Go to JCI Insight
  • About
  • Editors
  • Consulting Editors
  • For authors
  • Publication ethics
  • Publication alerts by email
  • Advertising
  • Job board
  • Contact
  • Clinical Research and Public Health
  • Current issue
  • Past issues
  • By specialty
    • COVID-19
    • Cardiology
    • Gastroenterology
    • Immunology
    • Metabolism
    • Nephrology
    • Neuroscience
    • Oncology
    • Pulmonology
    • Vascular biology
    • All ...
  • Videos
    • Conversations with Giants in Medicine
    • Video Abstracts
  • Reviews
    • View all reviews ...
    • Complement Biology and Therapeutics (May 2025)
    • Evolving insights into MASLD and MASH pathogenesis and treatment (Apr 2025)
    • Microbiome in Health and Disease (Feb 2025)
    • Substance Use Disorders (Oct 2024)
    • Clonal Hematopoiesis (Oct 2024)
    • Sex Differences in Medicine (Sep 2024)
    • Vascular Malformations (Apr 2024)
    • View all review series ...
  • Viewpoint
  • Collections
    • In-Press Preview
    • Clinical Research and Public Health
    • Research Letters
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Editorials
    • Commentaries
    • Editor's notes
    • Reviews
    • Viewpoints
    • 100th anniversary
    • Top read articles

  • Current issue
  • Past issues
  • Specialties
  • Reviews
  • Review series
  • Conversations with Giants in Medicine
  • Video Abstracts
  • In-Press Preview
  • Clinical Research and Public Health
  • Research Letters
  • Letters to the Editor
  • Editorials
  • Commentaries
  • Editor's notes
  • Reviews
  • Viewpoints
  • 100th anniversary
  • Top read articles
  • About
  • Editors
  • Consulting Editors
  • For authors
  • Publication ethics
  • Publication alerts by email
  • Advertising
  • Job board
  • Contact
Top
  • View PDF
  • Download citation information
  • Send a comment
  • Terms of use
  • Standard abbreviations
  • Need help? Email the journal
  • Top
  • Version history
  • Article usage
  • Citations to this article

Advertisement

Book Review Free access | 10.1172/JCI29920

Pneumonia before antibiotics Therapeutic evolution and evaluation in twentieth-century America

Adam J. Ratner and Jeffrey N. Weiser

University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. E-mail: ar127@columbia.edu (A.J. Ratner); weiser@mail.med.upenn.edu (J.N. Weiser)

Find articles by Ratner, A. in: JCI | PubMed | Google Scholar

University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. E-mail: ar127@columbia.edu (A.J. Ratner); weiser@mail.med.upenn.edu (J.N. Weiser)

Find articles by Weiser, J. in: JCI | PubMed | Google Scholar

Published September 1, 2006 - More info

Published in Volume 116, Issue 9 on September 1, 2006
J Clin Invest. 2006;116(9):2311–2311. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI29920.
© 2006 The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Published September 1, 2006 - Version history
View PDF

Scott H. Podolsky. Pneumonia before antibiotics Therapeutic evolution and evaluation in twentieth-century America. 2006. The Johns Hopkins University Press. Baltimore, Maryland, USA. 0-8018-8327-X (hardcover).$49.95248 pp.

Streptococcus pneumoniae (the pneumococcus) was first isolated by Pasteur and Sternberg in 1880 and shortly thereafter was recognized as the most common cause of bacterial pneumonia. Between then and now, the implication of a diagnosis of pneumococcal pneumonia has undergone a monumental change in the minds of physicians. In the early 20th century, when William Osler gave pneumonia its oft-cited appellation “captain of the men of death,” its case fatality rate was estimated to be between 30% and 40%. The subsequent decades saw a gathering storm of interest in the biology and treatment of pneumococcal infection. Neufeld and Haendel demonstrated that pneumococci could be divided into immunologic types, later distinguishable in a matter of hours in a clinical specimen. In the 1930s, sulfonamide therapy for pneumonia reduced the case fatality rate substantially, and with the introduction of penicillin, the respect and fear accorded to pneumonia among physicians was diminished (perhaps to the point of excess), the focus shifting to strategies for prevention of pneumococcal disease by vaccination.

Scott Podolsky, an internist and lecturer in the Department of Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School, focuses on a sometimes untold story in the evolution of therapy for pneumococcal pneumonia, the development and implementation of type-specific serum therapy. Serum therapy, when it is discussed, is often presented as a footnote in this historical parade, a brief stop between the hopelessness of Osler’s time and the triumph of the antibiotic era. Podolsky tells a story that is much richer, full of scientific and medical giants, such as Oswald Avery, Rufus Cole, and Maxwell Finland. Before the coming of the antibiotic era, which marks the end of the narrative, a massive public health system will have been mobilized and subsequently dismantled, pharmaceutical companies will have devoted massive resources to serum production, and debates will have simmered throughout the medical community as to how and when serum might best be used.

The three parts of the book trace the development, wide implementation, and subsequent decline of serotherapy over a period of more than 40 years. Podolsky is at his best when he illustrates the many instances in which debates over serotherapy foreshadowed questions that the medical community continues to face today. The role of the public health system vis-à-vis local practitioners was hotly debated, with individual doctors resentful of intrusions into their practices. Serious concerns were raised about the role of pharmaceutical companies in the investigation, marketing, and distribution of a product (serum) from which they profited. Finally, students of clinical investigation will recognize the seeds of controlled trials in this book, with disagreements over the proper handling of control groups, the need to convince practitioners of the value of statistical analysis, and the generalizability of studies performed at academic centers to the “real world.”

As an additional parallel to today, it is striking in the telling of this story how consistently medicine has underestimated the diversity and adaptability of the pneumococcus. As the number of known serotypes expanded from 2 to 4 to more than 30 (of the 90 that are currently recognized), there was the gradual realization that type-specific therapy would become logistically challenging. Likewise, antibiotics such as penicillin, hailed as the final blow against the pneumococcus, would prove ultimately to select antibiotic-resistant mutants. Today, we face similar issues as we use polysaccharide vaccines against a limited number of serotypes, a strategy that ultimately may require revision or addition of serotypes currently not represented in the vaccine.

It is somewhat unfortunate that, despite the timeliness of this book, it is written in large part in a manner not easily accessible to the general reader. A great deal of the text is devoted to specific local reactions to larger scale policies. The writing is turgid, and much of the story resides in the voluminous footnotes, which constitute roughly 40% of the book’s length. The result is a volume that is likely to be of greater interest to medical historians and sociologists than to clinicians or basic scientists.

Version history
  • Version 1 (September 1, 2006): No description

Article tools

  • View PDF
  • Download citation information
  • Send a comment
  • Terms of use
  • Standard abbreviations
  • Need help? Email the journal

Metrics

  • Article usage
  • Citations to this article

Go to

  • Top
  • Version history
Advertisement
Advertisement

Copyright © 2025 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

Sign up for email alerts