Whose Life Is It Anyway?
The FDA versus dying cancer patients. 
_Ronald Bailey_ (http://www.reason.com/staff/show/133.html)  | March 2,  2007 
 
Washington, DC - University of Virginia student Abigail Burroughs died of  
head and neck cancer at age 21 on June 9, 2001. She died while fighting to gain 
 
access to promising experimental anti-cancer drugs recommended by her 
oncologist  at Johns Hopkins University Hospital. Her father, Frank Burroughs, 
founded the  _Abigail Alliance for Better Access to  Developmental Drugs_ 
(http://www.abigail-alliance.org/)  and sued the Food and Drug Administration, 
arguing 
that  terminal cancer patients have a constitutional right to try to gain 
access to  developmental medicines that the agency has not yet approved. 

In May  2006, the Alliance won its case before the U.S. Court of Appeals for 
the  District of Columbia which _ruled_ 
(http://pacer.cadc.uscourts.gov/docs/common/opinions/200605/04-5350a.pdf)   
that "barring a terminally ill patient 
from the use of a potentially lifesaving  treatment impinges on this right of 
self-preservation.  that "barring a terminally ill patient from the use of a 
potentially lifesaving  treatment impinges on this right of 
self-preservation.<WBR>" The Appeals Court  sent the case back to District 
Court to consider if 
the protected liberty  interests of terminally patients outweigh the FDA's 
interest i

Earlier this week, the  Food and Drug Law Institute held a _colloquium_ 
(http://www.fdli.org/pubs/bk020081/) , "Whose Life Is It  Anyway?," on the 
issue. 
Scott Ballenger, the lawyer who is representing the  Abigail Alliance before 
the Appeals Court, noted that the legal question before  the court is what 
standard should apply to the case. Is trying to gain access to  potentially 
life-saving medicines unapproved by the FDA a fundamental right or  merely an 
economic right subject to regulations established by political  authorities? 
Can the 
government properly assert that it has a compelling  interest to deny dying 
patients access to potentially life-saving  drugs?

Ballenger compared the situation to self-defense. "Self defense is  the most 
obvious and self-evident rights of men," he asserted. "No state can  deny 
someone self-defense in the face of an attack." Ballenger argued that if  the 
law 
recognizes that people have the right to defend themselves from attack  by a 
bear or infectious bacteria, then surely they have the right to defend  
themselves against a rogue cancer cell.

At the colloquium, food and drug  lawyer Richard Cooper agreed that the issue 
is whether some rights are so  fundamental that we do not entrust them to 
decisions made by elected officials.  Until recently, establishing agencies to 
regulate the safety and efficacy of  drugs was thought to be within the purview 
of Congress. "I doubt that most  people thought that they had a constitutional 
right to buy investigational  drugs," said Cooper. "It's a wholly new, 
unheard of right with no antecedents in  Anglo-American law." If people want to 
change the way the FDA regulates patient  access to investigational drugs, 
Cooper 
argued, they can petition the FDA and  Congress and eventually vote out 
members of Congress who refuse to change the  regulations. 

Cooper noted that the Supreme Court _ruled_ 
(http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/cgi-bin/getcase.pl?court=us&vol=442&invol=544)   
in 1979 that cancer patients 
did not have a constitutional right to access the  cancer treatment _laetrile_ 
(http://www.quackwatch.org/01QuackeryRelatedTopics/Cancer/laetrile.html) .  The 
court reasoned that access to the drug might be restricted on the grounds  
that laetrile had not passed the hurdle of FDA safety testing. However, the  
Alliance argues that this ruling does not apply because it is asking only for  
the same right of access enjoyed by those terminally ill patients who are lucky 
 
enough to be enrolled in an FDA-approved efficacy trial.

Ballenger  continued that federal courts have recognized a number of 
fundamental rights and  not all of them deal with life and death issues, 
including the 
right to teach  your children German, educate them in private school, live 
with family members  under one roof, view pornography at home, and engage in 
homosexual sodomy. Some  other fundamental rights recognized by federal courts 
are the right to  interracial marriage, to use contraception, to worship, and 
to 
obtain  abortions.

University of Pennsylvania bioethicist Arthur Caplan pointed  out that it was 
difficult to figure out who qualifies for the category  "terminally ill." He 
also asked wyhy terminal illness in and of itself should  give a patient a 
privilege or a right. After all, a patient who has exhausted  standard 
treatments 
for some kind of severe disability, say, Parkinsonism,  macular degeneration, 
or dementia, could argue that they have a right to access  potentially better 
drugs that the FDA has not yet approved.

Scott  Gottlieb, who has just stepped down as deputy commissioner at the FDA, 
thinks  that "terminal patients should have access to experimental drugs 
after  exhausting other treatments" He noted that FDA bureaucrats are concerned 
that  opening access to investigational drugs to terminal patients might 
imperil 
the  agency's ability to collect good data on drug safety and efficacy. They 
think  that they are balancing individuals' interests in getting cutting edge  
treatments now against society's interest in obtaining more information in 
order  to get more drugs to more people eventually.

Gottlieb noted that there is  a marketplace issue. Companies have a 
disincentive to offer access outside of  clinical trials. Why? Because side 
effects or 
other adverse events would be  reported from patients who had not met the 
criteria for clinical trials. The  companies fear that an already 
hyper-cautious 
agency would use such adverse  event reports from outside of clinical trials as 
a justification for slowing the  approval of a drug. Gottlieb told the 
colloquium that many inside the FDA  believe that it is more important and 
better 
for society in the long run to gain  good clinical data about a drug than it is 
to try to save the lives of  individual patients. "I don't think the choice is 
that stark," said Gottlieb.  "The FDA could pursue both goals."

Gottlieb asserted that the FDA is  failing to use its authority to strike a 
balance on this issue. He suggested  that the agency could start to develop 
alternatives to randomized placebo  controlled clinical trials, perhaps 
incorporating _Bayesian_ 
(http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=35842) 
  techniques. The FDA could also develop and validate surrogate clinical 
endpoints  so that results can be known sooner than the results from trials 
that 
rely on  long term survival rates. Gottlieb pointed out that new cancer drugs 
are rarely  held up on safety grounds, so research should focus more quickly on 
efficacy. He  does worry that the agency has begun to refuse to approve drugs 
that have fewer  side effects but are less efficacious than earlier more 
brutal treatments. The  agency fears that patients would trade off a higher 
risk 
of dying for fewer side  effects. Why mentally competent people in consultation 
with their physicians  should not be allowed to make such tradeoffs is not at 
all clear.

Mark  Gately, a Baltimore attorney who defends pharmaceutical firms, pointed 
out  another big issue in this debate -- the fact that federal law forbids a 
patient  using experimental drugs from _waiving  negligence_ 
(http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/cfcfr/CFRSearch.cfm?fr=50.20)
 . Gately 
litigated the case involving patients enrolled in  clinical trials for the drug 
GDNF, developed by Amgen to control Parkinsonism.  The clinical trial did not 
find 
the drug to be efficacious, but many patients,  who believed that they did 
benefit from it, _sued_ 
(http://www.irbforum.com/forum/read/2/100/100?PHPSESSID=bd8ea6e5a4035cf9d71362135e755242)
   the company demanding continued access to 
it. The company refused because it was  worried by research that showed that 
the drug caused some brain damage in  monkeys. According to Gately, a Kentucky 
judge asked the lawyer who represented  two of a clinical trial participants, 
"What happens when one dies?" The lawyer  answered, "They know what they are 
getting into. There will be no lawsuit." The  judge replied, "This is America. 
If one dies, there will be a lawsuit." The  bottom line for Gately: "Drug 
companies will be hard pressed to provide these  drugs unless they are provided 
some protection from legal attacks."

For  Frank Palumbo, who is the executive director of the University of 
Maryland's  School of Pharmacy Center on Drugs and Public Policy, the central 
question is:  "If patients are allowed access to these investigational drugs 
for the 
purpose  of treating terminal illness, how can they afford them?" Newer 
cancer therapies  are very expensive, some costing $10,000 per month.

After the somewhat  dispassionate presentations of the panelists, 
representatives from the Abigail  Alliance made themselves heard during the 
question and 
answer period. Steve  Walker, the chief advisor to the Alliance explained what 
had happened to  Abigail. She had exhausted all of the approved therapies. 
Her oncologist  believed that the then-investigationaAfter the somewhat  
dispassionate presentations of the panelists, representatives from the Abigail  
Alliance made themselves heard during the question and answer period. Steve  
Walker, the chief advisor to the Alliance explained what had happened to  
Abigail. 
She had exhausted all of the approved therapies. Her oncologist  believed that 
the then-investigationa<WBR>l anti-cancer therapy, Erbitux, being  
developed_approved_ 
(http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=38678)   the 
drug for treating head and neck cancer in March 2006. Erbitux boosts average  
head and neck cancer _survival  rates_ 
(http://www.drugdevelopment-technology.com/projects/erbitux/)  by about 2 years.

Walker noted that the current clinical trial  system was devised 50 years ago 
in an era of medical ignorance. Today,  researchers use genomic information 
to develop targeted drugs. Walker pointed to  a current clinical trial 
involving a drug that early trials show works  "unbelievably well" against 
metastatic 
kidney cancer. According to Walker, the  FDA is insisting on randomized 
placebo controlled trial for approval. "Everyone  knows the drug works," said 
Walker. So the end result is that the cancers in  patients enrolled in the 
placebo 
end of the trial will have gotten worse by the  time the FDA approves the drug 
in the next 4 or 5 months.

Ballenger  pointed out that the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO) 
had actually  made the argument in its amicus brief in the current Abigail 
Alliance suit that  terminal patients are desperate so they can't give informed 
consent, yet somehow  ASCO also argues that such desperate patients can give 
informed consent to  participate in clinical trials. Is ASCO willing to 
sacrifice patients who might  benefit from investigational treatments in order 
to 
maintain a pool of research  subjects? Ballenger said, "I do not think that 
this 
is an ethical line of  argumentation.B

Ballenger added, "I am more than happy to concede  that the FDA has a 
compelling state interest to protect medical progress if the  FDA can prove 
that 
expanded access to investigational drugs will imperil  clinical trials. The 
fact 
is that most trials are over enrolled and that most  people asking for expanded 
access don't qualify for the trials anyway. Standing  in the way of expanded 
access is just perverse."

Abigail's father Frank  Burroughs wrapped up the presentation for the 
colloquium participants. "Every  drug that we've pushed for early access to 
over the 
past six years--all are now  approved by the FDA." Thousands died waiting for 
the FDA bureaucracy to let  cancer drugs that would have lengthened and 
perhaps even saved their lives onto  the market. Perhaps finding that mentally 
competent terminal cancer patients do  have a fundamental right to access 
investigational drugs will finally spur the  FDA to stop clinging to an 
outdated 
mid-20th century cancer clinical  trial system and embrace one more suited to 
the 
21st century science.  The _millions_ 
(http://www.cancer.org/downloads/stt/CFF2007ProbDevelInvCancer.pdf)   of us who 
will one day develop cancer had better 
hope so.

_Ronald  Bailey_ (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])  is Reason's science 
correspondent. His book _Liberation  Biology: The Scientific and Moral Case for 
the 
Biotech Revolution_ (http://www.reason.com/lb/)  is now  available from 
Prometheus 
Books.
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