With tens of thousands of individual drugs existing in modern medicine, studying them one by one is impossible. Drug classification refers to the systematic grouping of drugs based on shared characteristics. By grouping drugs logically, pharmacologists, physicians, and pharmacists can:
There is no single "perfect" way to classify a drug. A single drug can fall into multiple categories depending on the system used. Below are the primary methods of classification used in pharmacology, including several advanced clinical classifications.
This is the most intuitive and user-friendly system, especially for clinicians and patients. It groups drugs strictly according to the disease, symptom, or condition they are intended to treat, regardless of their chemistry or how they work.
| Therapeutic Class | Examples | Indication (What it treats) |
|---|---|---|
| Analgesics | Paracetamol, Morphine, Ibuprofen | Pain relief |
| Antihypertensives | Enalapril, Amlodipine, Losartan | Hypertension (High Blood Pressure) |
| Antidiabetics | Metformin, Insulin, Glipizide | Diabetes mellitus |
| Antibiotics / Antimicrobials | Amoxicillin, Ciprofloxacin, Azithromycin | Bacterial infections |
| Antimalarials | Artemether, Quinine, Chloroquine | Malaria |
| Antipyretics | Paracetamol, Aspirin | Fever reduction |
Aspirin is a classic example of this limitation. It can be classified as an Analgesic (treats headache), an Antipyretic (treats fever), an Anti-inflammatory (treats arthritis), and an Antiplatelet (prevents heart attacks). Classifying it under just one therapeutic use ignores its other vital roles.
This system groups drugs according to their broad physiological or biochemical effects on the body's systems. It bridges the gap between what the drug treats (therapeutic use) and exactly how it works at the molecular level (mechanism of action).
| Pharmacological Class | Examples | Physiological Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Diuretics | Furosemide, Hydrochlorothiazide | Increase urine output (removes excess fluid) |
| Sedatives / Hypnotics | Diazepam, Phenobarbital | Induce calmness, reduce anxiety, or induce sleep (CNS Depression) |
| Vasodilators | Nitroglycerin, Hydralazine | Relax and dilate smooth muscle in blood vessels |
| Bronchodilators | Salbutamol, Albuterol | Relax and dilate the bronchi/airways in the lungs |
| CNS Stimulants | Caffeine, Amphetamines | Increase brain activity and alertness |
This is the most specific and scientifically rigorous classification. It groups drugs according to how they produce their pharmacological effect at the molecular or cellular level. It looks at the specific receptors, enzymes, or ion channels the drug targets.
| Mechanism of Action Class | Drug Example | Specific Molecular Action |
|---|---|---|
| ACE Inhibitors | Enalapril, Lisinopril | Blocks the Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme, preventing the formation of Angiotensin II. |
| Beta-blockers (β-adrenergic antagonists) | Propranolol, Atenolol | Bind to and block β-adrenergic receptors in the heart, preventing adrenaline from binding. |
| Proton Pump Inhibitors (PPIs) | Omeprazole, Pantoprazole | Irreversibly inhibit the gastric H⁺/K⁺ ATPase pump in the stomach lining, stopping acid secretion. |
| DNA Gyrase Inhibitors | Ciprofloxacin, Levofloxacin | Inhibit bacterial DNA gyrase (topoisomerase II), physically halting bacterial DNA replication. |
| Calcium Channel Blockers | Amlodipine, Nifedipine | Block voltage-gated calcium channels in blood vessels, preventing calcium influx and causing relaxation. |
Note: This classification is critical in modern pharmacology and rational drug design, as it allows scientists to predict exact drug-drug interactions and side effects based on molecular targets.
Drugs are grouped based on their chemical composition, molecular skeleton, or structural similarity. Drugs that share a chemical structure usually share similar pharmacological activities, mechanisms, and side-effect profiles.
| Chemical Class | Examples | Structural Characteristic |
|---|---|---|
| Penicillins (Beta-Lactams) | Penicillin G, Amoxicillin, Ampicillin | Contain a four-membered Beta-Lactam ring essential for antibacterial activity. |
| Benzodiazepines | Diazepam, Lorazepam, Clonazepam | Contain a benzene ring fused to a diazepine ring. |
| Sulfonamides | Sulfamethoxazole, Sulfasalazine | Contain a sulfonamide (-SO2NH2) chemical group. |
| Barbiturates | Phenobarbital, Thiopental | Derivatives of barbituric acid. |
| Steroids | Cortisol, Testosterone, Dexamethasone | Contain a core of four fused carbon rings (cyclopentanoperhydrophenanthrene). |
Why do we care about chemical structure? Because of SAR. By understanding the chemical backbone of a drug, chemists can make tiny structural changes to improve the drug. For example, natural Penicillin G is destroyed by stomach acid and must be injected. By simply adding an amino (-NH2) group to its chemical structure, chemists created Amoxicillin, which survives stomach acid and can be taken as an oral pill.
Historically, all drugs came from nature. Today, we classify them by where the raw materials originate.
Many of our oldest and most powerful drugs are extracted directly from the leaves, roots, or sap of plants.
Extracts from animal tissues and glands.
Inorganic elements used therapeutically.
Drugs extracted from fungi or bacteria (often used to kill other competing bacteria).
The vast majority of modern drugs.
Modern Addition: Drugs created by inserting human genes into bacteria or yeast, turning the microbes into tiny factories that produce human proteins.
While the above 5 are the classical methods, two other systems are vital in modern medicine:
Developed by the World Health Organization (WHO), this is the global gold standard. It classifies drugs at 5 different levels combining anatomy, therapeutic use, and chemistry. For example, Metformin is classified as A10BA02:
Drug nomenclature refers to the systematic process of naming drugs. From the moment a new drug is discovered in a lab to the moment a patient buys it in a pharmacy, it will be assigned several different names. A single drug molecule typically has at least three or four distinct names.
This is the systematic, highly precise scientific name that describes the exact atomic and molecular structure of the compound. It is dictated by the rules of IUPAC (International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry).
When a pharmaceutical company first synthesizes a promising chemical, it does not yet have a generic or brand name. During early lab testing and clinical trials, it is assigned a short code name, usually consisting of letters (representing the company) and numbers.
Once a drug proves safe and effective, it is given an official, universally recognized name. This name represents the active pharmaceutical ingredient. These names are assigned by official national/international bodies, primarily the World Health Organization (WHO) through their International Nonproprietary Name (INN) system, or the USAN in America.
This is the commercial, marketing name given to the drug by the specific pharmaceutical company that manufactures and sells it.
| Generic Name (The actual drug) | Brand Names (Different companies' versions) |
|---|---|
| paracetamol | Panadol®, Calpol®, Tylenol® |
| amoxicillin | Amoxil®, Trimox®, Moxatag® |
| metformin | Glucophage®, Fortamet® |
| diclofenac | Voltaren®, Cataflam® |
| sildenafil | Viagra® (for erectile dysfunction), Revatio® (for pulmonary hypertension) |
Drug classification can be based on:
Drug nomenclature includes the progression of:
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