Leo Henryk Sternbach, Austrian medicinal chemist. Synthesis and discovery of centrally acting 1, 4-Benzodiazepines, Librium, Valium, Dalmane, Klonopin, Mogadon, Rohypnol and others; technical synthesis of the vitamin Biotin; patentee in field.
Background
Sternbach was born on May 7, 1908, in Opatija, to a Jewish family. He had a younger brother, Giusi. His father Michael Abracham Sternbach was from Polish city of Przemyśl in Galicia (then part of Austria-Hungary), and his mother Piroska (née Cohn) Sternbach was from Orosháza, Hungary.
Sternbach"s parents met and married in Opatija where they both lived.
The family lived in a rented four-room apartment on the third floor of the "Vila Jadran" (Villa Adriatic), near the pharmacy owned by Sternbach"s father. His family was an upper middle class Opatija family.
In 1926, Sternbach moved with his family to Poland.
Education
M.Pharmacy, University Cracow, Poland, 1929. Doctor of Philosophy in Chemistry, University Cracow, Poland, 1931. D.Techn. Sciences (honorary), Vienna, Austria, 1971.
Honorary Doctor of Science, Centenary College, 1984. Doctor philosophy national (honorary), Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany, 1986.
Career
He received his master"s degree in pharmacy in 1929 and his doctoral degree in organic chemistry in 1931 from the Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland. He left Poland because of increasing anti-Semitism. In Vienna he worked with Wolfgang Joseph Pauli (Senior) and Sigmund Fränkel.
After which he worked with Leopold Ružička at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich.
In 1941, he moved to the United States to work with Hoffmann-Louisiana Roche in Nutley, New Jersey, thus escaping the Nazis. While working for Hoffmann-Louisiana Roche in Nutley, New Jersey, Sternbach did significant work on new drugs.
He is credited with the discovery of chlordiazepoxide (Librium), diazepam (Valium), flurazepam (Dalmane), nitrazepam (Mogadon), flunitrazepam (Rohypnol), clonazepam (Klonopin), and trimethaphan (Arfonad). Librium, based on the R0 6-690 compound discovered by Sternbach in 1956, was approved for use in 1960.
In 1963, its improved version, Valium, was released and became astonishingly popular: between 1969 and 1982, it was the most prescribed drug in America, with over 2.3 billion doses sold in its peak year of 1978.
With Moses Wolf Goldberg, Sternbach also developed "the first commercially applicable" method for synthesizing biotin. Sternbach held 241 patents, and his discoveries helped to turn Roche into a pharmaceutical industry giant. He did not become wealthy from his discoveries, but he was happy.
He treated chemistry as a passion and said, "I always did just what I wanted to do".
He went into the office until he was 95. Sternbach was a longtime resident of Upper Montclair, New Jersey, from 1943 to 2003.
He then moved to Chapel Hill, North Carolina, where he died in 2005. A book Good chemistry: The life and legacy of Valium inventor Leo Sternbach was published by McGraw-Hill in 2004.
He was murdered in 1940 in the Nazi Sachsenhausen concentration camp as the result of the Nazi action against Polish academic teachers called Sonderaktion Krakau.
His killer was Gustav Sorge. He is present in the New Jersey Inventor"s Hall of Fame. And was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in February 2005, a few months before his death.
Achievements
Membership
Member American Chemical Society (Medicinal Chemistry award 1978, Creative Invention award 1979, Chemical Pioneer award 1979), Swiss Chemical Society, International Society Heterocyclic Chemistry, Chemical Society (Great Britain), Sigma Xi.
Connections
Married Herta Kreuzer, February 7, 1941. Children: Michael, Daniel.
Recipient John Scott medal Board Directors City Trusts, Philadelphia, 1982, Carl-Mannich medal German Pharmaceutical Society, 1984. Named Inventor of Year, New York Patent, Trademark and Copyright Law Association, 1987. Named one of 25 Most Influential Americans of the 20th Century, United States News & World Report.
Honored as discoverer Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association and National Health Council, 1987. Citations from American Institute of Chemists, Pharma. Research and Manufacturers of America, UNICO.
Elected to New Jersey Hall of Fame, 1989. Named to the National Hall of Fame, Akron, OH, 2005. Leo H. Sternbach yearly lectureship named in his honor, Yale University, 1989, also Roche.
Dedicated a Leo A. Sternbach Library in the Chemistry Department, Roche, Nutley, New Jersey.
Recipient John Scott medal Board Directors City Trusts, Philadelphia, 1982, Carl-Mannich medal German Pharmaceutical Society, 1984. Named Inventor of Year, New York Patent, Trademark and Copyright Law Association, 1987. Named one of 25 Most Influential Americans of the 20th Century, United States News & World Report.
Honored as discoverer Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association and National Health Council, 1987. Citations from American Institute of Chemists, Pharma. Research and Manufacturers of America, UNICO.
Elected to New Jersey Hall of Fame, 1989. Named to the National Hall of Fame, Akron, OH, 2005. Leo H. Sternbach yearly lectureship named in his honor, Yale University, 1989, also Roche.
Dedicated a Leo A. Sternbach Library in the Chemistry Department, Roche, Nutley, New Jersey.