July 30 issue When Ellen M. Roche, 24, volunteered for the
asthma experiment, she didnt expect to benefit from itexcept for the $365
shed be paid. Unlike clinical trials, in which most patients hope that an
experimental therapy will help them, this study was designed just to answer
a basic question: how does the way a normal lung reacts to irritants shed
light on how an asthmatic lung responds?
TO FIND OUT, scientists led by Dr. Alkis Togias of Johns
Hopkins University had Roche and other healthy volunteers inhale a drug
called hexamethonium. Almost immediately Roche began to cough and feel short
of breath. Within weeks her lungs failed and her kidneys shut down. On June 2
Roche dieda death made more tragic by the possibility that it was
preventable. Last week the federal Office for Human Research Protections
(OHRP) ruled that Hopkinss system for protecting human subjects is so flawed
that virtually all its U.S.-supported research had to stop.
The worst part is that Hopkins, one of the
nations premier medical institutions, is not alone. Two years ago the
inspector general of the Department of Health and Human Services warned that
the system safeguarding human subjects is in danger of a meltdown. The boards
that review proposed studies are overburdened, understaffed and shot through
with conflicts of interest. Oversight is so porous that no one knows how many
people volunteer to be human guinea pigs (21 million a year is an educated
guess), how many are hurt or how many die. Thousands of deaths are never
reported, and adverse events in the tens of thousands are not reported, says
Adil Shamoo, a member of the National Human Research Protections Advisory
Committee and professor at the University of Maryland. Greg Koski, head of
OHRP, has called the clinical-trials system dysfunctional.
The OHRP findings on Hopkins
are nothing short of devastating. After a three-day inspection last week,
OHRP concluded that the Hopkins scientists failed to get information on the
link between hexamethonium and lung toxicity, even though data were available
via routine Internet searches and in textbooks. The drug is not approved
for use in humans; the hexa-methonium Togias used was labeled [f] or
laboratory use only. The review board, OHRP charges, never asked for data on
the safety of inhaled hexamethonium in people. The consent form that Roche
signed states nowhere that hexamethonium is not approved by the FDA (the form
describes it as a medication) and didnt warn about possible lung toxicity.
Hopkins itself concluded that
the review board did not do all it could to protect the volunteers, and
suspended all 10 of Togiass studies. Still, the universitywhose $301
million in federal grants for 2,000 human studies made it the largest
recipient of government research money last yearis seething. Hopkins has
had over 100 years of doing clinical trials, says Dr. Edward Miller, CEO of
Johns Hopkins Medicine. We have had one death in all of those years. We
would have done anything in the world to prevent that death, but [suspending
the studies] seems out of proportion. Hopkins calls the shutdown of its
experiments unwarranted, unnecessary, paralyzing and precipitous. OHRP is
letting trials continue where it is in the best interests of subjects. The
rest of the studies can resume once Hopkins submits a plan to restructure its
system for protecting research subjects. How quickly that happens, says a
government spokesman, depends on Hopkins.
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