Daily
Signal
Full
Disclosure: Parents Fault Medical Research Study for Putting Preemies
in Harm’s Way
Sharyl
Attkisson
June
05, 2014
'Not
at the expense of our daughter': Carrie and Shawn Pratt say they
didn't know risks of oxygen tests on their daughter, Dagen. (Photo:
Angela Bradbery/Public Citizen)
In
May 2007, Carrie and Shawn Pratt agreed to sign up their severely
premature daughter, Dagen, for a government-funded study being
conducted at Duke University Hospital. The Pratts say they were told
that researchers simply were gathering information to help other
children.
“We
never understood the study to be based on manipulating her oxygen
level to meet [researchers'] needs,” Carrie Pratt says.
At
issue is an experiment in which researchers at two dozen academic
institutions randomly manipulated the oxygen levels of 1,316
extremely premature infants without providing their parents the full
details of the methods and risks.
Confronted
with the reality, which the Pratts discovered just last year, the
West Virginia couple remain shell-shocked.
They
already had lost a preemie son four years before Dagen was born. They
say they can’t understand why medical professionals would have
suggested enrolling their frail, newborn daughter in an experiment
that could put her at further risk.
“When
you have a small child, a micro-preemie, on a ventilator with
see-through skin and fighting for her life … it is the most
humbling, sad experience of your life,” Carrie Pratt says in an
interview. “So, of course we would agree to participate in a study
if it meant collecting info or data to help someone else. But
certainly not at the expense of our daughter.”
Today,
the Pratts wonder whether the study, called SUPPORT, contributed to
Dagen’s health issues. She suffered multiple incidences of
collapsed lungs, breathing problems, and other life-threatening
conditions. Diagnosed with retinopathy, Dagen had to have laser eye
surgery when she was 2 months old. She has cerebral palsy. Now 7, she
often wears orthotics on both legs.
“Do
we blame SUPPORT?” Dagen’s mother asks.
The
Academic Debate
The
friendly sounding acronym SUPPORT stands for “Surfactant, Positive
Airway Pressure, and Pulse Oximetry Randomized Trial.” The
experiment, which cost taxpayers $20.8 million, was conducted at 23
academic institutions from 2005 to 2009 under the National Institutes
of Health, part of the Department of Health and Human Services.
The
consent form signed by parents did not disclose one controversial
aspect of the experiment: The preemies’ oxygen monitors
intentionally were altered to provide false readings so that medical
staff wouldn’t be tempted to adjust the babies’ oxygen out of
their study-assigned range.
More
babies who received higher levels of oxygen ended up with serious
vision disorders. The low-oxygen preemies were more likely to die.
The results, published in the New England Journal of Medicine in May
2010, sparked ongoing ethical questions and complaints.
Little
over nine months ago, hundreds of researchers and academics from
around the globe gathered in person or via teleconference to address
the supposed confusion surrounding informed consent in the wake of
the SUPPORT controversy.
They
came together Aug. 28 near the Capitol, in the Great Hall of the
Hubert H. Humphrey Building, where HHS is headquartered. The meeting
was the first step in the government’s effort to clarify and draft
new guidance on the consent process for human research.
About
half of the academics used the HHS forum to defend SUPPORT’s
consent process. Some made the case that, in some instances, study
subjects should be told less, not more.
If
the process of informed consent becomes too off-putting, they argued,
not enough patients would sign up for studies intended to advance
what researchers consider the greater good.
Dr.
John Lantos, director of pediatric bioethics at another study site,
Children’s Mercy Hospitals and Clinics of Kansas City, Mo., said
consent forms that make it sound like “death lurked at every
corner” are counterproductive.
“[T]hey
are not empowering people to make informed choices, they are scaring
them into making uninformed ones,” Lantos said.
The
discussion was academic until the Pratts took the stage—carrying
pretty, 6-year-old Dagen, who was wearing a sundress and ponytails
but looked fragile and thin in leg braces.
“We
were guaranteed that the study wouldn’t hurt Dagen in any way, that
it was just gathering information,” Shawn Pratt told the audience
academics and research scientists, “and were shocked to learn the
care she received was based not on what she needed, but on some
protocol.”
Dagen’s
father continued: “We want to know, as information comes in, why
the risks and intent of the study were not clear. If it were clear,
we wouldn’t have taken part in the study.”
‘That
Wasn’t Clear?’
At
least one of three HHS panelists who moderated the meeting appeared
dumbfounded by the Pratts’ personal story after lofty discussions
about the greater good.
The
HHS ethics office director, Dr. Jerry Menikoff, was on the panel, but
he wasn’t the one who spoke up.
Rather,
it was Dr. Robert Temple, deputy director for clinical science at the
Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Drug Evaluation and
Research.
“Just
to be sure I understood: You got some kind of consent form, but I
take it you’re saying that you couldn’t tell from that, that
there were actually two things that she was going to be randomized
to?” Temple asked the Pratts. “But that wasn’t clear? Is that
what you’re saying?”
“They
said they are collecting data, that don’t worry, she is going to be
cared for,” Carrie Pratt answered.
“So
they didn’t really communicate that it was in fact an experiment?”
Temple asked.
“No,”
Dagen’s mom replied.
Sharrissa
Cook also spoke about her son, Dreshan, at the HHS meeting. Cook was
just 25 weeks into her pregnancy when she gave birth to a critically
ill baby boy in October 2006. She is now part of a lawsuit alleging
that the University of Alabama at Birmingham Hospital, the lead study
site, misled her and other SUPPORT parents.
Dreshan,
who weighed a fragile 1 pound, 11 ounces at birth, faces a myriad of
health problems at age 7.
“Had
I known the full extent of the study, I would not have given my
consent. … I unknowingly placed my son in harm’s way,” Cook
said. “I trusted them with my baby’s life … My son is a live,
breathing human being. He is not simply a subject.”
HHS
has yet to issue conclusions about what occurred during the multiyear
experiment on preemies...
Read
the full article plus links to related articles in the series at The
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