www.reuters.com
(Reuters) - At a
Finnish medical convention in January 2011, a colleague approached
neurologist Markku Partinen, laid a hand his shoulder and said:
"Markku, it's going to be a bad year for you."
In the following months, other
scientists ridiculed him, questioned his methods and motives, and
raised doubts about his mental stability. Colleagues began crossing the
street to avoid him, he says.
Partinen,
director of the Helsinki Sleep Clinic and Research Centre, had raised
the alarm about a GlaxoSmithKline vaccine called Pandemrix. He had
discovered the drug, used to protect people from H1N1 swine flu, may be
linked to a jump in cases of narcolepsy, a rare sleep disorder, in
children and young people. He knew his findings might help limit the
risks of narcolepsy for other children around the world, but was
fearful nonetheless. The work was bound to generate scientific
suspicion and public anxiety. Indeed, he struggled to get his paper on
the vaccine published.
His story underscores an increasingly tough
challenge for scientists balancing compelling data with public concern
over vaccines and their side effects. Treatments which stimulate
immunity to disease are highly controversial. In the past couple of
decades - especially after a British doctor made now-discredited claims
linking the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine to autism - the field
has become even more charged. After the false alarm sounded by British
doctor Andrew Wakefield, some scientists say they are more hesitant to
credit reports of potential side effects from vaccines.
Wakefield's
1998 paper suggesting a link between the MMR vaccine and autism was
debunked after repeated scientific studies found no such connection,
and was retracted by The Lancet medical journal in 2010. In that year,
Wakefield was also struck off Britain's medical register by the General
Medical Council for repeatedly breaching "fundamental principles" of
research medicine, and he is no longer licensed to work in the UK as a
doctor. But he still has thousands of passionate followers, especially
in the United States, who question the use of any vaccine and applaud
any new evidence that vaccines have unintended consequences.
"Wakefield
has done so much damage. We've seen it with all these anti-vaccine
people, and now we also see the damage he has done to science,"
Partinen said.
Partinen's findings have now been replicated
and confirmed by at least four independent teams of international
scientists. Studies in Sweden, Finland, Ireland,
Norway and Britain have also shown the risk of developing narcolepsy is
between seven and 13 times higher in children who were immunized with
Pandemrix than in those who were not. European drug regulators have
recommended the vaccine no longer be used in anyone under 20.
GlaxoSmithKline
acknowledges the statistical association, but alongside many more
research teams around the world, the company is investigating what
might cause the link.
Emmanuel
Mignot, a psychiatrist and narcolepsy expert at Stanford University in
the United States, is being funded by GSK to investigate further. He
says scientists now face a dilemma: even when you publish sound
scientific findings, you could attract criticism "like Wakefield", he
says.
"And at the same time, I
really feel strongly that there's nothing worse than to suppress
information - that's how you create paranoia in the public."
Wakefield, who now lives in Austin, Texas,
told Reuters he stands by his 1998 Lancet paper. He also says he was
the subject of "false allegations" in a subsequent investigation by the
British Medical Journal and denies his research was fraudulent. A
defamation lawsuit he took out in Texas against the British Medical
Journal, its editor Fiona Godlee and writer Brian Deer was dismissed
last year when the court said it did not have jurisdiction. Wakefield
is appealing that decision.
Godlee
said Deer and the BMJ stand by their reporting and their editorial
commentary on the Wakefield case "and we believe that Dr. Wakefield's
claims are meritless." She described his latest legal challenge as
"frivolous" and "yet another instance of him trying to use litigation
to harass and silence his critics."
ANTI-VAXXERS
Vaccines
have been controversial almost since they were invented in the late
18th century. When British physician Edward Jenner showed he could
protect children from smallpox if he infected them with cowpox, the
objectors included clergy who believed vaccination was not Christian
because it came from an animal.
Today, most doctors and scientists view the
technique as one of the greatest breakthroughs in modern medicine. No
other medical intervention has done more to save lives and fight
disease.
Yet over the past couple
of decades, a growing number of people have again become suspicious.
The MMR scare "created a sense of fear of vaccines that has extended
well beyond autism to a general fear that we're just giving too many
vaccines too soon," says Paul Offit, an American pediatrician and
vaccine scientist who blasted Wakefield in his book, "Autism's False
Prophets."
Wakefield's dedicated
following in the anti-vaccination movement - "anti-vaxxers" for short -
believe all vaccines are dangerous and should be avoided. For example,
Idaho-based group Vaccination Liberation declares on its website that
"vaccines are toxic" and that there is no proof vaccinations are safe
or effective. It says Wakefield was subjected to a "chain of
persecution" and a "witch hunt."
Partinen rejects any comparison between himself and the man who sparked the MMR-autism scandal, calling Wakefield a "fake".
At a medical centre on the outskirts of
Helsinki, another Finnish scientist agrees with Partinen's results and
is probing the mechanics of the Pandemrix-narcolepsy link, which she
thinks may have to do with the vaccine's super-charging effect on the
immune system.
Outi Vaarala
previously worked in research on autoimmune diseases and diabetes.
Since crossing over into the field of vaccinology, she says she has
found herself harangued in emails and phone calls by people on one side
accusing her of undermining trust in vaccines, or on the other begging
her to join an anti-vaccine crusade.
"There's
not the kind of open discussion we used to have. You're afraid you will
lose your whole career if you say something bad," says Vaarala. "When
you're dealing with vaccine it suddenly becomes like working in
politics, or religion."
"SERVES YOU RIGHT"
For
the parents of Swedish teenager Emelie Olsson, the row over vaccines
complicates their struggle to come to terms with all that has happened
to their family in the past few years.
Emelie
is one of at least 800 people across Europe who developed narcolepsy,
an incurable, life-long sleep disorder, after having the Pandemrix
shot. In total, 30 million doses of the shot were given to people in 47
countries during the 2009/2010 H1N1 swine flu pandemic. It was not used
in the United States.
An engaging 14-year-old, Emelie used to enjoy
singing in a choir, taking tennis lessons, playing piano and kicking
about with her friends. She now struggles to stay awake during the day
and battles with terrors and hallucinations that deprive her of sleep
and make her scream out in the night.
Her
parents, Marie and Charles, still believe children should be vaccinated
against diseases that put their lives at risk. The anti-vaccination
movement denounces their views.
A
blog post on the website "CureZone", which says it is dedicated to
"educating instead of medicating", seeks to use Emelie's story as a
"cautionary tale" against all flu vaccines. "Don't be fooled. Don't be
brainwashed," says the post, by a blogger named "befurther". "Don't end
up like Emelie and her parents."
Charles
Olsson says some anti-vaccine campaigners have told him in comments
online that he is to blame for Emelie's condition because he should not
have allowed her to have the flu vaccine. "They even tell you: 'It
serves you right,'" he said in their Stockholm apartment on a dark and
snowy winter's afternoon.
He
cites one post in Swedish on a Facebook page about vaccination where he
was discussing what had happened to Emelie. A contributor called Peter
W wrote: "Everyone is directly responsible for the vaccines that they
take, parents as well, when recommending shooting poison into their
newborn babies."
Marie says it
feels uncomfortable that "we, people who are in favor of vaccines, have
almost become marketing tools for the anti-vaccine movement."
BALANCING RISKS
Offit,
the American pediatrician, says one reason the vaccine debate is so
polarized is that people find it hard to balance risks. He helped
invent a shot against rotavirus, a diarrheal disease that kills
hundreds of thousands of children a year in poor countries.
Even
at his state-of-the-art Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, he sees
children die of diseases that could be prevented through immunization.
During the 2009/2010 pandemic, he saw five children die of H1N1 flu and saw parents baffled and crushed with grief.
"All
those children's parents had chosen not to vaccinate them, and all of
them said, 'I can't believe this happened to me,'" he told Reuters.
"Vaccines are medical products.
They have a benefit and - like any
product that has a benefit - they could also have a risk. But from the
public's standpoint it's difficult. For them, any risk is a bad thing."
Offit says he's had hate mail and death
threats, and needed an armed guard at meetings at the CDC during the
years he has spent arguing against the anti-vaccination movement.
Vaccination
rates, which fell after the MMR scare, have now recovered. But millions
of children were unvaccinated, which scientists say explains why some
diseases that were nearly eradicated in wealthy countries have
rebounded.
Last year, the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported an outbreak
of whooping cough in the United States that was the most severe in more
than half a century.
Hitting an
18-year high, there were 2,016 cases of measles in England and Wales in
2012, according to the UK Health Protection Agency, the highest annual
total since 1994.
BIG PROBLEMS
Partinen
attended another Helsinki medical conference last month, two years
after he had been warned about difficult times ahead. But this time he
was leading the first Nordic Symposium on Narcolepsy and its links to
the H1N1 swine flu vaccine.
"When
we found this, we wanted to publish our results and spread the news to
the world because we knew Pandemrix was also being used in other
countries," he said. "But there were big problems."
Having double- and triple-checked his
findings, Partinen approached the New England Journal of Medicine, one
of the world's most respected medical journals, and submitted his study
for publication. He says the journal asked for several revisions to the
paper, then finally declined to accept it.
"After
that we sent it to The Lancet," he said, stressing that this was the
same journal which published the now discredited Wakefield paper.
While
it is not unusual for such high-level medical journals to reject many
papers, Partinen said he was shocked by the strength of The Lancet's
resistance to his.
"It was quite
exceptional, they asked for revision and revision and revision,"
Partinen said. "Then they said they'd made an editorial decision - that
they couldn't publish it because we didn't know the (biological)
mechanism (behind the link between narcolepsy and Pandemrix)."
Partinen
argues that scientists don't know the biological mechanisms behind a
whole host of diseases - multiple sclerosis and diabetes to name just
two - yet The Lancet is full of peer-reviewed papers about those.
Neither The Lancet nor the New England Medical Journal would comment on their editorial decisions.
By the time Partinen's study was published -
March 2012, in the open-access journal of the Public Library of
Science, PLoS One - many more scientists had replicated his findings,
the H1N1 flu pandemic that Pandemrix was designed to protect against
had been declared over, and the vaccine's use had been restricted.
For those with narcolepsy it was already too late.
"There is no doubt any more that there is a link," Partinen said. "But it's taken three years to get here."
(Edited by Simon Robinson and Sara Ledwith)
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