WASHINGTON
(AP) — Terminally ill patients do not have a constitutional right to be
treated with experimental drugs, even if they likely will be dead
before the medicine is approved, a federal appeals court said Tuesday.
The ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit overturned last year's decision by a smaller panel of
the same court, which held that terminally ill patients may not be
denied access to potentially lifesaving drugs.
The full court disagreed, saying in an 8-2 ruling that it
would not create a constitutional right for patients to assume "any
level of risk" without regard to medical testing.
"Terminally ill patients desperately need curative
treatments," Judge Thomas B. Griffith wrote for the majority. But
"their deaths can certainly be hastened by the use of a potentially
toxic drug with no proven therapeutic benefit."
Food and Drug Administration approval of drugs generally
requires extensive testing that can involve years of trials and
thousands of patients.
The Abigail Alliance for Better Access to Developmental
Drugs and the Washington Legal Foundation sued the FDA in 2003, seeking
access for terminally ill patients to drugs that have undergone
preliminary safety testing in as few as 20 people but have yet to be
approved.
Abigail Alliance founder Frank Burroughs pledged an appeal
to the Supreme Court. Burroughs' daughter, Abigail, was denied access
to experimental cancer drugs and died in 2001. The drug she was seeking
was approved years later.
"What the opinion by Judge Griffith is saying is, 'We don't
want to risk one life or a few lives, even at the expense of the lives
of hundreds or thousands of people,'" Burroughs said. "The logic of
that escapes me."
Food and Drug Administration approval of drugs generally
requires extensive testing that can involve years of trials and
thousands of patients.
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