|
Stats
Illustrations for a case study of the TGN 1412 trial (October 12, 2007).
I am working with a graphic artist to produce some illustrations to help
explain what happened during the disastrous TGN1412 trial. The general
structure of these illustrations are not quite set in stone, but here are my
initial thoughts.
A second case study, on the Eric Poehlman case, would also be nice to
illustrate. The New York Times has a very nice article that could serve as a
starting point for this case study.
A nice timeline appears at
www.guardian.co.uk/medicine/story/0,,1978614,00.html. Some of the names
are not in the public record, of course, but the names that have been
mentioned in various press reports are
- Ryan Flanagan, 21-year-old student living in London
- Raste Khan, 23
- David Oakley, 35
- Rob O.
- Ryan Wilson, 20
- (no name) a 28-year-old assistant bar manager
Note that one report describes "Six healthy young men - including British
Asians, an Australian, a New Zealander, and a South African"
www.guardian.co.uk/medicine/story/0,,1734446,00.html
An image or two showing patients discovering about the trial.
In February, when Rob O. saw the text message pop up on his cellphone
from Parexel International -"healthy males needed for a drug trial"for '2,000
-it seemed like a harmless opportunity to make much-needed cash.
www.iht.com/articles/2006/04/07/news/drug.php
Under the heading, ``What's in it For You'' the site says: ``You'll have
plenty of time to read or study or just relax -- with digital TV, pool table,
videogames, DVD player and now FREE Internet access! You can even just catch
up on some sleep!'' The site says the study will provide ``modern medical and
monitoring equipment to ensure your safety whilst on trial.'' The company used
this language to recruit for the TGN 1412 trial. Goodyear says the language is
deceptive, equating participation in a clinical trial to vacationing. ``I was
blown away,'' he says. ``It's all about enticing people in.'' Parexel's
recruiting Web site also promises payment, a free medical exam, and more.
``Free food for the duration of your stay -- and NO shopping or washing
up!,''' the site says. ``I'm outraged by that cavalier language,'' Caplan
says. ``That would be fine if you want to recruit someone for a summer abroad,
but not for a clinical trial with uncertain risks.'' Khan, who volunteered for
a different clinic trial in December and was paid 1,600 pounds, says he
wouldn't do another. A friend from college alerted him to the Parexel trial,
and the advertising drew him in, he says. ``If you read the advertisements,
they make it look like a holiday home,'' he said. ``It makes it sound fun and
relaxing. I would never do a trial again.''
www.sskrplaw.com/publications/060410.html
An image or two showing why the subjects volunteered.
He (David Oakley) told the Mail on Sunday that he took part in the trial
to raise money for his wedding in June to wife Katrina...
www.guardian.co.uk/medicine/story/0,,1838498,00.html
"He (Ryan Flanagan) told us he would be paid 2,000 pounds ($3,500) and
did not think there would be any problems," Sarah Brown, a 27-year-old family
friend of the Flanagans, told UK-based newspaper The Sun.
www.newstarget.com/019371.html
Khan, who was studying to be a teacher at Roehampton University in
London, grew up in small town in south Wales, and has lived in London for four
years. He was attracted by the offer of quick and easy income, he says. ``It's
such good money for a student,'' Khan said. ``It goes a long way.'' The rights
of human subjects in clinical trials are protected by independent ethics
committees, which can also reject experiments or halt them if they become too
risky. They make sure risks are properly disclosed, and respond to inquiries
from participants with concerns about the conduct of the trial -- when
participants know where to call.
An image showing the doctor explaining the informed consent form to one of
the patients.
The actual consent form is at
www.circare.org/foia5/tgn1412_consentform.pdf.
A critique of the consent form appears at
www.sskrplaw.com/publications/060410.html. There are some pretty strong
allegations here, so I want to cross check these with other sources.
When volunteers asked questions about the TeGenero study's consent form,
the staff at Parexel's drug-testing facility in London's Northwick Park
Hospital were dismissive, says Raste Khan, one of the participants. The
23-year-old university student was one of two people given a placebo, or dummy
drug. ``The guy said, `We're in a bit of a push. Can you sign it now, and I'll
explain it all to you,''' says Khan, who was interviewed in his London house
on April 6. ``He didn't say anything whether the drug was going to be harmful
or what it's been tested on. ``He was saying if you're ever late, you could
lose 10 percent of your pay,'' Khan said. ``If you consume something or eat
something or drink when you shouldn't, you could lose 10 percent of your pay.
Most people do it because you need the money. It's a bit daunting.'' The 2,000
pounds, which Khan says he hasn't received, is about half of the amount of his
student loan. The consent form says violations of Parexel's rules are
``misdemeanors'' subject to fines. The form also says participants will get
the drug or a placebo. It doesn't say that 75 percent of the subjects would
get the drug.
www.sskrplaw.com/publications/060410.html
Ethicists say the consent document exploited the participants' need for
cash. The first page of the consent document says participants can leave the
trial at ``any time without giving a reason and my rights will not be
affected.'' On page 9, the document says, ``If you leave the study and
exercise your right not to give a reason or are required to leave the study
for non-compliance, no payment need be made to you.'' ``That's very coercive
language,'' says Greg Koski, 56, a physician and former head of the U.S.
Office for Human Subject Protection, interviewed by phone April 5. ``It's a
bait and switch.''
www.sskrplaw.com/publications/060410.html
A few weeks earlier the volunteers had gone for some standard tests and
a briefing on the trial. Nav Modi, 25, had asked the doctor if the trial was
unusual or risky. "He said, 'Certainly not, because if it was risky, it
wouldn't be tested on humans.' The doctors from Parexel assured us that things
wouldn't go wrong. "The worst case was that we would have a headache or nausea
that would be gone in a couple of hours."
www.mirror.co.uk/news/topstories/2007/03/10/exclusive--one-year-after-drug-test-horror---89520-18732768/
Several images show the progression of problems after administration of the
drug.
The volunteers knew the test had gone wrong within 20 minutes, Khan
says. The men started to undress, even though the ward was cold, he says. They
were grabbing their heads, and their breathing became erratic. Khan was sent
to the canteen as nurses and doctors tried to relieve the men's pain. Khan
says the man in the next bed pleaded for assistance. `Horrible Scream' ``It
was a horrible scream,'' Khan says. ``He was begging for help, saying `Doc, my
head is killing me. My back is killing me.' He was moving around like a snake,
arching his back.''
www.sskrplaw.com/publications/060410.html
The trial began at 8am. David was the first to be injected and the
others followed at 10-minute intervals. Within one hour, they were screaming
in agony, with fevers and excruciating headaches. One said it felt like
rockets in his brain. Rob says: "There was a sense the staff just wanted to
get it over with." Four minutes after restaurant manager Nino Abdelhady's had
his jab, his life became a screaming, agonising nightmare. "Everything just
fell apart" as the drug ripped through his body like wildfire, he says. The
drug was destroying their immune systems and shutting down their vital organs.
Sixteen hours later, the volunteers were finally moved into intensive care.
Shocked to the core, it was Nino's girlfriend, My fanwy Marshall, who
described him as the "Elephant Man."
www.mirror.co.uk/news/topstories/2007/03/10/exclusive--one-year-after-drug-test-horror---89520-18732768/
Several images showing treatment in the hospital
The first inkling that doctors were facing an unprecedented medical
crisis began with a call to the critical care unit at Northwick Park Hospital
last Monday afternoon. Patients on the seventh floor were having strange
reactions to a new drug, they were told. Some were having breathing
difficulties, others were losing consciousness. The news triggered alarm, but
nothing more. The unit's six beds were already occupied by patients who were
too ill to be moved. So a separate bay was taken over and the first patients
rushed down. It was then that staff realised the nature of the calamity they
were up against. Within minutes, the bay was filled with the writhing bodies
of young men screaming for help. Consultants were summoned from their homes.
All were baffled. Even the team who had administered the test drugs could not
explain why the men were slipping in and out of comas, why their heads had
puffed up to twice their normal sizes, why some were vomiting, or why some
were in such pain. Their only real comfort was provided by an experienced
nurse who supervised the installation of drips and ventilators.
www.guardian.co.uk/medicine/story/0,,1734446,00.html
The men, who had been contracted by the US drug testing company Parexel
to test the anti-cancer drug TGN1412, were put on ventilators. Then some began
showing signs of kidney failure. Blood filtration units were brought it to
clean out their veins and arteries. Relatives were called and told to expect
the worst. Only a miracle would see them through, one was told.
www.guardian.co.uk/medicine/story/0,,1734446,00.html
Within minutes of the last volunteer getting his TGN1412, the first
injected recruit had begun to complain of a severe headache, backache, fever
and pain. He tore his shirt off and yelled he was burning. 'An Asian guy next
to me started screaming and his breathing went haywire as though he was having
a terrible panic attack,' said one of the volunteers, Raste Khan, who had been
given a placebo. 'They put an oxygen mask on him but he kept tearing it off.
He was shouting "Doctor, doctor, please help me!" He started convulsing,
shouting that he was getting shooting pains in his back. People were fainting
and coming back to consciousness. It was terrifying. I kept expecting it to
happen to me at any moment. But I felt fine and didn't know why.'
www.guardian.co.uk/medicine/story/0,,1734446,00.html
Several images showing long term effects.
Today Rob, 32, has been told he is suffering from post-traumatic stress.
His blood, he says, is "not how it was" and his immune system remains damaged.
He's had a recurring rash on his legs and arms that feels as though someone's
stabbing him hard with pins. "You end up being paranoid about the smallest
things, thinking, 'God, what if it's cancer.'"
www.mirror.co.uk/news/topstories/2007/03/10/exclusive--one-year-after-drug-test-horror---89520-18732768/
Oakley, from Ealing, west London, has been told by doctors that he is
showing 'definite early signs' of lymphoma.
www.guardian.co.uk/medicine/story/0,,1838498,00.html
Now, more than a month after the incident, doctors frankly don't know
whether the adverse effects are reversible, especially for 20-year-old trial
volunteer Ryan Wilson, who is the lone volunteer still hospitalized. Wilson
had slipped into a coma for three weeks after taking the drug, and after
awakening, discovered that he may lose parts of his fingers and toes, which
had turned black because of his reaction to the drug. "I'm told it's like
frostbite and my fingers will just fall off," Wilson told the UK's News of the
World recently. In addition to being in a coma for nearly a month, Wilson also
suffered from heart, liver and kidney failure, septicemia, pneumonia and dry
gangrene. Marshall says her boyfriend -- a previously healthy, 28-year-old bar
owner in London -- had changed beyond recognition immediately after taking
TGN1412. "I went in expecting to see his smiley face and curly, black hair,
but he was completely lifeless," she says. "He's like a shell of who he is. He
can't even move his eyelids. The machine is pumping out of his lungs. His
chest is puffed out. His face is puffed out like the Elephant Man. A day ago,
I was talking to him and he was fine, and now they are saying he could die at
any moment."
www.newstarget.com/019371.html
Several images showing company spokespersons and ethicists debating what if
anything went wrong and who was to blame. This is the hardest thing to
illustrate because it just ends up being a talking head.
Yesterday Dr Thomas Hanke, TeGenero's chief scientific officer, defended
the decision to use healthy volunteers. 'We had early evidence [from animal
studies] that the effect of the drug depends on the status of the patient, so
it dampens the immune response for patients with auto-immune disease and it
boosts the response for the other group [with cancer]. We are so terribly
sorry it went so wrong. We are devastated by the tragic events that have
happened.' www.guardian.co.uk/medicine/story/0,,1734446,00.html
It said the life-threatening inflammation of the men's tissues and
internal organs were "most likely" caused by an unexpected biological effect
that had not been detected in animal tests of the TGN1412 drug, manufactured
by TeGenero. "We are satisfied that the adverse incidents which occurred were
not as a result of any errors made in the manufacture of TGN1412, its
formulation, dilution or administration to trial participants," the agency's
chief executive, Professor Kent Woods, said.
http://society.guardian.co.uk/health/story/0,,1783076,00.html
This webpage was written on 2007-10-12
and was last modified on
2008-07-08.
Category: Ethics in research
CMH Employees
|