Date: Thu,
08 Mar 2001 10:23:22 -0500
From: Michael
Belkin
“Although the paper depicts the patients with the side
effects in impassive clinical terms, doctors who have seen them paint a very
different picture.
Physicians and Surgeons and a researcher in the study,
said the uncontrollable movements some patients suffered were “absolutely devastating.”
“They chew constantly, their fingers go up and down, their
wrists flex and distend,” Dr. Greene said. And the patients writhe and twist,
jerk their heads, fling their arms about.
“It was tragic, catastrophic,” he said. “It’s a real
nightmare. And we can’t selectively
turn it off.”
One man was so badly affected that he could no longer eat
and had to use a feeding tube, Dr. Greene said. In another, the
condition came and went unpredictably throughout the day, and when it occurred,
the man’s speech
was unintelligible.
For now, Dr. Greene said, his position is clear: ‘No more
fetal transplants. We are absolutely and adamantly convinced that this should be considered for research only. And whether
it should be research in people is an open question.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/03/08/health/08PARK.html?pagewanted=all
March 8, 2001
A carefully controlled study that tried to treat Parkinson’s
disease by implanting cells from aborted fetuses into patients’ brains not only
failed to show an overall benefit but also revealed a disastrous side effect, scientists
report.
In about 15 percent of patients, the cells apparently grew
too well, churning out so much of a chemical that controls movement that the
patients writhed and jerked uncontrollably.
The researchers say that while some patients have similar
effects from taking too high a dose of their Parkinson’s drug, in this case the
drugs did not cause the symptoms and there is no way to remove or deactivate
the transplanted cells.
On the researchers’ advice, six patients who enrolled in
the study but who had not yet had the implantation operation have decided to
forgo it.
The results, reported today in The New England Journal of
Medicine, are a severe blow to what has been considered a highly promising
avenue of research for treating Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease and
other neurological ailments. The study indicates that the simple solution of injecting
fetal cells into a patient’s brain may not be enough to treat complex diseases
involving nerve cells and connections that are poorly understood. Some say it
is time to go back to the laboratory and to animals before doing any more
operations on humans.
The findings may also fuel the debate over whether it is
appropriate to use tissue from aborted fetuses to treat diseases. Despite their
disappointment, some researchers said they hoped that the results would not bring
fetal cell research to an abrupt halt. The research has been controversial
because the fetal cells were obtained from abortion clinics.
“This is still our one great hope for a cure,” said Dr. J.
William Langston, who is scientific director and chief executive officer at The
Parkinson’s Institute in Sunnyvale, Calif.
Parkinson’s disease occurs when cells of the substantia
nigra region in the base of the brain die, for unknown reasons. The hope was
that fetal substantia nigra cells might take over for them. But, the study
showed, in older patients the operation had no benefit and in some younger
patients, the transplants brought on nightmarish side effects.
Although the paper depicts the patients with the side
effects in impassive clinical terms, doctors who have seen them paint a very
different picture.
Dr. Paul E. Greene, a neurologist at the Columbia
University College of Physicians and Surgeons and a researcher in the study,
said the uncontrollable movements some patients suffered were “absolutely
devastating.”
“They chew constantly, their fingers go up and down, their
wrists flex and distend,” Dr. Greene said. And the patients writhe and twist,
jerk their heads, fling their arms about.
“It was tragic, catastrophic,” he said. “It’s a real
nightmare. And we can’t selectively turn it off.”
One man was so badly affected that he could no longer eat
and had to use a feeding tube, Dr. Greene said. In another, the condition came
and went unpredictably throughout the day, and when it occurred, the man’s
speech was unintelligible.
For now, Dr. Greene said, his position is clear: ‘No more
fetal transplants. We are absolutely and adamantly convinced that this should
be considered for research only. And whether it should be research in people is
an open question.”
Dr. Gerald D. Fischbach, who was director of the National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, which sponsored the study, said
that while the operation had been promoted by some neurosurgeons as miraculous,
this was the first time it was rigorously evaluated. It used sham surgery as a
comparison, a controversial and rarely used strategy but one that researchers
felt was necessary to understand the true effects of the operation.
Dr. Fischbach, who is now dean of the faculty of medicine
at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, was the director
of the institute only at the end of the study.
“Ad hoc reports of spectacular results can always occur,”
Dr. Fischbach said. “But if you do these studies systematically, this is the
result you get.”
The surgery, he added, “is not the final solution that
people would have hoped going into it.”
In the study, researchers, led by Dr. Curt R. Freed of the
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center in Denver and Dr. Stanley Fahn of
the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, recruited 40 patients,
ages 34 to 75, who had had Parkinson’s disease for an average of 14 years. The
patients were randomly assigned to have substantia nigra cells from four
fetuses implanted in their brains or to have sham surgery, for comparison.
The surgery took place in Colorado and the patients were
evaluated in New York. The fetal cell surgery involved drilling four small
holes in the patient’s forehead and then inserting long needles through the
holes into the brain and injecting fetal cells. The sham surgery involved
drilling the holes but not injecting needles into the brain. After a year, the
patients were told whether they had the fetal cell surgery and, if not, they
were offered it if they wanted it.
The study’s primary measure of success was whether the
patients themselves noticed that they were better, as determined by a survey
that they mailed in a year later but before they knew whether they had had
fetal cell implants or a sham operation. The study found no difference between
the two groups — neither those who had had the fetal cell operation nor those
who had had the sham surgery noticed an improvement in their symptoms.
Other tests, like neurologists’ assessments of the
patients while they were taking their medication and the patients’ assessments
of their condition in diaries they kept also showed no effect of the surgery.
And there was no difference between the two groups in the doses of drugs needed
to control the disease.
The one glimmer of hope came from assessments by
neurologists before the patients had had their first dose of medication in the
morning. By that measure, the 10 patients under age 60 who had had the fetal
cell implants seemed better than those who had had sham surgery, with less
rigidity, although their tremor was just as bad.
Dr. Freed hailed that result, saying, “It was a clear-cut
improvement.”
And, he added, the fetal cells survived in most patients’
brains.
“I would be disappointed if people used a strict clinical
trial approach,” Dr. Freed said. “This study is about multiple phenomena.”
Others were less enthusiastic, pointing out that finding
subgroups after the fact who may have benefited suggests a hypothesis for
future studies, not evidence of an effect.
“We try to teach everybody that you have to identify
beforehand what’s the primary outcome,” said Dr. William Weiner, the director
of the Maryland Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorder Center and a
professor of neurology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in
Baltimore, referring to the measure of success determined before the study
began. “In this case, they picked a subjective assessment by the patients
themselves, which I think is a very good one.”
And so, Dr. Weiner said, when the patients noticed no
improvement, “the study was negative.”
In addition, Dr. Langston said, even if a subsequent study
confirmed that the surgery had an effect on the condition in younger patients
before they took their medicine in the morning, and even if there was a way of preventing
the terrible side effect, the operation would still hardly be a breakthrough.
Parkinson’s disease is almost always a disease of the elderly, he noted, adding
that well under 10 percent of patients who would be candidates for the surgery
are younger than 60.
The wiggling and writhing movements first emerged a year
after the operation, showing up in five of the younger patients who had at
first appeared to benefit from fetal cell surgery — three who had the operation
in the initial phase of the study and two who had it a year later, when they
learned that they had originally had a sham surgery. While doctors sometimes
see such effects in Parkinson’s patients, it is caused by giving too much of
drugs that act like dopamine in the brain. And it can be controlled by reducing
the drugs.
In this case, however, drugs were not the culprit. Even
when doctors took away the drugs, the symptoms persisted.
The fetal implant study had been controversial from the
start, both because it included sham surgery and because it used fetal tissue
from abortions. But many Parkinson’s disease experts said it had to be done because
doctors were already offering the surgery to patients, and charging them for
it, at costs of $40,000 or more, with no evidence that they were helping them.
Yet patients, facing a disease in which brain cells slowly and inexorably die
and in which even the drugs that once controlled their symptoms of tremor and
rigidity would inevitably fail, took their chances with the operation, thinking
they had little to lose.
Dr. Freed said he was the first in the United States to
offer the treatment, starting in 1988 with a 52-year- old man, who is still
alive although, of course, he also still has Parkinson’s disease.
Dr. Freed continued to offer it to paying patients while
he was treating those who were part of the federal study and whose procedures
were paid for by the study. He said he considered these other operations
research because he experimented with different amounts and placements of fetal
cells. He has given fetal cell implants to 27 patients, he said, with the most
recent operation last October.
Dr. Freed said his group was now implanting less fetal
tissue and putting the tissue in a different area of the brain, hoping to avoid
the devastating side effects. But, he said it would be a mistake to stop doing the
surgery altogether.
“To say that you can’t do or shouldn’t do human research
because the research has uncertain outcome, I think would be a bad decision,”
Dr. Freed said.
Meanwhile, a second federally financed study of the
operation is winding to a close, and some researchers say it is time to go back
to animal studies and learn more about the complex roles of the brain cells
involved in Parkinson’s disease.
Dr. Weiner said that if a patient came to him today
seeking advice, he would say: “The bottom line for patients is that human fetal
cell transplants are not currently the best way to go. If you are willing to
pay for them, you can still have them done. But my advice is you ought not to do
this.”
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