Category: Health Care

  • Chapter 17: Science Intervenes and Project Badger Surfaces

    A study was conducted on 8,195 British Gulf War-era veterans. The British, serving alongside American forces, gave their servicemen untested vaccines as well.  There were two important findings from the study:

    • The Gulf War cohort reported symptoms and disorders significantly more frequently than those in the Bosnia Era cohorts, which were similar . . . Gulf War veterans were more likely than the Bosnia cohort to have substantial fatigue, symptoms of post-traumatic stress, and psychological distress, and were twice as likely to reach the CDC case definition [of Gulf War Illness]. …Vaccination against biological warfare and multiple routine vaccinations were associated with all outcomes.[i]
    • Service in the Gulf War was associated with various health problems over and above those associated with deployment to an unfamiliar hostile environment. Since associations of ill health with adverse events and exposures were found in all cohorts, however, they may not be unique and causally implicated in the Gulf War-related illness. A specific mechanism may link vaccination against biological warfare agents and later ill health, but the risks of illness must be considered against the protection of servicemen.[ii]

    The state of Kansas Commission of Veterans Affairs funded a study of 2,030 Kansas Gulf War era veterans. Despite over $150 million spent on Gulf War Illness research, DoD has never conducted a comparable study on US service members. The Kansas study concluded:

    Gulf War Illness . . . occurred in 34% of Persian Gulf War (PGW) veterans, 12% of non-PGW veterans who reported receiving vaccines during the war, and 4% of non-PGW veterans who did not receive vaccines . . . Among PGW veterans who served away from battlefield areas, Gulf War illness was least prevalent among those who departed the region prior to the war (9%) and most prevalent among those who departed in June or July of 1991 (41%). Observed patterns suggest that excess morbidity among Gulf War veterans is associated with characteristics of their wartime service, and that vaccines used during the war may be a contributing factor.[iii]

    Britain and Canada also conducted studies and found a possible link to vaccines given to their veterans. One of the most interesting studies is one by France that found no Gulf War Illness at all among its veterans. In September 2000, France’s Defense Minister Alain Richard created an independent commission to look into the health of the French military servicemembers who participated in the Gulf War.[iv] Interestingly, a French medical corps spokesman, said that

    “France’s belief that allied troops were victims of their own protective measures were based on a long series of meetings with U.S. medical experts . . .  ‘About 100,000 of the 600,000 Americans who served in the Gulf complain of ailments that have tentatively been lumped under the Gulf War syndrome heading. No one has yet come to definitive conclusions but we note that of 25,000 Frenchmen who served in the Gulf, only 180 have ailments whose origin could be in question. The only really major difference between the two groups is vaccinations,’ he said.” [v]

    These studies received little to no attention in the U.S., and in some cases, were immediately disclaimed by the DoD. There was also a considerable amount of anecdotal evidence regarding adverse reactions to the anthrax vaccine. Perhaps the DoD was right in one respect, the advent of email allows large numbers of people to communicate around the world quickly. It is an ideal tool for servicemembers, who are deployed the world over, to communicate with friends quickly regardless of time zones or presence at the receiving end. I personally received dozens of emails from different people detailing adverse health effects from the anthrax vaccine. One email contained a list of at least a hundred names with phone numbers and/or addresses, as well as the particular adverse effect.

    Finally, the most compelling study conducted on Gulf War Illness, and perhaps revealing the worst about the DoD, is a study conducted at Tulane University and the controversy it started. Originally, a 1999 Vanity Fair article stated that DoD had used an experimental anthrax vaccine on troops going to the Gulf War. This article explained that the vaccine was experimental because it contained a substance known as squalene.  Squalene is an experimental adjuvant. An adjuvant is a substance added to a vaccine in order to increase the body’s immune response to the vaccine itself. Squalene is produced naturally by the body in very minute quantities but it is not licensed by the FDA for injection into human beings. Squalene not only boosts the immune system’s response, it also decreases the time necessary for the body to develop immunity to the vaccine. The Vanity Fair article posited that there was squalene in the anthrax vaccine given to service members during the Gulf War.

    Questions about vaccine adjuvant formulations were raised to DOD in June 1994. At that time, an immunologist from the private sector notified the Defense Science Board that some symptoms being reported by Gulf War-era veterans were very similar to those of her patients with autoimmune diseases. These patients had a range of symptoms affecting more than one of the body systems and the immunologist believed they were associated with exposure to vaccine adjuvant formulations. In October 1995, DOD, before a meeting of the Presidential Advisory Commission on Gulf War illnesses, dismissed this hypothesis on the grounds that it had administered only vaccines with aluminum salts as adjuvants. In November 1996 and again in 1997, the immunologist notified DOD, based on independent research, that she had found antibodies to squalene in the blood of a few sick veterans who had served in the military during the Gulf War. However, DOD has not responded to these findings. According to the researcher, she continues to be willing to discuss the research with DOD.[vi]

    The Tulane scientists had developed a test, called an assay, for detecting the presence of squalene antibodies in the bloodstream. Some Gulf war veterans who were found to have squalene antibodies in their blood early on approached Congressman Jack Metcalf (R-WA). In 1997, Representative Metcalf asked the GAO to conduct an inquiry into the possibility that squalene was in vaccines given to service members. This study by the GAO took three years to complete and the timing of its release in March 1999 could not have been worse for the DoD. The report found a “pattern of deception” by the DoD with regards to the use of squalene adjuvants.[vii]

    At an initial meeting with DoD officials, GAO notes show that the DoD claimed that they “had not performed or sponsored any research on synthetic or natural squalene or squalene until after the Gulf War.”[viii] The GAO investigators, however, found articles and databases that indicated there had been squalene studies before the Gulf War. The investigators confronted DoD officials with some of these public records and some of the DoD officials began to admit that they had conducted five human trials involving squalene and that a sixth was planned. Furthermore, the GAO investigators found that the DoD “had conducted numerous animal studies, particularly to develop a modern vaccine for anthrax. In fact, in most cases they only admitted to conducting research after we had discovered it in public records. On three occasions, people attending a meeting did not report their own research on squalene adjuvants.”[ix]

    The GAO investigators also met with various officials, including the DoD’s Director of AIDS research during the Gulf War, members of the FDA, who all pointed to Colonel (Dr.) Carl Alving as the person who “was most interested in developing own adjuvants at WRAIR [Walter Reed Army Institute of Research].”[x] During meetings with DoD officials, Dr. Iving was never present nor mentioned, despite NIH and FDA officials calling him the top DoD researcher on vaccine issues. When finally interviewed by GAO investigators, Dr. Alving initially denied any participation in vaccine adjuvants. When pressed, he recalled that he had been called by someone at USAMRIID “who asked if he could develop a new, more potent anthrax vaccine on a crash basis to use in Operation Desert Shield. He worked on it and thought he could do it, but no one ever called him back. He wouldn’t say who called . . . or why he just didn’t return the call.”[xi]

    Interviews with Dr. Anna Johnson-Winegar revealed a Tri-Service Task Force operation called Project Badger. Winegar mentioned that Dr. Alving was the DoD’s in-house adjuvant expert. She also mentioned that “[s]ome in the group were willing to jump out and use everything. (She refused to say who.)”[xii]

    The GAO then interviewed General Blanck, Army Surgeon General, who disclosed that the DoD had very little botulism toxoid vaccine and so “we contracted with Porton to make them.” Porton refers to Porton Down, a British vaccine manufacturer.  According to General Blanck, “we got it, but didn’t use it.”[xiii] General Blanck also pointed the GAO investigators to a Peter Collis, who headed oversight for Project Badger and vaccine efforts. Peter Collis refused to talk to the GAO. First, he cited the classified nature of the research, which was a non-issue for the GAO. He then said he couldn’t look at some matters as a civilian without a clearance (GAO offered to get him a temporary clearance). Mr. Collis then called to say he didn’t know much, even though notes from Badger showed him at the center of all Badger discussions and running the briefings.”[xiv]

    By September of 1998, the GAO investigators were discussing the Tulane study’s assay for determining the presence of squalene antibodies. DoD officials acknowledged that they could develop their own assay inexpensively and test Gulf War veterans, which would either refute or corroborate the Tulane results. They refused to do so, even after urging by the GAO. The DoD, in an effort to try to put the issue to rest, contracted to have lots of the anthrax vaccine tested by Stanford Research Institute (SRI) International. The tests did not find any squalene in the AVA. This gave the DoD what appeared to be unimpeachable proof that no squalene laced vaccine was given to Gulf War Veterans. The Tulane study was still very compelling, however, because of the extremely high percentage of Gulf War veterans with GWS who had squalene antibodies in their system, including those who didn’t deploy to the Gulf but received vaccines. These persons all suffered some form of autoimmune disorder. This is also in keeping with laboratory studies on animals given squalene formulations. These animals had an increased incidence of autoimmune disorders.

    After the GAO report’s release in March 1999, the DoD began a concerted effort to discredit both the report and the Tulane research. The GAO encouraged the DoD to participate in the Tulane study by testing Gulf War veterans in its own studies using the Tulane assay or developing its own to validate the Tulane assay. The DoD’s response was that even though “they [DoD] could develop an assay . . . for detecting antibodies to squalene . . . [and] it would not be expensive to develop [and] . . . test it on a sample of Gulf War-era veterans that are sick” they refused to do so.[xv] The DoD medical people recited a litany of reasons why they would not and should not participate in such research.

    They [DoD scientists] believed that since DOD did not use adjuvants with squalene, DOD does not need to develop such an assay or to screen the veterans for the antibodies. Second, squalene is a substance that occurs naturally in the human body, and they doubted that an assay could be developed to differentiate antibodies to natural and manufactured squalene. Third, they noted that squalene is also found in numerous topical creams that some soldiers could have used. Finally, DOD officials do not believe that funding squalene antibodies in veterans would prove that the antibodies caused Gulf War illnesses.[xvi]

    Here is promising scientific research that shows a strong link between GWS and a potential cause, yet rather than at least encourage or aid the research, which one would think DoD would do if it were truly concerned about finding a cause and perhaps treatment for GW veterans’ illnesses, DoD responded by circling the wagons and denying that such a link could exist. And then offered that “topical creams” used by soldiers could be the source of the squalene. The DoD responded to the report by asking that it be definitively entitled “GULF WAR ILLNESSES: Gulf War Veterans Did Not Receive Vaccine Adjuvant Formulations Containing Squalene”.[xvii] Additionally, the DoD asserted that “in view of the GAO’s conclusion that Gulf War era Veterans did not receive vaccine adjuvant formulations containing squalene, the GAO proposal to test Gulf War veterans for the presence of squalene antibodies seems scientifically and fiscally irresponsible.”[xviii] The GAO responded in its report:

    DOD misstated our finding on whether Gulf War-era veterans may have received vaccine adjuvant formulations containing squalene. We did not conclude that Gulf War era veterans were not given adjuvant formulations containing squalene. Rather, we cannot say definitively whether or not Gulf War-era veterans were given these formulations. We have modified the report text to make this point clear.[xix]

    Now the DoD was caught “misstating” the GAO’s conclusions and asking the GAO to change the title of its report on the squalene issue.

    At the same time, the DoD began an attack on the Tulane research. On May 24, 1999, Dr. Carl Alving called Dr. Robert Garry, a respected scientist who was working o the Tulane study. Dr. Alving expressed a “purely scientific” interest in Dr. Garry’s research and asked for a copy of the in-progress work. Dr. Garry agreed to fax a copy, asking Dr. Alving not to circulate it as it was preliminary only. The final report differed significantly from the in-progress work. Dr. Alving not only circulated it, but subjected it to a scathing review and placed that review on the DoD’s website prior to the paper’s final publication. The review included an accusation that the Tulane researchers had an “anti-military agenda,” though there was little evidence to support this. In fact, the DoD claimed on its website that the Tulane “conclusions derived from the test have no scientific basis.”[xx] Dr. Garry later stated that this preemptive strike by the DoD might well hinder the chances for the research getting published in a peer reviewed journal. At the same time, the DoD repeatedly denounced the Tulane results by claiming that the paper had not been published in a peer-reviewed journal.

    Notwithstanding these attempts to prevent the paper’s publication, the Tulane study was published in February 2000 in a peer-reviewed journal. Despite the DoD’s refusals, Congress finally required the DoD to participate in a squalene study as part of the Defense Appropriations bill for Fiscal Year 2000. The DoD claimed that “the FDA verified that none of the vaccines used during the Gulf War contained squalene as an adjuvant.” The FDA was queried by Representative Metcalf and responded in a much more qualified manner, stating that “neither the licensed vaccines known to be used in the Gulf War, nor the one investigational product known to have been used, contained squalene as an adjuvant in the formulations on file with FDA.”

    On October 3, 2000, while I sat coolly with David Ponder and his wife Jenn in the Rayburn Building waiting for his chance to testify before Congress, Representative Jack Metcalf read from a report his staff had prepared, including the shocker (or perhaps not) that retesting of the lots revealed trace amounts of squalene in the AVA. The original tests had been sensitive to detecting squalene in parts per million. The supplemental testing detected squalene in parts per billion, 1000 times more sensitive. An independent vaccinologist from Baylor University, however, offered that even in those amounts the presence of the adjuvant could boost immune response.

    The DoD then took a new position. At this point, the DoD claimed that “amounts were so minute as to be insignificant.” Additionally, the FDA came in to disclaim what its own scientists had found. What is interesting about the DoD position is that it still doesn’t explain the presence of squalene in the vaccine. It is one thing to point out that the body produces squalene naturally and that the amounts are small. The DoD, and the manufacturer, have still not come forward to state that squalene is naturally produced in the vaccine by either the bacillus anthracis or some other aspect of the manufacturing process. Until that explanation happened, and it didn’t, in addition to all of the other failed inspections and contaminated lots, the anthrax vaccine should have been considered adulterated, containing an experimental adjuvant. More startling is that on the same day that David Ponder testified before Congress, a press conference was held where DoD spokesman Ken Bacon answered questions about squalene in the anthrax vaccine.

    QUESTION: And just to be clear, and I know that this has come up many times before over the years, but squalene also is not present in vaccines used during the Gulf War, before the Gulf War, after the Gulf War and to this day; is that correct?

    BACON: I have been told – I’m not an expert on vaccines and certainly not on squalene, but I’ve been told that squalene has not been in vaccines for – or certainly in the anthrax vaccine for a considerable period of time.

    According to this statement by DoD’s own spokesman, the Anthrax Vaccine did have squalene in it at some point, but not “for a considerable period of time.”

    The history of this DoD research seems incredibly coincidental. Between 1988 and 1998, DOD sponsored 101 clinical trials on vaccines under IND protocols; this means test involving human subjects. None of these human studies involved an anthrax vaccine, although 5 studies involved squalene and two occurred before the Gulf War.  More questionable were several experiments on animals, using vaccines with adjuvant formulations containing squalene, for a wide range of diseases, including anthrax, toxic shock, and malaria. The anthrax vaccine experiments with adjuvant formulations containing squalene began in 1987, and some of the results were presented at conferences and published in several medical journals. The GAO noted that

    DOD’s animal studies are of interest for two reasons. First, because tests on animals are generally performed before human trials, they represent the first step of vaccine research and provide a more complete picture about the state of research on adjuvant formulations with squalene before the Gulf War. Second, since vaccines against biological warfare cannot be tested for efficacy in humans, animal research is considered essential by researchers.[xxi]

    In light of all of this compelling research and evidence, the question becomes why? Why would the DoD not want to find out the cause of Gulf War Illness? Even if it were the anthrax vaccine, wouldn’t the health of veterans be more important than one vaccine? The answer to that question involves a mix of politics, personal agendas, and, of course, money. Unfortunately, it also reveals something about the leadership of the U.S. Armed Forces.

     

    ENDNOTES

    [i] Catherine Unwin, et.al., “Health of UK servicemen who served in Persian Gulf War”, The Lancet, 16 Jan 1999, page 169.

    [ii] Unwin, page 169.

    [iii] Lea Steele, “Prevalence and Patterns of Gulf War Illness in Kansas Veterans: Association of Symptoms with Characteristics of Person, Place, and Time of Military Service”, American Journal of Epidemiology, Vol. 152, No. 10 : 992-1002, page 1 of 14 (online).

    See: http://aje.oupjournals.org/cgi/content/full/152/10/992

    [iv] “France Investigates Gulf War Syndrome”, The Lancet, 18 Nov 2000, page 1747.

    [v] “French to Check Liaison Officers for Gulf Syndrome”, Reuters, 14 Sep 2000.

    [vi] GAO Report 99-5, March 1999 p. 2.

    [vii] Background working documents, GAO Report 99-5, DI-23

    [viii] Background working documents, GAO Report 99-5, DI-2

    [ix] Background working documents, GAO Report 99-5, DI-23

    [x] Background working documents, GAO Report 99-5, DI-20, F-5

    [xi] Background working documents, GAO Report 99-5, DI-23

    [xii] Background working documents, GAO Report 99-5, DI-9

    [xiii] Background working documents, GAO Report 99-5, DI-8

    [xiv] Background working documents, GAO Report 99-5, DI-23

    [xv] GAO Report 99-5, p. 8.

    [xvi] Id.

    [xvii] 99-5, p.22.

    [xviii] Id.

    [xix] Id.

    [xx] Letter from Rep. Jack Metcalf to Secretary of Defense William Cohen dtd February 25, 2000, quoting from the DoD’s anthrax website in February 2000.

    [xxi] GAO Report, 99-5, p. 5.

  • Poll: Dentists

    My MIL is getting some long overdue new dentures, and it has fallen to me, the dental phobic, to escort her to her appointments.

    I’ve never had a dentist not hurt me. This guy promises as pain-free a procedure as possible for Mom. We shall see.

    Today’s questions:

    How do you feel about going to the dentist?

    How often do you go?

    Do you have dental insurance? Is it worth a dental dam? (I crack myself up!)

     

    Discuss!

  • Chapter 13 – Defense Delay and Praying for a Stay

    I sent out the judge’s ruling in Corporal Stonewall’s case to a list of people the same night the judge issued it. I was in despair. Now what would I do?

    Major Tom “Buzz” Rempfer, USAFR, was an Air Force Academy graduate, former F-16 pilot, then A-10 pilot, and flew for one of the major airlines in his day job. He was the poster boy image of an Air Force pilot. He also had been appointed by his Reserve Squadron Commander to a “Tiger Team” to investigate some of the “rumors” that were going around about the Anthrax Vaccine. His Team’s investigation would get him thrown out of his unit and publicly branded a coward by his CO. Tom and Major Russ Dingle, another member of the Tiger Team, were on the leading edge of the anthrax program’s problems. The “rumors” about which their CO was concerned began with the first Reserve squadron to receive the vaccine, based in Dover, Delaware. Most of the Reserve Air Force pilots who got the vaccine were also airline pilots in their day jobs. Thus, when some pilots started having adverse reactions, it meant they also lost their flight status in their civilian jobs because they were medially grounded. Colonel John Richardson, USAFR, was involved early on, as were Major Sonnie Bates’ attorneys, Lou Michels and Bruce Smith.

    Someone in that group mentioned the name of an attorney in California who was filing an extraordinary writ in an anthrax refusal case. The writ asked the intermediate appellate court, the Navy-Marine Corps Court of Criminal Appeals (NMCCA), to find that the judge had erred by ruling that the order to take the vaccine was not just lawful, but unquestionably lawful. California was seventeen hours behind Okinawa.

    I looked at my watch. I was on the phone at 12:30 am, or 0030 military time, 9:30 PST.

                                                                                                                                                                                                   

    On August 9, 2000, I made the same arguments I had made in Jason Stonewall’s case in David Ponder’s case. It was even more surreal because the judge had already ruled in Jason’s case and we both knew it. I tried my best to pretend that we both didn’t already know the outcome, but what was the point? It was the same judge. What were the odds he was going to arrive at a different conclusion in David Ponder’s case? I gave it my best effort, but most of my energy was being spent working on the extraordinary writ appealing the judge’s rulings on our motions in Corporal Stonewall’s case.

    I pounded the table, addressed his four findings specifically, probably even stepped over the line in calling his logic “ridiculous” that one could not plead a federal law in defense at a court-martial. I was heated and I wouldn’t have cared if he threw me in jail for contempt. We finished at 3:25 p.m. Wednesday afternoon.

    At 4:00 p.m. I was right back in court on Jason Stonewall’s case. We set dates for our next session of court, which would be the trial. We would have to listen to Stonewall’s legal officer say that he gave the order, it wasn’t followed, and then case over. Time was running out on us.

                                                                                                                                                                                                               

    On August 18, I got tricked, bamboozled, swindled, hornswoggled, whatever name you can use to describe being duped. It really happened sooner, right after our prior session of court, but the trap wasn’t sprung until the 18th. I walked right into it.

    The prosecutor had asked me a few days after our oral arguments in Ponder’s case if we could have a “quick” session of court in order to take the testimony of the officer who had actually given David the order to take the shot. The officer had flown in from the mainland or Korea and was there any reason we couldn’t preserve his testimony now while he was here? I had just come off of the rifle range a day early and the request seemed fairly benign. After all, it was a Friday afternoon at 1:30, what could happen? The prosecutor had asked me if I would mind letting him proceed with his witness and then he wouldn’t oppose a continuance request by defense. It seemed reasonable to me and the collegial thing to do was accommodate the request. On such minor accommodations do the courts continue to function and without which they simply would not.

    By then, I had already filed my extraordinary writ with the appellate court, which was ‘extraordinarily’ rough because of the time constraints, but it was filed with the court. I was also worried, but optimistic by then. NMCCA had issued a stay in the case of Ocean T. Rose, another Marine who had refused the vaccine in California. Rose’s case had proceeded a little ahead of our cases, but they were all essentially mirror image cases. The stay meant the court-martial below was stopped while the accused got a hearing in front of the appellate court on the judge’s denial of his motions. I was in steady contact with his counsel about potentially joining our cases for purposes of the stay. I figured the stay would issue within a week, maybe two. Sure, Chris we’ll take the government witness’ testimony, continue the case, and then boom! I’ll get my stay. I had even come out of the funk of depression I had been mired in for weeks.

    Imagine my surprise when the prosecutor stood up in court and objected to my continuance. When I stared over at him, less than two feet away, my eyes bored into him.  He wouldn’t look at me and that was probably wise on his part. A lifetime of playing hockey did not make me forget being wronged or improve the gentlemanly disposition I was supposed to display in court. I felt like I had just gotten a proverbial slash on the back of the legs. I was ready to drop the gloves and punch his teeth down his throat on the spot.

    “Sir, an extraordinary writ is currently pending before NMCCA,” I began in response to the Judge’s question about why I wanted a continuance. “It has been served on that Court. In light of that Court’s issuance of a stay in the case of United States versus Rose, we believe there are good grounds to request a continuance, especially where there have been no continuances requested by defense up to this point. This would be our first and it’s not an undue burden on the government to ask for one. Finally, sir, we are willing to stipulate to the government witness’ testimony, or allow that witness to be heard and then have the case continued, or we could even depose the witness.  Additionally, sir, you haven’t even officially ruled in this case on the record. Normally, the rules for appellate procedure allow the defense twenty days to appeal an adverse ruling.”

    Judge Stone seemed to think for a moment.

    “Have you made a forum election in this case?”  I wondered what that had to with anything and I went through my own mental checklist.

    “No, sir, we have not,” I answered evenly. Already the wheels were turning in my head. I had ridden an emotional roller-caster in this case, into hopelessness after the Judge’s ruling on our motions and back out with the Rose stay. I was not going to plummet back down again. Worst of all, I had violated my own rules, and I had given David Ponder – and his wife – my solemn word that he would not be going to jail tonight. I should have been tipped off when he told me that the command had him inventory his gear and was acting like he was. I should have put it all together then, but I hadn’t.

    “I am going to need a moment to reflect upon your proposal and the government’s opposition.” The judge sat back, pensive.

    “Sir,” the prosecutor began, while I fantasized of having a hockey stick in my hands, “the defense has just raised an issue. If you haven’t ruled yet, then what are they appealing at this point –” I was on my feet instantly.

    “Let’s talk about that for a moment,” the judge said. He turned to me. “Did you receive my electronic mail with regards to my anticipated ruling?”

    “Yes, sir, and that was the basis for sending the writ up to NMCCA.”

    The judge sat for a moment longer.

    “I’ll tell you what. What I am going to do is put my ruling on the record in a minute and then we’ll take up the matter of what, if anything we’re going to do today.  My current inclination is to proceed through arraignment and the taking of the government’s evidence and possibly ask you for evidence. Is that fair enough?”

    “Yes, sir,” I replied warily.

    “This court stands in recess.” I started to leave the courtroom, but the Judge indicated he would be right back and motioned for us to stay. He exited out his side door.  I stared at the prosecutor. He still wouldn’t look in my direction.

    The judge came right back in and hopped into his chair.

    He read through the identical findings he had made in Stonewall’s case on the motions. It still made my stomach sink to hear it in open court.

    “Now, at this point I’ll take the accused’s forum election.” I had a bad feeling about this.

    “Sir, if we could, we’d like to get a ruling on our request for a continuance before the accused elects his forum.” I no longer cared what the judge thought. I was completely out of pretense. If he didn’t grant our continuance, I was going to tell David to elect a jury with enlisted members as his forum. If the trial counsel was going to lie to me in order to get me into court, I was more than willing to go back on an email I had sent that I anticipated we would elect judge alone as our forum. Fuck ‘em both. The gloves were now off.

    “Well, you’ll have to give me a better reason than that… Or provide me with some law.” The judge looked at me and I knew he had every intention of finishing this case today. I had no lawyerly pretense left in me.

    “Sir, if this court does not grant a continuance, that means that if the accused elected judge alone as his forum, we could proceed through the entire case today. The government has one witness. In all likelihood, there is no question about whether or not the order was given. It is quite possible then that this case could conclude with an adverse finding against the accused with a writ pending before NMCCA where a stay is likely to issue. Sir, in the Rose case, the writ was served on NMCCA on 4 August and the stay was issued three days later on 7 August. We served our writ on the court on Wednesday afternoon, eastern standard time. That means tonight it will have been two days. I start a contested trial on Monday in another case. What harm is there to the government’s case to grant a six day continuance? If the stay doesn’t issue in that time, then we go forward.  This is a miniscule request, sir. If the judge denies that continuance request, then the accused will elect enlisted members in anticipation that the stay will be granted. We will need time to get the members’ questionnaires, prepare voir dire, et cetera. So, quite frankly, we’re using the procedure to give us the time we need for a stay to issue.  Straight up, that’s what we’re going to do.” I didn’t know if I had just violated a half dozen rules in the code of professional conduct or the JAG Instruction and at that point I didn’t care.

    The judge paused. He wasn’t angry, but he certainly didn’t seem too pleased.

    “I appreciate your candor, counsel. Nevertheless, I would imagine it’s an improper reason. Actually,” he paused for a moment, “there is no improper reason. If the accused wishes to be tried by members, that is a perfectly fine selection as far as the court is concerned. I do appreciate your candor. I hate to put the accused in a bind of forcing him to choose trial by members solely to for the purpose of getting delay in the case.”

    “Do you have anything?” he turned to the prosecutor.

    “Basically, sir, they’re threatening members if they don’t get their continuance because their sole purpose of requesting members is for a delay tactic.” If I had accomplished little else, I had gotten the prosecutor pissed and that alone made me feel better. “And we believe that to be improper. However, that’s within the discretion of the court.”

    “You know as well as I do that defense may and has every right to select trial by members. Would you like a few moments?”

    “Yes, sir, we’d like a brief recess.” The prosecutor stormed out of the courtroom.  I turned to David Ponder, who really looked nervous now, the first time I had seen him visibly shaken in the entire case. It had come home to him; he could be going to trial and likely jail in no time at all. He turned to me.

    “I’m not going to the brig tonight am I, sir?” I leaned over and looked at the back of the courtroom, out the door where Captain Kolomjec had gone.

    “Not tonight,” I whispered back. I said it with a confidence that I didn’t really feel. I had never promised a client anything, but overcome by my own confidence and trusting in the prosecutor’s promise, I had given David and his wife Jennifer my word that he was not going to the brig that night because there would be no trial.

    When Kolomjec returned, the judge allowed us to argue on why a continuance should be granted. I didn’t want to have David elect members, but I was willing to try anything at that moment. David’s freedom, Jason Stonewall’s, PFC Arroyo’s, everything hinged on a stay being issued.

    After we argued, the judge denied the continuance, despite the judicial mandate that continuances should be granted liberally. Worse yet, because I was starting a contested general court-martial in an officer case on that following Monday, the judge ordered that we would start the trial tomorrow, on a Saturday morning. I noted my objection three times, but we were sunk. If the writ didn’t come by the end of the work day east coast time, David Ponder would be going to the Brig the next day.

     

  • Update from Ev

    October 24, 2019

    Chiang Mai Ram Hospital

    Private Room

    I’m old enough to know that life always changes in unexpected ways, but I’m not disciplined or skilled enough to have made the most out of that reality. Rather than make me special, that more accurately lumps me in with the majority of people, by my estimation. This story is a one-off example of when that truth doesn’t hold up to anything meaningful. My writing is also askew, as I’ve long been out of practice and the writer living within me is currently on the Disabled List.

    A month ago, Lady and I were going around Chiang Mai, Thailand, where we work and call home. I got out of the taxi and got a scooter to navigate around the heart of city. Shortly after I was hit by a car. I flipped off the bike and landed on my head on the curb of a walkway. My head busted open and blood poured through the many cracks approaching my brain. I also broke four ribs. I remember none of this or the next several weeks. Lady told me about it all; I was taken into a vehicle and sped off to a hospital, where they sawed off a chunk of my skull larger than one of my hands.

    The boneless area of my head would swell with pockets of blood, creating dangerous areas that prevented one from poking directly into my brain itself. My ribs would flex and swell,causing profound pain by frequently poking my lungs or other internal organs. Sneezing, damn diaphragm inflating, would push the bones around as well, delivering pain that I learned to avoid as best I could.

    In my life I’ve broken about fifteen bones, I’ve had both hips replaced, and have largely lived a life that involved smiling through pain, understanding that complaining doesn’t have a point in such circumstances. Learning how to cope and reduce long-term damage is more useful. This injury soaked me in two related lessons: The pain I was going through also affected my memories of both real events and also of historical or literary importance by locking them from my active search. In many ways I’ve been able to flip the hand I’ve been dealt in order to use this truth to my benefit.

    I mentioned that I have no recollection of the accident and the aftermath. I have also forgotten the lyrics to hundreds of songs. I’ve known who assassinated President Lincoln since I was 8 years old. The Booth name slipped my brain all day today and I angrily had to look up the name, despite remembering all of the details behind the events. Those slips and hundreds of others make me angry. I can’t trust how my brain is trying to mock me by getting me to believe by pushing a story that passes muster when first looked at again.

    On the other hand, however, doctors, nurses, and family members have all had the same compliment to attribute to me. They appreciated and applauded my patience with the injuries and difficulties with the mental stalemate. After reflecting upon this statement, I slowly began to understand its truth and importance. I could no longer see the next step in Whatever Game, so it was wiser to focus on the factors that would reveal their importance within x amount of time. I also learned not to panic when I understood that the next step was too high or too far away for me to put too many chips behind. This taught me to handle things within proper due process, surprisingly with future aspirations and unexpected effects.

    This helped me think about my nomadic life and my current work-related opportunities. Important goals and things that need to be painted in, but too much is happening *NOW* that need to first be settled or conquered. The current End Game requires too many variables to be accounted for at the moment for an adequate, let alone perfect, solution to be settled upon.

    This so far has helped me navigate the issues that have long roamed my personality and zoomed through my consciousness, perhaps often looking for a way not to pay. I know the ones that cause me too much trouble and should be shied away from, and I know which information can be absorbed and need my direct attention. Sometimes they act the very same as each other now, before they separate into their unique paths. Keep a close eye on those. They frequently have a way of reading you that can leave you helpless until you smell out their unique games.

    I suppose I’m out of time. I had planned on personalizing this to many people, but I think this is the bottom line. I have surgery in ten hours and I can only eat one more meal in the next two hours. The clock is winding down and I’m not sure how long I have to keep writing this prelude or when I’ll be able to put together the Post Surgical Thoughts onto a page.

    Thanks to everyone who has reached out to me. Many have been in their own way. People I’ve worked with (both traditionally and artistically); friends from all over the world; special love to my brother and mother who came to visit. And perhaps the most love to Kylie (Lady), who has shown a Romanesque devotion to helping me however she can.

    I thank everyone. Your kind words and actions have kept this prisoner free in thought and desire. Hopefully after I get my skull reattached today I’ll be better suited (in a certain amount of recovery time) to pursue the goals some of you have added to my Ledger.

    Please stay in contact. I’ll do my best to do the same. Some people, when they are mentally ill or several drinks under the table, suggest that they need to get their head straight. I’m going to give it my best shot today. Hopefully the future bubbles I’ve planned will align once the doc physically gets my skull sorted. I’ve been working at it like a lumberjack on a log cabin. I feel confident in how I’ve lined up everything in my head. It’s time to put my bat on the ball.

    Have a fantastic weekend!

    Evan from Evansville

  • Chapter 12: The DoD “Evolves” on the Anthrax Vaccine

    Mary PENDERGAST (FDA):  As I indicated to you, it was not the type or quantity of information we would have hoped for.

    SHAYS (R-CT): That’s an understatement.

    PENDERGAST: It – it was.  We don’t disagree with you. This was war. This was the first time, and it didn’t work particularly well. We are in full agreement with you on that.

    SHAYS: This isn’t the first time the military has conducted themselves this way. And as long as they know the FDA’s going to be a paper tiger with the military, they will continue to do this. They will continue to basically say, bug off. And . . . as far as I’m concerned, that’s what they’ve said, and that’s what you’ve accepted. . .

    . . . And so we’re going to pursue this with the FDA, because in my judgment, the FDA allowed the military to do what they have to do in time of war, to have gotten a waiver from informed consent. They should have required that the troops technically, not just in spirit, be notified. And they should have made sure that it was being enforced . . . and [it’s] an outrage that it was not kept and data was not kept.

    And the FDA has not, in fact, really overseen this . . . And frankly, if you had said to me, we really blew it, just like the military, I could accept it. But you’re defending it, so now we’re going to pursue it.

    During the hearings on the Nixon impeachment, Senator Howard Baker (R-TN) asked the now famous question: “What did the President know and when did he know it?”[i] This same question is equally applicable to both FDA and DoD officials regarding the anthrax vaccine program. There has been a startling lack of candor and double-speak from both of these government agencies. While some of this could be attributed to normal bureaucrat-ese inside the Beltway, the level to which it has risen with this particular program goes so far beyond the “norm” as to be risible – and imputes far less honorable motives to those involved.

    _______________________________________________________

    In 1985, at the same time that the FDA’s panel was preparing its review on the anthrax vaccine, the Army had conducted its own review and sent out a Request for Proposals (RFP) for a contract to develop a new anthrax vaccine. The purpose of the RFP was to solicit manufacturers for their willingness to enter into a contract to create a new anthrax vaccine and the stated justification for fielding such a vaccine was that “[t]here is an operational requirement to develop a safe and effective product which will protect US troops against exposure from virulent strains of Bacillus anthracis.” This would seem to be a fairly straightforward proposition, but it immediately raises the question: why would the Army need a new vaccine, in light of the existing AVA? The Army RFP explains it quite simply:

    There is no vaccine in current use which will safely and effectively protect military personnel against exposure to this hazardous bacterial agent.[ii]

    In light of later DoD statements already examined and the ongoing program, it seems rather incredible that the Army announced in 1985, when there was only one existing license for anthrax vaccine (as there has been since the AVA was fist developed), that no vaccine in current use was safe or was effective – the two fundamental legal requirements for licensure by the FDA – safety and efficacy.

    The RFP singles out MBPI’s anthrax vaccine, noting that there is “a licensed vaccine against anthrax, which appears to afford some protection from the disease . . . [but]  [t]he vaccine is . . . highly reactogenic, requires multiple boosters to maintain immunity, and may not be protective against all strains of the anthrax bacillus.”[iii] Now, contrast this with statements by Dr. Kathryn Zoon of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER), who claimed in Congressional testimony in 1999 of the same exact vaccine that “to our knowledge . . . the vaccine that we are using protects against all known natural strains of anthrax.”[iv] She is either completely misinformed or lying. Setting that aside for the moment, what is even more troubling – and revealing – about her statement is that Dr. Zoon, a member of the FDA, the agency that is supposed to regulate Biologics, refers to the vaccine as one that “we are using[!]” Dr. Zoon is a senior government official in the Division that is supposed to regulate the safety of vaccines and monitor compliance with Good Manufacturing Practices.

    In this same hearing, Dr. Zoon dismissed the previous Notice of Intent to Revoke (NOIR) letter given to MBPI by her own Agency as if it were a minor matter. When asked directly “what the most serious problems are with the manufacturing of the vaccine and whether the manufacturer is taking steps to remedy those problems” Dr. Zoon replied that “. . . the manufacturer has had a notice of an intent to revoke. There were GMP deficiencies, and the manufacturer is currently engage in remedying those deficiencies.”[v] This is from the head of an agency that has found continuous and repeated cGMP violations, to such an extent that the Agency has called the manufacturing process “not validated,” had issued an NOIR which led to a “voluntary” shutdown of the entire facility just 20 months prior, had found that when the FDA was not notified that “[o]n 6/30/98, the firm installed a new reaction tank mixer on Tank (redacted).” Finally, one month after Dr. Zoon is telling Congress that this vaccine works against all known strains of anthrax, in November, 1999, the FDA inspectors would find again that “[t]he manufacturing process for Anthrax Vaccine Adsorbed is not validated.”[vi]

    In 1989 the DoD actually defended its position that the (then)-current vaccines were not good enough for mass troop inoculation. A DoD letter to Senator John Glenn of the Senate Committee on Government Affairs from Assistant Secretary of Defense Robert Barker proffered that “[c]urrent vaccines, particularly the anthrax vaccine, do not readily lend themselves to use in mass troop immunization for a variety of reasons: the requirement in many cases for multiple immunizations to accomplish protective immunity, a higher than desirable rate of reactogenicity, and, in some cases, lack of strong enough efficacy against infection by the aerosol route of exposure.”[vii] This can be contrasted with Dr. Sue Bailey’s claims on behalf of the DoD in 1999 that “[t]he vaccine . . . is effective and has an incredibly safe record. The evidence of vaccine effectiveness against aerosol exposure to anthrax is very persuasive.”[viii] Dr. Bailey was the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs. She also offered that “[w]e have a vaccine that can protect our troops from this deadly weapon. It would be irresponsible for us to deploy our servicemen and women without using this safe and efficacious vaccine.”[ix] Evidently, the same exact vaccine, which in the intervening ten years had failed almost every conceivable FDA inspection for sterility and purity and potency and quality, had managed to transform itself in the eyes of the DoD from being “highly reactogenic” in 1985 and again in 1989 and lacking in “effectiveness against aerosol exposure” to being an essential force protection measure against anthrax. The only comparable transformation for a liquid involves water, wine, and a Jewish carpenter.

    In March of 1990, two Army doctors, Col. Takafuji, of the Army Surgeon General office and Col. Philip K. Russell of Fort Detrick, Maryland, describe the anthrax vaccine as a “limited use vaccine  . . . unlicensed experimental vaccine.”[x] This is interesting because in the same year that two prominent Army doctors were calling the anthrax vaccine “unlicensed” and “experimental”, the DoD was arguing to the FDA that it didn’t need a Rule 50.23(d) waiver for anthrax – or any other drugs, actually, regardless of their status. This medical admission, however, appears to have been an aberration in the DoD’s medical community, or at least in its messaging. The more consistent opinion, from senior Army physicians was actually that the vaccine was unlicensed and potentially hazardous. In 1994, Major General Ronal Blanck, later the Army’s Surgeon General, testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee about the anthrax vaccine as a possible cause of Gulf War Illness.

    Although anthrax vaccine had been considered approved prior to the Persian Gulf War, it was rarely used. Therefore, its safety, particularly when given to thousands of soldiers in conjunction with other vaccines, is not well established. Anthrax vaccine should continue to be considered as a potential cause for undiagnosed illnesses in Persian Gulf military personnel because many of the support troops received anthrax vaccine, and because the DoD believes that the incidence of undiagnosed illnesses in support troops may be higher than that in combat troops.[xi]

    This position was reiterated by Colonel Arthur Friedlander, the Army’s Chief anthrax vaccine researcher, in a chapter in a medical textbook, Plotkin’s Vaccines, stating that the anthrax vaccine was “unsatisfactory for several reasons.”[xii] Among these reasons were the high adverse reactions and the unknown “degree of purity” of the vaccine. The Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, after hearing Major General Blanck’s testimony and many others, found in its 1994 report that “the vaccine’s effectiveness against inhaled anthrax is unknown. Unfortunately, when anthrax is used as a biological weapon, it is likely to be aerosolized and thus inhaled. Therefore, the efficacy of the vaccine against biological warfare is unknown. . . . The vaccine should therefore be considered investigational when used as a protection against biological warfare.[xiii]

    By 1995, the DoD had, it appears, two plans in place to gain licensure for the anthrax vaccine as a pretreatment for a biological warfare attack. The U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID) had “developed a new recombinant protective antigen vaccine against anthrax. This vaccine was successfully tested in experiments using animals but has not been tested on humans.”[xiv] USAMRIID officials stated that the testing on this new vaccine “would take about 3 years, and FDA approval of the manufacturing of the vaccine could take years longer.”[xv] Either this dissuaded the DoD from pursuing this approach or the DoD had a concurrent plan to approach MDPH to see what kind of arrangement could be made with respect to the existing vaccine. In light of the previous DoD articles, responses, letters and statements, it appears that the length of time to bring an updated, recombinant vaccine through the FDA approval process was unacceptable and the project was abandoned.[1] A House Committee attributed the DoD’s abandonment of the new generation vaccine to the time it would take to complete FDA approval, perhaps 6 to 8 years.[xvi] In 1999, the “DOD consider[ed] further development of this [new] vaccine candidate an unfunded requirement.”[xvii] One has to wonder if this new vaccine’s status had anything to do with fear of undermining the new anthrax program that was announced in 1997. The GAO and Congress both criticized the DoD for focusing “almost exclusively on the older, FDA approved vaccine, to the exclusion of development work on newer, recombinant vaccine formulations.”[xviii] Whatever the reasons,[2] in 1995, the DoD shifted its focus from developing a newer, better vaccine to amending the license for the existing vaccine.

    In September 1995, the DoD contracted with Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) to develop a plan to obtain FDA approval for use of the existing anthrax vaccine as a pretreatment for aerosol exposure to anthrax in a Biological Warfare (BW) environment. SAIC conducted an analysis and presented a plan to the Army that explained that there would be a significant informed consent obstacle to implementing this change in order to meet the regulatory requirements of the FDA and CBER. Dr. Anna Johnson-Winegar (U.S. Army) explained the legal status of the vaccine to Dr. Robert Myers (MDPH) in quite simple terms:

    “This vaccine is not licensed for aerosol exposure expected in a biological warfare environment.”[xix]

    Here is incontrovertible evidence that DoD officials at significant levels were acutely aware of the legal status of the anthrax vaccine at least two years before the anthrax program was commenced. While this is damning, it is only so because of the subsequent DoD actions. At the time, however, it appeared that DoD was preparing to comply with the regulatory requirements for obtaining a change to the existing license in order to get an indication for use against inhalational (aerosol) anthrax exposure expected in the BW environment.

    In October 1995, the Joint Program Office for Biological Defense (JPOBD) held a meeting to develop a plan for obtaining the necessary FDA approval for amending the existing AVA license. The minutes from that meeting indicate that the Army knew it had two big problems in obtaining FDA approval of a new licensed indication for inhalation anthrax. First, the efficacy tests used to license the vaccine were for a different vaccine, the Merck vaccine used by the Brachman study rather than the MDPH vaccine. Second, there was no scientific data (the necessary two “well-controlled human studies”) to support this change by FDA. [xx] A meeting was held on 20 Oct 1995 to discuss the process for modifying the MDPH anthrax vaccine license for several purposes: to indicate a reduced number of injections, to include a different route of administration (intramuscularly as opposed to subcutaneous), and to expand the indication to include protection against aerosol challenge of spores. Col. Arthur Friedlander said that “the original series of 6 doses was established in the 1950’s for an anthrax vaccine similar to but not identical with the MDPH vaccine.”[xxi] The minutes also noted what had been commented on by the 1985 FDA panel review of the AVA: “Studies of vaccine (not MDPH product) effectiveness in humans working in tanneries showed protection against cutaneous disease, but there was insufficient data to demonstrate protection against inhalation disease.”[xxii]

    This meeting also portended the beginning of the public relations campaign for the anthrax vaccine. Prior to that, however, Brigadier General Busby, the Joint Program Manager for Biological Defense, stated that: “the DoD’s position is ‘soldiers are citizens first’ and whatever studies are formulated, they have to be done with this concept in mind. Soldiers have the same Constitutional rights as other citizens.” These comments may have been addressing one of the SAIC briefing slides at that meeting. The slide is entitled “Volunteer Considerations” and is a comparison of two groups for use in any studies to amend the license for the vaccine. It depicts two rows: on one side is “At-Risk Forces” and on the other is “Normal Volunteers.” There are bulleted points on either side, indicating pros and cons of using the two groups. The At-Risk Forces have in their favor, it would appear, that using them would serve “Dual Purpose[s]” – “Immunized (??) force” and “Study needs.”  However, on the down side, At-Risk forces have “Informed consent complications,” which include record keeping and “assignment issues,” probably referring to the frequent rotation of service members. “Normal” volunteers have the problem of availability, but once you have them, there is better “access for study needs and record keeping”. They also come with a “cost” and using them “doesn’t support immediate readiness needs.” Finally, the last point against using soldiers points out the DoD’s concerns with public relations from the beginning: “Soldier ‘guinea pigs’ criticism.”[xxiii] Whether BGen Busby had his mind changed on soldier’s rights by the brief or not, he made an odd pronouncement at a meeting on the license amendment for the vaccine. According to the minutes, he “addressed the need to make the case that anthrax is currently the principal biological warfare threat. By protecting against anthrax and other BW threats, the vaccines serve as a deterrent.”[xxiv] We do not have transcipts of those meetings and we don’t know how exactly he “addressed” this supposed “need,” but it is troubling on many levels because it is a sweeping statement justifying the use of vaccines against an invisible, perhaps even non-existent, threat. A cynical person might reasonably infer that the General is suggesting running a PR campaign on the American people to justify knowingly using an unlicensed vaccine. It is also odd because this is not a meeting of operational planners discussing the terrorist threat to U.S. Forces. These are doctors mostly, discussing how to get a license amendment for the anthrax vaccine and suddenly a one-star starts talking about the need to make a case for the vaccine as a BW deterrent. There is no discussion about the intelligence or evidentiary basis for such a conclusion, nor an explanation as to why military doctors would need to ‘make the case.’ One can imagine the hushed silence or, perhaps worse, the nodding heads, after the General makes that statement. Was this an implication that informed consent was to be side-stepped and patients were to be told that this was a great deterrent to anthrax attack? Was this to begin some media campaign to justify the use of this vaccine off-label?  Whatever it was, the idea of soldiers having the same rights as other citizens did not ultimately win out.

    In accordance with one of the decision tree slides from the 1995 briefing, the U.S. Army was supposed to help MDPH prepare an Investigational New Drug Application in an effort to amend the license for three reasons: (1) a new route of administration, (2) a reduced shot schedule (from 6 to 3), and (3) to obtain an indication against aerosolized anthrax. This IND application was pending with the FDA at the time of all of the courts-martials mentioned in the prior chapters. The importance of this application cannot be overstated. By law, that application becomes effective thirty days after it is submitted for the purposes set forth therein. This means that if someone administers the drug in accordance with the IND submission protocol, by definition and by law it is an investigational use of the drug. That IND was not withdrawn, modified, or otherwise dismissed by the FDA.

    If the above wasn’t enough to demonstrate conclusively the absurdity of the DoD position, consider this: the clinical protocol for this IND was being conducted at Fort Detrick, Maryland, a U.S. Army base; it was being run by DoD doctors and administrators; and the volunteers were U.S. Army soldiers. Amazingly, in the coup de gras, the soldiers in that study were given information about the anthrax vaccine, filled out and signed consent forms, and they were using the exact same vaccine that DoD was concurrently compelling regular troops to take under threat of court martial. The IND application was submitted following an Army, Joint Staff, and OSD staff process in which there was concurrence that it was necessary to obtain FDA approval of a new licensed indication for inhalation anthrax before DoD could start mass anthrax vaccinations.[xxv]

    For whatever reason, this consensus was reversed within a month of William Cohen’s confirmation in January of 1997 as Secretary of Defense. This followed significant DoD pressure on the FDA, much like in 1990 prior to the Gulf War, to get permission to begin use of the anthrax vaccine for inhalation anthrax without obtaining a new licensed indication or completing the scientific investigation proposed by the Army in the IND application.[xxvi] There were phone calls made, including one by Admiral Ed Martin, a U.S. Navy doctor and the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, looking for a new interpretation of the anthrax vaccine license, one different than the DoD’s long-standing position that the vaccine was not licensed for inhalational anthrax.

    Now (in 1997) the DoD wanted the FDA to say that the anthrax vaccine was licensed for such a use. On March 4, 1997, four days after the retirement of long-time FDA commissioner Dr. David Kessler, the man who had negotiated and required DoD to get a Rule 23(d) waiver on the verge of the Gulf War, Dr. Stephen Joseph, the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, wrote to the acting FDA commissioner and stated that the “DoD has long interpreted the scope of the license to include inhalation exposure, including that which would occur in a biological warfare context.”[xxvii] Given what was already on the record by DoD officials, that statement cannot be spun any other way than as a bald-faced lie. In addition, Dr. Joseph asked “whether FDA has any objection to our interpretation of the scope of the licensure for the anthrax vaccine.” If Joseph’s assertion regarding the DoD’s position on the anthrax vaccine was correct and this belief was “long-standing”, then why would the DoD need to join in a clinical protocol and get an indication against aerosolized anthrax? Why did they even need to address that indication with the manufacturers? And why would the holder of the license, the maker of the vaccine, who presumably knows something about its own licenses and products, ask for an amendment to get the vaccine indicated for inhalational anthrax?  The answer is quite simple and mandated by the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act: it is because the AVA was never licensed for use against an aerosolized biological warfare attack.

    On March 13, 1997, acting FDA commissioner Dr. David Friedman abandoned the FDA’s regulatory role. He offered that “[w]hile there is a paucity of data regarding the effectiveness of Anthrax Vaccine for prevention of inhalation anthrax, the current package insert does not preclude this use . . . Therefore, I believe your interpretation is not inconsistent with the current label.”[xxviii] Notice that Friedman has now completely turned the law and FDA regulations – and the English language – completely on its head. The DoD now (apparently) had the green light it wanted and needed to go forward claiming that the vaccine was “FDA approved” for inhalational anthrax… Almost.

    There are obvious problems with these type of back-door, inter-office memos serving as policy statements of an agency: they circumvent the entire regulatory process. One person does not simply wave a magic wand and make a vaccine or drug licensed. Fortunately, enough people were apparently cognizant of the fact that outside entities might place undue reliance on the private informal opinion of FDA staff that the FDA drafted strict requirements for what it refers to as “advisory opinions” that might bind or commit the agency. 21 C.F.R. § 10.85(k) specifically states:

    a statement made or advice provided by an FDA employee constitutes an advisory opinion only if it is issued in writing under this Section. A statement or advice given by an FDA employee orally, or given in writing but not under this Section or §10.90 is an informal communication that represents the best judgment of that employee at that time but does not constitute an advisory opinion, does not necessarily represent the formal position of the FDA, and does not bind or otherwise obligate or commit the agency to the views expressed.[3]

    The above-mentioned “Friedman letter,” while consistently and extensively relied upon by the DoD as “proof” that the AVA was not an Investigational New Drug, was not issued under either of the required C.F.R sections. Accordingly, the letter is nothing more than an “informal communication” that has absolutely no legal effect. As such, the letter cannot modify the clearly defined legal status of the AVA that results from filing of the IND application by MBPI. What is even more bizarre about the DoD trying to solicit a favorable opinion about the AVA from the brand-new head of the FDA is that they are not even the manufacturer: they are a third party that wants to use it, but in no way does DoD have any ‘standing’ to do this where the company that makes the drug did not seek the FDA’s opinion on the vaccine’s status. This would be like Dow Chemical or Merck having an IND application for a drug pending before the FDA and then the American Medical Association steps in to ask the FDA to announce that the drug is actually not an IND, but licensed for the exact purpose that the drug’s own manufacturer is running a clinical testing protocol.

    The second reason that the letter is of no legal effect is that the Supreme Court had recently decided a similar case, Christensen, et al v. Harris Country, et al.[xxix] The Supreme Court specifically found that agency “personal opinion” letters are not entitled to deference by the Court, but only to “respect” – and then only to the extent that the letter’s interpretations are persuasive.[xxx] In this case, in light of the FDA regulations, Dr. Friedman’s letter is completely illogical because it rewrites the entire FDA regulatory scheme. His letter states that the DoD’s interpretation is “not inconsistent” with the approved labeling. This is nonsensical because drugs are designed, tested, and licensed for a specific purpose, not licensed for what’s on their label AND anything not inconsistent with that label. How could such be the case with the requirements for showing efficacy through two well-controlled human studies? In short, Dr. Friedman’s letter was worth little more than the combined total of the ink and paper with which it was written. Indeed, there could be no other result, given the fact that the letter is totally at odds with the IND application language of the manufacturer. It makes absolutely no sense to believe that an FDA official writing in his personal capacity can single-handedly invalidate the regulatory scheme adopted by the FDA to prevent the licensing and interstate movement of Investigational New Drugs at the request of some third party.

    What is truly mind-boggling about Dr. Friedman’s response is that just one week later, on March 20, 1997, CBER, the sub-agency of the FDA responsible for monitoring and inspecting the vaccine’s manufacturer, would issue the Notice of Intent to Revoke (NOIR) letter. To emphasize the recurring problems FDA had found at the manufacturer’s plant, the FDA letter stated:

    While these deviations were documented in the most recent inspection, we note that significant deviations have been documented during previous FDA inspections of May 4 through May 7,1993; May 31 through June 3, 1994; and April 24 through May 5, 1995. The seriousness of these deficiencies was emphasized to you in a letter dated December 22, 1993, and a Warning Letter dated August 31, 1995.[xxxi]

    To sum up, at the exact moment that the DoD is soliciting a favorable opinion/back-door approval from the head of the FDA for the AVA, the manufacturer is about to have its entire manufacturing process invalidated and threatened with having its license to manufacture the vaccine pulled by the results of FDA inspections. In an interview with the Canadian newspaper The Province, Mark Elengold, the Deputy Director for Operations at CBER, explained the significance of an NOIR letter. “. . . In the three years I have been in this job, I have done it about three times,” said Elengold. “It is a very serious tool. We view it . . . to be equivalent to an injunction . . . where we get a court to order compliance.”[xxxii] While the legal effect of Dr. Friedman’s letter is nil, it does make for great Public Relations and that’s exactly how the DoD would use the letter in seeking to win the PR battle that was about to begin. A number of interesting initiatives, press briefings, and press releases began not long after Dr. Joseph’s letter and Dr. Friedman’s response in March 1997.

    In retrospect, an overall pattern starts to emerge. There were several fronts on which the Secretary of Defense and the DoD tried to outdistance criticism of the program. The first claim was that the vaccine was “licensed.” This category had several sub-claims, such as long-term safety, use on veterinarians, and proven effectiveness of the AVA. The problem with these statements is, of course, their lack of completeness and/or their outright falsity. Some of these statements were well-beyond being just “spin.” As another example, at a background briefing on December 15, 1997, two senior defense officials laid out the upcoming anthrax vaccine immunization program (AVIP), noting that it was still six months away. There reporters asked some questions.

    Q:  The availability of the vaccine at this point, if you wanted to do a large program tomorrow, is there a stockpile of this vaccine available?

    A:  There’s a stockpile right now of seven million shots, which is about 1.2 TED – troop equivalent doses – of six shots, if you will. So there’s a large stockpile.

    A:  But that’s the stockpile . . .  We’re redoing the testing on it just to be absolutely certain before we go out. There’s been a great attention to safety in this.

    Q:  You found no impurities in the stockpile…

    A:  No.

    This answer came six months after the process for manufacture had been invalidated by CBER.

    The second area where the DoD attempted to promote the AVA harkens back to Brigadier General Busby’s statements at the meeting about the license amendment plan. There he talked about the need to “make the case” that anthrax was the number one biological threat. This was relatively easy to accomplish because anthrax is a real biological threat, but the DoD would engage in an unprecedented fear-mongering campaign in order to support the vaccine. Making it even easier were events in the headlines, such as Aum Shinryuko cult’s sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway, and the U.S. members of the U.N. inspection teams being forbidden from participating in Iraqi weapons’ inspections by Saddam Hussein. DoD briefers never missed an opportunity to point to the possibility of a terrorist attack on U.S. soil or to exaggerate the lethality of anthrax.[xxxiii] This is not to say that it is not lethal, but DoD briefers constantly called it “100% lethal,” which is a bizarrely hyperbolic claim. What does “one-hundred percent lethal” even mean? Does that mean everyone who breathes in even a molecule of anthrax spores? The answer to that is unequivocally “No.” What amount constitutes a lethal dose then? One briefer referred to 10,000 spores, while other DoD information refers to the LD50 as the number in thousands of spores that constitutes a lethal dose. The SecDef himself participated in this campaign with his then-famous quote during a live TV appearance with Cokie Roberts on ABC’s “This Week.” While holding a five pound bag of sugar, Cohen said that if “this was anthrax, it could wipe out half the population of Washington, D.C.”[xxxiv] One expert later called that “one of the most irresponsible statements ever made by a politician.”[xxxv] Additionally, Secretary of Defense Cohen gave several speeches about the proliferation of these weapons, exaggerating the number of countries capable of manufacturing and delivering such weapons. In three different speeches, Cohen put the number(s) of countries capable of weaponizing anthrax at 30, 25, and finally 10.[xxxvi]

    The final area of this media campaign was a kind of rhetorical fallback position, which consisted of a series of statements that can be summarized as “what else are we supposed to do?” The old “if it saves even one life” play. A number of high-ranking DoD officials made statements to the effect that they would be “derelict” if they didn’t give this vaccine in light of the threat, or that they were “morally obligated” to vaccinate soldiers, or that “it’s the best response” or “it’s the only response” that we have. These statements frequently relied upon the record of the individual making the statement as a testimonial to the vaccine’s necessity.

    The problem with all of this is that it ignores three critical aspects of immunizing people against their will. First, it ignores the law requiring informed consent. Second, it ignores the lack of efficacy for the claims being made in support of the anthrax vaccine. In other words, there had been no studies, and could never be ethically, proving the effectiveness of the vaccine against aerosolized anthrax. Even the animal studies, while promising, indicated a less than stellar performance against certain strains of the anthrax bacillus.[xxxvii] Finally, it completely elides the validity and viability of other (non-vaccine) treatments.

    There existed at the time a highly effective, fully licensed antibiotic with studies showing excellent success rates against anthrax if taken right after exposure. This has been a common military method of response to a number of other chemical agents, so there didn’t seem to be any explanation as to why the DoD couldn’t use these already licensed antibiotics in the event of an anthrax attack.[4] An illustration of the DoD’s refusal to consider other treatments occurred at the December 15th press briefing, when a reporter asked about other treatments against anthrax. The briefer’s answer:

    With regard to those medical countermeasures, antibiotics. They’re effective in sustaining service members until antibodies are built. Provides immediate protection, but it has to be sustained over a period of time, until the antibodies are developed. There are limited minor side effects with the dosage required of the antibiotics. Antiserum is a very fast reacting, immediately protection capability, but again, it’s limited, and it has to be re-administered to sustain protection. It’s expensive and the same minor side effects are associated with it.

    Vaccines are the way to go. It takes time to develop the immunity, but the immunity lasts for a long time. Limited, minor side effects. I think the rate of those folks that we’ve vaccinated over the last five years associated with their jobs — either lab workers, workers in industry in the private sector, special operations forces, there’s been about a 96-97 percent rate of no reaction at all, and those that did have had limited topical reactions, minor swelling or redness, things like that.

    It’s extremely difficult to circumvent a vaccine. This would ward against genetic engineering of other strains. Once that vaccine’s in, it takes a major effort for an unfriendly nation to try to develop another type of anthrax strain that we would have to dissect, if you will, figure out what it was and then rework our vaccine. But it is very effective. It provides the protection we need over the long haul.

    The briefer acknowledges the immediate nature of antibiotics and the long time necessary to develop immunity for vaccines, but offers that “vaccines are the way to go.” Additionally, probably most surprising, are the briefer’s references to the “minor reactions” (with a negative implication – “you’ve still got those minor reactions”) and the incredible claim of “96-97 percent no reaction at all” with the AVA, something that had never been true of the AVA. The briefer’s claims that the vaccine “would ward against genetic engineering” of other strains also had no evidence to support it. This makes the briefing read rather like an unsubstantiated point-by-point denial of the criticisms that had been levelled against the program. Either the briefer was unaware of BioPort’s problems, the DoD’s own studies on the highly reactogenic nature of the AVA, badly informed, or he was straight-up lying. With the DoD and this program, it is difficult to know which one.

    The DoD’s media campaign was fairly extensive, involving many briefings with the press in each of the above areas. For example, On April 16th, 1997, two senior defense officials gave a briefing on the DoD’s role in helping to train and “enhance the capability of federal, state, and local emergency response agencies to prevent and respond to domestic terrorist incidents involving weapons of mass destruction.”[xxxviii] On April 25, 1997, a notice was sent to the press that the Marine Corps’ Chemical Biological Incident Response Force (CBIRF) would conduct “demonstrate its ability to effect consequence management following the simulated detonation of a chemical-biological terrorist device” in the Washington, D.C. area on April 30th. On April 28th, 1997, Secretary of Defense Cohen gave a speech at the University of Georgia, speaking at a conference on Terrorism, and told listeners that a rogue state attack using chemical-biological weapons was “not only plausible, it’s really quite real.”[xxxix] In fact, he told his audience that “about 30 countries now possess mature chemical and biological weapons programs with 12 having advanced missile capabilities.”[xl] Secretary Cohen emphasized a comprehensive response that included active and passive measures against such attacks. By November 1997, when U.S. members of the U.N. Inspection teams were not allowed by Saddam Hussein to participate in weapons’ inspections, anthrax and chemical-biological warfare (CBW) and weapons of mass destruction (WMD) were being talked about as imminent. There was November 14, 1997, briefing by a senior defense official on Iraq’s CBW capability.[xli] On related fronts, General Ronald Blanck, the Army’s Surgeon General, and Vice Admiral Dennis Blair, on November 6, 1997, were briefing the press on the DoD’s improved ability to track vaccine’s and medical health of service members.[xlii] This would of course be a crucial part of any DoD vaccine program because of its historically atrocious record (including in the Persian Gulf War), which has already been laid out in prior chapters.

    In sum, the DoD’s position on the AVA went from an open acknowledgment of the vaccine’s scientific and legal limitations in light of the vaccine’s history, to one of hyperbolic and straight-up false statements about its biological safety and efficacy and its legal status. This cannot be explained by bureaucratic turnover, or loss of institutional knowledge, because in many cases it involved the exact same people and agencies reversing their position within weeks, or even days, in some cases.

    Endnotes

    [1] Ironically, had this approach been taken, by 2002 the DoD would have had a new generation anthrax vaccine, presumably more effective and less reactogenic than the current vaccine, but more importantly, one actually licensed for its intended use. The quick fix did not turn out that way. A Congressional committee reached the same conclusion in 2000. See House Committee on Government Reform, 106 H. Rpt. 556.

    [2] I do offer some hypotheses and supporting evidence for them as to why the DoD changed courses in later chapters. It is for the reader to decide if that evidence is compelling enough to support those assertions.

    [3] The informal and non-binding nature of such “advice” is also made clear in the IND regulations themselves.  21 C.F.R. § 312.41(c).  Moreover, it is noted that the communication did not even involve the IND applicant, Bioport, Inc.

    [4] I address possible/likely reasons that the DoD insisted on this particular vaccine over all other possibilities in later chapters and let the reader decide.

    [i] Congressional Impeachment hearings on Pres. Richard Nixon.

    [ii] Request for Proposals (RFP) No. DAMD 17-85-R-0078, US Army Medical Research Acquisition Activity, Fort Detrick, Frederick, MD, 16 May 1985.

    [iii] Id.

    [iv] Congressional Hearings on the Anthrax Vaccination Program, Oct 12, 1999, NSVAIR (II), testimony of Dr. Kathryn Zoon, cited in H. Rep. 106-556, fn 22, “DoD AVIP: Unproven Force Protection.”

    [v] Id.

    [vi] FDA Form 483 Inspectional Observations, 25-23 November 1999.

    [vii] Letter from former Assistant Secretary of Defense Robert B. Barker to former U.S. Sen. John Glenn, chairman of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, 24 Aug 1989, transcript of Senate Hearing 101-744. The letter and quotes from Barker to Glenn are on page 474 and 480.

    [viii] Congressional Hearings on the Anthrax Vaccination Program, Oct 12, 1999, NSVAIR (II), testimony of Dr. Sue Bailey, cited in H. Rep. 106-556, fn 22, “DoD AVIP: Unproven Force Protection.”

    [ix] Id.

    [x] Infectious Disease Clinics of North America, 3/90, p. 156

    [xi] Maj. Gen. Ronald Blanck, Commanding General, Walter Reed Army Hospital, to Committee staff, 414 Russell Senate Office Bldg., Washington, DC, 4 Feb 1994, from Senate Report 103-97, 8 Dec 94, page 35.

    [xii] Plotkin’s Vaccines, ed. Stanley A. Plotkin, Walter A. Orenstein, Kathryn M. Edwards. See chapter by Dr. Arthur Friedlander on anthrax.

    [xiii] Senate Veterans Affaires Committee staff report 103-97, 414 Russell Senate Office Bldg., Washington, DC, 4 Feb 1994, from Senate Report 103-97, 8 Dec 94, Note 61-63.

    [xiv] GAO T-NSIAD-99-226, July 21, 1999 (p. 10)

    [xv] Id.

    [xvi] H. Rep. 106-556, p. 32.

    [xvii] GAO report 99-226 p. 10

    [xviii] H. Rep. 106-556

    [xix] SAIC Corporation plan, 29 Sep 1995, enclosure to memorandum from Dr. Anna Johnson-Winegar (US Army) to Dr. Robert Myers (MDPH), US Army Medical Research and Material Command, Fort Detrick, Frederick, MD, 5 Oct 1995.

    [xx] LTC David Danley, “Minutes of the Meeting on Changing the Food and Drug Administration License for the Michigan Department of Public Health (MDPH) Anthrax Vaccine to Meet Military Requirements”, held on 20 Oct 1995 meeting; Joint Program Office for Biological Defense memorandum, 13 Nov 1995.

    [xxi] Id.

    [xxii] Id.

    [xxiii] Briefing slide from Anthrax Vaccine License Amendment Plan: Information Briefing for Joint Program Manager, DoD Biological Defense, page 18. Oct 19, 1995.

    [xxiv] LTC David Danley, “Minutes of the Meeting on Changing the Food and Drug Administration License for the Michigan Department of Public Health (MDPH) Anthrax Vaccine to Meet Military Requirements,” held on 20 Oct 1995 meeting; Joint Program Office for Biological Defense memorandum, 13 Nov 1995.

    [xxv] Id.

    [xxvi] Dr. Stephen C. Joseph, DoD ASD/Health Affairs, letter to FDA Lead Deputy Commissioner Michael Friedman, 4 Mar 1997

    [xxvii] Id.

    [xxviii] Id.

    [xxix] 120 S. Ct. 1655, 2000 U.S. LEXIS 3003 (May 1, 2000).

    [xxx]  Christensen, 2000 U.S. LEXIS 3003 at 19-20.

    [xxxi] FDA letter to MBPI, 20 Feb 1997.

    [xxxii] Ann Rees, “Their Dangerous Dose,” The Province [Vancouver, Canada], 25 Jun 2000

    [xxxiii] See, e.g., DoD Press Briefing, Dec. 15, 1997.

    [xxxiv] SecDef William Cohen on “This Week” with Cokie Roberts, Nov. 1997.

    [xxxv] Paul Richter, “Experts Assess Risk of ‘New Terrorism’ Threat,” Los Angeles Times, Feb. 7, 2000.

    [xxxvi] Combating Weapons of Mass destruction, by Jim Garamone, AFPS, 4/30/97; William S. Cohen, “Preparing for a Grave New World”, Washington Post, Op Ed., July 26, 1999; William S. Cohen, “Force Protection is My Priority”, Army Times, July 31, 2000.

    [xxxvii] See GAO Report T-NSIAD-99-148, FN 4, 5.

    [xxxviii] DoD Background Briefing, Apr 6, 1997.

    [xxxix] Combating Weapons of Mass destruction, by Jim Garamone, AFPS, 4/30/97

    [xl] Id.

    [xli] Nov 14, 1997, DoD background briefing

    [xlii] DoD News Briefing, Nov 6, 1997.

  • Chapter 10 – The Anthrax Vaccine Fails, Is Awarded Zero Points… and you’ll still have to roll up your sleeve!

    The manufacturing process for Anthrax Vaccine is not validated.[i]

    The anthrax vaccine’s manufacturer has had an interesting ownership history, beginning in 1968 as the Michigan Department of Public Health (MDPH), a public entity that manufactured the earliest vaccine through 1997, when it spun off its ‘biologics’ division into a for-profit entity, the Michigan Biologic Products Institute (MBPI), BioPort, Inc. quickly bought MBPI in 1998. While management and ownership structure changed, one thing has remained remarkably consistent: how badly the vaccine has been manufactured from when it first began being inspected. BioPort/MBPI/MDPH has continued to violate the regulations governing the manufacture of the vaccine and current Good Manufacturing Practices (cGMP) for as long as it has records of inspections. The regulations regarding the manufacture of biologic products is fairly tedious, but the underlying philosophy can best be summarized by the first pull-quote above: the manufacturing process for the anthrax vaccine is not validated.

    Because Anthrax Vaccine Adsorbed (AVA) is a biologic product designed for human consumption, it is controlled by very stringent requirements. A GAO report pointed this out and explained the necessity for it:

    The inspection process for ensuring vaccine safety is more stringent and complex than for chemical drug because vaccines have three distinguishing features. First, either they have no clearly chemically defined composition, or chemical analysis is extremely difficult. Second, proper evaluation of vaccines generally requires measuring their effects in animals. Finally, quality cannot be guaranteed from final tests on random samples but only from a combination of in-process tests, end-product tests, and strict controls of the entire manufacturing process.[ii]

    Biologic products are regulated by the Public Health Service Act (PHS) and the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDCA). 42 U.S. Code §262 describes the regulation of biologic products according to the PHS Act. Chapter 9 of Title 21 of the U.S. Code contains the FDCA.

    The FDCA provides the following definition of an adulterated drug:

    A drug shall be deemed to adulterated (a)(1) (A) if it has been prepared, packed, or held under insanitary conditions whereby it may have been contaminated with filth, or whereby it may have been rendered injurious to health; or (B) if it is a drug and the methods used in, or the facilities or controls for, its manufacture, processing, packing, or holding do not conform to or are not operated or administered in conformity with current good manufacturing practice to assure that such drug meets the requirements of this chapter as to safety and has the identity and strength, and meets the quality and purity characteristics, which it purports or is represented to possess.[iii]

    Thus, in sum, a drug is adulterated if it is either (a) made under “insanitary conditions” or, (b) if the manufacturer does not comport with current Good Manufacturing Practices (cGMPs). The Code of Federal Regulations, specifically 21 C.F.R. §600 and following, sets forth the current Good Manufacturing Practices for Biologic products. 21 C.F.R. §601.12 reads, in part:

    (a) General. As provided by this section, an applicant shall inform Food and Drug Administration (FDA) about each change in the product, production process, quality controls, equipment, facilities, responsible personnel, or labeling, established in the approved license. Before distributing a product made using a change, an applicant shall demonstrate through appropriate validation and/or other clinical and/or non-clinical laboratory studies, the lack of adverse effect of the change on the identity, strength, quality, purity, or potency of the product as they may relate to the safety or effectiveness of the product.

    (b) Changes requiring supplemental submission and approval prior to distribution of the product made using the change (major changes). (1) A supplement shall be submitted for any change in the product, production process, quality controls, equipment, facilities, or responsible personnel that has a substantial potential to have an adverse effect on the identity, strength, quality, purity, or potency of the product as they may relate to the safety and effectiveness of the product. (2) These changes include but are not limited to: (i) Changes in the qualitative or quantitative formulation or other specifications as provided in the approved application or in the regulations; (vi) Changes which may affect product sterility assurance, such as changes in product or component sterilization method(s), or an addition, deletion or substitution of steps in a aseptic processing operation.

    Until a 1988 contract with the DoD, the production of Anthrax Vaccine Adsorbed (AVA) was infrequent, a batch being produced every three to four years, with the largest being 7500 doses. MDPH had one production line for AVA that they alternately used for other vaccine products. The 1988 contract with DoD called for a drastic increase in the amount of production of the anthrax vaccine: 300,000 doses over a five-year period. The only possible way to meet the requirements of the DoD contract was to increase the production facility itself. One production line would simply not meet the demands of that new contract.

    The first production line, and only one licensed by the FDA, was built around a 100-liter sintered glass-lined fermenter, where the anthrax bacteria was cultured and grown. In 1990, two new stainless-steel fermenters were added to grow the bacteria. In 1991, the original, licensed glass-lined fermenter was removed and two more new stainless-steel fermenters were added, bringing the number of production lines to four.

    None of the new fermentors were approved by the FDA prior to being installed and beginning to produce the anthrax vaccine. This was not news to anyone; MDPH was aware of the need for prior FDA approval. Documents show that Dr. Robert Myers, the Responsible Head of MDPH, was well-briefed in the FDA requirements for amending the Establishment License Agreement (ELA). Dr. Myers notified the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER) in June 1990 that BioPort would replace the approved fermenter and chill tank on or about 15 August 1990 with a new fermenter. A 9 July 1990 Conversation Record by FDA employee Rebecca Devine to Dr. Myers indicates that he was informed that this would be considered a major change and should be submitted in the form of an ELA amendment. An FDA official also communicated to Dr. Myers that the new equipment was considered a “major change” to the facility’s Establishment License Agreement (ELA) in December 1990.[iv]

    MDPH applied for the necessary amendment to the ELA in December 1990 for the first two new fermenters installed in that same year.[v] This ELA amendment request indicates, however, that the renovation had already taken place. Additionally, the two production lines added in 1990 consisted of stainless-steel fermenters, stainless-steel chill tanks, and low-protein-binding nylon membrane filters, while the production line in the original ELA consisted of glass-lined fermenters, a glass-lined chill tank, and sintered-glass filters. The 1990 ELA amendment request, while indicating that stainless-steel equipment was being used, failed to identify this as a change in equipment type for the additional production lines. As a result, the FDA was unaware of the substantial likelihood of the amendment request to have an adverse effect on the “identity, strength, quality, purity, or potency of the product as they may relate to the safety and effectiveness of the product.” Finally, the FDA did not approve these fermenters in 1993.[vi] No amendment was ever sought for the subsequent two stainless steel fermenters, nor was there ever an amendment made to the Product License Amendment for this change in how the cultured bacteria was being grown.

    More troubling is that a July 1990 Trip Report to the Michigan facility by a member of the U.S. Army Medical Research and Development Command (USAMRD) indicates that at least one 100-liter fermenter had been added to the AVA production line and that a recently delivered 100-liter fermenter could be diverted from production of another vaccine to the AVA production line. A September 1990 Trip Report to the Michigan facility discusses the necessity and the ability to put the recently acquired additional fermenter into AVA production. Also discussed is the total number of fermenters that the facility could hold, i.e. three additional fermenters for a total of four fermenters producing AVA. This Trip Report also indicates that FDA must approve the change in fermenter types from glass-lined to stainless steel and that FDA approval will require developing the definitive data that the product from the stainless steel fermenters is the same as the glass-lined fermenters.

    It also bears noting that each of the production lines did not produce individual lots of the vaccine. After 1990, while the old (licensed) line was running, alongside the  two new stainless-steel lines, each production line’s output was stored as a sublot and then combined for shipment to form what was labeled as the “final anthrax vaccine” lot (FAV-001, FAV-002, etc.). The stainless steel sublots supposedly produced a more potent vaccine. As a result, MDPH delivered a least one dose of AVA to DoD that was produced after the major manufacturing change had occurred and before the ELA amendment was approved.

    As if all of the above-listed, unapproved changes were not enough, MDPH changed the type of filter used in the manufacturing process. This filter is the only part of the manufacturing process that purifies the vaccine. There were no amendments sought to either the ELA or the PLA. This means that all of the anthrax vaccine produced from these lines was and is, by definition, adulterated. Every dose delivered since the 1990 manufacturing change has occurred without an ELA amendment for the change in filter type. Lest this appear to be scientific or legal quibbling, when the FDA conducted inspections through 1995, this specific filter would fail inspection.

    The FDA inspectors conducted numerous inspections of the anthrax production facility over some 7 or 8 years. During this time, the inspectors would cite repeated and serious problems with the manufacturing process. Below is a bulleted list of some of the major findings.

    1988.[vii]

    • “There is no written procedure for assessing stability characteristics of final biological products.”
    • “No direct physical accountability for packaged undated anthrax vaccine which was stored alongside of packaged and dated vaccine with the same lot number. Nine hundred and six vials of unfinished vaccine were distributed freely in 3 cardboard boxes with unknown number of vials in each carton. Removal of vials as needed was not indicated.”

    1990.[viii]

    • “Anthrax prod. fac. was observed to be in a state of general disrepair in that there was: (A) Paint peeling from the walls (B) Exposed light fixtures (C) Cracked ceiling (D) Exposed raceways (E) Dirt & filth & dust on overhead pipes (F) Cluttered work space.”
    • “Anthrax prod. records are inconsistent in that procedures used to formulate Lot #21 are different from those used to formulate Lots #25, 26 & 27 in that media is autoclaved for sterilization for Lot #21 and filtered for sterilization for Lots #25, 26 & 27.”

    1992.[ix]

    • “Changes in the manufacturing methods for…were not submitted as amendments to the product license application prior to releasing the material for distribution…”
    • “No SOP [standard operating procedure] exists to describe procedures for handling potentially infectious material…”

    1993.[x]

    • “There are insufficient personnel to assure compliance with current GMP regulations, e.g., failure to report changes in manufacturing, failure to maintain calibration records adequately, failure to adequately validate equipment used in the formulation or testing of product.”

    1994.[xi]

    • “There are insufficient personnel to assure compliance with current GMP regulations, e.g., failure to maintain calibration records adequately, failure to maintain environmental controls adequately in that production area temperatures were above 80°F, and failure to submit changes to CBER.”
    • “There is no annual review of production batch records [anthrax].”
    • “Raw material [anthrax vaccine materials] stored in an unapproved warehouse, building (redacted) i.e., no ELA [establishment license application] supplement has been submitted for this area.”

    1995.[xii]

    • “the company did not inform FDA of the procedural and equipment change during the production of…”
    • “facilities and equipment were not adequate.”
    • “SOP’s did not exist for many procedures.”
    • “SOP’s were incomplete or incorrect.”
    • “SOP’s were not adhered to.”
    • Frequent contamination during vaccine manufacturing was documented but not investigated.

    Finally, on June 22, 1995, the CBER Inspection Task Force recommended the issuance of a Warning Letter to MDPH. Another Warning Letter was issued to MDPH on 31 August 1995. Subsequent inspections found that the warning had no effect on the quality of the product being produced.

    1996.[xiii]

    • “The firm had not completed cleaning validation studies for routine cleaning procedures on multi-use equipment.”
    • “Validation studies to demonstrate microbial retention and compatibility have not been conducted for sterilizing filters…”
    • There was condensate dripping onto open (redacted) tanks…
    • “There was no procedure for clean-up of live rabies virus spills…”
    • The anthrax production facility was not inspected because “it comes under military inspection.”[xiv]

    In 1997, after some ten years of continuous violations of CGMPs, CBER issued a “Notice of Intent to Revoke” the license of MBPI.[xv] The Army responded by sending in a team to assist the manufacturer develop a “strategic compliance plan.” In January 1998, anticipating another inspection by the FDA, MBPI decided to “voluntarily” shut down its production.[xvi] An FDA inspection in February returned a report which concluded:

    “The manufacturing process for Anthrax Vaccine is not validated.”

    The report also noted that “[t]here are no written procedures, including specifications, for the examination, rejection, and disposition of Anthrax and Rabies.”  And, finally, what should have been reported seven years earlier: “Prior to August 1997, the (redacted) filters used for harvest of Anthrax vaccine were neither validated nor integrity tested. This filter is the only sterile filtration step in the Anthrax manufacturing process.” An inspector “questioned W. White, D. Slabbekoorn, and T. Wilsey regarding the filters used prior to this validation. Each reported that the filters used prior to the introduction of the [redacted] filters had not been integrity validated nor were they routinely integrity tested.” The filters were approved in August 1997, however, a February 1998 inspection revealed that the validation process used to gain the approval was not valid. Incredibly, the validation for the filters was not done using the anthrax vaccine. “Validation of microbial retention by the (redacted) filters used for harvest of Anthrax vaccine was performed only with (redacted) media, which is used in tetanus production. Studies were not performed using Anthrax product or media.” This means that there had been no test done to determine if the filters would even work to filter out the necessary impurities in the anthrax vaccine, but instead had been done on the tetanus vaccine.

    Another finding was that “[t]he firm does not trend multiple contaminations with microorganisms in sublots.” As a result of this February inspection, MBPI “voluntarily” quarantined 11 lots of AVA. The failure of FDA to recall the quarantined vaccine and order it destroyed resulted in some of it being shipped to the Canadian military and being used on their servicemembers.[xvii] The list of violations, unfortunately, does not end here.  Another inspection took place in October 1998, finding:[xviii]

    • “Stability testing has not always been performed in accordance with stability protocols, for example…”
    • “CBER has not been notified in accordance with Error and Accident reporting of the following…
    • “On 6/30/98, the firm installed a new reaction tank mixer on Tank (redacted). There is no data documenting that the new mixer is equivalent to the old mixer, including mixing profiles. In addition, CBER has not been notified of this change.”

    Yet again, in 1999, the FDA found that “[t]he manufacturing process for Anthrax Vaccine Adsorbed is not validated.”[xix]

    Thirty observations were noted. The inspection report ends with this comment. “The observations noted in this FDA-483 are not an exhaustive listing of objectionable conditions. Under the law, your firm is responsible for conducting internal self-audits to identify and correct any and all violations of the GMP regulation.” What is unique about these findings is not that they are out of the past trend-line of the manufacturer, but these were found at the new facility! The old facility had been razed in 1998 and a new one built in an extraordinary windfall from the U.S. taxpayers approved by the DoD, which will be discussed in some detail later. Despite all of this, in 2000:[xx]

    • “The design and construction…do not assure sterility of products filled…”
    • “The following product lots failed initial sterility testing for release or for stability testing…Investigations into these initial sterility failures are incomplete…”
    • “Investigations are incomplete, inaccurate, or not conducted.”
    • “There is no assurance equipment is operating as designed.”

    In addition to these violations in manufacture, there were also significant problems in what happened to the vaccine after it was made. A product can be adulterated even after it is manufactured correctly (which didn’t happen in this case) if it is “prepared, packed, or held under insanitary conditions”. The regulations regarding processing also apply to packing and holding. Thus, “[t]he failure to comply with any regulation set forth in this part and in parts 211 through 226 of this chapter in the manufacture, processing, packing, or holding of a drug shall render such drug to be adulterated under section 501(a)(2)(B) of the act and such drug, as well as the person who is responsible for the failure to comply, shall be subject to regulatory action.”[xxi]

    Biologic products also have expiration dates as described in Part 600 of 21 C.F.R. Modifications to the expiration dates “shall be made only upon written approval, in the form of a supplement [amendment] of the product license, issued by the Director of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research.” Expiration dates are also regulated under the current good manufacturing practices. The reason for this is that biologic products by their very nature may break down chemically over time. In order to “assure that a drug product meets applicable standards of identity, strength, quality, and purity at the time of use, it shall bear an expiration date determined by appropriate stability testing described in §211.166.” 21 C.F.R. § 211.166 states in part:

    There shall be a written stability testing program designed to assess the stability characteristics of drug products. The results of such stability testing shall be used in determining appropriate storage conditions and expirations dates.

    In 1997, MBPI relabeled 1.5 million doses of AVA. That is, MBPI took vials of AVA that were already labeled with an expiration date and soaked the labels off. They then relabeled the vials with new expiration dates. These 1.5 million doses of AVA are adulterated for that reason alone. Also, at the time of the relabeling, MBPI had no approved stability testing program, as observed in the February 1998 FDA inspection.  They also had no approved procedures for removing and relabeling filled vials of vaccine. In other words, there was no certified process to guarantee that the originally labeled vials were the same ones when relabeled. In other words, MBPI could not assure that the vials would be re-identified correctly, i.e. FAV008, or FAV009, etc. Hopefully, whoever soaked the labels off, got the right number back on the right bottle.

    MBPI also “re-dated” bulk vaccine that had expired without justification or approved procedures. These doses, too are legally & scientifically “adulterated.” Both of these practices, relabeling and re-dating, require a supplement to the product license IAW 21 C.F.R. § 610.53(d). No supplement was sought or approved at the time of these events. Current good manufacturing practice regulations require compliance with these parts of the C.F.R. Non-compliance renders the drug adulterated.

    There is no other way to express the violations of FDA regulations by the manufacturer of the anthrax vaccine as anything other than laughably abhorrent. Two things make it worse: First, the FDA’s failure to police a manufacturer who is wantonly violating regulations designed to protect the health of U.S. citizens, and second, the DoD’s actions in light of these continued violations, of which it had full knowledge. The public actions of both of these agencies are almost too incredible to believe in light of what both knew was going on at the production facility, but they happened. Now that we’ve considered the manufactures actions, I turn first to the DoD’s actions and then to the FDA’s.

    Endnotes

    [i] FDA Form 483 Inspectional Observations Feb. 4-20, 1998.

    [ii] GAO Report T-NSIAD-00-48 (Oct. 12, 1999).

    [iii] 21 U.S.C. § 351 (2000)(emphasis added)

    [iv] Conversation record memo from Rebecca Devine to Dr. Myers, 9 July 1990.

    [v] MDPH letter to CBER seeking to amend establishment license for new equipment, 6 December 1990.

    [vi] CBER letter to MDPH granting approval of new equipment, 27 July 1993.

    [vii] FDA Form 483 Inspectional Observations, 26-27 April 1988.

    [viii] MDPH letter to CBER responding to FDA inspectional observations made on 12-13 September 1990, 10 October 1990.

    [ix] FDA Form 483 Inspectional Observations, 29-31 July 1992.

    [x] FDA Form 483 Inspectional Observations, 4-7 May 1993.

    [xi] FDA Form 483 Inspectional Observations, 31 May – 3 June 1994.

    [xii] FDA Form 483 Inspectional Observations, 23 April 1995 – 5 May 1995,

    [xiii] FDA Form 483 Inspectional Observations, 18-27 November 1996.

    [xiv] Summary of Findings Report, 14 January 1997.

    [xv] CBER NOIR letter to MBPI, 11 March 1997.

    [xvi] FDA Form 483 Inspectional Observations, 4-20 February 1998.

    [xvii] Ann Rees, “Their Dangerous Dose”, The Province [Vancouver, Canada], 25 Jun 2000

    [xviii] FDA Form 483 Inspectional Observations, 19-23 October 1998

    [xix] FDA Form 483 Inspectional Observations, 25-23 November 1999.

    [xx] FDA Form 483 Inspectional Observations, 10-26 October 2000.

    [xxi] 21 C.F.R. 210(b)

  • Chapter 6 – The Gulf War and Its Experimental Drugs aka “Your Body is the New Battlefield”

    The current regulations do not permit a determination that obtaining informed consent is otherwise not feasible or is contrary to the best interest of the subject . . .

    II. DOD’s Request

    . . . FDA assistance is also needed on the issue of informed consent. Under the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, the general rule is that, regardless of the character of the medical evidence, any use of an IND, whether primarily for investigational purposes or primarily for treatment purposes, must be preceded by obtaining informed consent from the patient. The statute authorizes exceptions, however . . .

    Our planning for Desert Shield contingencies has convinced us that another circumstance should be recognized in the FDA regulation in which it would be consistent with the statute and ethically appropriate for medical professionals to “deem it not feasible” to obtain informed consent of the patient – that circumstance being the existence of military combat exigencies, coupled with a determination that the use of the product is in the best interest of the individual . . .

    In all peacetime applications, we believe strongly in informed consent and its ethical foundations. In peacetime applications, we readily agree to tell military personnel, as provided in FDA’s regulations, that research is involved, that there may be risks or discomforts, that participation is voluntary and that refusal to participate will involve no penalty.[i]

    In the late 1980s, the Department of Defense had a problem. It was anticipating the need for better means to combat chemical and biological agents and, to the point, the U.S. was way behind the Soviet Union in its chemical and biological warfare preparedness. Protective suits and gas masks are the primary means of biological and chemical defense. Different garments are worn depending on the threat level. This is referred to as MOPP level and the garments are referred to in military slang as MOPP gear (Military Operational Protective Posture). Revelations circa 2000 made it clear that even the protective suits and gas marks issued to troops were defective in large numbers.[ii] The DoD made assertions initially that the defects were not serious and not widespread. A subsequent inspection revealed failures of entire lots and the DoD eventually sued the manufacturer.[iii]

    Besides protective suits and gas masks, the DoD’s assertion was that the only way to defend against many chemical and biological agents is through the use of drugs and vaccines. Drugs are typically administered after a person has been exposed to a particular agent in order to counteract the agent’s effects, to the extent those drugs can. Vaccines, in the case of biological agents, theoretically may provide some prospective protection if the particular vaccine produces the proper response to the agent or disease to which the soldier is exposed. The process obviously involves a lot of guesswork, from the perspective that in the first instance, we never know definitively what agent the enemy will use and, secondarily, no one knows for certain what any individual’s immune response will be to the vaccine especially vis à vis the introduction of some weaponized disease, gas, or other agent. These uncertainties were never more apparent than in the Gulf War.

    To return to the example at the end of the last chapter regarding the hypothetical drug PB that combats the hypothetical illness MG. Pyridostigmine Bromide (PB) had been licensed since 1955 as a treatment for terminally ill patients with a disease called myasthenia gravis (MG), a degenerative neurological disorder. Prior to the Gulf War, after receiving an informed consent waiver from the FDA, the DoD issued troops PB in pill form as a pretreatment for a certain nerve agent, soman (SM in my example) that the USG believed Iraq might use against U.S. troops. Eventually we learned that Iraq had no such agent, but instead had a different agent called sarin – yes, that gas. The PB that the U.S. had issued to its troops would almost certainly have aggravated the effects of sarin on U.S troops, not ameliorated it, due to the underlying chemical mechanisms in the brain.[iv]

    Vaccines are no better because of the specificity with which the body develops an immune response. For example, there is no vaccine against the common cold because, like most viruses, it mutates constantly, thus defying the immune system’s “memory”, or its capability to reproduce antigens to fight diseases that it already recognizes. The anthrax bacteria has dozens of strains (some have numbered it at 33) that are produced as a biological weapon. The current anthrax vaccine is based upon one of the weaker strains of anthrax that is passed as a result of skin contact with the pelt of an animal having the bacteria spores in it. This is to say nothing of genetic manipulation of strains, which would make them completely resistant to any antigen produced by the body. Thus, any vaccine, no matter which one, necessarily relies upon the hope that the agent to be used by the enemy will be the exact one for which the body has an immune response. There are also additional considerations, including the risks of adverse reactions that any vaccine or drug carries with it, a very real possibility when vaccinating a population the size of the entire U.S. Armed Forces – several million people. In 1989, the Assistant Secretary of Defense Robert Barker sent a letter to Senator John Glenn in answer to questions from a Senate Governmental Affairs Committee regarding the escalation of the biowarfare threat. In the letter Barker expressed the limitations on vaccines as a pretreatment for chemical and biological weapons.  Interestingly, he specifically noted the limitation of the anthrax vaccine as a pretreatment for chemical warfare, a position evidently reversed by the DoD a short time later during its lobbying effort with the FDA.

    Current vaccines, particularly the anthrax vaccine, do not readily lend themselves to use in mass troop immunization for a variety of reasons: the requirement in many cases for multiple immunizations to accomplish protective immunity, a higher than desirable rate of reactogenicity, and, in some cases, lack of strong enough efficacy against infection by the aerosol route of exposure.”[v]

    Notwithstanding all of these limitations, as the Gulf War approached the DoD began a concerted effort to get the FDA to allow the DoD to use investigational, and even experimental, drugs either as pretreatments for chemical-biological agents or in response to such an exposure. The DoD was seeking a waiver from Rule 50.23(d)’s strict requirements of obtaining informed consent from servicemembers prior to treating them with a number of agents. The DoD was turned down on a number of these requests because the drugs were so experimental. Then-Commissioner of the FDA, Ronald Kessler, explained before a house committee in 1996 that

    I had just become Commissioner. Desert War broke out immediately thereafter. There were INDs available for certain drugs to treat both anthrax and botulism toxin. In fact, one of them was not just – there was no interest in a manufacturer producing them but had been used for many years.

    The Army came and said we have soldiers going into battle.  Only years later did we learn that Saddam really did have stockpiled some of these biological agents. And in the midst of that crisis, I made the decision that we needed to make sure that we knew everything possible about these drugs.

    In fact, one drug they wanted to use was a skin cream to prevent nerve gas. We went up to the plant and inspected the plant, and we found that before it was released it caused blisters on the arms.[vi]

    Even the licensed drug PB was considered investigational because the DoD was going to use a different dosage than the licensed indication and was going to use it as a pretreatment for a nerve agent, rather than as a treatment against the disease myasthenia gravis. The FDA expressed reluctance to give the DoD a complete, blanket waiver from Rule 23(d)’s requirements, so a compromise was reached. A Senate Committee looking into this in 1994 summarized the events well.

    In August 1990, the DOD contacted FDA to review regulatory restrictions of DOD’s plan to use pyridostigmine and botulinum toxoid for U.S. troops in the Persian Gulf. The major focus of the meeting was informed consent. The DOD sought a waiver of requirements for informed consent for the use of pyridostigmine bromide and botulinum toxoid, arguing that these investigational products had well-established uses and were safe. They also claimed that there were no reasonable alternatives. According to minutes of the meeting, “FDA expressed some concern about liability and the need to comply with the regulations,” and FDA’s Deputy Director for Drug Review “pointed out the need to establish an appropriate investigational framework to collect observational data and evaluate the military medical products in question.”[vii]

    One wonders if DoD officials had the same concerns about liability and lawsuits that the FDA did. As has already been shown, the tendency of courts, including even the United States Supreme Court, to shy away from questioning military decisions because of the inherent lack of expertise of judges in matters martial was certainly known to DoD officials and lawyers. In these discussions between the FDA and the DoD, despite the fact that the FDA is the federal agency given the statutory authority to regulate drugs and biologics, the DoD insisted that it could administer the drugs if it so chose to, in complete defiance of the Nuremberg Code or the Helsinki Declaration, or the regulatory authority of the FDA.

    . . . DOD informed FDA that they did not want to abide by informed consent regulations, and FDA officials pointed out that pyridostigmine and botulinum toxoid were investigational and that there are laws regulating how they can be used. DOD claimed that “under the DOD directive the Secretary of Military Departments [could] dictate the use of unapproved FDA regulated products” in the Persian Gulf, but “DOD’s current position is that this not their primary choice at this time.”[viii]

    Exactly what DoD directive Defense officials were relying upon is not clear.  How that DoD directive could trump the FDA’s regulatory authority over drugs and biologics is not clear, either. How an Armed Service Secretary could decide all alone that he/she would ignore forty-five years of law is not only unclear, it boggles the mind. International law in the form of the Nuremberg Code and the Helsinki Declaration, and by 1990, a United States statute that made the Nuremberg Code a part of federal law, 50 U.S.C. §1520a, all said this was a human rights violation. The U.S. put people to death for violating this principle, yet here is concrete evidence – if what happened to MSgt Stanley and Nathan Schnurman were not proof enough – that the DoD felt it was free to disregard any law in pursuit of the military mission, in this case, the War with Iraq. We can leave aside the issue of whether or not the war served any useful or legitimate purpose; we should not forget, however, that there was never any Congressional declaration of war.

    There is a Latin maxim that inter arma leges silentae sunt: “amid the clash of arms the laws are silent.” This might be acceptable for a nation engaged in a civil war or threatened with invasion and can perhaps (I am being generous) explain the actions of military governors post-Civil War or (maybe?) the internment of Japanese during World War II. But in no way could the Gulf War possibly justify the DoD’s defiance of plain U.S. and international law for an ‘optional,’ undeclared war halfway around the world: but there it was and is. If the DoD’s actions do not speak clearly enough, a memo by Deputy Secretary of Defense John Deutsch to a Senate Committee after the war sums the DoD’s position up succinctly: “Although pyridostigmine and botulinum toxoid were classified as investigational drugs as required by FDA regulations, they were not used for experimental purposes in [Operation Desert Storm] and the military personnel who received these products were not experimental subjects.”[ix] Mr. Deutch felt that “these drugs were used for treatment purposes, not research purposes,” and additionally had been, “specifically approved by the courts in litigation challenging the governments [sic] actions.” The DoD’s position was that because they didn’t really intend for the use of these drugs to be research, it therefore wasn’t research. Moreover, because they won in court in a suit filed by a soldier in federal district court[x], the DoD now had “specific approval” from – of all branches – the courts! The Senate committee’s comment on this letter in its report cuts to the heart of the problem with that logic: “Once again, it appears that the DOD confuses the goals of using these medical products with the process, which was clearly considered investigational by FDA.”[xi]

    My position is neither anti-war, nor anti-national security, rather it is pro-law, and pro-ethical principles. Either the United States is a nation of laws protected by an Armed Force committed to the same, or it is not. We cannot be dedicated (selectively) to ‘principles’ – and only when convenient. Situational ethics is an oxymoron; ethical principles are not situational. This commitment to principle is not mere naïveté, but an important aegis that serves to protect both our troops, our citizens, and even our enemies. If we are not committed to these principles, particularly when they are a pain for us to follow or when we can invoke mantras like ‘national survival’, then things like MKULTRA, the Atomic Energy tests, Nathan Schnurman’s mustard gas experiences, the internment of Japanese citizens, and other more unspeakable tragedies are inflicted upon the innocent. It is too easy to dismiss these incidents as anomalous or products of their time, rather than facing the legal, moral, and ethical reality that these repeated incidents are a product of a cultural mindset that values results – mission completion – over all else, including the rights of citizens and soldiers.

    After some lengthy debate surrounding the issue of rule 23(d) waivers between the FDA and DoD, an agreement was finally reached on December 13, 1990, about how these products would be administered to U.S. troops. According to the minutes of that meeting, “DOD officials agreed that the botulism vaccine would be administered by trained individuals with a health care background, and that information would be provided orally ‘at minimum, and in written form if feasible, to all personnel receiving the vaccine.’”[xii] The essence of the agreement was that the DoD assured the FDA that although informed consent would not be sought from each individual, the DoD would ensure “that at least verbal [sic] information would be provided to each person receiving the vaccine.”[xiii]

    There were some additional issues that were raised at these meetings regarding vaccines and drugs being given to pregnant women. With the introduction of women into military roles closer and closer to front-line combat has come the necessary consideration of gender differences and pregnancy among troops. The FDA’s Informed Consent Waiver Review Group recommended that

    pregnant women be excluded from receiving the vaccine and that information about the vaccine be “posted at places where vaccine is administered.”  However, DOD argued that pregnant women would be at greater risk from exposure to botulism toxins than to the vaccine, and FDA agreed that instead of excluding pregnant women, a statement would be added to the information sheet stating that, “If you are pregnant, it is not known if this vaccine will hurt the unborn baby, however, most vaccines do not.”[xiv]

    Unfortunately, notwithstanding these assurances by the DoD, inquiries by Congress and the DoD itself after the War showed that the overwhelming majority of servicemembers were told little or nothing about the drugs and vaccines they received.[xv]  As the Committee on Veterans Affairs noted in 1994:

    DOD had promised to provide extensive information about potential risks orally and in writing. In addition to being ordered to take an investigational product without informed consent, most Persian Gulf War military personnel surveyed claim they received no oral or written information about the drug or vaccine, despite the DOD promises to FDA to provide information about potential risks. These claims are supported by a survey conducted by the Department of Defense following the Persian Gulf War.[xvi]

    This lack of promised information was not an isolated incident where a few people were not told. The post-war surveys conducted by both Congress and the DoD showed that the medical personnel administering the shots in most cases had no idea what they were administering, what the side-effects were, or any possible adverse effects.[xvii] Eight (8) or Nine (9) out of every ten servicemembers surveyed were told nothing or that they simply had to take the given drug. In one DoD survey, 16 of 23 corpsmen administering the PB tablets provided no information to servicemembers. The history of this particular drug, referred to “hypothetically” earlier in this chapter, bears some close examination as its procurement and use by the DoD bears a striking resemblance to the anthrax vaccine.

                                                                                                                                                                           

    A brief chemistry lesson is necessary to understand just how bad the Department of Defense got this. Nerve agents come in two types, carbamates and organophosphates (OP). The best known OP agents, developed by the Germans in the 1930s and ’40s and still in use today, are tabun, sarin, soman, and VX gas. These agents all operate basically the same way: the agents bind to an enzyme, acetylcholinesterase (AChE). This enzyme is responsible for “turning off” the neurotransmitter acetylcholine (ACh), which sends nerve impulses to the muscles. When these agents bind to the enzyme, AChE, they prevent the enzyme from turning off the muscle impulses. If ACh continues to produce uncontrolled muscle stimulation, it results in twitching, loss of muscle coordination, weakness, and ultimately, can produce death. In graphic language, it turns a man into a twitching, frothing, writhing mass of flesh until he dies.

    Pyridostigmine Bromide (PB) is a drug licensed by the FDA and used to treat myasthenia gravis patients. It was first licensed in 1955.[xviii] Myasthenia Gravis is a degenerative neurological disease that is characterized by extreme weakness. It is caused by the production of antibodies that interfere with the uptake of the enzyme, acetylcholine (ACh) at the neuromuscular junction. Pyridostigmine is actually a nerve agent itself, but it is a carbamate. PB acts similarly to OP agents in that it inhibits production of AChE also, but it limits it the production to about 40% and its effect is reversible. Thus, in high quantities, PB produces an increase in the production of AChE that overcomes the blockage of antibodies at the neuromuscular junction.

    The theory behind using PB as a pretreatment for the nerve agent soman is that it would limit the level of AChE production to 40%, thus negating the (threatened) OP agents’ complete inhibition of AChE. Further, PB is used in conjunction with two other agents found in the standard Nuclear, Biological, Chemical (NBC) treatment kits, 2-PAM-chloride and atropine. 2-PAM-choride reverses PB’s inhibition of AChE and the atropine theoretically counteracts any overstimulation due to the accumulated acetycholine (ACh) at the neuromuscular junction.

    Of course, it bears repeating that PB has never, ever been tested in such a fashion. The theories on the chemistry above are just that, theories based upon the current understanding of PB upon myasthenia gravis patients and the known properties of OP nerve agents. Complicating matters even more was the dosing problem: the DoD gave soldiers two 30 mg tablets to take every eight hours, likely as a concession to safety. The dosage for myasthenia gravis patients can reach as high as 120 mg every three hours. Thus, not only was the use of PB for a different purpose, it was used in a different dosing, both in schedule and amount, than its licensed or prescribed use, making it an experiment by any reasonable definition of the word.

    Finally, and unfortunately, because of the intricate chemistry in our brains, it is believed that PB would actually be less effective against sarin and might make one more susceptible to its effects. At the close of the Gulf War, we would learn that Iraq stocked sarin, not soman. While the DoD denied for 6 years that there were any exposures of U.S. troops to nerve agents, it finally admitted in 1997 that some 100,000 servicemembers may have been exposed to the nerve agent sarin when the U.S. destroyed an ammunition supply dump at Kamisiyaw at the close of the War. The DoD covered this information up for years, causing some to call for the DoD to lose its authority to investigate the possible causes of Gulf War Illness.[xix]

    This does not end the story, though. Quite possibly more damning than any of the legal requirements the DoD is the scientific evidence that DoD had collected in its own studies of the effects of PB before applying for the waiver of informed consent. It makes their claims of safety to the FDA ring deathly hollow.

    The DoD conducted a number of different studies on pyridostigmine bromide in the late 1980’s. Almost none of those studies included women, which is problematic for two reasons. First, there is some data to suggest that women have differing levels of AChE than men. Women on birth control for certain have differing levels of AChE than men, as do women in different stages of their reproductive cycles. Second, dosing is based upon weight, so there should be some consideration for the differing physiologies of men and women (i.e. the average man weighs significantly more than the average woman.)

    In these 1980s studies, the DoD had concerns about the safety of PB, so the studies screened out persons who might be hypersensitive to PB, or to bromide more generally, or people who might be taking certain medications, such as propranolol, birth control medications, or anti-malaria medications. Smokers were ruled out of certain studies and participants in some were told not to drink alcohol. People with blood pressure abnormalities, asthma, glaucoma, hyperthyroidism, GI disorders, or, probably most directly of concern, people with low serum AChE levels were kept out of some of the studies.[xx]

    Notwithstanding all of these concerns and safety measures taken by DoD in its own PB experiments, some test subjects still had severe reactions to PB. For example, during one study, PB was given to “a group of 28 active duty Air Force pilots. One pilot experienced respiratory arrest 91 minutes after swallowing the third in a series of three 30-mg pyridostigmine tablets. This pilot had shown no sensitivity to the test dose of pyridostigmine prior to the study.”[xxi] In another study of 32 males, one person “lost consciousness following vision problems and headache.”[xxii] In still other studies, “abnormal liver tests, unusual electrocardiograms, gastrointestinal disturbances, and anemia were reported.”[xxiii] Most interesting from a scientific perspective, and perhaps from an ethical perspective as well, was that some of these same studies “showed that pyridostigmine impaired performance, including tasks which require short-term memory, and prevented a number of test subjects from exercising in hot environments during the second or third day of treatment.”[xxiv] With hundreds of thousands of soldiers in the desert of Saudi Arabia, where temperatures routinely reach the hundred degree level, the DoD had in its possession clinical data that suggested that some people were affected differently by PB under hot conditions. No one had ever considered that all of the data previously obtained from myasthenia gravis patients was in the relatively aseptic, sterile environment of a hospital. This area of scientific inquiry would produce additional troubling data after the Gulf War, which I explain with in the Epilogue.

    In August 1990, as U.S. troops were preparing to go to the Gulf, the DoD’s scientists requested approval for a four-man study that would “evaluate the effects of pyridostigmine on vision.”[xxv] This study was quickly approved because of the urgency of events in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. This study included extensive safety precautions.  Each man was given a medical exam before receiving the PB. There were restrictions on the subjects – they could not have “bronchial asthma, peptic ulcer, liver, kidney, heart disease, or hypersensitivity to pyridostigmine or related drugs.”[xxvi] Volunteers were informed that possible adverse side effects included “nausea, vomiting, slow heart rate, sweating, diarrhea, abdominal cramps, increased salivation, increased bronchial secretions, and pupil constriction.” The scientists also warned the subjects of other possible adverse effects, including “weakness, muscle cramps, and muscle twitches.”  Because of these possible side effects, “all subjects will be admitted to Lyster Army Hospital as in-patients so that they will be medically monitored during evening periods of non-testing. A drug will be available at the test site to counteract the possible adverse side effects.”[xxvii] Finally, the Human Subjects Committee reviewing this study gave some thought to adding a clause to the consent form explaining that there was a “possibility of pyridostigmine causing death . . .after some discussion, it was decided that such a warning was unnecessary since death was unlikely.”[xxviii]

    These extensive precautions were being taken at the exact same time, in August of 1990, that the DoD was simultaneously urging the FDA to waive the requirements of Rule 23(d) and informed consent for the exact same drug – and the FDA granted the request in December of 1990. This was despite the data from the previous studies and the data being collected in the August 1990 study. Months later, DoD would beging giving PB to some 400,000 U.S. soldiers, including approximately 28,000 women, and others who were not screened for any diseases, sensitivity to PB, or any other possible at-risk factor for PB.

    In 1993, Dr. James Moss at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), conducted studies on cockroaches using pyridostigmine bromide in conjunction with several different pesticides. Nerve agents are very similar chemically to modern pesticides. These common insect repellants, such as DEET (diethyl-m-tolamide), a very popular repellant available in almost any Post Exchange, and permethrine, a chemical that was treated in the uniforms of Gulf War soldiers, had increased levels of toxicity when used in conjunction with PB. DEET is more toxic by a factor of seven and permethrine twice over when used in conjunction with PB. Likewise, PB was found to be four times more toxic when used in conjunction with DEET. These studies also showed increased toxicity for other substances, such as lindane, a treatment for lice used during the Gulf.[xxix]

    George Santayana once trenchantly observed that “those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” The history of pyridostigmine bromine’s use during the Gulf War is instructive because of what it portends for servicemembers in the new era of biological warfare. Will servicemembers’ bodies become the new battlefield, with each new biological threat giving rise to a new prophylactic countermeasure – a new drug, vaccine, or antibiotic? More importantly, will the safety data be timely enough to protect servicemembers’ health? As of 2003, there were an estimated 100,000 veterans of the Persian Gulf War suffering from some symptoms that defy classification, but are undeniably, objectively real, notwithstanding DoD’s claims (which have gradually changed over time and investigation) that the diseases are nothing more than PTSD – post traumatic stress disorder. Studies have shown several potential causes, including the anthrax vaccine, nerve agents in the Gulf, and PB and/or its interaction with the heat and other chemicals. If the lessons of the Gulf were not learned, they might again be repeated, resulting ultimately (if one chooses to be a hardline pragmatist) in cost to the taxpayers for skyrocketing veterans’ disability claims.

    PB’s history has some important parallels to the current anthrax vaccine program and for future Biological Warfare (BW) programs. DoD claimed that PB was a “licensed product” by the FDA many years ago, supporting claims of long-term safety anecdotally, although there were certainly no epidemiological studies regarding its administration to healthy individuals. It was claimed that scientists had enough knowledge about how PB worked and the chemistry involving nerve agents to infer a particular result for the effectiveness of PB against a particular agent. PB’s use was clearly investigational, as the DoD acknowledged by asking for Rule 23(d) waivers and by its submission of a New Drug Application and a clinical protocol for PB. Over the course of time, however, the DoD’s position varied from (a) we can do this if we want to ultimately… but it is our choice to follow the procedures at this point, to (b) this was not “research” but “treatment” because of how we intended to use these things, so no informed consent is necessary, to (c) we won in court when someone tried to get an injunction, so therefore this is legal. This position changed each time Congressional inquiry yielded more and more information (to paraphrase the Nixon impeachment hearings) about “what the DoD knew and when they knew it.” Leadership in Congress, frustrated by the DoD’s intransigence and dissembling, swamped by calls from constituents and veterans with GWS/GWI, and bemused by investigative journalism that revealed continued DoD cover-ups, would finally decide to act in 1997. So would the DoD.

                                                                                                                                                                           

    Endnotes

    [i] Informed Consent for Human Drugs and Biologics; Determination That Informed Consent Is Not Feasible, 55 Fed. Reg. at 52814

    [ii] See http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Mar2000/n03142000_20003142.html.

    [iii] Id.

    [iv] Cite to aggravating effects of PB on sarin in GAO report.

    [v] Letter from former Assistant Secretary of Defense Robert B. Barker to former U.S. Sen. John Glenn, chairman of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, 24 Aug 1989, transcript of Senate Hearing 101-744.  The letter and quotes from Barker to Glenn are on page 474 and 480 (emphasis added).

    [vi] Testimony on March 12, 1996, before the House Committee on Appropriations’ Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies.

    [vii] Staff Report Prepared for the Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Senate Report 103-97 (1994)(citing a Memorandum for Record, August 30, 1990, submitted by Craig R. Lehmann, Lt. Col., USAF, BSC; in Committee files.)

    [viii] Staff Report Prepared for the Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Senate Report 103-97 (1994)(citing an FDA memorandum from Richard Klein and Ann Graham to Stuart Nightingale, September 7, 1990; in Committee files.)

    [ix] Letter from John Deutch, Deputy Secretary of Defense, to Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV, Chair, Senate Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, November 17, 1994; in Committee files.

    [x] The case, Doe v. Sullivan, 756 F. Supp. 12 (D.D.C. 1991) is interesting because the judge, Stanley Harris, made it clear that he was no expert in military matters and therefore the “DOD’s decision to use unapproved drugs is precisely the type of military decision that courts have repeatedly refused to second-guess.”  Doe at 13.  The judge also believed that the “primary purpose of administering the drugs is military, not scientific.”  Doe at 15-16.  The Nuremberg Code is not mentioned anywhere in his opinion, nor the federal statute codifying it.

    [xi] Staff Report Prepared for the Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Senate Report 103-97 (1994).

    [xii] Id.  (Draft of minutes, meeting between officials of DOD and FDA, December 31, 1990, provided by FDA to Committee; in Committee files.)

    [xiii] Id.

    [xiv] Id.

    [xv] Staff Report Prepared for the Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Senate Report 103-97 (1994).

    [xvi] Id.

    [xvii] Id.

    [xviii] 44 Fed. Reg. ________.

    [xix] Amy Waldman, Credibility Gulf: The Military’s Battle over Whether to Protect its Image or Protect its Troops, Wash. Monthly, Dec. 1996, at 28, 28-29.

    [xx] S. Rep. No. 103-97 (1994), n. 114.

    [xxi] IND Amendment, 28 March 1988, IND 28,480.

    [xxii] IND Annual Report, 1987-1988, IND 23,509.

    [xxiii] See Senate Report No. 103-97 (1994), notes. 117, 118, 119.

    [xxiv] Id.

    [xxv] Abbreviated Protocol, signed by Roger W. Wiley and Darcelle Delrie, and other documents regarding “The Effects of Pyridostigmine Bromide on Vision”; attached to a cover letter from Martha H. Myers, Acting Chief, Human Use Review and Regulatory Affairs Office, Department of the Army, August 15, 1990. Documents are in Committee files.

    [xxvi] Id.

    [xxvii] Id.

    [xxviii] S. Rep. No. 103-97 (1994).

    [xxix] Id.

  • How I Spent My Summer Vacation

     

    Soundtrack.

    “You know this won’t help him,” said Nurse Vinson.

    “I’m following the wishes of my client, as expressed while he was still compos mentis,” replied Mr. Izzard the lawyer who looked at her unblinkingly. “You will remember that we have a court order.” The corners of the lawyer’s mouth turned up ever so slightly.

    She felt a chill run up her spine. “Like a rabbit ran over your grave,” was what her grandmother called it. There was something just wrong about the lawyer. No, she shouldn’t even think that because thinking would lead to saying, and that led to trouble.

    “Proceed,” said the lawyer.

    “Go ahead, Brian.”

    “Okay, Mr. Hammond, open up,” smirked the beefy orderly putting on a pair of blue rubber gloves.

    Hammond was strapped to a gurney by wide leather belts at the chest, wrists, waist and ankles. Brian opened an envelope containing a thick rubber “hockey puck” bite guard which he slipped into the patient’s open and eager mouth, then made sure it was fitted in securely. He was the only orderly who would work this duty; the others were either scared off by Vinson’s rantings about deviltry, or terrified of the old bat herself. Whatever. The whole thing was amusing and gave him a break from some of his more sad and grim duties in the Profoundly Retarded Bedridden Unit.

    “Very well,” said the lawyer as he sat down on the chair the hospital administration had told her she had to give him. He placed his metal briefcase on his lap and opened its clicky latches to reveal a thick leatherbound book nestled in its snug bed of black padding.

    The book gave Nurse Vinson the creeps. The first time she saw it she hadn’t noticed the five-pointed star tooled into the wrinkly black leather cover; she had thought that it was an old family Bible and that the lawyer was a nice man about to read her patient a comforting lesson from the scriptures, something she was forbidden from doing herself.

    She wanted not to look at the book but couldn’t help herself; she knew it was looking at her. In the center of the star an eye opened and winked at her all red and glowing before closing again. Must be one of those modern electrical gizmos – like those greeting cards that started singing when you opened them. That had to be it, right? The lawyer was trying to drive her crazy, doubtlessly in cahoots with the new Director.

    Izzard carefully removed the book and used his elbows to close the case, then rested the book on top of the case.

    “You remember his sinuses drain copiously, and you have to constantly aspirate his nasal passages.”

    “Yes sir,” she replied, painfully aware that the lawyer was deliberately working her in front of the orderly. Retirement couldn’t come soon enough. She’d put in twenty-seven years at Eastern State Hospital caring for the lunatics and imbeciles of Virginia. She only had three more years before she could retire. It would be a long three years. Somehow, Izzard’s visits always occured when she was on shift. Administration said they didn’t know anything about it and wouldn’t lift a finger to help her. She suspected that Brian was tipping the lawyer off whenever the shift schedule came out. Nobody would switch shifts with her anymore; they were all out to get her.

    She put the stethoscope into her ears and listened to the patient’s pulse so she wouldn’t have to hear the words. Out of the corner of her eye she saw the lawyer wet his lips with his tongue, preparatory to reading. The tongue was abnormally thin and quick. She closed her eyes and in her mind sang “Yes, We Shall Gather at the River.”

    The first time she had heard the filthy words that lawyer read from the book she had to put a stop to things. Those were not the type of stories which would help her patient get better; if anything they would make him worse. Pornographic occult filth didn’t belong in mental hospitals; didn’t belong anyplace, really, but she knew that she was fighting a losing battle against a society which had abandoned all reason and decency.

    She’d sent him packing, then he came back with a piece of paper which she tore up and she sent him packing again, and then the Sheriff’s Deputies showed up and took the Director in front of the judge to get talked to. Then she had to sit in an all-day meeting with people from DMHS headquarters in Richmond who yelled at her about legal stuff, and then she had to sign papers saying that she understood what they’d said and a whole bunch of other crap that sounded like they could fire her if she interfered again, or even looked at the lawyer cross. Apparently crazy people had a right to have pornography read to them. She knew she couldn’t preach or testify to patients, but why did she have to help them damn their poor souls to even deeper pits in hell? But she did get a week of “administrative leave” which was basically a paid vacation.

    “Ph’nglui mglw’nafh Cthulhu R’lyeh wgah’nagl fhtagn” said the lawyer.

    Brian stifled a giggle. Whatever that was always sounded like the lawyer was trying to talk while eating pussy.

    Hammond made a series of eager whimpering noises in response. The lawyer nodded solemnly at Hammond and began reading.

    “‘The Haunting of Hillary House,’ by SugarFree.”

  • Rant Alert ?

    I was going to treat you all to another episode of my Guide to Insufferable Politeness, but I’m too angry and frustrated to write about being polite.

    I’ve been trying since 29 July to get one small thing done for my MIL and her healthcare.

    We need a tracking referral with authorization number from Mom’s soon-to-be former primary care doc so she can see the retinal specialist here and not have to self-pay each time (which isn’t being reimbursed).

    Can we get it sent?

    NO!

    I’ve sent 4 faxes on the appropriate form. The eye doc’s office has sent 3. OMWC’s sister was in Florida and WENT AND FILLED OUT THE PAPERWORK AT THE OFFICE, WHERE THE STAFF KNOWS HER.

    Has it been sent? Nope.

    Tomorrow I will be invoking attorneys, and my attorney has actually killed people.

    /rant

     

     

  • Poll: There’s an eye chart?

    Full Disclosure: I am decidedly not good with eye stuff. When I worked in EMS, I invariably made my partner handle treatment of all eye issues. I mean, ALL eye issues, even if it was just an eyelash in an eye.

    And, of course, in the way of karma, along with Alzheimer’s, my MIL has macular degeneration. This results in her having to have a horrific treatment every 6 weeks. This means immediately after relocating her to AZ, we had a “new patient” visit with one of the top retinal specialists in Phoenix.

    New patient visit means a battery of tests and imaging, taking a few hours over the course of an afternoon in a very packed office. I was seriously the youngest person there (by far!) who wasn’t an employee.

    Anyway, so far, so good.

    We sit down in the first exam room and the polite, chirpy, young tech addresses Mom, “Hi! I’m Jenny! Mrs OMWC’s Mom, please look at the eye chart being projected on the wall and read the first line for me.”

    “There’s an eye chart?” *pause* “Which wall am I supposed to be looking at?”

    “The one in front of your chair.” Tech taps a few keys and increases the eye chart to Interstate exit sign size. “How about now?”

    “Oh! Yes, that’s an…O. Or maybe…a G. Hmmm…maybe D.”

    I think to myself, “No, it’s a Q. Damn, can’t I get away from those Glibs even for one afternoon?!”

    “Thanks, Mrs OMWC’s Mom. I think that’s all we need for now. John will take you in for the next test in a few minutes.”

    ***************

    It got me thinking. I only go see an ophthalmologist if I need a change in my eyeglass prescription, so every couple years or so. I could never in a zillion years stick a piece of plastic in my eye every morning, so I have never even considered contacts. WebDom has been wearing contacts since she was a teenager. But, then, she’s a honey badger.

    Tonight’s questions:

    1. How often do you see an eye doc?
    2. Do you wear either glasses or contacts?
    3. Do you let them do the drops?
    4. Do you have any more serious eye issues?
    5. Is SP a saint for taking her MIL for these horrific treatments?