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By
Myron Levin for the LA Times. This story has been
picked up widely all over the country
A memo from Merck & Co. shows that, nearly
a decade before the first public disclosure, senior
executives were concerned that infants were getting
an elevated dose of mercury in vaccinations containing
a widely used sterilizing agent.
The March 1991 memo, obtained by The Times, said
that 6-month-old
children who received their shots on schedule
would get a mercury dose up
to 87 times higher than guidelines for the maximum
daily consumption of
mercury from fish.
"When viewed in this way, the mercury load
appears rather large,"
said the memo from Dr. Maurice R. Hilleman, an
internationally renowned
vaccinologist. It was written to the president
of Merck's vaccine
division.
The memo was prepared at a time when U.S. health
authorities were
aggressively expanding their immunization schedule
by adding five new
shots for children in their first six months.
Many of these shots, as well as
some previously included on the vaccine schedule,
contained thimerosal, an
antibacterial compound that is nearly 50% ethyl
mercury, a neurotoxin.
Federal health officials disclosed for the first
time in 1999 that
many infants were being exposed to mercury above
health guidelines through
routine vaccinations. The announcement followed
a review by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration that was described at
the time as a first effort
to assess the cumulative mercury dose.
But the Merck memo shows that at least one major
manufacturer was
aware of the concern much earlier.
"The key issue is whether thimerosal, in
the amount given with the
vaccine, does or does not constitute a safety
hazard," the memo said.
"However, perception of hazard may be equally
important."
Merck officials would not discuss the contents
of the memo, citing
pending litigation.
Separately, the drug giant is trying to fend off
a legal onslaught
over Vioxx, the popular painkiller it introduced
in 1999. The company,
based in Whitehouse Station, N.J., faces hundreds
of lawsuits claiming that the drug caused heart
problems and that Merck concealed the risks. Merck,
which in September pulled Vioxx off the market,
has denied the allegations.
The legacy of thimerosal, meanwhile, also is causing
problems for
Merck and other drug companies.
More than 4,200 claims have been filed in a special
federal tribunal, the Vaccine Injury Compensation
Program, by parents asserting that their children
suffered autism or other neurodevelopmental disorders
from
mercury in vaccines. A handful of similar claims
are awaiting trial in civil
courts.
The plaintiffs cite various scientific studies
that they say prove the
dangers of thimerosal, including at the levels
found in vaccines.
Thimerosal has been largely removed from pediatric
vaccines in
recent years in what health officials have described
as a precautionary measure.
(This has been accomplished as drug makers have
voluntarily switched from
multi-dose vials of vaccine, which require a chemical
preservative like
thimerosal, to single-dose containers.) In September,
Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger signed legislation prohibiting
vaccines with more than
trace amounts of thimerosal from being given to
babies and pregnant women. Iowa has a similar
ban.
For their part, Merck and other vaccine makers,
along with many
government health officials and scientists, say
there is no credible
evidence of harm from the amounts of mercury once
widely present in kids'
shots. They cite a report in May by a committee
of the national Institute
of Medicine concluding that the evidence "favors
rejection of a causal
relationship" between vaccines and autism.
The seven-page Merck memo was provided to The
Times by James A.
Moody, a Washington lawyer who works with parent
groups on vaccine safety issues.
He said he obtained it from a whistle-blower whom
he would not name.
The memo provides the "first hard evidence
that the companies knew -
or at least Merck knew - that the children were
getting significantly more
mercury" than the generally accepted dose,
the lawyer said.
He also provided a copy to attorneys for Vera
Easter, a Texas woman
who blames thimerosal for the condition of her
7-year-old son, Jordan, who
is autistic and mentally retarded. The Easter
lawsuit is pending in U.S.
District Court for the Eastern District of Texas.
The defendants include
Merck; rival vaccine makers GlaxoSmithKline, Aventis
Pasteur Inc. and
Wyeth; and thimerosal developer Eli Lilly &
Co.
Easter's lawyer, Andy Waters, described the memo
as "incredibly
damning and incredibly significant." After
receiving it in the fall, he
confronted Merck lawyers about why he hadn't seen
it earlier.
In a letter to Waters in October, Merck attorneys
said they had in
fact made available 32 boxes of records, but that
the copying service
hired by the plaintiffs for some reason had failed
to copy several of the
boxes - including the one with the Hilleman memo.
"The memo," said company spokeswoman
Mary Elizabeth Blake, "was
produced voluntarily by Merck in the ordinary
course of discovery
proceedings."
Hilleman is a former senior vice president of
Merck who developed
numerous vaccines for the company. A 1999 profile
in the Philadelphia
Inquirer said that "it is no exaggeration
to assert, as many scientists
do, that Maurice Hilleman has saved more lives
than any other living
scientist."
Hilleman, 85, currently director of the Merck
Institute for Vaccinology, had officially retired
and was a consultant to Merck when he wrote the
'91 memo. He declined to be interviewed.
The memo was sent to Dr. Gordon Douglas, then
head of Merck's
vaccine division and now a consultant for the
Vaccine Research Center at the
National Institutes of Health. Douglas also declined
to comment.
The memo stated that regulators in several countries
had raised
concerns about thimerosal, including in Sweden,
where the chemical was
being removed from vaccines.
"The public awareness has been raised by
the sequential wave of
experiences in Sweden including mercury exposure
from additives, fish,
contaminated air, bird deaths from eating mercury-treated
seed grains,
dental amalgam leakage, mercury allergy, etc.,"
the memo said.
It noted that Sweden had set a daily maximum allowance
of mercury
from fish of 30 micrograms for a 160-pound adult,
roughly the same guideline
used by the FDA. Adjusting for the body weight
of infants, Hilleman calculated
that babies who received their shots on schedule
could get 87 times the
mercury allowance.
The Swedish and FDA guidelines work out to about
four-tenths of a
microgram of mercury per kilogram of body weight.
A stricter standard of
one-tenth of a microgram per kilogram has been
adopted by the
Environmental Protection Agency and endorsed by
the National Research Council.
These standards are based on methyl mercury, the
type found in fish
and airborne emissions from power plants. Though
toxic, the ethyl mercury
in thimerosal may be less hazardous than methyl
mercury, some scientists say, because it is more
quickly purged from the body.
"It appears essentially impossible, based
on current information, to
ascertain whether thimerosal in vaccines constitutes
or does not
constitute a significant addition to the normal
daily input of mercury from diverse sources,"
the memo said.
"It is reasonable to conclude" that
it should be eliminated where
possible, he said, "especially where use
in infants and young children is
anticipated."
In the U.S., however, thimerosal continued to
be added throughout
the '90s to a number of widely used pediatric
vaccines for hepatitis B,
bacterial meningitis, diphtheria, whooping cough
and tetanus.
It was added to multi-dose vials of vaccine to
prevent contamination
from repeated insertion of needles to extract
the medicine. It was not
needed in single-dose vials, but most doctors
and clinics preferred to
order vaccine in multi-dose containers because
of the lower cost and easier
storage.
The Hilleman memo said that unlike regulators
in Sweden and some
other countries, "the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration . does not have this
concern for thimerosal."
A turning point came in 1997 when Congress passed
a bill ordering an
FDA review of mercury ingredients in food and
drugs.
Completed in 1999, the review revealed the high
level of mercury
exposure from pediatric vaccines and raised a
furor. In e-mails later
released at a congressional hearing, an FDA official
said health authorities could be criticized for
"being 'asleep at the switch' for decades
by
allowing a potentially hazardous compound to remain
in many childhood
vaccines, and not forcing manufacturers to exclude
it from new products."
It would not have taken "rocket science"
to add up the amount of
exposure as the prescribed number of shots was
increasing, one of the
e-mails said.
While asserting that there was no proof of harm,
the U.S. Public
Health Service in July 1999 called on manufacturers
to go mercury-free by
switching to single-dose vials. Soon after, Merck
introduced a mercury-free version of its hepatitis
B vaccine, replacing the only thimerosal-containing
vaccine it was still marketing at the time, a
company spokesman said.
By 2002, thimerosal had been eliminated or reduced
to trace levels
in nearly all childhood vaccines. One exception
is the pediatric flu vaccine
made by Aventis and still sold mainly in multi-dose
vials.
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