Less than four months after its publication, the Department of Defense (DOD)
has agreed to review a controversial study that appears to link Gulf War
syndrome (GWS) with a banned substance used in experimental vaccines.
The study, conducted by scientists at Tulane University Medical School, found
that an overwhelming majority of sick veterans who had served in the Gulf War,
and had received at least one vaccination, tested positive for antibodies to a
naturally occurring substance called squalene. None of the healthy
veterans in the study tested positive for squalene antibodies.
DoD officials originally dismissed the study as flawed and asserted that none
of the vaccines administered during the Gulf War contained squalene. In response
to pressure from Congress, however, the department has asked the Armed Forces
Epidemiological Board (AFEB) to re-examine the study. The Institute of Medicine
is also reviewing the research to see what role squalene may play in
Gulf-related illnesses.1
Squalene Adjuvant: Friend or Foe?
A naturally occurring molecule, squalene is produced by the human liver and
plays a role in the metabolism of cholesterol. It is most commonly found in
vegetable oils, shark liver oil, cosmetics and various health supplements.
Under normal circumstances, squalene is released into the blood to help
combat physical injuries. However, people don't usually have enough squalene in
their blood to prompt the production of detectable levels of antibodies.
Since the late 1980s, squalene has been studied by the DoD and the National
Institutes of Health as a possible adjuvant in vaccines. Because adjuvants boost
the immune system's response to foreign antibodies, the subtance has sparked the
interest of researchers. Drug manufacturers, for their part, have incorporated
adjuvants into vaccines in the belief that the substance will render the vaccine
more effective.
Adjuvants, however, can sometimes trigger unwanted immune responses. While
large-scale studies have yet to be conducted in humans, animal studies have
shown that squalene adjuvants may generate autoimmune versions of arthritis and
multiple sclerosis type-conditions that attack the body from within.2
Although they have been used in a number of vaccines worldwide, only one
adjuvant - aluminum hydroxide - has been approved by the Food and Drug
Administration for use in vaccines in the United States. And although squalene-adjuvant
vaccines have been used on laboratory animals and in experimental human tests,
the FDA has not approved the general use of any vaccine containing squalene in
the U.S.
"We Never Used Squalene in Vaccines"
Military officials have said all along that no Gulf War vaccines contained
squalene. In August 1997, spokespersons for the DoD claimed that squalene "was
not an adjuvant that was in any of the vaccines that were used by the Department
of Defense,"3 and that "we never used squalene in vaccines" during
the Gulf War. However, in a report4issued in March 1999, the General
Accounting Office (GAD) - the investigative arm of Congress - stated:
We cannot say definitively whether or not Gulf War-era veterans were given
vaccines with adjuvant formulations containing squalene for a number of
reasons. Although DoD officials told us they did not administer such vaccines,
they stated they did not have documentation on the process and results of
decision-making related to the administration of vaccines at the time of the
Gulf War. Also, some officials involved in the decisions were no longer
employed with DoD at the time of our review, and we were either unable to
locate them, or they declined to be interviewed.
A month after the GAO issued its 1999 report, the first hint that squalene
might be linked to Gulf War syndrome appeared in an article in New Scientist
magazine.5 Robert Garry, a virologist at Tulane University, tested
more than 400 Gulf War veterans for antibodies to squalene and found that 95
percent of those with GWS had high levels of squalene antibodies.
Garry also tested a pair of volunteers who had received experimental herpes
vaccines containing squalene in trials conducted by the National Institutes of
Health. Both had high levels of squalene antibodies and also suffered from GWS-type
symptoms.
In February, the peer-reviewed journal Experimental and Molecular
Pathology6 published a study written by Garry's team at Tulane
University and Dr. Pamela Asa, an immunologist from Tennessee. Dr. Asa was one
of the first health professionals to advance the theory that Gulf War syndrome
might be an autoimmune disorder caused by experimental vaccinations.
The research included blinded and unblinded studies. In the blinded study, 56
Gulf War-era veterans and military personnel who were on active service in
1990-91 were tested for squalene. Of those 56, 38 had been deployed to the
Persian Gulf and had GWS-type symptoms; 12 had been deployed but were healthy;
and six had not been deployed but were nevertheless ill.
The researchers found that among the 38 ill veterans who had been deployed,
36 (94.7 percent) tested positive for squalene antibodies. None of the deployed
healthy individuals, however, tested positive.
Furthermore, all six subjects who were ill, but had not been sent to the
Gulf, also had squalene antibodies. While they did not serve in the war, they
had received the same type and number of vaccinations given to Gulf War troops.
To see whether squalene antibodies might be a marker for other types of
autoimmune diseases, the researchers also tested groups of patients with lupus
and chronic fatigue syndrome, as well as a small sample from the general
population. Only 15 percent of those with chronic fatigue tested positive for
squalene; only 10 percent of those with lupus tested positive; and only five
percent of the general population had squalene antibodies.
The Tulane study made no conclusion about whether Gulf War vaccines contained
squalene, what may have produced the antibodies, or what role they play in Gulf
War syndrome. Still, it is hoped that the research conducted by Garry and Asa
will prompt others to investigate the role of vaccinations in Gulf War syndrome
and the safety of vaccines that contain squalene.
"We don't know what caused the immune system to produce anti-squalene
antibodies in the Gulf War veterans, but this study shows that the antibodies
are indeed there," observed Dr. Russell Wilson, president of Autoimmune
Technologies, which helped market the study. Dr. Wilson does not believe that
the antibodies were the result of a reaction to squalene added to vaccines.
"That possibility must still be formally ruled out,"7 he concluded.
Approximately 700,000 Americans served in the Gulf War between 1990-91. One
hundred and forty-eight Americans were killed in action; 467 were wounded. The
Department of Veterans Affairs estimates that as many as 100,000 veterans may be
suffering from Gulf War syndrome or related symptoms, and that approximately
6,500 soldiers have died since the war's conclusion, including more than 1,300
soldiers between the ages of 18-24.8
Hughes J. Scrutinizing squalene: government to review study linking gulf
illness, antibodies. Associated Press, April 14, 2000.
What is squalene? Associated Press, April 14, 2000.
Rodriguez PM. The Gulf War mystery. Insight Magazine, September 8,
1997.
Gulf War Illnesses. Questions about the Presence of Squalene Antibodies
in Veterans Can Be Resolved. United States General Accounting Office,
March 1999.
Mackenzie D. Victims of vaccines. New Scientist April 10, 1999.
Asa PB, Cao Y, Garry R. Antibodies to squalene in Gulf War syndrome.
Experimental and Molecular Pathology February 2000;68(1):55-64.
New antibodies discovered in Gulf War syndrome patients. AutoImmune
Technologies (www.autoimmune.com
), January 31, 2000.
Turner A. Death ruling raises issue of Gulf War ills. Houston Chronicle
April 15, 2000.
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