Province tries to run illegal trial with quack medicine
The Eastern Cape Health Department has instructed hospitals to give an untested medicine to patients with tuberculosis. It has not received ethical approval to proceed with this clinical trial. Now it appears the project has been scrapped, apparently after the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) asked the national government to intervene.
GroundUp has obtained a memo that the manager of the Nelson Mandela Bay Health district, Dr LP Mayekiso, sent to three hospitals on 27 January. The memo instructs the hospitals to start dispensing Immutides Spray to patients with tuberculosis (TB) from 1 March. "The goal is to boost the immune system of patients so badly affected by TB that they need admission to hospital," says the memo. It also says, "All these patients must stay on Immutides for the remainder of their TB treatment."
According to Stats SA data, TB is the infectious disease responsible for the most number of annual recorded deaths in South Africa. People with HIV are at particularly high risk of dying from TB. There are effective medicines that cure TB and they are available in the public health system.
Mayekiso wrote that a "research project must be launched that will evaluate the effect of adding Immutides Spray to the treatment regimen of all TB patients admitted to a TB hospital." This project would have run for six months and a report on it would have to be ready by the end of October. "During November 2014, the research report will be evaluated by the Top Management of [the health district] and the future use of Immutides Spray will be evaluated," the memo said.
There is no mention of whether patients will be asked to consent before taking the spray; this is a requirement before giving untested medicines to people. As far as GroundUp can ascertain, no ethics board has given the go-ahead for this research and the Medicines Control Council has not authorised it. Yet these are steps that are required in South Africa before testing a medicine on people, whether it is considered "complimentary", as this one is, or not.