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Dear Acting FDA Commissioner Crawford, Ph.D., D.V.M.
When a federal judge ruled the vaccine to be an "investigational
drug and a drug being used for an unapproved purpose" on December
22, 2003, FDA hurriedly issued a Final Rule for anthrax vaccine.
The agency submitted its Final Rule just eight days after a federal
court injunction, having failed to do so for 19 years. In a January 7,
2004 court hearing the same judge called FDA's actions "highly suspicious."
On October 27, 2004 FDA's arbitrary and capricious promulgation
of this Final Rule resulted in a permanent injunction, remanding
the license to your agency to complete according to the law. The injunction
also halted what the judge called DoD's
"illegal" mandatory anthrax vaccination program.
Since late December 2004 FDA took
two major steps to bring back the use of this experimental vaccine.
First, FDA complied with the Defense Department and the Department of
Health and Human Services to issue rules for an Emergency Use Authorization
that would permit use of the vaccine despite its lack of a license. Since
the court injunction allowed voluntary immunization with informed consent,
the sole purpose of the EUA is to deny military service-members knowledge
of deaths, chronic autoimmune disorders, and birth defects known
by FDA to be associated with this BioPort anthrax
vaccine.
Second, FDA opened a ninety-day
comment period as a prerequisite to consideration of licensure of
the vaccine, having been sanctioned by the court for not having opened
the license to comment before issuing a final rule.
We are very concerned by FDA's actions,
which ignore the significant departures from Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act
standards in all aspects of this vaccine's licensing process.
Accordingly, we have prepared
the accompanying detailed comments to
make perfectly clear the many regulatory failures in this vaccine's
history. The quality of the data supporting licensure
is very poor, and almost all of the human data was obtained using
very different vaccine formulations. No valid bridging studies
exist to allow FDA to extrapolate data from these studies. FDA has used animal studies to justify licensure
when no valid correlate of immunity exists. There is a high degree of
product variability. The BioPort anthrax
vaccine has never demonstrated efficacy in humans for any route of infection,
and the very different protoype vaccine used
in the Brachman study did not demonstrate inhalation efficacy.
We understand that the vaccine is associated with a high rate of chronic,
serious illnesses.
We have provided FDA with
a large number of facts about the vaccine, and have footnoted relevant
documents so your staff can substantiate the scientific basis of our comments.
We believe there is abundant evidence to recategorize
BioPort's anthrax vaccine as a Category II biologic, "determined
to be unsafe or ineffective or to be misbranded and which should not continue
in interstate commerce." We have asked FDA to respond to
a number of questions posed in our comment, and we await your answers.
Human beings -- including military
service-members -- deserve to make informed choices about vaccines
and drugs. Unfortunately, FDA's past actions have repeatedly undermined
informed consent and have aided and abetted the military's unlawful cover-up
of the very real risks of this vaccine. We implore you to insure
that the agency's future regulatory actions place respect for both
the law and and the dignity of all American citizens before the demands
of the Department of Defense.
Our organizations appreciate this
opportunity to comment and to provide the agency our expertise with
anthrax vaccines. If the FDA follows the law and the science,
your licensing decision should be very simple.
Sincerely yours,
Meryl Nass, M.D., Director
Vera Sharav, President
Alliance for Human Research Protection.
Barbara Loe Fisher, President
National Vaccine Information Center
Steve Robinson, Executive Director
National Gulf War Resource Center
Detailed Comments Submitted to FDA
Re Anthrax Vaccine (312K pdf)
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