WASHINGTON(AP)
A Minnesota family is trying to force a New Jersey drug company
to give their son an experimental drug for a fatal form of muscular
dystrophy, saying he'll die without it.
The boy's mother, Cheri Gunvalson, who helped persuade
Congress to significantly boost spending to find a cure for the
disease, filed a lawsuit along with her husband and son in federal
court in New Jersey Wednesday.
Jacob Gunvalson, 16, suffers from Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a
genetic, degenerative disease that mostly affects young boys.
Typically, those who suffer from it die in their 20s because of
weakness in their heart and lung muscles. There is no known cure,
but the Gunvalson family believes the experimental drug holds
hope.
The family claims that PTC Therapeutics of South Plainfield,
N.J., repeatedly promised them Jacob would have access to the drug,
known as PTC124, but then broke its word. The company denied ever
making that assurance.
Jacob, who lost his ability to walk about a year ago, said in an
interview that he thought he was going to get the drug many
times.
"To think you can get help, and then just in the last
second it's pulled out _ that's like getting your whole
future hopes and all that smashed," he said.
Jacob hopes to one day become a psychiatrist or psychologist to
help people facing "tough times."
"But it takes a lot of schooling to get done with
that," he said, "and I don't know how much longer I
have."
Chip Baird, PTC Therapeutics' chief financial officer, said
the company sympathizes with the Gunvalsons and other families
suffering from the disease, but that PTC has always communicated
with the Gunvalsons "in a clear and consistent
manner."
In 2001, Cheri Gunvalson teamed with the late Sen. Paul
Wellstone, D-Minn., for passage of the MD CARE Act, which increased
federal funding to study the disease. The legislation established
several "centers of excellence" _ since renamed
"Wellstone Centers" _ for muscular dystrophy
research.
The family claims the company discouraged the Gunvalsons from
enrolling Jacob in a preliminary, 28-day trial in 2005, saying it
wouldn't hurt his chances of getting into a later study. It
then used his absence from that original trial as a reason to
disqualify him from a current study.
Jacob is also ineligible for another study because patients have
to be able to walk to participate.
PTC's Baird said the family opted not to participate in the
clinical trial, but said the company will look for future
opportunities once the current trials are over. The Gunvalsons say
Jacob will probably be dead by then.
The Gunvalsons say they want access to the drug through a
"compassionate use exception," such as a single-patient
study. Jacob's physician says he's willing to do a study
but needs the company to provide the drug.
Dr. Richard S. Finkel, the principal investigator on the 28-day
trial and director of the neuromuscular program at Children's
Hospital of Philadelphia, said there was not enough safety data to
make such an exception.
"I realize these parents are all desperate and we as
physicians are as well," he said. "We are in this
together with the parents. But we have the burden of having to
consider the safety of our patients first, particularly when that
patient's a child."
The Food and Drug Administration has agreed to fast-track
PTC124, but a best-case scenario would be approval in 2011, Finkel
said.
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