
Daniella Rogers died on May 3, 2002 after
undergoing clinical trial chemotherapy treatments at St.
Louis Children's Hospital.
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When John and Oksana Rogers learned that their year-old daughter,
Daniella, had cancer, they knew she
might die.
But they hardly expected that the medicine that
was supposed to save her would instead take her life.
"It
wasn't the cancer that killed her. It was the treatment," Oksana
Rogers said.
The chemotherapy drugs Daniella received at St. Louis Children's
Hospital as part of a clinical trial caused the blood in
the small vessels of her liver to clot like curdled milk. Three
other children died of the same side effect before the study's sponsor,
Children's Oncology Group of Arcadia, Calif., and the National Cancer
Institute temporarily suspended the trial last year.
Now a federal
public health agency has ruled that Washington University Medical
School, a local participant in the trial, should have done a better
job of warning patients about complications from the potentially
fatal liver disease.
The Office of Human Research
Protection, an arm of the U.S. Health and Human Services Department,
determined last month that the medical school should have spelled
out the risk of veno-occlusive disease of the liver, a rare but
well-known reaction to commonly used cancer-fighting drugs. The
disease occurred in about 1 out of 20 patients in the trial. Four of
the 360 children enrolled died of it.
The agency's finding
carries no sanctions or fines. Washington University now warns
remaining participants in the cancer trial specifically about the
disease.
Washington University wouldn't allow the
Post-Dispatch to interview its doctors about Daniella's case because the Rogers family
has threatened to sue. However, the university released several
statements and documents that defend its actions.
"Washington University School of Medicine takes extremely
seriously its commitment to add to medical knowledge through
clinical trials that are always conducted with patients' safety and
best interests as the highest priority," the school said in a
written statement. "We express our sincere regret and heartfelt
sympathy to the Rogers family for their tragic loss."
Daniella's case is one of the latest to
raise questions about the massive clinical research industry, and to
provoke debate about how far researchers must go to make sure
subjects understand the risks.
The number of clinical trials
has increased tenfold in the past 25 years, according to the federal
Food and Drug Administration. The National Institutes of Health
provided $7.2 billion in public funding last year for clinical
research, a figure expected to rise 11 percent this year. Major
private pharmaceutical companies spent $30 billion last year on
research and development, with at least 20 percent of that amount
spent on human research, industry figures show.
Dr. David
Lepay, head of the FDA's Office of Good Clinical Practices, said his
agency's inspectors find far fewer problems now than they did 25
years ago, when perhaps 20 percent of trials failed to meet key
regulations. Now, the number of violators is around 2 percent, he
said.
But as the field grows, and scrutiny increases,
serious problems have surfaced:
In 2001, Johns Hopkins
University temporarily lost its government funding after admitting
it was responsible for the death of a healthy volunteer in an asthma
experiment.
In 1999, the FDA shut down a gene therapy
experiment at the University of Pennsylvania after an 18-year-old
subject died. The agency charged that investigators violated federal
regulations and failed to adequately protect the lives of patients.
Washington University's School of Medicine, which ranks
fourth in federal research funding nationwide, has never been
charged by federal agencies with such a serious violation. The
medical school received more than $302 million in NIH funding in
fiscal year 2002, following behind Johns Hopkins, the University of
Pennsylvania, and the University of California at San Francisco,
spokeswoman Joni Westerhouse said.
Westerhouse said the
medical school is involved in about 3,000 clinical trials, and it
receives only two to three complaints per year from patients. Calls
go to the Human Studies Committee, which is charged with ensuring
that the research is safe and ethical.
Officials at the
Washington University medical school say they informed the Rogers
family about the risks inherent in chemotherapy, which uses highly
toxic chemicals that kill healthy cells along with cancer cells.
Westerhouse also provided a letter dated Sept. 3, 2002, from
the FDA stating that the agency found "no significant deviations"
from federal regulations in its investigation of Daniella's case. Both the FDA and the
Office of Human Research Protection conducted investigations because
of complaints filed by the Rogers family.
John Rogers said
he felt vindicated by the finding of the Office of Human Research
Protection that the university failed to fully inform trial
participants about the risks of veno-occlusive disease. "It makes us
feel a little bit better that the government acknowledged they
(Washington University) didn't do the right thing," he said. "But it
doesn't bring Daniella back."
"The best treatment option"
Since their
daughter died last spring, John and Oksana Rogers have become
activists. They set up a Web site, www.daniellarogers.org, which documents their
allegations. The family says that Daniella might have lived had Washington
University properly informed the couple of the risks and monitored
more closely for symptoms of the disease. The university denies
responsibility for the girl's death.
Daniella's memory fills the family home in
Florissant. On a recent visit, framed photos showed the little girl,
bald from chemotherapy, smiling and wearing a parade of hats. A
small Christmas tree held her ornaments. Her bedroom, much the way
she left it, contained a shrine where Oksana's mother, a Russian
immigrant, prays every morning.
The Rogers family first
noticed a lump in Daniella's
shoulder in the fall of 2001, during a visit to see Oksana's family
in Russia. When the family returned from the trip, doctors at
Washington University took a biopsy of the mass and pronounced it to
be nonmalignant, John Rogers said. When the lump continued to grow,
doctors removed it last February. That's when the family was told
that it was a malignant form of cancer.
Daniella had rhabdomyosarcoma, a tumor of
the skeletal muscles that makes up about 7 percent of childhood
cancer cases. Doctors told the family that, with treatment, Daniella had about a 70 percent chance of
survival. Her parents were hopeful.
John Rogers wanted the
best care for the couple's first and only child. He was familiar
with clinical research because of his work at the Barnes Retina
Institute as a medical photographer.
When Dr. David Wilson
said they could join a cancer trial, the Rogers family jumped at the
chance. John Rogers said he assumed Daniella would get the most attention that
way.
"We had just found out our daughter had cancer. Most
parents are desperate at that point, and willing to do anything, and
being presented with this being the best treatment option, we're
like, 'Yeah, let's do it,'" John Rogers said.
The family did
seek a second opinion from another area doctor. After being
reassured that Daniella's treatment
would be the best available, the family signed up.
John and
Oksana Rogers signed a document that explains what the patient and
her guardians need to know about the research. Called an informed
consent document, it is required by federal law to disclose risks
and inform patients of their rights.
Most of the nine-page
document contains legal disclaimers, signature pages and schedule
information. About two and a half pages are devoted to charts
explaining the "risks and discomforts that may be associated with
this research." Possible side effects for radiation and six drugs
used in the study are listed briefly, including one line that says
simply: "liver damage."
In the control group
On Feb. 28, 2002, Daniella
began therapy in a nationwide study comparing the standard
chemotherapy treatment for rhabdomyosarcoma with a newer drug
combination.
She was in the control group, which received
the regular treatment - a combination of the drugs vincristine,
actinomycin-D and cyclophosphamide, or VAC, dubbed by Washington
University as the "gold standard" for decades.
Subjects in
the experimental group received VAC alternating with another group
of drugs. In a previous study, published in 1997, an estimated 3.1
percent of patients receiving the VAC regimen developed liver
disease, but no one had died of it.
The family and
Washington University agree about these basic facts of what happened
in the two-month course of treatment:
Daniella responded normally to the drugs
until the week of April 24. On that Tuesday, her chest catheter bled
abnormally. On Wednesday, she got a transfusion of platelets and red
blood cells. On Thursday, she got more platelets and another dose of
chemotherapy medicine.
Early Friday morning, Daniella threw up blood. Upon arrival at
Children's Hospital emergency room, doctors found her listless with
a distended abdomen.
Tests confirmed that Daniella had veno-occlusive disease. There
is no cure, although patients sometimes recover. Despite aggressive
care, Daniella's liver and kidneys
shut down, her brain swelled, her breathing slowed and her heart
faltered. Daniella, then 20 months
old, died a week after admission, on May 3.
Other
deaths reported
John Rogers said he never even heard of
veno-occlusive disease before his daughter was diagnosed with it. He
was outraged when he found out that two other children in the same
study had already died of it before Daniella became ill.
According to
Washington University, its doctors didn't know anyone had died
either. The national sponsor of the study, Children's Oncology
Group, had detected 15 cases, including two deaths, from the liver
disease as of last February. After an internal review, the group
posted the report to its Web site two months later, on April 23 -
just a day before Daniella's steep
decline began.
Children's Oncology Group recommended
continuing the study as planned while closely monitoring the
incidence of the liver disease, according to Washington University.
The university said Daniella's doctor hadn't seen the Web site
before she got sick. But even if he had, it wouldn't have changed
the outcome, the university said.
The medical school's
doctors were well-informed about the disease, monitored for it, made
a timely diagnosis of symptoms and began supportive care within a
reasonable amount of time, Washington University said.
"Although tragic, the patient's death did not result from
any lack of awareness or vigilance" on the part of the medical
school, according to a letter dated Aug. 1, 2002, from Dr. Philip
Ludbrook, chairman of the Washington University Medical Center Human
Studies Committee, to the Office of Human Research Protection.
Within a few months of Daniella's death, another patient in the
trial died of veno-occlusive disease. Children's Oncology Group and
the National Cancer Institute suspended the study in August.
Washington University argues that the drugs Daniella received were the same she would
have gotten anywhere, whether in a study or not.
But John
Rogers believes that the dose she received was much higher than it
should have been. According to his calculations, based on the
manufacturer's package insert, she got up to twice as much as she
should have, and over a shorter time period.
Dr. Gregory
Reaman, chairman of Children's Oncology Group, said in an interview
that the dosage outlined in the original protocol was only
"modestly" higher than that used in past studies and "well within
the standards we've used for many years." He also said the drugs
were given in one day, rather than over a five-day period, to make
it more convenient for patients.
When the trial later
resumed, the dosage was decreased, especially for younger children,
to address the liver toxicity problem, Reaman said.
Another
change: The risk and symptoms of veno-occlusive disease were added
to the model informed consent document. Washington University
expanded its own consent form in May, at the Rogers family's
request, and adopted the more extensive model wording in July.
"Needs to be crystal clear"
Why didn't
Washington University spell out the risks earlier? According to
Washington University's letter, it was because the university didn't
want to confuse parents with medical jargon.
The university
strives to use simple, understandable wording in its informed
consent documents, according to Ludbrook's letter. He cited a
national committee that recommends that "documents be written at an
eighth-grade or lower reading level."
To John Rogers, that's
unacceptable. "If you have to put everything in eighth-grade
terminology, that leaves out a lot, and that's wrong," he said.
Dr. Arthur Caplan, a nationally recognized medical ethicist
at the University of Pennsylvania, said informed consent documents
should be simple to read. But that doesn't mean they should omit
details that parents would want to know, he said.
Whether
the risk of death is one in a hundred or one in a thousand, the
patient has the right to be informed, he said. "It has to be very
specifically spelled out, and it needs to be crystal clear," Caplan
said. "In a sense, you can't overinform."
Caplan added that
parents of sick children often suffer from what he calls
"therapeutic misconception" - they only want to hear good news, and
they don't really absorb bad news. They see a clinical trial as
personal therapy, when really it's just an experiment.
"I
think it's harder to accept deaths from treatment than from a
disease," he said. "Disease is an act of God, while treatment can be
controlled."
Ronald Munson, a bioethicist at the University
of Missouri at St. Louis who also serves on Washington University's
Human Studies Committee, said it's normal for the parents of a child
who died to question everything, even well-intentioned doctors.
Should the university have explained the risk of this
specific disease?
Should the sponsor have informed
Washington University of the other deaths sooner?
Even if
the parents knew the risk, would they have chosen to go forward?
There are few other treatment options available, and they all carry
risks.
"I think it's important to keep in mind all these
matters. Yes, there's a risk of using the drug, but there may be a
bigger risk in not using it," he said.
John Rogers said he
accepts the risks of research; he just believes parents should know
exactly what they're getting into.
"(Researchers) need to
tell parents there are other options, and tell the parents the side
effects and the risks of treatment," he said.
Reporter
Sara Shipley:
E-mail: sshipley@post-dispatch.com
Phone: 314-340-8215