US commission paves way for anthrax vaccine testing on children

20 Mar, 2013 10:14 / Updated 12 years ago

A US commission has advised that anthrax vaccination trials be carried out on children. The board gave strict guidelines for testing to put infants at no more than “minimal risk,” but critics accuse them of using children as guinea pigs.

The presidential commission described the necessity to test the vaccine on children because in the event of a mass bioterrorist attack a large proportion of the victims would be children. It advised to start the testing of the vaccine on young adults aged from 18 to 25 to first understand the risk before progressing on to younger participants.

"You'd work your way down from 18-year-olds,"
said Dr. John Parker, a retired army major general and chairman of the biodefense board. "If it were safe you'd go to 17-year-olds, then 16-year olds."

The commission, however, emphasized children would be subjected to “no more than minimal risk” by the tests, despite strong criticism from rights activists.

Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius called on the presidential commission to broach the ethical validity of using children in vaccination testing.

The Commission Chair, Amy Gutmann, said that "this is one of the most difficult ethical decisions the bioethics commission has undertaken."

“Our nation ethically must protect children enrolled in research studies, and we must also do our best to develop the knowledge needed to save children's lives during a possible emergency,” said Gutmann at a news conference on Tuesday.

Opposition to the report by the presidential commission likened testing the vaccine on children to using infants as guinea pigs as they are unable to fully understand the risks of participating in such a study.  

Vera Sharav, founder of the Alliance for Human Research Protection, said that if testing on children were to be carried out it would spell "moral harm for us as a nation and suffering for the children. They should have said, 'thou shalt not’.”

Opponents to testing argue that antibiotics would offer sufficient protection to children.

Side effects


The anthrax vaccine has been tested on around 2.9 million adults so far, most of whom were members of the armed forces being vaccinated against the threat of biological warfare in Iraq. A number of side effects were registered during the testing of the vaccination, including skin ulcers, fever and malaise.
 
"We have to wonder if, after all the data collected by the US Army on the side-effects experienced by soldiers, we would want to subject children to skin ulcers symptoms of the disease," said Jeanne Guillemin, author of ‘American Anthrax’, to Reuters.

Additionally, a study carried out by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention carried out a study in 2008 involving 1,563 adults who took the vaccine. Participants reported over 229 serious adverse effects, such as seizures, intracranial aneurism and cardiovascular disease, but only nine of these cases were attributed to the vaccine.