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When the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved implanting
microchips in humans, the manufacturer said it would save lives,
letting doctors scan the tiny transponders to access patients' medical
records almost instantly. The FDA found "reasonable assurance" the
device was safe, and a sub-agency even called it one of 2005's top
"innovative technologies."
But neither the company nor the
regulators publicly mentioned this: A series of veterinary and
toxicology studies, dating to the mid-1990s, stated that chip implants
had "induced" malignant tumors in some lab mice and rats.
"The
transponders were the cause of the tumors," said Keith Johnson, a
retired toxicologic pathologist, explaining in a phone interview the
findings of a 1996 study he led at the Dow Chemical Co. in Midland,
Mich. Leading cancer specialists reviewed the research for The Associated
Press and, while cautioning that animal test results do not necessarily
apply to humans, said the findings troubled them. Some said they would
not allow family members to receive implants, and all urged further
research before the glass-encased transponders are widely implanted in
people.
To date, about 2,000 of the so-called radio frequency
identification, or RFID, devices have been implanted in humans
worldwide, according to VeriChip Corp. The company, which sees a target
market of 45 million Americans for its medical monitoring chips,
insists the devices are safe, as does its parent company, Applied
Digital Solutions, of Delray Beach, Fla.
"We stand by our
implantable products which have been approved by the FDA and/or other
U.S. regulatory authorities," Scott Silverman, VeriChip Corp. chairman
and chief executive officer, said in a written response to AP
questions.
The company was "not aware of any studies that have
resulted in malignant tumors in laboratory rats, mice and certainly not
dogs or cats," but he added that millions of domestic pets have been
implanted with microchips, without reports of significant problems.
"In
fact, for more than 15 years we have used our encapsulated glass
transponders with FDA approved anti-migration caps and received no
complaints regarding malignant tumors caused by our product."
The FDA also stands by its approval of the technology.
Did
the agency know of the tumor findings before approving the chip
implants? The FDA declined repeated AP requests to specify what studies
it reviewed.
The FDA is overseen by the Department of Health
and Human Services, which, at the time of VeriChip's approval, was
headed by Tommy Thompson. Two weeks after the device's approval took
effect on Jan. 10, 2005, Thompson left his Cabinet post, and within
five months was a board member of VeriChip Corp. and Applied Digital
Solutions. He was compensated in cash and stock options.
Thompson,
until recently a candidate for the 2008 Republican presidential
nomination, says he had no personal relationship with the company as
the VeriChip was being evaluated, nor did he play any role in FDA's
approval process of the RFID tag.
"I didn't even know VeriChip
before I stepped down from the Department of Health and Human
Services," he said in a telephone interview.
Also making no
mention of the findings on animal tumors was a June report by the
ethics committee of the American Medical Association, which touted the
benefits of implantable RFID devices.
Had committee members reviewed the literature on cancer in chipped animals?
No, said Dr. Steven Stack, an AMA board member with knowledge of the committee's review.
Was the AMA aware of the studies?
No, he said.
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Published
in veterinary and toxicology journals between 1996 and 2006, the
studies found that lab mice and rats injected with microchips sometimes
developed subcutaneous "sarcomas" -- malignant tumors, most of them
encasing the implants.
* A 1998 study in Ridgefield, Conn., of 177 mice reported cancer
incidence to be slightly higher than 10 percent -- a result the
researchers described as "surprising."
* A 2006 study in
France detected tumors in 4.1 percent of 1,260 microchipped mice. This
was one of six studies in which the scientists did not set out to find
microchip-induced cancer but noticed the growths incidentally. They
were testing compounds on behalf of chemical and pharmaceutical
companies; but they ruled out the compounds as the tumors' cause.
Because researchers only noted the most obvious tumors, the French
study said, "These incidences may therefore slightly underestimate the
true occurrence" of cancer.
* In 1997, a study in Germany
found cancers in 1 percent of 4,279 chipped mice. The tumors "are
clearly due to the implanted microchips," the authors wrote.
Caveats accompanied the findings. "Blind leaps from the detection of
tumors to the prediction of human health risk should be avoided," one
study cautioned. Also, because none of the studies had a control group
of animals that did not get chips, the normal rate of tumors cannot be
determined and compared to the rate with chips implanted.
Still, after reviewing the research, specialists at some pre-eminent cancer institutions said the findings raised red flags.
"There's
no way in the world, having read this information, that I would have
one of those chips implanted in my skin, or in one of my family
members," said Dr. Robert Benezra, head of the Cancer Biology Genetics
Program at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.
Before
microchips are implanted on a large scale in humans, he said, testing
should be done on larger animals, such as dogs or monkeys. "I mean,
these are bad diseases. They are life-threatening. And given the
preliminary animal data, it looks to me that there's definitely cause
for concern."
Dr. George Demetri, director of the Center for
Sarcoma and Bone Oncology at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in
Boston, agreed. Even though the tumor incidences were "reasonably
small," in his view, the research underscored "certainly real risks" in
RFID implants.
In humans, sarcomas, which strike connective
tissues, can range from the highly curable to "tumors that are
incredibly aggressive and can kill people in three to six months," he
said.
At the Jackson Laboratory in Maine, a leader in mouse
genetics research and the initiation of cancer, Dr. Oded Foreman, a
forensic pathologist, also reviewed the studies at the AP's request.
At
first he was skeptical, suggesting that chemicals administered in some
of the studies could have caused the cancers and skewed the results.
But he took a different view after seeing that control mice, which
received no chemicals, also developed the cancers. "That might be a
little hint that something real is happening here," he said. He, too,
recommended further study, using mice, dogs or non-human primates.
Dr.
Cheryl London, a veterinarian oncologist at Ohio State University,
noted: "It's much easier to cause cancer in mice than it is in people.
So it may be that what you're seeing in mice represents an exaggerated
phenomenon of what may occur in people."
Tens of thousands of
dogs have been chipped, she said, and veterinary pathologists haven't
reported outbreaks of related sarcomas in the area of the neck, where
canine implants are often done. (Published reports detailing malignant
tumors in two chipped dogs turned up in AP's four-month examination of
research on chips and health. In one dog, the researchers said cancer
appeared linked to the presence of the embedded chip; in the other, the
cancer's cause was uncertain.)
Nonetheless, London saw a need
for a 20-year study of chipped canines "to see if you have a biological
effect." Dr. Chand Khanna, a veterinary oncologist at the National
Cancer Institute, also backed such a study, saying current evidence
"does suggest some reason to be concerned about tumor formations."
Meanwhile, the animal study findings should be disclosed to anyone considering a chip implant, the cancer specialists agreed.
To date, however, that hasn't happened.
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The
product that VeriChip Corp. won approval for use in humans is an
electronic capsule the size of two grains of rice. Generally, it is
implanted with a syringe into an anesthetized portion of the upper arm.
When prompted by an electromagnetic scanner, the chip transmits
a unique code. With the code, hospital staff can go on the Internet and
access a patient's medical profile that is maintained in a database by
VeriChip Corp. for an annual fee.
VeriChip Corp., whose parent
company has been marketing radio tags for animals for more than a
decade, sees an initial market of diabetics and people with heart
conditions or Alzheimer's disease, according to a Securities and
Exchange Commission filing.
The company is spending millions to assemble a national network of hospitals equipped to scan chipped patients.
But
in its SEC filings, product labels and press releases, VeriChip Corp.
has not mentioned the existence of research linking embedded
transponders to tumors in test animals.
When the FDA approved
the device, it noted some Verichip risks: The capsules could migrate
around the body, making them difficult to extract; they might interfere
with defibrillators, or be incompatible with MRI scans, causing burns.
While also warning that the chips could cause "adverse tissue
reaction," FDA made no reference to malignant growths in animal
studies.
Did the agency review literature on microchip implants and animal cancer?
Dr.
Katherine Albrecht, a privacy advocate and RFID expert, asked shortly
after VeriChip's approval what evidence the agency had reviewed. When
FDA declined to provide information, she filed a Freedom of Information
Act request. More than a year later, she received a letter stating
there were no documents matching her request.
"The public
relies on the FDA to evaluate all the data and make sure the devices it
approves are safe," she says, "but if they're not doing that, who's
covering our backs?"
Late last year, Albrecht unearthed at the
Harvard medical library three studies noting cancerous tumors in some
chipped mice and rats, plus a reference in another study to a chipped
dog with a tumor. She forwarded them to the AP, which subsequently
found three additional mice studies with similar findings, plus another
report of a chipped dog with a tumor.
Asked if it had taken
these studies into account, the FDA said VeriChip documents were being
kept confidential to protect trade secrets. After AP filed a FOIA
request, the FDA made available for a phone interview Anthony Watson,
who was in charge of the VeriChip approval process.
"At the
time we reviewed this, I don't remember seeing anything like that," he
said of animal studies linking microchips to cancer. A literature
search "didn't turn up anything that would be of concern."
In
general, Watson said, companies are expected to provide
safety-and-effectiveness data during the approval process, "even if
it's adverse information."
Watson added: "The few articles
from the literature that did discuss adverse tissue reactions similar
to those in the articles you provided, describe the responses as
foreign body reactions that are typical of other implantable devices.
The balance of the data provided in the submission supported approval
of the device."
Another implantable device could be a
pacemaker, and indeed, tumors have in some cases attached to foreign
bodies inside humans. But Dr. Neil Lipman, director of the Research
Animal Resource Center at Memorial Sloan-Kettering, said it's not the
same. The microchip isn't like a pacemaker that's vital to keeping
someone alive, he added, "so at this stage, the payoff doesn't justify
the risks."
Silverman, VeriChip Corp.'s chief executive,
disagreed. "Each month pet microchips reunite over 8,000 dogs and cats
with their owners," he said. "We believe the VeriMed Patient
Identification System will provide similar positive benefits for
at-risk patients who are unable to communicate for themselves in an
emergency."
* __
And what of former HHS secretary Thompson?
When
asked what role, if any, he played in VeriChip's approval, Thompson
replied: "I had nothing to do with it. And if you look back at my
record, you will find that there has never been any improprieties
whatsoever."
FDA's Watson said: "I have no recollection of him being involved in it at all." VeriChip Corp. declined comment.
Thompson
vigorously campaigned for electronic medical records and healthcare
technology both as governor of Wisconsin and at HHS. While in President
Bush's Cabinet, he formed a "medical innovation" task force that worked
to partner FDA with companies developing medical information
technologies.
At a "Medical Innovation Summit" on Oct. 20,
2004, Lester Crawford, the FDA's acting commissioner, thanked the
secretary for getting the agency "deeply involved in the use of new
information technology to help prevent medication error." One notable
example he cited: "the implantable chips and scanners of the VeriChip
system our agency approved last week."
After leaving the
Cabinet and joining the company board, Thompson received options on
166,667 shares of VeriChip Corp. stock, and options on an additional
100,000 shares of stock from its parent company, Applied Digital
Solutions, according to SEC records. He also received $40,000 in cash
in 2005 and again in 2006, the filings show.
The Project on Government Oversight called Thompson's actions
"unacceptable" even though they did not violate what the independent
watchdog group calls weak conflict-of-interest laws.
"A decade
ago, people would be embarrassed to cash in on their government
connections. But now it's like the Wild West," said the group's
executive director, Danielle Brian.
Thompson is a partner at
Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP, a Washington law firm that was
paid $1.2 million for legal services it provided the chip maker in 2005
and 2006, according to SEC filings.
He stepped down as a VeriChip Corp. director in March to seek the GOP
presidential nomination, and records show that the company gave his
campaign $7,400 before he bowed out of the race in August.
In
a TV interview while still on the board, Thompson was explaining the
benefits -- and the ease -- of being chipped when an interviewer
interrupted:
"I'm sorry, sir. Did you just say you would get one implanted in your arm?"
"Absolutely," Thompson replied. "Without a doubt."
"No concerns at all?"
"No."
But to date, Thompson has yet to be chipped himself.
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On the Web:
http://www.verichipcorp.com
http://www.antichips.com
http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/
http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/sns-ap-chipping-america-ii,1,3611732.story?page=4&coll=chi_tab01_layout
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