Untested Ebola therapies 'ethical'
Experimental therapies unproven as
safe for human use can be offered to Ebola patients provided certain
conditions are met, a World Health Organisation-convened panel has recommended in an effort to curtail the worst recorded outbreak of the disease.
West
Africa is experiencing the most severe and complex outbreak of Ebola in
history and if certain conditions are met - such as informed consent -
it is ethical to offer "unproven" interventions, the panel of ethicists,
medical experts and lay people concluded.
The panel said research
efforts had been invested in developing drugs and vaccines for the
disease over the past decade with some showing "promising" results in
the laboratory, but they had not yet been evaluated for safety in human
beings.
"In the particular circumstances of
this outbreak, and provided certain conditions are met, the panel
reached consensus that it is ethical to offer unproven interventions
with as yet unknown efficacy and adverse effects, as potential treatment
or prevention," the UN health agency said in a statement.
"Ethical
criteria must guide the provision of such interventions. These include
transparency about all aspects of care, informed consent, freedom of
choice, confidentiality, respect for the person, preservation of dignity
and involvement of the community."
The
panel, which includes UK experts Professor Peter Smith - of the London
School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and Professor Jeremy Farrar -
director of the Wellcome Trust, added that there was a "moral duty" to
evaluate interventions in the "best possible clinical trials under the
circumstances".
The findings
have been released amid growing demands for an experimental treatment
to be made available to Africans amid a rising death toll from the
disease which has been declared a public health emergency by WHO.
The virus has no known cure and causes symptoms including fever, vomiting,
muscle pain and bleeding. It is spread by direct contact with bodily
fluids like blood, sweat, urine, saliva and diarrhoea. Around 40% of
those infected are surviving the current outbreak.
The outbreak has centred on Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea.
So
far 1,013 people have died and 1,848 suspected, probable or confirmed
cases have been recorded. Nigeria, Africa's most populous country, has
confirmed 10 cases.
Two American aid workers diagnosed with the disease while working in a hospital
that treated Ebola patients and a Spanish priest, Father Miguel
Pajares, all of whom were evacuated back to their home countries - are
believed to have received the US-made experimental drug Zmapp. In spite
of this, Fr Pajares died today in Madrid.
Professor
Jonathan Ball, professor of molecular virology at the University of
Nottingham, said the panel's findings did not come as a "huge surprise".
But
he warned that using experimental therapies was not without risks,
including that of generating "mistrust" among African countries.
"You
certainly cannot say definitively that something which works and is
safe in animals will work and be safe in humans; I think there is a
risk," he said.
"However,
when you weigh that against the fact that there is 60% chance that you
will die of Ebola infection, you can understand how they reached the
decision."
He said he was concerned too about how clinical trials could be conducted effectively in the current situation.
"I
can absolutely understand why they have said they (the experimental
therapies) can be used but it worries me that we might end up none the
wiser at the end," he added.
Source: dailymail
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