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The cruel sham that is federal right-to-try has passed. Let patients beware!

“Right-to-try” laws are a cruel sham that purport to allow terminally ill patients access to promising experimental drugs. In reality, they strip away many protections and leave vulnerable patients on their own. After four years and a number of toothless state laws, a federal version of “right-to-try” has passed Congress and is poised to become law. Once President Trump signs the bill this week, this federal version of “right-to-try” will leave terminally ill patients on their own and will likely be the first step in returning the FDA to its pre-thalidomide state, in which it only required evidence of safety, not efficacy, to approve drugs.

It’s all over but the fat lady singing.

Last week, of the two federal “right-to-try” bills under consideration in Congress, the House of Representatives just passed the worst one, meaning that the bill, previously passed by the Senate, is on its way to President Trump’s desk to be signed. I couldn’t let this go by without one more post on it, just to remind people how bad this bill is, how patient-hostile it will be.

Regular readers should be familiar with the saga of right-to-try, which I have written about many times before. However, given that the last time I visited this saga was in January, when right-to-try supporters, with the help of Vice President Mike Pence and the Koch Brothers’ Americans for Prosperity and Freedom Partners, were making a final push to pass a federal right-to-try law, and March, when the House passed a slightly less harmful version of the original bill, it’s still worth going through the history of how we got to this point, where Congress is on the verge of passing a bill that, if passed, would strip important patient protections from terminally ill patients. It’s a saga that goes back four years. We will look at the actual bill being considered in the House, so that I can explain why it’s actually the worse possible option, but first a little history.

How right-to-try got here

As I pointed out what seems to me to be so long ago, when a right-to-try bill was on the verge of passing in Colorado, when right-to-try came to my own state, and as these laws spread like kudzu all over the US, even coming back from the dead after a veto in California, the very concept behind right-to-try is designed not to help patients, but to give the appearance of helping terminally ill patients as it serves as the first step in cutting the FDA out of drug approval and regulation as much as possible. Consider: these laws, being state laws, have no teeth because drug approval is under federal jurisdiction. Sure, a state can say that patients have a right to experimental therapeutics, but unless the FDA agrees to say yes, no company with a drug in clinical trials for FDA approval is going to risk the wrath of the FDA by taking part in right-to-try. Basically, such laws are sold based on false hope and fear. Indeed, some libertarians even used the fear of Ebola as a tactic to promote such laws and accused the FDA of killing patients with bureaucratic inertia.

It’s much worse than that, however, because these laws are actively anti-patient, the claims of their supporters notwithstanding. The only requirements these laws have for testing of the drugs being “tried” are (1) that they have passed phase I clinical trials and (2) that they are still under development and undergoing further clinical trials. Anyone out there who is familiar with clinical trials knows that passing phase I is an incredibly low bar for safety. Phase I trials are “first in human” trials in which a small number of patients test the drug. Basically, the dose is escalated until unacceptable toxicity is encountered. The dose just below that is called the “maximum tolerated dose,” or MTD. The main purposes of phase I trials is thus to identify the highest dose that can be safely used and to identify the most severe adverse reactions and side effects. That’s it. Phase I trials are not designed to determine if a drug has any efficacy. Saying that a drug that’s passed phase I testing is safe, as I’ve heard many right-to-try advocates claim, is utter and complete bullshit. Phase I trials do not prove safety. They merely show that the drug is not too toxic to continue with efficacy testing.

Consistent with their libertarian origin, right-to-try laws also strip away many protections from patients. First, there is no requirement that companies provide the drugs for free or at a reduced price. Indeed, these laws explicitly state that insurance companies are under no obligation to pay, even though such a statement is unnecessary given that insurance companies don’t reimburse for experimental therapies. As a result, the only people who would potentially be able to access right-to-try are the rich or people who are very good at fundraising. A terminally ill person trying to access right-to-try can easily spend away his estate or even go bankrupt before dying. It’s even worse than that. The language in many of these laws can be interpreted to mean not just that insurance companies don’t have to pay for right-to-try but that they don’t have to pay for medical care as a result of complications suffered from using a drug under right-to-try.

Another aspect of these bills is, as Jann Bellamy and I have described many times, how, compared to existing expanded access programs, they strip patient protections away from patients who access them. One way to see this is by comparing what happens when a patient accesses an experimental therapeutic under the FDA expanded access program to what happens when another patient accesses one under a right-to-try law. Under FDA expanded access, patients retain full protections under federal and state laws. They can sue for malpractice if there is any, and their care is still monitored by an institutional review board (IRB), with any adverse events recorded and considered by the FDA. Moreover, the FDA approves nearly all such requests (99%). In contrast, under right-to-try, there is no IRB oversight. It’s all between the company and the patient, a libertarian paradise!

These laws also immunize companies providing right-to-try drugs and physicians overseeing their administration from liability. Right-to-try laws also limit what patients can do in the event of malpractice or negligence. All of them broadly immunize physicians advising or administering right-to-try medications or using right-to-try devices against malpractice suits or actions against their medical license by the state medical board related to their participation in right-to-try. All of them also immunize companies providing experimental therapeutics under right-to-try from liability. All of them contain provisions stating that state employees can’t interfere with a patient seeking right-to-try, which could be interpreted to mean that a doctor at an academic medical center at a state university couldn’t counsel a patient not to seek right-to-try without running afoul of the law. As Jann notes, even if state authorities believe, for example, that an elderly person is being exploited for financial gain by a physician, presumably this provision would prohibit their acting.

Of course, the ideologues at the Goldwater Institute knew all along that state laws weren’t going to do anything to make access to experimental therapeutics easier for terminally ill patients. Indeed, not surprisingly, they haven’t; basically right-to-try thus far has been a miserable failure, with almost no one accessing drugs through it. There’s a reason why I refer to state right-to-try laws as “placebo” legislation. They give the appearance of doing something but really don’t do anything to address the issue of making experimental drugs more widely available to terminally ill patients. The idea, of course, was for these state laws to build momentum and pressure for Congress to act. The first iteration of federal laws was the Compassionate Freedom of Choice Act of 2014. It didn’t go anywhere, probably because it was too early. Another federal right-to-try bill was introduced in 2016, but it, too, went nowhere, likely stymied by electoral politics.

Then last year a federal right-to-try effort was undertaken again in the form of S. 204: The Trickett Wendler Right to Try Act of 2017, introduced into the Senate by Ron Johnson (R-WI) and H.R. 878: Right to Try Act of 2017, introduced by Rep. Andy Biggs (R-AZ). An attempt was made to insert right-to-try language into The Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA), the law that allows the FDA to collect user fees from drug companies to fund the drug approval process, which was due to expire at the end of last September and needed to be renewed. To get a vote on right-to-try, Sen. Johnson held PDUFA hostage by threatening to obstruct it. Fortunately, this effort failed, but a version of right-to-try did ultimately pass the Senate, the Trickett Wendler Right to Try Act of 2017. This is the bill that is coming up for a vote next week. Oddly enough, it’s not the most recent version of the bill.

The Trickett Wendler Right to Try Act

So let’s discuss the bill again, S. 204, the Trickett Wendler Right to Try Act of 2017 (or, if you want the full version of the name, the Trickett Wendler, Frank Mongiello, Jordan McLinn, and Matthew Bellina Right to Try Act of 2017). The bill was championed by Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI), who has been flogging it for at least two years and managed to get a vote on the bill by threatening to hold the renewal of the bill funding the FDA hostage unless right-to-try provisions were attached to it. Had that happened, that would have been a disaster, because it would have “baked” right-to-try into the very founding legislation that funds the FDA through user fees. Ultimately, Sen. Johnson appears to have been placated by a promise to put right-to-try to a vote. Predictably, the bill passed unanimously last August.

When the bill went over to the House, there was less enthusiasm for it, at least as written. Indeed, Sen. Greg Walden, Chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, was opposed to the bill as written, and his was the committee that had to vote to send the bill to the floor for a vote. Unfortunately, then as now, Rep. Walden was under great pressure from the Koch-backed Freedom Partners, Vice President Mike Pence, and the House leadership to send the bill to the floor for a vote. Rep. Walden managed to improve the bill considerably by actually consulting with the FDA, although, as I’ll briefly relate, even the new House version that was passed (H.R. 5247) wasn’t that great. It just wasn’t as awful as S. 204.

And, make no mistake, S.204 is awful. Let’s take a look at some of the provisions. As with all the state right-to-try laws, it defines an “eligible investigational drug” for right-to-try as a drug that has passed phase I testing, has not been approved by the FDA but has a pending application for approval, and is undergoing further clinical trials. Now here’s where things get patient-hostile:

(c) Use Of Clinical Outcomes.—

“(1) IN GENERAL.—Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, the Public Health Service Act, or any other provision of Federal law, the Secretary may not use a clinical outcome associated with the use of an eligible investigational drug pursuant to this section to delay or adversely affect the review or approval of such drug under section 505 of this Act or section 351 of the Public Health Service Act unless—

“(A) the Secretary makes a determination, in accordance with paragraph (2), that use of such clinical outcome is critical to determining the safety of the eligible investigational drug; or

“(B) the sponsor requests use of such outcomes.

So, basically, S. 204 as passed states that the FDA can’t use a clinical outcome or adverse event associated with the use of a right-to-try drug in its determination of licensure for sale unless the Secretary of Health and Human Services decides that the use of these outcomes is critical to determining the safety of the drug or the applicant wants them used. Not the FDA official charged with overseeing the approval of the drug. Not even the FDA Commissioner. The Secretary of HHS. How often do you think that the HHS Secretary will step in and insist on the use of right-to-try outcomes for the approval of a drug? I’d be willing to bet that the answer would be: Not very often—or even basically never.

It is fortunate, then, that there is an additional provision that allows the HHS Secretary to delegate this authority. This provision, however, is less than it appears:

(2) LIMITATION.—If the Secretary makes a determination under paragraph (1)(A), the Secretary shall provide written notice of such determination to the sponsor, including a public health justification for such determination, and such notice shall be made part of the administrative record. Such determination shall not be delegated below the director of the agency center that is charged with the premarket review of the eligible investigational drug.

This is somewhat better, in that the HHS Secretary can delegate this decision to the FDA Commissioner or the director of the specific agency within the FDA charged with premarket review of the drug. Even so, notice the language. Rather than what the default should be (that all outcome data should be considered when examining a drug for FDA approval), this law would force the HHS Secretary or a high level delegate, to justify including right-to-try outcomes in the deliberations over whether the drug under consideration should receive FDA approval for marketing. In other words, the burden of proof is on the FDA, not the company seeking approval for its drug, as to why right-to-try outcomes should be included.

Then, of course, there are provisions regarding liability:

(b) No Liability.—

(1) ALLEGED ACTS OR OMISSIONS.—With respect to any alleged act or omission with respect to an eligible investigational drug provided to an eligible patient pursuant to section 561B of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and in compliance with such section, no liability in a cause of action shall lie against—

(A) a sponsor or manufacturer; or

(B) a prescriber, dispenser, or other individual entity (other than a sponsor or manufacturer), unless the relevant conduct constitutes reckless or willful misconduct, gross negligence, or an intentional tort under any applicable State law.

I find it rather fascinating (and telling) that there is a carve-out from the freedom from liability of doctors who administer right-to-try such that this provision no longer applies to willful or “criminal misconduct, “reckless misconduct,” or “gross negligence relative to the applicable standard of care and practice with respect to the administration or dispensing of such investigational drug.” So, in fairness, this is an improvement, although one wonders why this carve-out from the immunity from liability for sponsors and manufacturers? Basically, S. 204 leaves doctors out to twist in the wind but still protects manufacturers.

There are also provisions in S. 204 that require the FDA to publish right-to-try usage to its website. That is probably the least objectionable part of the bill.

To the House and back

When S. 204 went over to the House, it ultimately became H.R. 5247, and, thanks to Rep. Walden’s committee working with the FDA, there were a number of improvements. For example:

(ii) The requirements described in this clause are the requirements under subsection (b) or (c) of section 561, including—

(I) the reporting of safety information, from clinical trials or any other source, as required by section 312.32 of title 21, Code of Federal Regulations (or any successor regulations);

(II) ensuring that the informed consent requirements of part 50 of title 21, Code of the Federal Regulations (or any successor regulations) are met; and

(III) ensuring that review by an institutional review board is obtained in a manner consistent with the requirements of part 56 of title 21, Code of the Federal Regulations (or any successor regulations).

This seems to be requiring informed consent through standard federal regulations. However, there is a caveat, as noted by Holly Fernandez Lynch, whose Tweetstorm is worth revisiting:

She points out that those federal regulations explicitly state: “No informed consent, whether oral or written, may include any exculpatory language through which the subject or the representative is made to waive or appear to waive any of the subject’s legal rights, or releases or appears to release the investigator, the sponsor, the institution, or its agents from liability for negligence.” This is a conflict that would probably require rewriting that section of federal regulations on informed consent. There is also now the requirement that an institutional review board (IRB) be involved in any right-to-try requests. I’m not sure how this would work, given that the bill would cut the FDA out of right-to-try requests. As Fernandez notes hopefully, perhaps IRBs charged with overseeing such requests would ask the FDA for guidance.

I won’t go into much more detail about the House version that passed, because that’s not the version that ultimately passed last week. Basically, the House version was, surprisingly enough, a significant improvement over the version that just passed Congress last week. However, it was still pretty bad. Of course, leave it to Congress to pick the worst of the two bills out there.

The final push

Make no mistake. There were powerful forces pushing for this vote. In the normal course of Congressional activity, what would have happened next is that Congress would have convened a conference committee to reconcile the House and Senate versions of the bill that have passed, and then the reconciled bill would be voted on again by the House and the Senate. This is not what happened. Here’s what did happen and why.

Originally, the House version that passed went to the Senate for consideration. At that time, Sen. Charles Schumer blocked consideration of that bill:

The announcement on Thursday that it will take up the Senate’s bill comes as congressional momentum had appeared to grind to a halt the past two months, leaving the path forward on the measure unclear.

Senate Democrats last year didn’t object to the bill Johnson introduced with Sen. Joe Donnelly (D-Ind.), which also sidesteps the FDA.

But since the opposition from House Democrats, Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) has voiced concerns about taking the FDA out of the equation and objected to a request to bring the House bill up by unanimous consent.

House Democrats voiced concerns about patient safety that were echoed by some advocacy groups.

At the time, Schumer’s move appeared to doom right-to-try. Unfortunately, as I have pointed out multiple times before, powerful forces were backing right-to-try, including the Koch brothers and Vice President Mike Pence. Opponents to right-to-try almost certainly shot themselves in the foot by blocking the Senate from considering the House version, which, while bad, was not as bad as the Senate version. (At least the House version would have left open the possibility of IRBs being involved in right-to-try cases.) As a result, the only option that right-to-try supporters had left to fall back on was the even more awful Senate version, which had to pass essentially as is because the Senate had been blocked from considering the less horrible Hosue version. So the Republican powers that be used various parliamentary rules to make it happen. Basically, the fix was in, as Richard Plotkin noted:

It appears the Senate understood that H.R. 5247 shouldn’t be brought up for a vote, which resulted in the current effort to have the House approve S. 204. It is not disputed that S. 204 was passed by the Senate in response to Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wisc.) putting a hold on Prescription Drug User Fee Act (PDUFA).

Because of this, there was no real opportunity for the Senate to consider S. 204 on the merits. In other words, S. 204 does not have the support of the Senate and was approved based on the unconscionable “wheeling and dealing” by Johnson.

Add to that pressure from Vice President Pence, President Trump, and the Koch brothers, an I knew that this train would be almost impossible to stop. Even FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb appeared to have recognized that right-to-try was going to pass and had given up completely, as these recent Tweets showed:

Here’s what Gottlieb said that STAT News interview:

Gottlieb said his agency will have to work harder to protect patients than it would have had to under the structure set up in the alternative bill, which was spearheaded in large part by Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Greg Walden of Oregon. The bill the House will vote on next week, from Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.), didn’t include as much of the FDA’s input and could open the pathway to more patients.

“In terms of making sure that it balances [access to experimental drugs] against appropriate patient protections, I think the Walden bill gives us less work to do,” Gottlieb said. “With the Johnson bill, we’d have to do a little bit more … in guidance and perhaps in regulation to achieve some of those goals, and I think those are the goals that Congress wants us to achieve.”

He said the newer Walden bill “baked in more of the technical assistance we provided.”

And his walkback:

In a subsequent interview Thursday afternoon, Gottlieb added that he is supportive of the Johnson bill, and said he had not realized the House was set to vote on that bill when he spoke with STAT earlier in the day.

“We can implement the Johnson bill in a way that achieves what Chairman Walden set out to do,” Gottlieb said.

“We felt that there were certain aspects of the [Johnson] legislation that could be modified to build in additional patient protections, but if you weren’t able to do that legislatively, that [there] was a pathway by which you do that administratively and still remain consistent with both the letter and the spirit of this law,” he added.

Was that whistling I heard at the gate of the graveyard?

The real purpose of right-to-try

In the end, right-to-try has almost nothing to do with actually helping terminally ill patients access promising experimental therapeutics that might save their lives. It never has been. In actuality, right-to-try is a first step in weakening the FDA, with the ultimate goal of reducing it to a pre-thalidomide, pre-Kefauver-Harris Amendment, which required the FDA to assure not just drug safety but efficacy as well.

Now that this toxic version of right-to-try has passed, you can bet that it won’t be long before the anti-regulation ideologues at the Goldwater Institute will start asking, “Why should right-to-try apply only to terminally ill patients? What about patients who are just seriously ill?” And so it will begin. Then after that, the next question will be: Why just seriously ill patients? Why not everyone? (Because, you know, freedom.) It’s already begun on other fronts. For instance, the Goldwater Institute has launched a campaign in the name of “free speech” to allow manufacturers to share information with physicians about off-label uses of approved drugs. Elsewhere, the Foundation for Economic Education is promoting its Free to Choose Medicine plan, which would basically require only safety testing of drugs for them to be approved, thus moving us back to the pre-1962 situation. Right-to-try is just the beginning.

Remember, the Goldwater Institute, which tries to paint itself as a libertarian “think tank,” has never been a true think tank. Rather, it has always been a far right-wing advocacy organization, so much so that before he died Barry Goldwater actually wanted his name removed from the group, but backed off because the Institute was dear to his brother. Unfortunately, the press treats the Goldwater Institute as a real think tank when it really isn’t. Rather, it’s part of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), a corporate-funded bill mill. That’s why, before there was right-to-try at the state level in 2014, there was a Goldwater Institute-written legislative template, a pre-written bill if you will, that could be modified as needed by states to fit into their existing regulatory framework. It’s why all state-level right-to-try laws contain the same elements, such as requiring only phase I testing and an open phase II trial to make a drug eligible for right-to-try. It’s why all state right-to-try laws contain libertarian tropes like elimination of liability for companies and doctors participating in right-to-try, and provisions that basically leave terminally ill patients on their own if things go south.

Right-to-try was, is, and has only been very little about actually helping patients. Rather, it’s always been far more about dismantling the FDA and giving drug and device manufacturers more freedom to market drugs and devices with much less testing than it has been about helping patients. Now that right-to-try has passed, we will find out the effects, which will likely either range from very little, given that drug companies are still free to turn down right-to-try requests, to widespread complications among terminally ill patients. If the former happens, you can bet that the Goldwater Institute and its fellow anti-regulation travelers will use that “failure” as a pretext to further weaken the FDA’s regulatory authority. If the latter happens, you can bet that the Goldwater Institute won’t be doing anything to help the patients harmed by its reckless law. Basically, this bill, when signed into law, will legalize Stanislaw Burzynski’s entire business model at the federal level.

Regardless of what happens, I also fear that the next steps will be to loosen regulations against promoting off-label drug use, expanding the definition of who’s eligible for right-to-try, and otherwise dismantling patient protections in the name of “deregulation.” The possibilities are endless, and the Goldwater Institute has tasted success with right-to-try. It won’t stop now. Neutralizing the FDA has long been one of its major goals, and it will continue to chip away, its goal being to leave the FDA in a state so weakened that a new age of snake oil will be ushered in under the delusion that the free market will guarantee drug safety.

By Orac

Orac is the nom de blog of a humble surgeon/scientist who has an ego just big enough to delude himself that someone, somewhere might actually give a rodent's posterior about his copious verbal meanderings, but just barely small enough to admit to himself that few probably will. That surgeon is otherwise known as David Gorski.

That this particular surgeon has chosen his nom de blog based on a rather cranky and arrogant computer shaped like a clear box of blinking lights that he originally encountered when he became a fan of a 35 year old British SF television show whose special effects were renowned for their BBC/Doctor Who-style low budget look, but whose stories nonetheless resulted in some of the best, most innovative science fiction ever televised, should tell you nearly all that you need to know about Orac. (That, and the length of the preceding sentence.)

DISCLAIMER:: The various written meanderings here are the opinions of Orac and Orac alone, written on his own time. They should never be construed as representing the opinions of any other person or entity, especially Orac's cancer center, department of surgery, medical school, or university. Also note that Orac is nonpartisan; he is more than willing to criticize the statements of anyone, regardless of of political leanings, if that anyone advocates pseudoscience or quackery. Finally, medical commentary is not to be construed in any way as medical advice.

To contact Orac: [email protected]

21 replies on “The cruel sham that is federal right-to-try has passed. Let patients beware!”

After all, why should pharmaceutical companies have to foot the bill for expensive clinical trials and safety testing of their treatments, when they can just exploit desperate volunteers to be their guinea pigs for free? After all, they were probably gonna die anyway. Yay, free market! /sarc

I know you put the sarcasm disclaimer in there; however, working in the biopharma industry, my wife and myself fully support FDA regulations and do not approve of this bill. And many of the “boots on the ground” employees do not support stripping the FDA of their regulatory authority. Disclaimer: I am a quality consultant who makes money off of regulations, though I like to think that money is not my motivator for my opinion.

Off label use means prescribing a drug that has been thoroughly tested and approved for one condition for a different condition. So we have a much better picture of the side effects and contradictions than with right to try, which has only completed level 1 testing.

To add to what squirrellite said, and reiterate what Orac has told us: in a Phase 1 clinical trial, which is the first stage of human testing, the goal is ONLY to determine how toxic a drug is. Not whether it is safe. Not even if it works.

Experimental drugs are given to HEALTHY people, people who do NOT have the condition being treated. The goal is only to determine what dose is too much before it makes people really sick, and what side effects are reported. As the drug moves through Phase 2 and Phase 3 testing, additional information on toxicity and side effects will be collected, but they’ll also start working to show whether the treatment is even effective. Phase 4 clinical trials come AFTER drug approval by the FDA, when the drug is marketed. Medical researchers will collect additional data on safety and efficacy. Sometimes that data shows serious adverse outcomes that weren’t reported in the Phase 3 trials (in the sick population). A good example is what happened with VIoxx, a cox 2 inhibitor (NSAID) that resulted in serious heart injuries. It worked. It just wasn’t safe.

Disasters can happen with Phase I trials. The classic example is the Theralizumab disaster. Six volunteers suffered castostrophic organ failure at a sub clinical dose that was less than what was used in animal trials (500 times lower than the animal dose). One man lost fingers and toes, and while all went home none are expected to recover completely.

When doctors use drugs off label, we already have data on safety and efficacy for the purpose for which they were developed. Sometimes doctors notice patients who take a drug for one purpose have less problems with something else. An example is amitriptyline (Elavil), a trycyclic antidepressant. It’s been around for decades. Depressed patients who were taking it reported a marked decrease in headache frequency, or other chronic pain. It is now used as adjuvant therapy with other drugs to control migraines and chronic pain. I can tell you as a chronic migraine sufferer, it works. Sadly I can no longer take it as it causes my heart to beat irregularly (was probably prolonging my QT interval but I just quit taking it instead of getting an EKG). The point of that is this: just because a drug is proven safe doesn’t mean everyone can take it. All drugs can produce potentially serious side effects.

This is why right to try is a horrible idea. These whackadoodles want desperate and sick people to be able to take drugs that aren’t even proven safe in healthy people. They want the pharma companies and doctors to be free from consequence when things go bad (and they will). They provide no mechanism to pay for the drugs, so the only silver lining is most people won’t be able to afford right to try. Even if the drug companies agree to provide a drug, they only can make limited amounts so the costs will be astronomical.

But as Orac points out, this horrible law will make quackery legal under the auspice of “clinical trial.” And in today’s age of GoFundMe, desperate patients will pluck on the heart strings of caring people to fund quackery. Stanislaw Burzynski is going to go laughing all the way to the bank.

And, of course, the anti-science, anti-vaccine ghouls will have no objection even though this travesty immunizes all those eeebil corporations and the doctors in their thrall who use this legislation to promote whatever crackpot quackery they find appealing. It even takes the FDA out of the oversight picture. As Orac states above it will be essentially a ‘business agreement’ between the poor patient and the manufacturers and providers of the drugs/potions/treatments with everyone legally exempt from responsibility.
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It is essentially – “Every man for himself! If you’re injured you can’t sue anyone because you exercised your Freedumb! and voluntarily agreed to use the snake oil. The companies and providers and the US gubmint ain’t required to tell you sh!t about the safety or efficacy of that snake oil so they laugh at your lawsuits.”
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Contrast the conniptions they have at the mere thought of the 1986 National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act (NCVIA) which established the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (VICP or NVICP) which provides a federal no-fault system for compensating vaccine-related injuries or death.
The NCVIA did indemnify vaccine manufacturers from most torts; but, on the technical side, the vaccine manufacturers must still meet FDA licensing requirements for safety and efficacy.
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This is like a quack version of the NCVIA for snake oil manufacturers and dispensers/promoters except there is no FDA protection/oversight and there is no federal compensation program for patients who are injured by the quackery.
Stanislaw Burzynski and Kevin Trudeau will probably look like pikers compared to what we may see in the future.
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(I’m assuming that foreign quackery will also be “right to try” so we’ll even get imported quackery and the scammers promoting it… Yay!)

Technically for a drug to be eligible for right to try, it has to be part of a clinical trial.

Unfortunately, in an effort to improve the transparency of clinical trials, we now have ClinicalTrials.gov. The problem is, to improve transparency we created a vehicle for quacks like Buzynski to create fake trials with fake or weak IRBs and never report results. Quacks will use this to create ghost trials to sell their quackery. There is no law enforcement mechanism in place to stop them. Consider how long it’s taken for law enforcement to deal with computer crimes. They lacked detectives who knew anything about computers. It took decades for them to even start catching up with the hackers and the crooks, and that’s why computer crimes is such a serious financial issue today.

We’re going to see something similar with right to try, mark my works. Law enforcement will be impotent to do anything about it because the people who know how to run investigations don’t know jack about science or medicine.

@ Brian Curtis:

Unfortunately, there are many who feel what you express without the sarc tag.

I tried, briefly, yesterday to explain this to an enthusiastic group of friends–I was nearly tarred and feathered for being such a grumpus–all I said was “this bill is not what it seems”. I got no further before being waved off. These people are completely taken in by the mere title “Right To Try”. They have not looked beyond that at all. They are unaware of the Goldwater Institute, unaware of the threat to the FDA, unaware of what a Phase I trial is, unaware of the legal ramifications. All they see is “help for the terminally ill–give them a chance”. Any further attempt to clarify was met with, “we’re entitled to our opinion”. These people are democrats and loathe Trump and Ron Johnson, who sponsored this debacle. Go figure. I’m pretty sure they don’t even know or care who sponsored it.

I’m so discouraged. : ((

As I said four years ago, opposing right-to-try is viewed the same way as opposing mom, apple pie and the American flag. You might as well declare that you support torturing puppies. You’ll get the same reaction.

I got that reaction at work, and I work in biopharma! I even had the very specific example of a nearby company whose treatment caused fatal side effects in several patients and the trial was pulled.
If I can’t explain “I don’t think people should have all their money taken for something that has an incredibly low probability of working and might kill them” to people who have worked on clinical trials that failed, well, it’s going to be next to impossible to explain it to anyone else.

Sadly, the only way I see this law being reversed is if someone very famous dies from “right to try” in a graphically horrible way (very publicly). It’s terribly depressing.

I hear you JustaTech.

I constantly talk to people who say, “well if there’s a chance shouldn’t you take it?”

As someone with 7 years experience in hospice nursing, I can confidently say NO. No you should not, not if the odds are so long as to be meaningless in terms of having any kind of real chance. There’s a difference between hope and false hope the right to try people disingenuously and shamelessly exploit.

Research is showing that terminally ill patients who choose hospice live longer and better than those who choose aggressive but futile treatment at end of life. No one lives for ever; we will all get to a point where how we die is as important as long long it takes us to die, and becomes part of how we live.

Right now people don’t get it. They don’t want to. The idea of death scares people so much they willingly blind themselves to it. I think until more Gen Xers and millennial go through the process of putting the Boomers to rest, and see what dying in America can really entail, that the right to try will have cachet with people.

Indeed, some libertarians even used the fear of Ebola as a tactic to promote such laws

Cluster randomization counts as Phase III, right?

My medical science is simple: flush out your colon using a colon-cleanser, or balance the Four Humours, whether blood, air, yellow bile and black bile, etc etc, or place magical stones like Amethyst in your front top pocket to instil its energy of healing you, or the historical science that I have a bright idea, with scientific proof in the faith that what we know about history is false, and that the Romans weren’t all war heroes, so I say about that peace out! Peace is part of this science. However not all my faiths in science are medical science, but getting back to the original subject, there’s a danger of medical pseudoscience, e.g. drugs can cure, what a load of hogwash! Drugs can’t cure, because the patient will need them for the rest of their lives, and the patient never gets cured, and the belief that medicine makes you better is proven false, although I couldn’t prove it to delusional believers in the religion of the doctor. So, as a doctor, who has painstakingly studied alternative medicine, say, humourism, for 3 months, on Wikipedia and the four part series on YouTube, I know. And I know from experience that the patient sometimes doesn’t like me, but they are convinced that my medicine works, which isn’t about pleasing the patient, but a step towards wellness, and I think, other than drug-based remedies, medical science is the future.

I really, really hope you’re trying to be funny. Also, Paragraphs, please!

If you really believe this, that “Drugs can’t cure, because the patient will need them for the rest of their lives”, well, what about antibiotics? Those cure the infection and the patient stops taking them.

And who the heck ever said the Romans (I’m assuming you mean Ancient Romans) we all war heroes? Most of the famous ones were authors and philosophers, and the odd cook. Virgil, Apicius, Livy, Pliny (elder and younger), and your best buddy Galen.

You’re very odd.

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