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MERYL NASS, MD
March 5, 2003
THE DANGEROUS
DRUG LICENSING GAME THE FDA PLAYS WITH THE
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
By Meryl Nass
Did you think the FDA’s job IS to protect
the public from dangerous drugs and
vaccines? Well, yes, sometimes…as long as
the federal government doesn’t want to
administer those self-same dangerous
products.
FDA has been helped along by the 1997 FDA
Modernization Act (FDAMA), which lowered the
evidence bar for new drug approvals, and by
the so-called "animal rule" of 2002, which
allows drugs and vaccines to be approved
without checking out their effectiveness in
humans. (The rule does not omit safety
testing in humans, however.) This lowering
of standards was used to expedite licensing
for the first two examples below.
Example 1: Pyridostigmine bromide
(aka PB or NAPS tablets). May help survive
exposure to certain nerve gases, if ingested
8 hours before exposure.
Although PB when used alone may not cause
serious side-effects, research has shown
that when PB is used in a setting like the
Gulf War, things get a lot more complicated.
There, soldiers wore permethrin-impregnated
uniforms to repel insects, used additional
insect repellents like DEET on their skin,
and were exposed to sarin when Iraqi weapons
depots were blown up.
Several researchers have shown that PB,
when ingested while simultaneously exposed
to various combinations of DEET, permethrin,
sarin (another nerve gas to which it offers
no protection) or jet fuel, caused brain and
testicular injury in experimental animals.
Despite this, FDA went ahead, ignored all
the evidence, and approved PB as a licensed
drug for "nerve gas pretreatment."
PB was used in the Gulf War as an
experimental drug under a waiver from FDA,
which allowed the military to mandate its
use. FDA is no longer giving out those
waivers, since the Defense Department never
kept its agreement for the use of
experimental products. You know, stuff like
refusing to keep records of who received the
experimental drug or vaccine, and whether
the recipients became ill. Not in the Gulf
War, nor in the Bosnia theater would DOD
keep track of these human experiments.
Had PB remained an experimental or
investigational drug for nerve gas
pretreatment, the military would have had to
give soldiers informed consent and the
option of whether to take it, or invoke a
direct order from the President. Licensing
PB saves the President any political cost,
and allows the military to avoid what is
anathema to them: giving troops a choice.
Who cares about sterile or brain-damaged
guinea pigs, anyway?
Example 2: Smallpox vaccine. A
decades-old stash of Dryvax smallpox
vaccine, owned by the federal government,
had been tested and readied for use. Never
mind that expired drugs and vaccines are
considered adulterated, and cannot be
licensed. Last October, FDA went ahead and
licensed old Dryvax anyway. But they
didn’t license the identical vaccine
for civilians.
That makes no sense, you say. Think
again. The military can only force it on
soldiers if it is licensed, or ordered by
the President. Soldiers cannot sue the
government for injuries sustained as a
result of vaccination. (Thank the Feres
Doctrine, a body of law that got the
government off the hook for injuries to
uniformed subjects of its LSD experiments.)
Civilians, on the other hand, need sign
no informed consent if the vaccine is fully
licensed. And if they are injured, they can
sue the manufacturer. Or perhaps the
government, which owned the stockpile.
Knowing what we know of this vaccine, a lot
of folks were going to get injured. Neither
Wyeth, the original manufacturer, nor the
government wanted to pay for injuries. By
not licensing the vaccine for civilians,
recipients must sign a consent form before
vaccination that prevents them from suing.
Pretty clever, eh?
Example 3: Anthrax vaccine. "Fully
licensed" for the first 520,000 military
recipients, said FDA. A small stockpile of
licensed vaccine remained available in late
2001, when it was decided to offer the
vaccine to civilians who had been exposed to
anthrax spores. (Vaccine had been saved for
a pending clinical trial to be performed by
CDC.)
But that wasn’t what the civilians were
offered. They got "experimental" vaccine,
unlicensed because it came from the new
plant, and also because it was being used
after exposure, which was not an
FDA-approved use at the time. Despite this,
the military had recommended post-exposure
vaccination for decades.
You guessed right! The civilians had to
sign an informed consent for this "fully
licensed" vaccine, and signed away their
right to both medical care and a lawsuit,
were they to be injured as a result.
The civilians weren’t so dumb as Uncle
Sam thought. Only 2% of those offered
anthrax vaccine by CDC accepted. And less
than 2% of health care workers took up the
government’s offer of smallpox vaccination.
The result: a safer smallpox vaccine is now
being developed, and Congress is working on
a plan to compensate civilians made ill by
the current smallpox vaccine. But both
remedies only appeared after the public said
"NO."
On the other hand, close to 100% of our
military troops slated for either
vaccination have accepted. Do they have any
real choice, facing threats of court martial
and 1-2 years in the brig for refusing a
vaccine? |