New York Times
August 13, 2006
Panel Suggests Using Inmates in Drug Trials
By IAN
URBINA
PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 7 — An influential federal panel of medical
advisers has recommended that the government loosen regulations
that severely limit the testing of pharmaceuticals
on prison inmates, a practice that was all but stopped three decades
ago after revelations of abuse.
The proposed change includes provisions intended to prevent problems
that plagued earlier programs. Nevertheless, it has dredged up a
painful history of medical mistreatment and incited debate among
prison rights advocates and researchers about whether prisoners
can truly make uncoerced decisions, given the environment they live
in.
Supporters of such programs cite the possibility of benefit to prison
populations, and the potential for contributing to the greater good.
Until the early 1970’s, about 90 percent of all pharmaceutical
products were tested on prison inmates, federal officials
say. But such research diminished sharply in 1974 after revelations
of abuse at prisons like Holmesburg here, where inmates were paid
hundreds of dollars a month to test items as varied as dandruff
treatments and dioxin, and where they were exposed to radioactive,
hallucinogenic and carcinogenic chemicals.
In addition to addressing the abuses at Holmesburg, the regulations
were a reaction to revelations in 1972 surrounding what the government
called the Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis
in the Negro Male, which was begun in the 1930’s and lasted
40 years. In it, several hundred mostly illiterate men with syphilis
in rural Alabama were left untreated, even after a cure was discovered,
so that researchers could study the disease.
“What happened at Holmesburg was just as gruesome as Tuskegee,
but at Holmesburg it happened smack dab in the middle of a major
city, not in some backwoods in Alabama,” said Allen M. Hornblum,
an urban studies professor at Temple
University and the author of “Acres of Skin,” a
1998 book about the Holmesburg research. “It just goes to
show how prisons are truly distinct institutions where the walls
don’t just serve to keep inmates in, they also serve to keep
public eyes out.”
Critics also doubt the merits of pharmaceutical testing on prisoners
who often lack basic health care.
Alvin Bronstein, a Washington lawyer who helped found the National
Prison Project, an American
Civil Liberties Union program, said he did not believe that
altering the regulations risked a return to the days of Holmesburg.
“With the help of external review boards that would include
a prisoner advocate,” Mr. Bronstein said, “I do believe
that the potential benefits of biomedical research outweigh the
potential risks.”
Holmesburg closed in 1995 but was partly reopened in July to help
ease overcrowding at other prisons.
Under current regulations, passed in 1978, prisoners can participate
in federally financed biomedical research if the experiment poses
no more than “minimal” risks to the subjects. But a
report
formally presented to federal officials on Aug. 1 by the Institute
of Medicine of the National
Academy of Sciences advised that experiments with greater risks
be permitted if they had the potential to benefit prisoners. As
an added precaution, the report suggested that all studies be subject
to an independent review.
“The current regulations are entirely outdated and restrictive,
and prisoners are being arbitrarily excluded from research that
can help them,” said Ernest D. Prentice, a University
of Nebraska genetics professor and the chairman of a Health
and Human Services Department committee that requested the study.
Mr. Prentice said the regulation revision process would begin at
the committee’s next meeting, on Nov. 2.
The discussion comes as the biomedical industry is facing a shortage
of testing subjects. In the last two years, several pain medications,
including Vioxx and Bextra, have been pulled off the market because
early testing did not include large enough numbers of patients to
catch dangerous problems.
And the committee’s report comes against the backdrop of a
prison population that has more than quadrupled, to about 2.3 million,
over the last 30 years and that disproportionately suffers from
H.I.V.
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C, diseases that some researchers say could be better controlled
if new research were permitted in prisons.
For Leodus Jones, a former prisoner, the report has opened old wounds.
“This moves us back in a very bad direction,” said Mr.
Jones, who participated in the experiments at Holmesburg in 1966
and after his release played a pivotal role in lobbying to get the
regulations passed.
In one experiment, Mr. Jones’s skin changed color, and he
developed rashes on his back and legs where he said lotions had
been tested.
“The doctors told me at the time that something was seriously
wrong,” said Mr. Jones, who added that he had never signed
a consent form. He reached a $40,000 settlement in 1986 with the
City of Philadelphia after he sued.
“I never had these rashes before,” he said, “but
I’ve had them ever since.”
The Institute of Medicine report was initiated in 2004 when the
Health and Human Services Department asked the institute to look
into the issue. The report said prisoners should be allowed to take
part in federally financed clinical trials so long as the trials
were in the later and less dangerous phase of Food and Drug Administration
approval. It also recommended that at least half the subjects in
such trials be nonprisoners, making it more difficult to test products
that might scare off volunteers.
Dr. A. Bernard Ackerman, a New York dermatologist who worked at
Holmesburg during the 1960’s trials as a second-year resident
from the University of Pennsylvania, said he remained skeptical.
“I saw it firsthand,” Dr. Ackerman said. “What
started as scientific research became pure business, and no amount
of regulations can prevent that from happening again.”
Others cite similar concerns over the financial stake in such research.
“It strikes me as pretty ridiculous to start talking about
prisoners getting access to cutting-edge research and medications
when they can’t even get penicillin and high-blood-pressure
pills,” said Paul Wright, editor of Prison Legal News, an
independent monthly review. “I have to imagine there are larger
financial motivations here.”
The demand for human test subjects has grown so much that the so-called
contract research industry has emerged in the past decade to recruit
volunteers for pharmaceutical trials. The Tufts Center for the Study
of Drug Development, a Boston policy and economic research group
at Tufts University, estimated that contract research revenue grew
to $7 billion in 2005, up from $1 billion in 1995.
But researchers at the Institute of Medicine said their sole focus
was to see if prisoners could benefit by changing the regulations.
The pharmaceutical industry says it was not involved. Jeff Trewitt,
a spokesman for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of
America, a drug industry trade group, said that his organization
had no role in prompting the study and that it had not had a chance
to review the findings.
Dr. Albert M. Kligman, who directed the experiments at Holmesburg
and is now an emeritus professor of dermatology at the University
of Pennsylvania Medical School, said the regulations should never
have been written in the first place.
“My view is that shutting the prison experiments down was
a big mistake,” Dr. Kligman said.
While confirming that he used radioactive materials, hallucinogenic
drugs and carcinogenic materials on prisoners, Dr. Kligman said
that they were always administered in extremely low doses and that
the benefits to the public were overwhelming.
He cited breakthroughs like Retin A, a popular anti-acne drug, and
ingredients for most of the creams used to treat poison ivy. “I’m
on the medical ethics committee at Penn,” he said, “and
I still don’t see there having been anything wrong with what
we were doing.”
From 1951 to 1974, several federal agencies and more than 30 companies
used Holmesburg for experiments, mostly under the auspices of the
University of Pennsylvania, which had built laboratories at the
prison. After the revelations about Holmesburg, it soon became clear
that other universities and prisons in other states were involved
in similar abuses.
In October 2000, nearly 300 former inmates sued the University of
Pennsylvania, Dr. Kligman, Dow Chemical and Johnson & Johnson
for injuries they said occurred during the experiments at Holmesburg,
but the suit was dismissed because the statute of limitations had
expired.
“When they put the chemicals on me, my hands swelled up like
eight-ounce boxing gloves, and they’ve never gone back to
normal,” said Edward Anthony, 62, a former inmate who took
part in Holmesburg experiments in 1964. “We’re still
pushing the lawsuit because the medical bills are still coming in
for a lot of us.”
Daniel S. Murphy, a professor of criminal justice at Appalachian
State University in Boone, N.C., who was imprisoned for five years
in the 1990’s for growing marijuana, said that loosening the
regulations would be a mistake.
“Free and informed consent becomes pretty questionable when
prisoners don’t hold the keys to their own cells,” Professor
Murphy said, “and in many cases they can’t read, yet
they are signing a document that it practically takes a law degree
to understand.”
During the Holmesburg experiments, inmates could earn up to $1,500
a month by participating. The only other jobs were at the commissary
or in the shoe and shirt factory, where wages were usually about
15 cents to 25 cents a day, Professor Hornblum of Temple said.
On the issue of compensation for inmates, the report raised concern
about “undue inducements to participate in research in order
to gain access to medical care or other benefits they would not
normally have.” It called for “adequate protections”
to avoid “attempts to coerce or manipulate participation.’’
The report also expressed worry about the absence of regulation
over experiments that do not receive federal money. Lawrence O.
Gostin, the chairman of the panel that conducted the study and a
professor of law and public health at Georgetown University, said
he hoped to change that.
Even with current regulations, oversight of such research has been
difficult. In 2000, several universities were reprimanded for using
federal money and conducting several hundred projects on prisoners
without fully reporting the projects to the appropriate authorities.
Professor Gostin said the report called for tightening some existing
regulations by advising that all research involving prisoners be
subject to uniform federal oversight, even if no federal funds are
involved. The report also said protections should extend not just
to prisoners behind bars but also to those on parole or on probation.
Professor Murphy, who testified to the panel as the report was being
written, praised those proposed precautions before adding, “They’re
also the parts of the report that faced the strongest resistance
from federal officials, and I fear they’re most likely the
parts that will end up getting cut as these recommendations become
new regulations.”
Barclay Walsh contributed research for this article.
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