Ken Koe, Pfizer Co-Inventor of Zoloft Antidepressant, Dies at 90
This article is for subscribers only.
Ken Koe, a Pfizer Inc. chemist who co-invented Zoloft, which once was the most-prescribed antidepressant drug in the U.S., has died. He was 90.
He died on Oct. 7 in Shrewsbury, Massachusetts, at the home of his daughter, Kristin M. Koe, according to the website of Heald & Chiampa Funeral Home. No cause was given.