Eli Lilly and Company
Company type | Public |
---|---|
NYSE: LLY S&P 500 Component | |
Industry | Pharmaceuticals |
Founded | 1876 |
Founder | Eli Lilly |
Headquarters | Indianapolis, Indiana, United States |
Key people | John C. Lechleiter (Chairman, President and CEO) |
Products | Drugs |
Revenue | US$ 23.113 billion (2013)[1] |
US$ 5.889 billion (2013)[1] | |
US$ 4.685 billion (2013)[1] | |
Total assets | US$ 35.249 billion (2013)[1] |
Total equity | US$ 17.641 billion (2013)[1] |
Number of employees | 37,925 (December 2013)[1] |
Website | Lilly.com |
Eli Lilly and Company is an American global pharmaceutical company with headquarters located in Indianapolis, Indiana, in the United States. The company also has offices in Puerto Rico and 17 other countries. Their products are sold in approximately 125 countries. The company was founded in 1876 by Col. Eli Lilly, a pharmaceutical chemist and veteran of the American Civil War, after whom the company was named.
Company profile
A Fortune 500 corporation, Eli Lilly had revenues of $20 billion in 2008, making it the 148th largest company in the United States and the 10th largest corporation by global pharmaceutical sales. The company is publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange and is a member of the S&P 500 stock index. Eli Lilly was one of the Nifty Fifty stocks that propelled the mid 20th century bull market.
Eli Lilly is a full member of the European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations (EFPIA).[2]
History
Company founder
The company's founder was Colonel Eli Lilly, a pharmaceutical chemist and Union Army veteran of the American Civil War.[3] Col. Lilly served as the company president until his death in 1898.[4] A stylized version of his signature still appears in the company's red logo.[3] After he mustered out of the Union army, Lilly briefly became a cotton planter in Mississippi, but the venture failed and he returned to the Midwest, where he was a partner in a Paris, Illinois, drugstore.[5] Lilly began formulating plans to create a medical wholesale company while working in partnership at the Binford and Lilly drug store in Illinois.
Early days: 1870s–1900
The first Lilly location in Indianapolis was a small, two-story brick building on Pearl Street.[3][6] In his first year of business, sales reached $4,470. At the end of 1877 sales reached $11,318.[7] The company outgrew its first location and moved twice in the next four years until it settled in 1881 on property at McCarty Street in Indianapolis's south-side industrial area. Lilly later purchased additional facilities for research and production.[8]
From its facilities in Indianapolis the company manufactured and sold "ethical drugs" for use by the medical profession. Lilly's medicines included labels that disclosed product ingredients.[3] Lilly's first innovation was gelatin-coating for pills and capsules[citation needed]. He hired his brother, James, to take over sales in 1878.
In 1881 the business was formally incorporated as Eli Lilly and Company. Col. Lilly's only son, Josiah, a pharmaceutical chemist who graduated from the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science in 1882, joined the family business after college as a superintendent and became company president in 1898.[9] In 1883 the company contracted to mix and sell Succas Alterans, a treatment for venereal diseases.[10] Sales from this product provided funds for Lilly to expand its manufacturing and research facilities.[7]
By the late 1880s Col. Lilly was one of the area's leading businessmen, whose company employed more than one-hundred employees and had $200,000 in annual sales.[5] As the Lilly company grew, other businesses set up operations near the plant on Indianapolis's near south side and the area began to develop into one of the city's major business and industrial hubs. Lilly's production, manufacturing, research, and administrative operations in Indianapolis eventually occupied a complex of more than two dozen buildings covering a 15-block area as well as production plants on Kentucky Avenue.[11]
The 1890s were a tumultuous decade economically, but the company was able to survive and came out stronger than ever.[12] Until the turn of the century Lilly operated as many other pharmaceutical businesses did—manufacturing and selling "sugar-coated pills, fluid extracts, elixirs, and syrups" in Indianapolis and the surrounding area.[13] The company used plants for its raw materials and produced its products by hand. One historian noted, "Although the Indianapolis firm was more careful in making and promoting drugs that the patent medicine men of the era, the company remained ambivalent about scientific research."[13] Succus Alterans, one the company's best sellers, was sold as a "blood purifier", a treatment for syphilis, and was recommended for "certain types of rheumatism" and skin diseases such as eczema and psoriasis.[13]
In addition to Lilly, his brother, James, and son, Josiah, other family members were also employed by the growing company. Lilly's cousin, Evan Lilly, was hired as a bookkeeper.[12] As young boys, Lilly's grandsons, Eli and Josiah (Joe) ran errands and did other odd jobs. After college Eli and Joe joined the family business and eventually each one served as company president and chairman of the board.[14] Their father, Josiah K. Lilly, Sr. became company president after his father, Col. Lilly, died in 1898.[4] Under Josiah's leadership, the company introduced scientific management concepts, organized the company's research department, increased its sales force, and began international distribution of its products.[15] In addition he also oversaw a large expansion of the company. By 1905 the company reached sales of $1 million.[4]
Modernization:1900–40
Just before and after World War I, the Lilly company experienced rapid change.[13] Expansion of Lilly's manufacturing facilities at the McCarty Street plant improved production capacity with a new Science Building (Building 14), opened in 1911, and a new capsule plant (Building 15) in 1913.[16] The company also began constructions of the Lilly Biological Laboratories, a research and manufacturing plant on 150 acres near Greenfield, Indiana, in 1913.[17]
In addition to development of new medicines, the company achieved several technological advances, including automation of its production facilities. Lilly was also an innovator in pill capsule manufacturing. It was among the first manufacturers to insert medications into empty gelatin capsules, which provided a more exact dosage.[3] Lilly manufactured capsules for its own needs and sold its excess capacity to others.[18] A 1917 Scientific American article claimed the Lilly operation in Indianapolis was "the largest capsule factory in the world" and was "capable of producing 2.5 million capsules a day".[18] One of Lilly's innovations was fruit flavoring for medicines and sugar-coated pills to make their medicines easier to swallow.[19] Over the next few years the company began to create tens of millions of capsules and pills annually.[20]
Other advances improved plant efficiency and eliminated production errors. Eli Lilly, grandson of the company founder, introduced a method for blueprinting manufacturing tickets in 1909.[21] This process, which created multiples copies of a drug formula, helped eliminate manufacturing and transcription errors.[18] In the 1920s Eli introduced the new concept of straight-line production, where raw materials entered at one end of the facility and the finished product came out the other end, in the company’s manufacturing process. Under Eli’s supervision, the design for Building 22, a new 5-floor plant that opened in Indianapolis in 1926, implemented the straight-line concept to improve production efficiency and lower production costs.[22][23] One historian noted, "It was probably the most sophisticated production system in the American pharmaceutical industry."[23] This more efficient manufacturing process also allowed the company to hire a regular workforce. Instead of recalling workers at peak times and laying them off when production demand fell, Lilly's regular workforce produced less-costly medicines in off-peak times using the same manufacturing facilities.[14]
During the 1920s the introduction of new products also brought the company financial success.[13] In 1919 Josiah hired biochemist George Henry Alexander Clowes as director of biochemical research. In 1921 three University of Toronto scientists, J. J. R. Macleod, Frederick G. Banting, and Charles H. Best, were working on the development of insulin for treatment of diabetes.[24] Clowes and Eli Lilly met with the researchers in 1922 to negotiate an agreement with the University of Toronto scientists to mass-produce insulin.[25] The collaboration led to the first successful large-scale production of insulin. In 1923 Lilly began selling Iletin (Insulin, Lilly), their tradename for the first commercially available insulin product in the U.S for the treatment of diabetes.[26] The Toronto scientists won a Nobel Prize in 1923 for their research. Insulin, "the most important drug" in the company’s history, did "more than any other" to make Lilly "one of the major pharmaceutical manufacturers in the world."[24]
The success of insulin enabled the company to attract well-respected scientists and, with them, make more medical advances. By its fiftieth anniversary in 1926 sales reached $9 million and the company produced more than 2,800 different items.[14] In 1928 Lilly introduced Liver Extract 343 for the treatment of pernicious anemia, a blood disorder, in a joint venture with two Harvard University scientists, George R. Minot and William P. Murphy. In 1930 Lilly introduced Liver Extract No. 55 in collaboration with George Whipple, a University of Rochester scientist.[27] Minot, Murphy, and Whipple won the 1934 Nobel Prize in medicine for their research.[28]
Despite the economic challenges of the Great Depression, Lilly's sales rose to $13 million in 1932.[29] That same year Eli Lilly, the eldest grandson of Col. Lilly, was named as the company's president to succeed his father, who remained as chairman of the board until 1948. Eli joined the family business in 1909.[4] In his early years at the company Eli was especially interested in improving production efficiency and introduced a number of labor-saving devices. He also introduced scientific management principles and implemented cost-savings measures that modernized the company.[30] In addition Eli was involved in expanding the company’s research efforts and collaborations with university researchers.[31]
In 1934 the firm opened two new facilities on the McCarty Street complex: a replica of Lilly’s 1876 laboratory and the new Lilly Research Laboratories, "one of the most fully equipped facilities in the world."[32] In the 1930s the company also continued expansion overseas.[33] In 1934 Eli Lilly and Company Limited, the company's first overseas subsidiary was established in England, with headquarters in London and a manufacturing plant in Basingstoke.[29][33]
Expansion: 1940–70
World War II brought production at Lilly to a new high with the manufacturing of Merthiolate and penicillin. During the war Lilly also cooperated with the American Red Cross to process blood plasma and by war's end the company had dried over two million pints of blood, "about 20 percent of the United States' total".[34] Merthiolate, first introduced in 1930, was an "anticeptic and germicide" that became a U.S. army "standard issue" during World War II.[35][36] In the early 1940s Lilly became one of the companies mass-producing penicillin.[37]
International operations expanded even further during World War II.[33] Eli Lilly International Corp. was formed in 1943 as a subsidiary to encourage business trade abroad. By 1948 Lilly employees worked in thirty-five countries, most of them as sales representatives in Latin America, Asia, and Africa.[33]
At the end of World War II the company continued to grow. In 1945 Lilly began a major expansion effort that would include two manufacturing operations in Indianapolis. The company purchased the massive Curtiss-Wright propeller plant on South Kentucky Avenue, west of the company's McCarty Street operation. When renovation was completed in mid-1947, the Kentucky Avenue location manufactured antibiotics and capsules and housed the company’s shipping department.[38] By 1948 Lilly employed nearly 7,000 people.[6]
Eli Lilly, who had served as the company's president since 1932, retired from active management of the company in 1948, became chairman of the board, and relinquished the presidency to his brother, Josiah K. Lilly, Jr. (Joe).[39] During Eli's sixteen-year presidency sales rose from $13 million in 1932 to $117 million in 1948. Joe joined the company in 1914 and concentrated on the company's personnel and marketing efforts.[40] He served as company president from 1948 to 1953, then became chairman of the board and remained in that capacity until his death in 1966.[41] In 1952 the company offered its first public shares of stock.[42] In 1953 Eugene N. Beesley was named the company's new president, the first non-family member to run the company.
Over the next several decades Lilly continued to develop and introduce new drugs to the marketplace. In the 1950s Lilly introduced two new antibiotics: vancomycin and erythromycin. In addition Lilly was heavily involved in production and distribution of Jonas Salk's poliomyelitis (polio) vaccine. In 1954 the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis (NFIP) contracted with five pharmaceutical companies to produce Salk's polio vaccine for clinical trials. These included Lilly as well as Parke, Davis and Company, Cutter Laboratories, Wyeth Laboratories, and Pitman-Moore Company.[43] Lilly's selection to produce the vaccine was, in part, due to its previous experience in collaborations with university researchers.[44] Lilly manufactured 60 percent of the Salk vaccine in 1955.
During the mid-twentieth century Lilly continued to expand its production facilities outside of Indianapolis. In 1950 Lilly began Tippecanoe Laboratories in Lafayette, Indiana,[45] and increased antibiotic production with its patent on erythromycin. In 1954 Lilly formed Elanco Products Company for the production of veterinary pharmaceuticals. In 1969 the company opened a new plant in Clinton, Indiana.[45]
After a company reorganization and transition to non-family management in 1953, Lilly continued to expand its global presence. In the 1960s Lilly operated thirteen affiliate companies outside the United States.[46] In 1962, with an acquisition from Distillers Company, the company established a major factory in Liverpool, England. In 1968 Lilly built its first research facility, the Lilly Research Centre Limited, outside the United States near London, England.
Innovations and challenges: 1970–2010
During the 1970s and 1980s, Eli Lilly and Company saw a flurry of drug production: an antibiotic, Keflex, in 1971; a heart drug, Dobutrex, in 1977; Ceclor, which would become the world's top selling oral antibiotic, in 1979; a leukemia drug, Eldisine; an antiarthritic, Oraflex; and an analgesic, Darvon. When generic drugs flooded the marketplace after the expiration of patents for drugs discovered in the 1950s and 1960s, Lilly diversified into other areas, most notably agricultural chemicals, animal-health products, cosmetics, and medical instruments.
To further diversify its product line, Lilly made an uncharacteristic, but ultimately profitable move in 1971, when it bought cosmetic manufacturer Elizabeth Arden, Inc. for $38 million. Although the subsidiary continued to lose money for five years after Lilly acquired it, executive management changes at Arden helped turn into a financial success. By 1982 the subsidiary's "sales were up 90 percent from 1978, with profits doubling to nearly $30 million." Sixteen years after its acquisition, Lilly sold Arden to Fabergé in 1987 for $657 million.[47]
In 1977 Lilly ventured into medical instruments with the acquisition of IVAC Corporation, which manufactures vital signs and intravenous fluid infusion monitoring systems. Lilly also purchased Cardiac Pacemakers Incorporated, a manufacturer of heart pacemakers in 1977. In 1980 Lilly acquired Physio-Control Corporation. Other acquisitions included Advance Cardiovasular Systems Incorporated in 1984, Hybritech in 1986, and Devices for Vascular Intervention, Incorporated in 1989. Lilly acquired Pacific Biotech in 1990 and Origin Medsystems and Heart Rhythm Technologies, Incorporated in 1992. In the early 1990s Lilly combined these medical equipment companies into a Medical Devices and Diagnostics Division that "contributed about 20 percent" of Lilly’s annual revenues.
In 1989 a joint agri-chemical venture between Elanco Products Company and Dow Chemical created DowElanco. In 1997 Lilly sold its 40 percent share in the company to Dow Chemical for $1.2 billion and the name was changed to Dow AgroSciences.[48][49][50]
In 1994 Lilly acquired PCS Systems, a drug delivery business for Health Maintenance Organizations, and later added two similar organizations to its holdings.[51] Lilly purchased PCS, which was the largest U.S. prescription drug benefits manager at the time, for $4 billion.[52]
In 1991 Vaughn Bryson was named CEO of Eli Lilly. During his 20-month tenure, the company reported its first quarterly loss as a publicly traded company.[53] In 1993 Randall L. Tobias, a vice-chairman of AT&T Corporation and Lilly board member, was named Lilly's chairman, president, and CEO after "product and competitive pressures" had "steadily eroded Lilly's stock price since early 1992."[54] Tobias was the first president and CEO recruited from outside of the company. Under Tobias's leadership the company "cut costs and narrowed its mission".[55] Lilly sold companies in its Medical Device and Diagnostics Division, expanded international sales, made new acquisitions, and funded additional research and product development. Sidney Taurel, former chief operating officer of Lilly, was named CEO in 1998, replacing Tobias. Taurel was named chairman in January 1999. In 2000 Lilly reported $10.86 billion in net sales.
In 1998 Eli Lilly formed a joint venture with Icos Corporation (ICOS), a Bothell, Washington-based biotechnology company, to develop and commercialize Cialis, a product for the treatment of erectile dysfunction. In October 2006 Lilly announced its intention to acquire Icos for $2.1 billion, or $32 per share.[56] After its initial attempt to acquire Icos failed under pressure from large institutional shareholders, Lilly revised its offer to $34 per share. Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS), a proxy advisory firm, advised Icos shareholders to reject the proposal as undervalued,[57][58] but the buyout was approved by Icos shareholders and Lilly completed its acquisition of the company on January 29, 2007.[59][60] Lilly closed Icos manufacturing operations, terminated nearly 500 Icos employees, and left 127 employees working at the biologics facility.[61] In December 2007 CMC Biopharmaceuticals A/S (CMC), a Copenhagen, Denmark-based provider of contract biomanufacturing services, bought the Bothell-based biologics facility from Lilly and retained the existing 127 employees.[58][61][62]
In January 2009, the largest criminal fine in U.S. history, totaling $1.415 billion was imposed on Lilly for illegal marketing of its best-selling product, the atypical antipsychotic medication, Zyprexa.[63]
In January 2011, Boehringer Ingelheim and Eli Lilly and Company announced their global agreement for the joint development and marketing of new APIs for diabetes therapy. Lilly could receive more than one billion dollars for their work on the project, while Boehringer Ingelheim could receive more than $800 million from development of the new drugs.[64] Oral anti-diabetic of Boehringer Ingelheim–Linagliptin and BI 10773–and two insulin analogs of Lilly–LY2605541 and LY2963016–were in phase II and III of clinical developmentat that time.[65]
In April 2014, Lilly announced plans to buy Swiss drugmaker Novartis AG's animal health business for $5.4 billion in cash to strengthen and diversify its Elanco unit. Lilly said it plans to fund the deal with about $3.4 billion of cash on hand and $2 billion of loans.[66]
Collaborative research
Eli Lilly and Company has a long history of collaboration with research scientists. In 1886 Ernest G. Eberhardt, a chemist, joined the company as its first full-time research scientist.[67] Lilly also hired two botanists, Walter H. Evans and John S. Wright, to join its early research efforts.[7][68] After World War I the company’s expanded production facilities and introduction of new management methods set the stage for Lilly's next crucial phase—its "aggressive entry into scientific research and development."[6] The first big step came in 1919 when Josiah Lilly hired biochemist George Henry Alexander Clowes as director of biochemical research.[69] Clowes had extensive medical research expertise and links to the scientific research community, which led to the company's collaborations with researchers in the U.S. and elsewhere.[70] Clowes's first major collaboration with researchers who developed insulin at the University of Toronto significantly impacted the company’s future.[70] Lilly’s success with insulin production secured the company's position as a leading research-based pharmaceutical manufacturer, allowing it to attract and hire more research scientists and to collaborate with other universities in additional medical research.[71] In 1934 the company built a new research laboratory in Indianapolis.[24] As part of its research and product development process Lilly also conducted clinical studies at Indianapolis City Hospital (Wishard Memorial Hospital). Lilly continues to conduct clinical studies to test medications before their introduction to the market.[72] In 1949 Eli Lilly actually went into partnership with the United States Army Reserve setting up a local Strategic Intelligence Research and Analysis (SIRA)Unit to allow employees to research company data for the Scientific Logistics and Eurasian fields of study (source: declassified Defense Intelligence Agency document MDR -0191-2008 dated 17 Sep 2012). In 1998 the company dedicated new laboratories for clinical research at the Indiana University Medical Center in Indianapolis.
Publicly funded research
In addition to internal research and development activities Lilly is also involved in publicly funded research projects with other industrial and academic partners. One example in the area of non-clinical safety assessment is the InnoMed PredTox, a collaboration with pharmaceutical companies, research organizations, and the European Commission to improve the safety of drugs.[73][74] In 2008 this consortium, which included Lilly S.A. (Switzerland), secured a €8 million budget for a 40-month project that was coordinated by the European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations (EFPIA), an organization who represents the research-based pharmaceutical industry and biotech companies operating in Europe.[74][75][76] In 2008 Lilly's activities included research projects within the framework of the Innovative Medicines Initiative, a public-private research initiative in Europe that is a joint effort of the EFPIA and the European Commission.[77][78][79]
Pharmaceutical brands
The company's most important products introduced prior to World War II included insulin, which Lilly marketed as Iletin (Insulin, Lilly), Amytal, Merthiolate, ephedrine, and liver extracts.[36] Introduced in 1923, Iletin (Insulin, Lilly) was Lilly's first commercial insulin product. In 2002 the company was the leading producer of products for those with diabetes.[citation needed]
During World War II Lilly produced penicillins and other antibiotics. In addition to penicillin, other wartime production included "antimalarials," blood plasma, encephalitis vaccine, typhus and influenza vaccine, gas gangrene antitoxin, Merthiolate, and Iletin (Insulin, Lilly).[80]
Among the company's more recent pharmaceutical breakthroughs are cephalosporin, erythromycin, and Prozac (fluoxetine), a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) for the treatment of clinical depression. Ceclor, introduced in 1970s, was an oral cephalosporin antibiotic. Prozac, introduced in the 1980s, quickly became the company's best-selling product for treatment of depression, but Lilly lost its U.S. patent protection for this product in 2001. Among other distinctions, Lilly is the world's largest manufacturer and distributor of medications used in a broad range of psychiatric and mental health-related conditions, including clinical depression, generalized anxiety disorder, narcotic addiction, insomnia, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and others.
Cialis
In 2003, Eli Lilly introduced Cialis (tadalafil), a competitor to Pfizer's blockbuster Viagra for erectile dysfunction. Cialis maintains an active period of 36 hours, causing it sometimes to be dubbed the "weekend pill". Cialis was developed in a partnership with biotechnology company Icos Corporation. On December 18, 2006, Lilly bought Icos in order to gain full control of the product.[81]
Cymbalta
Another Lilly manufactured anti-depressant, Cymbalta, a serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor used predominantly in the treatment of major depressive disorders and generalized anxiety disorder, ranks with Prozac as one of the most financially successful pharmaceuticals in industry history. It is also used in the treatment of fibromyalgia, neuropathy, chronic pain and osteoarthritis.[citation needed]
Gemzar
In 1996 the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved Gemzar for the treatment of pancreatic cancer. Gemzar is commonly used in the treatment of pancreatic cancer, usually in coordination with 5-FU chemotherapy and radiology. Gemzar also is routinely used in the treatment of non-small cell lung cancer.
Methadone
Eli Lilly was the first distributor of methadone, an analgesic used frequently in the treatment of heroin, opium and other opioid and narcotic drug addictions.[citation needed]
Prozac
Prozac was one of the first therapies in its class to treat clinical depression by blocking the uptake of serotonin within the human brain. It is prescribed to more than fifty-four million people worldwide.[citation needed] Prozac was approved by the U.S. FDA in 1987 for use in treating depression. In 2001 Lilly lost its U.S. patent protection for Prozac and in January 2002 the U.S. Supreme Court rejected Lilly's final appeal, a decision that allows other companies to make generic versions of the drug. Prozac has given rise to a number of comparably functioning therapies for the treatment of clinical depression and other central nervous system disorders such as obsessive compulsive disorder, bulimia nervosa, and panic disorders.[citation needed]
Prozac in popular culture
Because of its wide appeal as a popular anti-depressant, references to Prozac have appeared in books, movies, and music. Prozac Nation (1994), an autobiographical book by Elizabeth Wurtzel, was turned into a film of the same name in 2001 and starred Christina Ricci. Listening to Prozac (1993), by Peter Kramer, was a generally analytical look at Prozac and its uses, not only to treat disorders but to diagnose them as well. Talking Back to Prozac (1994), by psychiatrist Peter Breggin, focuses on Prozac's side effects. Rapper Jay-Z referenced Prozac in the song, "Nigga What, Nigga Who" (1998). In HBO's fictional series, The Sopranos, Tony Soprano's use of Prozac is periodically referenced.[citation needed]
Secobarbital
Eli Lilly has manufactured Secobarbital, a barbiturate derivative with anaesthetic, anticonvulsant, sedative and hypnotic properties. Lilly marketed Secobarbital under the brand name Seconal. Secobarbital is indicated for the treatment of epilepsy, temporary insomnia and as a pre-operative medication to produce anaesthesia and anxiolysis in short surgical, diagnostic, or therapeutic procedures which are minimally painful. With the onset of new therapies for the treatment of these conditions, Secobarbital has been less utilized, and Lilly ceased manufacturing it in 2001.[citation needed]
Secobarbital overdoses
Secobarbital gained considerable attention during the 1970s, when it gained wide popularity as a recreational drug. On September 18, 1970, rock guitarist legend Jimi Hendrix died from a secobarbital overdose. On June 22, 1969, secobarbital overdose was the cause of death of actress Judy Garland. The drug was a central part of the plot of the hugely popular novel Valley of the Dolls (1966) by Jacqueline Susann in which three highly successful Hollywood women each fall victim, in various ways, to the drug. The novel was later released as a film by the same name.[citation needed]
Thimerosal
Eli Lilly has developed the vaccine preservative thiomersal (also called merthiolate and thimerosal). Thiomersal is effective by causing susceptible bacteria to autolyze. Launched in 1930, merthiolate was a mercury-based anticeptic and germicide that "had been formulated at the University of Maryland with support of a Lilly research fellowship."[36]
Additional Eli Lilly therapies
- Alimta (for pleural mesothelioma and non-small cell lung cancer).
- Amytal (a "barbituric acid derivative" introduced in 1925 was "the first American sedative of this kind").[36]
- Ceclor (an oral cephalosporin antibiotic).
- Connoracelis (experimental caffeine/stimulant mix established by independent designer; increases cranial functions in high stress situations).
- Darvocet (an analgesic for mild to moderate pain).
- Darvon, (an analgesic and a non-narcotic, non-addictive alternative to codeine, introduced in 1957).
- Effient (an antithrombotic for acute coronary syndrome in percutaneous coronary intervention); co-marketed with Daiichi Sankyo.
- Ephedrine (introduced in 1926 for the treatment of allergies, including hay fever and asthma).[36]
- E-Mycin (an antibiotic for respiratory and other infections).
- Erbitux (for metastatic colorectal cancer and head and neck cancer).
- Evista (for the prevention and treatment of osteoporosis and for the reduction in risk of breast cancer).[82]
- Forteo (for osteoporosis).
- Glucagon (for severe, life-threatening hypoglycemia).
- Humalog (for Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes).
- Humatrope (a human growth hormone for pediatric growth disorders).
- Humulin (for Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes).
- Keflex (a cephalosporin antibiotic).
- Livalo (for hypercholesterolemia).
- Moxam (an antibiotic) Introduced in collaboration with Shionogi, a Japanese drug company).
- Mandol (an injectable cephalosporin antibiotic for treating "hospital-acquired infections").
- ReoPro (a cardiovascular drug used during high-risk angioplasty surgery).[83]
- Strattera (a non-stimulant medication for attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder).
- Symbyax (for bipolar disorder).
- Tradjenta (for Type 2 diabetes).
- Xigris (for severe sepsis). Withdrawn in November 2011 after failure to show benefit.
- Zyprexa (for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder) Released in 1996.
Personnel
After three generations of Lilly family leadership under company founder, Col. Eli Lilly, his son, Josiah K. Lilly Sr., and two grandsons, Eli Lilly Jr. and Josiah K. Lilly Jr., the company announced a reorganization in 1944 that prepared the way for future expansion and the eventual separation of company management from its ownership.[84] The large, complex corporation was divided into smaller groups headed by vice presidents and in 1953 Eugene N. Beesley was named the first non-family member to become the company’s president.[46]
Although Lilly family members continued to serve as chairman of the board until 1969, Beesley's appointment began the transition to non-family management.[46] In 1972 Richard D. Wood became Lilly's president and CEO after the retirement of Burton E. Beck.[85] In 1991 Vaughn Bryson became president and Wood became board chairman.[86] During Bryson's 20-month tenure as Lilly's president and CEO, the company reported its first quarterly loss as a publicly traded company.[53]
Randall L. Tobias, a vice chairman of AT&T Corporation, was named chairman, president, and CEO in June 1993. Tobias, a Lilly board member since 1986, was recruited from outside the company's executive ranks to replace Lilly's president, Vaughn Bryson, and board chairman, Richard Wood.[53] Tobias later became the U.S. director of Foreign Assistance and administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), with the rank of ambassador.[87]
Sidney Taurel, former chief operating officer of Lilly, was named CEO in July 1998 to replace Tobias, who retired. Taurel became chairman of the board in January 1999.[88] Taurel retired as CEO on March 31, 2008, but remained as chairman of the board until December 31, 2008. John Lechleiter was elected as Lilly’s CEO and president, effective April 1, 2008. Lechleiter had served as Lilly's president and chief operating officer since October 2005.[89]
A number of global leaders in the fields of health policy, management, and scientific research have worked at Lilly, including:
- Ernesto Bustamante, Peruvian scientist.
- Richard DiMarchi, Chief Scientific Officer, Marcadia Biotech.
- Mitch Daniels, current president of Purdue University, former Governor of Indiana and director of the Office of Management and Budget for President George W. Bush.
- Roald Hoffmann, Nobel Prize-winning chemist.
- Michael Johns, former White House speechwriter and Heritage Foundation policy analyst.
- Claude H. Nash, CEO, ViroPharma.
- Peter Nicholas, co-founder of Boston Scientific.
Prominent Lilly board members have included:
- George H. W. Bush, former President and Vice President of the United States of America.
- Martin Feldstein, economist, Harvard University.
- Kenneth Lay, former CEO, Enron.
- William Verity Jr., former U.S. Secretary of Commerce.
Accolades
In 2006 Fortune magazine named Eli Lilly and Company one of the top 100 companies in the United States for which to work. Also in 2006, Barron's Magazine named the company among the top 500 best managed companies in the U.S.
In 2012 Working Mothers magazine named Lilly one of the "100 Best Companies for Working Mothers" for the eighteenth consecutive year. Working Mother reported that in 2012 forty-eight percent of Lilly’s U.S. employees and thirty-four percent of its U.S. managers and executives were women.[90][91]
Community service
The Lilly family as well as Eli LIlly and Company has a long history of community service. Around 1890 Col. Lilly turned over operation of the family business to his son, Josiah, who ran the company for the next several decades.[7] Col. Lilly remained active in civic affairs and assisted a number of local organizations, including the Commercial Club of Indianapolis, which later became the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce,[92] and the Charity Organization Society, a forerunner to the Family Services Association of Central Indiana, an organization supported by United Way.[7][93] Josiah’s sons, Eli and Joe, were also philanthropists who supported numerous cultural and educational organizations.[94]
It was Josiah Sr. who continued his father's civic mindedness and began the company tradition of sending aid to disaster victims.[4] Following the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, the company sent much needed medicine to support recovery efforts and provided relief after the 1936 Johnstown Flood.[4]
In 1917 Lilly Field Hospital 32, named in Josiah’s honor, was equipped in Indianapolis and moved overseas to Contrexville, France, during World War I, where it remained in operation until 1919.[4] Throughout World War II, Lilly manufactured more than two hundred products for military use, including aviator survival kits and seasickness medications for the D-Day invasion.[29] In addition Lilly dried more than two million pints of blood plasma by the war’s end.[34]
Lilly Endowment
In 1937 Josiah K. Lilly Sr. and his two sons, Eli and Joe, founded the Lilly Endowment, a private charitable foundation, with gifts of Lilly stock.[95]
Eli Lilly and Company Foundation
The Eli Lilly and Company Foundation, which is separate from the Lilly Endowment, operates as a tax-exempt private charitable foundation that the company established in 1968. The Foundation is funded through Lilly’s corporate profits.[96]
Controversy
Eli Lilly has been involved in numerous controversies, including political and medical ethics controversies. Eli Lilly is now the sole manufacturer of BGH having purchased the rights to manufacture the drug from Monsanto.
Lawsuits
In June 2008, Eli Lilly and Company agreed to settle a lawsuit stemming from discrimination charges. The lawsuit alleged that the company withheld severance pay in order to convince a former employee, Starr E. Johnson, to withdraw her lawsuit. Eli Lilly was accused by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission of violating the federal anti-discrimination law when they withheld severance benefits to Johnson. Johnson originally filed a discrimination charge after she was fired in 2005. She is a black woman and became disfigured in 1997 when she was exposed to a blood pathogen. Her charge claimed that her supervisor stated that he was put in charge "so that he could watch her and get rid of her and that no one liked looking at her." Eli Lilly was ordered to pay $54,400 in severance pay, $7,000 in interest and compensatory damages, along with $3,000 in attorney fees.[97]
Criminal prosecution
In 2009, four sales representatives for Eli Lilly filed separate qui tam lawsuits against the company for illegally marketing the drug Zyprexa for uses not approved by the Food and Drug Administration. Eli Lilly pled guilty to actively promoting Zyprexa for off-label uses, particularly for the treatment of dementia in the elderly. The $1.415 billion penalty included an $800 million civil settlement and a $515 million criminal fine. The U.S. Justice Department said the criminal fine of $515 million was the largest ever in a health care case, and the largest criminal fine for an individual corporation ever imposed in a U.S. criminal prosecution of any kind.[98][99] "That was a blemish for us," John Lechleiter, CEO of Lilly, told The New York Times. "We don’t ever want that to happen again. We put measures in place to assure that not only do we have the right intentions in integrity and compliance, but we have systems in place to support that."[100]
See also
Notes
- ^ a b c d e f "2013 Form 10-K, Eli Lilly and Company". United States Securities and Exchange Commission.
- ^ "The Pharmaceutical Industry in Figures - 2008 Edition". European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations (EFPIA). p. 49. Retrieved 2008-08-25.
- ^ a b c d e "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. p. 1. Retrieved 2013-02-26.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). p. 3. Retrieved 2013-02-26. Cite error: The named reference "IHSHBR3" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ a b Bodenhamer, David J., and Robert G. Barrows, ed. (1994). The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press. p. 911. ISBN 0-253-31222-1.
{{cite book}}
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has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) Cite error: The named reference "b911" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page). - ^ a b c Bodenhamer, p. 540. Cite error: The named reference "b540" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ a b c d e "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). p. 2. Retrieved 2013-02-26. Cite error: The named reference "IHSHBR2" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). p. 1 and 4. Retrieved 2013-02-26.
- ^ Bodenhamer and Barrows, p. 913.
- ^ Madison, James H. (1989). Eli Lilly: A Life, 1885–1977. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. p. 27. ISBN 0-87195-047-2.
- ^ Taylor Jr., Robert M.; Errol Wayne Stevens; Mary Ann Ponder; Paul Brockman (1989). Indiana: A New Historical Guide. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. p. 423. ISBN 0-87195-048-0.
- ^ a b Price, Nelson (1997). Indiana Legends: Famous Hoosiers from Johnny Appleseed to David Letterman. Indianapolis: Guild Press of Indiana. p. 60. ISBN 1-57860-006-5.
- ^ a b c d e Madison, James H. (1989). "Manufacturing Pharmaceuticals: Eli Lilly and Company, 1876-1948" (PDF). Business and Economic History. 18. Business History Conference: 72. Retrieved 2013-02-20.
- ^ a b c "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). pp. 2, 5 and 6. Retrieved 2013-02-26.
- ^ "The Pharmaceutical Industry in Indiana" (pdf). Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. p. 3. Retrieved 2013-02-20.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 30.
- ^ Taylor Jr., Robert M. p. 481.
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b c Madison, "Manufacturing Pharmaceuticals," Business and Economic History, p. 73.
- ^ Price, p. 59.
- ^ Podczeck, Fridrun, and Brian E. Jones (2004). Pharmaceutical Capsules. Chicago: Pharmaceutical Press. p. 12–13. ISBN 0-85369-568-7.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 29.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 46.
- ^ a b Madison, "Manufacturing Pharmaceuticals," Business and Economic History, p. 74.
- ^ a b c Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 76.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 55–57.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 61.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 66–67.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 67.
- ^ a b c "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. p. 5. Retrieved 2013-02-26.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 28–34.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 62–65.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 91.
- ^ a b c d Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 111.
- ^ a b Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 105.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 65 and 106.
- ^ a b c d e Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 65. Cite error: The named reference "MLilly65" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 107–8.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 110.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 91, 119–20.
- ^ Bodenhamer and Barrows, p. 912.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 120 and 249.
- ^ Price, p. 61.
- ^ "Polio and Eli Lilly and Company" (pdf). Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. p. 5. Retrieved 2013-02-20.
- ^ "Polio and Eli Lilly and Company" (pdf). Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. p. 6. Retrieved 2013-02-20.
- ^ a b Bodenhamer and Barrows, p. 541.
- ^ a b c "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. p. 6. Retrieved 2013-02-26.
- ^ "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). p. 7. Retrieved 2013-02-26.
- ^ "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). p. 6 and 8. Retrieved 2013-02-26.
- ^ "Dow AgroSciences Fast Facts". Dow AgroSciences. Retrieved 2013-02-20.
- ^ http://www.dowagro.com/newsroom/mediakit/facts.htm [dead link ]
- ^ "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). p. 8. Retrieved 2013-02-26.
- ^ Armor, Nancy (1994-07-31). "New Lilly Chief Nurtures Change". Kokomo Tribune. Kokomo, IN.
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(help) - ^ a b c Associated Press (1993-06-28). "New Lilly Chief Doesn't Have Own 'Agenda'". Kokomo Tribune. Kokomo, IN.
{{cite news}}
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requires|url=
(help) Cite error: The named reference "KokomoTrib62893" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page). - ^ Associated Press (1993-06-26). "Eli Lilly CEO Resigns in Dispute". Kokomo Tribune. Kokomi, IN.
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:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). p. 8 and 9. Retrieved 2013-02-26.
- ^ Associated Press (2006-12-19). "Lilly Increases Offer for Icos; Shareholders' Vote Is Put Off". The New York Times. Retrieved 2013-02-27.
- ^ Timmerman, Luke (2007-01-13). "Reject Icos Offer, Holders of Shares Advised". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2013-01-16.
- ^ a b Timmerman, Luke (2006-11-07). "Proposed Icos Sale Gets More Criticism: Payouts for Execs Called 'Overkill'". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2013-01-16.
- ^ James, Andrea (2007-01-26). "Icos Voters Approve Buyout by Eli Lilly". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved 2013-01-16.
- ^ "Eli Lilly Completes Icos Takeover". The Seattle Times. 2007-01-30. Retrieved 2013-01-16.
- ^ a b Tartakoff, Joseph (2007-12-05). "New Owner Will Invest $50 Million in Icos Facility". Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved 2013-02-27.
- ^ Timmerman, Luke (2006-12-12). "All Icos Workers Losing Their Jobs". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2013-01-16.
- ^ Eli Lilly Gets $1.4B Fine for Zyprexa Off-Label Marketing | MedHeadlines
- ^ Murphy, Tom (2011-01-12). "Lilly, Boehringer Collaborate on Diabetes Drugs". Anderson Herald Bulletin. Anderson, IN. p. A7.
{{cite news}}
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requires|url=
(help) - ^ "Lilly and Boehringer Ingelheim Announce Strategic Alliance to Bring New Diabetes Treatments to Patients Worldwide". Indianapolis, IN: Eli Lilly and Company. 2011-01-11. Retrieved 2013-02-27.
- ^ http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/04/22/us-novartis-divestiture-eli-lilly-idUSBREA3L08020140422
- ^ "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). p. 1 and 2. Retrieved 2013-02-26.
- ^ Eberhardt and Evans were Purdue University graduates. See "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). p. 2. Retrieved 2013-02-26.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 53.
- ^ a b Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 55.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 63.
- ^ "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). p. 4. Retrieved 2013-02-26..
- ^ "Alliances". Basel, Switzerland: Genedata. Retrieved 2013-02-27.
- ^ a b "InnoMed PredTox Consortium Members Present Preliminary Study Results". Basel, Switzerland: Genedata. 2008-05-15. Retrieved 2013-02-29.
{{cite web}}
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instead. - ^ "InnoMed PredTox Member Organizations". Retrieved 2008-08-25.
- ^ "The Innovative Medicines Initiative". Innovative Medicines Initiative. Retrieved 2013-02-27.
- ^ "IMI 1st Call 2008". Innovative Medicines Initiative. Retrieved 2013-02-27.
- ^ Innovative Medicines Initiative. "IMI Call Topics 2008". IMI-GB-018v2-24042008-CallTopics.pdf. European Commission. Retrieved 2008-08-25. [dead link ]
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 105–6.
- ^ With its television advertisement for Cialis during the 2004 Super Bowl Halftime Show, Eli Lilly was one of several companies whose costly 2004 Super Bowl Halftime advertisements were largely overshadowed by the Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show controversy.[citation needed]
- ^ In 2000 sales of Evista reached $552 million.
- ^ ReoPro was "discovered and developed by Centocor".
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 112.
- ^ Associated Press (1977-03-29). "Lilly Director Dies in Hawaii". Anderson Herald. Anderson, IN.
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requires|url=
(help) - ^ Associated Press (1991-09-18). "Lilly Move No Big Surprise". Kokomo Tribune. Kokomi, IN.
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requires|url=
(help) - ^ Congressional Record, March 29, 2006, S2546
- ^ "Eli Lilly & Company" (pdf). p. 9. Retrieved 2013-02-26.
- ^ Associated Press (2007-12-19). "Lechleiter Named Lilly CEO". Kokomo Tribune. Kokomo, IN. p. A7.
{{cite news}}
:|access-date=
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(help) - ^ "Working Mother Report: Meet the 2012 100 Best Companies". Working Mother. 35 (6). New York: Bonnier Working Mother Media Inc.: 46 Oct–Nov 2012.
{{cite journal}}
:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ The company was named one of the top 10 best companies for working mothers in 2004 by Working Mothers magazine.
- ^ Bodenhamer, p. 399.
- ^ Bodenhamer, p. 402–03, 911–12, and 560–61.
- ^ Bodenhamer, p. 910–12.
- ^ Madison, Eli Lilly, p. 205–6.
- ^ Meek, Heather. "Lilly, Eli". LearningToGive.org and the Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University. Retrieved 2013-02-20.
- ^ Murphy, Tom (2008-06-30). "Lilly agrees to settle discrimination lawsuit". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2008-07-01.
- ^ "Pharmaceutical Company Eli Lilly to Pay Record $1.415 Billion for Off-Label Drug Marketing" (PDF). United States Attorney, Eastern District of Pennsylvania. United States Department of Justice. January 15, 2009.
- ^ "Eli Lilly and Company Agrees to Pay $1.415 Billion to Resolve Allegations of Off-label Promotion of Zyprexa". 09-civ-038. United States Department of Justice. January 15, 2009.
- ^ Wilson, Duff (October 2, 2010). "Side Effects May Include Lawsuits". The New York Times. Retrieved September 23, 2011.
References
- Bodenhamer, David J., and Robert G. Barrows, eds. (1994). The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-31222-1.
{{cite book}}
:|author=
has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Madison, James H. (1989). Eli Lilly: A Life, 1885–1977. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. ISBN 0-87195-047-2.
- Podczeck, Fridrun and Brian E. Jones (2004). Pharmaceutical Capsules. Chicago: Pharmaceutical Press. ISBN 0-85369-568-7.
- Price, Nelson (1997). Indiana Legends. Indianapolis: Guild Press of Indiana. ISBN 1-57860-006-5.
- Taylor Jr., Robert M.; Errol Wayne Stevens; Mary Ann Ponder; Paul Brockman (1989). Indiana: A New Historical Guide. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society. p. 481. ISBN 0-87195-048-0.
- Weintraut, Linda and Jane R. Nolan. "The Secret Life of Building 314". Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History. 8 (3). Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Society: 16–27.
External links
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