Last year Arthur
Caplan and Kenneth Moch published a very thought provoking article in the
Health Affairs Blog, “Rescue
Me: The Challenge of Compassionate Use in the Social Media Era.” In the article they touch on the ethics and
policies of denying access to potentially life-saving treatments.
Caplan and
Moch (2014) state, “The question of whether there is a duty to pay for the use
of unproven and experimental therapies to attempt to rescue individuals in dire
medical straits, even those with poor odds of success, is one that health
policy makers have not acknowledged as part of ongoing national health care
debates in the United States and other nations…The duty to seek to rescue those
in very dire straits is a powerful norm in American society and in major
religious traditions around the world.
Whether it is coal miners trapped in a mine, mountaineers stranded on a
peak or a child fallen in a long abandoned well, it is very clear that, despite
difficultly and cost, society wants strenuous rescue efforts to be made. Health policy discussions often fail to
reflect this deep moral concern as shown in the absence of attention to the
issue of ‘rescue’ and in the lack of funding in public and private insurance for
attempting to do so.”
It would
seem then that unless there is in-your-face coverage of the injuries and death
caused by denying patients access to potentially life-threatening disease,
there will be no movement towards Expanded Access or Accelerated Access
Programs for ALS or other rare diseases.
Caplan and
Moch (2014) discuss the case of 7-year old Josh Hardy who in March 2013 was
denied access to the experimental drug Brincidofovir (Chimerix, Inc.). Chimerix, the North Carolina based
pharmaceutical company had previously made brincidofovir available to over 430
critically ill patients under an Expanded Access Program initiated by several
individual doctor-sponsored emergency INDs in 2009, and later funded for 215
more patients through funding from the Health and Human Services Biomedical Advanced
Research and Development Authority (BARDA).
It was only after a social media cry for help (#SaveJosh) followed by a
smear campaign against Chimerix (#SaveJosh), which lead to televised media
coverage and letters and phone calls to politicians that Hardy received the
necessary treatment. The irony of the
situation is that after Chimerix released the drug to Hardy, the company was
applauded online and stocks rose by fifty-percent.
So I ask
myself, why are companies developing ALS and rare disease treatments denied
expanded access left and right? Why are
there only a few companies that have clear, transparent policies on Expanded
Access, procedures, and contacts listed on their webpage? Why are people who do participate in these
clinical trials taken off the treatment to observe for follow-up even when their
clinical measures have improved? Why do
we not yet have FDA Guidelines specific for conducting clinical trials research
and expanded access programs with ALS and other rare diseases that include
input from those actually afflicted?
Speaking to
advocates in cancer, HIV/AIDS, and tuberculosis, diseases where you can
actually find Expanded Access Programs available, you will hear that they have faced
these same issues. It is history
repeating itself. You would think that
people suffering rare, fatal diseases today would not have to suffer through the
same hurdles. What we should be doing as
PALS, CALS, and advocates is work with the U.S. FDA, HHS, NIH, politicians, public
and private insurance companies and pharmaceutical/biotechnology companies to
overhaul the current system.
The FDA
permits pharmaceutical/biotechnology companies to conduct clinical trials in the
United States. Public dollars from NIH, DOD, etc…fund their research and FDA
has provided them with additional funding and expedited status for those investigating
rare diseases. In the end the companies
negotiate treatment costs and extend patents to the maximum to maintain their
high rates. How are people with the
disease benefiting? How are those who
participate in clinical trials benefiting when the treatment is taken away
after the trial has ended?
The solution
is the political will to rescue people with potentially life-saving treatments
like they do for those caught in an avalanche, or buried underground. We could require companies who conduct trials
in the United States to have clear policies on Expanded Access, procedures, and
contacts posted on their websites. We
could also require companies to provide a minimum quota of expanded access
patients for each clinical trial they conduct.
And also require that if a treatment that is shown to be safe and
improve clinical measures to a patient enrolled in a clinical trial, that they
be allowed to continue that treatment once follow-up measures have been made. It would also behoove many to create clear
FDA Guidelines for clinical trials research and expanded access programs for
ALS and other rare diseases in collaboration with researchers, treating
doctors, companies, patients and caregivers.
When all else fails, make some noise.
Social media and televised stories can be powerful tools.
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