Horny Goat Weed versus Viagra
Tue Feb 16, 2010 5:19pm EST Reuters and Bloomberg reported earlier this week on an ongoing patent battle (read: pissing match) between Pfizer and Eli Lilly & Co. relating to their erectile dysfunction drugs Viagra and Cialis, respectively.
A US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) appeals committee has ruled that an element of Pfizer’s patent on sildenafil, the active chemical in Viagra, is invalid because the drug is insufficiently different from a traditional Chinese medicine called Yin Yang Huo or horny goat weed.
At issue is Pfizer’s claim to a method for treating male erectile dysfunction. The patent appeals panel ruled that the method did not constitute a new invention because of the precedent set by Yin Yang Huo. Moreover, the board ruled that chemicals found in the herbal medicine act by the same mechanism as sildenafil by inhibition of an enzyme called phosphodiesterase-5 (PDE5). Therefore, the panel ruled, “the patent claim was the next logical step up from using the herb.”
I’m not an expert in law but there are untold number of traditional remedies touted for all sorts of sexual enhancement, none of which have the convincing efficacy of the prescription PDE5 inhibitors. We may call the condition “erectile dysfunction” today and the idea of treating it may have existed for centuries but having a compound that can actually do anything about it is an invention. However, I can see the fine distinction if Pfizer claimed that the idea of treating erectile dysfunction was an invention.
You lawyers out there can weigh in but this sounds like a bunch of posturing for market share: worldwide Viagra sales were $2 billion USD last year.
But what is this horny goat weed and why is it being singled out?
Horny goat weed is the colloquial name for any number of species of plants in the Epimedium genus. Most medicinal plant accounts describe some variation on the theme that a Chinese goat herder observed an increase in mating behavior among his flock while grazing on the plant. According to North Carolina State University Department of Horticulture webpage, it grows as a deciduous perennial ground cover in USDA Zones 6, 7, and 8.
And remember: that’s the purified compound in an isolated enzyme assay. Let’s take a look at the plant extract itself, the product sold on the internet and in health food stores as horny goat weed.
The EP-20 extract does indeed increase SNP-stimulated cGMP concentration over SNP alone, but it tops out at about 1/10 the levels stimulated by sildenafil (note the broken y-axis for scale). More importantly, the concentrations of horny goat weed extract are tremendously high: 0.1 and 0.3 mg/mL. A direct comparison with sildenafil is difficult because it is a pure compound while the EP-20 horny goat weed extract is a mixture of all the chemicals that occur in the plant.
The take-home messages?:
The active constituent of horny goat weed, icariin, bears no structural similarity to sildenafil.
Going back to the Pfizer and Eli Lilly spat, there is really little comparison between horny goat weed and the active compound in Viagra.
And as for anyone thinking that horny goat weed might be a more cost-effective substitution for Viagra? You’re probably better off buying a dietary supplement intentionally adulterated with the prescription drugs.
Original Article: http://scienceblogs.com/terrasig/2010/02/18/viagra-horny-goat-weed/
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