean, who cares?"
Drug companies clearly do, and can easily spend $500,000 on a name and
packaging. But after clinical trials costing tens or hundreds of
millions of dollars, "even a couple of million dollars spent on a name
it can't use, that's chump change," Professor Trombetta said.
The companies even register names before they have a drug to fit them.
"There are about 12,000 drugs out there, and only so many Z's and X's to
go around," Professor Trombetta said. "The brand is thought up when it's
in the petri dish."
Dr. Yusuf K. Hamied, chairman of Cipla, an Indian drug company that
copies many drugs patented in the West and makes AIDS drugs for Africa,
operates in a less restrictive environment. He can let his imagination roam.
He makes knockoffs of Viagra, Levitra and the newest member of the
class, Cialis. He originally planned to market Cialis in India as Lexis
or Elexis, playing on Lexus. But since it's known in Europe as "the
weekender" because its effects last 36 hours, he's now thinking of "Y-End?"
"It's a gimmick," he said. "It may catch on."
In India, his version of Viagra is called Silagra, from its generic
name, sildenafil citrate. Indians were already so familiar with Viagra
that it made sense to echo Pfizer's name, he said.
But in Latin America, he sells it as Eviva. It sounds like "revive," but
also has an echo of the female Eve. He said he almost named it Tarzia
"because it makes you feel like Tarzan."
In the Middle East, he forgoes all subtlety. There, it's Erecto.
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/28/weekinreview/28mcne.html
[I didn't know that the name "Sarafem" came from "seraphim." I just
thought it was the combination of two feminine-sounding words to appeal
to women: "Sarah" + "feminine."
Made me wonder who Sarah was. :-)
]
-- Steven L.
Immuno - 28 Dec 2003 17:45 GMT
> I always wondered how pharma companies devise these exciting-sounding
> brand names for their medications. This article in the NY Times sheds
> some light on it:
Nice post :o)
Next time a HEPA debate starts though, don't forget "Nothing sucks like an
Electrolux!".
Pete
Raymond Roy - 28 Dec 2003 22:13 GMT
Interesting post indeed. I suggest you crosspost it on sci.lang and
alt.usage.english.
Raymond
Le Sun, 28 Dec 2003 16:02:00 GMT, Steven Litvintchouk
<sdlitvin@earthlinkNOSPAM.net> ?crivit :
>I always wondered how pharma companies devise these exciting-sounding
>brand names for their medications. This article in the NY Times sheds
[quoted text clipped - 120 lines]
>
>-- Steven L.
Richard Friedel - 30 Dec 2003 07:40 GMT
> I always wondered how pharma companies devise these exciting-sounding
> brand names for their medications. This article in the NY Times sheds
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
>
>......................
Sounds like the morbidly poetic names used by drug makers a century
ago. See Gullible America, f. i.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, a popular nostrum for women,
with depending on the formula, 15 to 20 percent alcohol
Dr. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters with 44%
Vicks Nyquil is 25% alcohol, ,
Contac, Jr.--a medicine for children--has 10 percent.
"Kopp's Baby Friend," sweetened water and morphine, was advertised as
the perfect way to calm babies down.
Bad habits were mystified ("medically explained") to sell deleterious
concoctions. Dr. Peper whom I've posted on here so often, shows that
asthma can be abated with breathing techniques, but folks stick to
dancing round the golden calf - medication. One must really ask if
asthma is partly a medicine cult. Cortisone lets people breathe
dysfunctionally (which apparently damages the bronchi) and this is
called tackling the ........cause of asthma (namely curing
inflammation and at the same time weakening breathing muscles). At
any rate, even if this is an exaggeration, we could follow Carl Sagan
with his recommendation to spin some alternative theory, no matter
what the present world view is and big pharma says and goes down so
well. Regards, Richard Friedel
francispoon - 30 Dec 2003 08:25 GMT
Very interesting. I was unable to find ATIVAN in China until I
discovered a drug named LORA manufactured in Thailand and which
belongs to the group of lorazepam.
FP
========================
> I always wondered how pharma companies devise these exciting-sounding
> brand names for their medications. This article in the NY Times sheds
[quoted text clipped - 120 lines]
>
> -- Steven L.