FDA had already licensed PB in 1955 for treating myasthenia gravis at daily, lifetime doses up to six times higher than those DoD proposed. However, because PB was not licensed as a pretreatment for nerve agent exposure, it was designated as an IND for that purpose. BT has been in routine use since the 1980s under IND status to protect agriculture workers from botulism. Because no significant market for BT exists, it has not attracted a sponsor willing to underwrite the additional clinical trials required for licensing; thus, it remains unlicensed.
After reviewing DoD's request and its proposed uses for PB and BT, FDA agreed that obtaining informed consent might not be feasible "in certain combat-related situations" and that withholding potentially life-saving INDs in such situations would be "contrary to the best interests of military personnel involved." Therefore, FDA issued the Interim Rule, "Informed Consent for Human Drugs and Biologics; Determination that Informed Consent is Not Feasible," which established the authority of the Commissioner of Food and Drugs to waive informed consent under certain military exigencies. Under this new authority, FDA subsequently granted DoD permission to waive informed consent for administration of PB and BT.
Proponents of the waivers argued that DoD had an ethical responsibility to protect its service members to the greatest extent possible. During the Gulf War, the best protection DoD could offer its personnel included use of PB and BT, which were the only preventive or therapeutic treatments available for defense against certain CW/BW agents. Although legally designated as "investigational," PB and BT were neither "remarkably novel nor experimental in a scientific or medical sense." They had been subjected to "extensive research" and, in the case of BT, had been approved for uses that were not substantially different from those the military proposed. Under the circumstances, the proponents argued, it was clear that the proposed uses of PB and BT did not constitute "research." Moreover, documents like the Nuremberg Code and the Belmont Report were written with human experimentation in mind, in which the outcome of the research was in doubt and could result in serious harm to the subject. They clearly did not anticipate the ethical issues surrounding the use of drugs that would provide the only available means of avoiding death or serious disability under combat situations. Finally, the proponents noted that, under the doctrine of military command authority, DoD could have justifiably chosen to act on its own, without FDA approval, but sought waivers to avoid even the appearance of impropriety.
Given the likelihood of facing CW/BW agents in the future and the need to defend against such agents, Rettig's analysis concludes that revoking the Interim Rule altogether would not be prudent. That said, some modifications to the Interim Rule--such as specifying the general requirements for record keeping, providing information to military personnel, and training the medics and commanders responsible for overseeing administration of INDs--appear to be necessary. Although alternatives to the Interim Rule exist, the most frequently discussed alternative--some form of "anticipatory" consent that could be obtained at recruitment, during basic training, or immediately before deployment--poses numerous ethical and logistical issues of its own: For example, what range of INDs should anticipatory consent cover? For how long would the anticipatory consent be valid? What penalties, if any, would attach to refusal to consent?
Despite arguments to retain the Interim Rule, FDA was poised to revoke it. Revocation would have immediately reopened the question of whether authority to grant waivers of informed consent existed, and if so, who was authorized to exercise it. Congress has since decided this question by vesting authority to approve waivers in the President alone. However, as of the publication of this report, many of the implementation issues raised above remain unresolved.
RAND research briefs summarize research that has been more fully documented elsewhere. This research brief describes work done for the National Defense Research Institute and documented in Military Use of Drugs Not Yet Approved by the FDA for CW/BW Defense: Lessons from the Gulf War, by Richard A. Rettig, MR-1018/9-OSD, 1999, 102 pp., ISBN: 0-8330-2683-6.
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