TRANSCRIPT OF
MEET THE PRESS:
AUGUST 7, 2005
David Kirby &
Dr. Harvey Fineburg debate the use of thimerosal in vaccines and the
potential connection with autism.
Coming
next, autism: what we know and what we don't know. Dr. Harvey Fineberg
of the Institute of Medicine and David Kirby, author of "Evidence of
Harm: Mercury in Vaccines and the Autism Epidemic," a medical
controversy, next, right here on MEET THE PRESS.
MR. RUSSERT: The controversy over childhood vaccines and autism,
after this brief station break.
MR. RUSSERT: And we are back.
Dr. Fineberg, Mr. Kirby, welcome both.
In your book, Mr. Kirby, you raise early on two questions. "Why did the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) allow mercury exposures from childhood vaccines to
more than double between 1988 and 1992 without bothering to calculate
cumulative totals and their potential risks? Why ... was there a
corresponding spike in reported cases of autism spectrum disorders? Why
did autism grow from a relatively rare incidence of 1 in every 10,000
births in the 1980s to 1 in 500 in the late 1990s? Why did it continue to
increase 1 in 250 in 2000 and then 1 in 166 today?" Have you answered
those questions?
MR. DAVID KIRBY: No, nobody's answered those questions. And we
have to answer those questions as soon as possible. We need to solve this
mystery. We need to get this controversy behind us so we can go on to find
ways to help these kids. Mercury is toxic. It's a known neurotoxin. If
it gets into the brain, it could stay there virtually forever. Children
born in the '90s received mercury far in excess of federal safety limits.
That's indisputable. And yet we're looking at a neurotoxin. And yet most
of the evidence developed by the public health sector has been looking at
the epidemiology. And we really need to look at what this mercury is
doing inside the bodies and brains of these children if we're going to
solve this mystery one way or the other.
MR. RUSSERT: Dr. Fineberg, in your 2004 report from the Institute
of Medicine, you said this: "While some information suggests that autism
rates may be rising, it is not clear whether the observed increase is real
or due to factors such as heightened awareness of the disorder or the use
of a broader diagnostic definition. ..."
Do you think there's an epidemic of autism or do you think it's simply a
change in defining it?
DR. HARVEY FINEBERG: There's definitely a huge number of cases
diagnosed with autism, Tim. What is clear is that number recognized has
increased dramatically. It's also clear that the definition was broadened
markedly in the 1980s and 1990s, and there were increased incentives to
recognize children from increased awareness and availability of services.
No one knows with certainty what part of the increase is genuine, a
genuine increase in numbers, and what part is from increased recognition
of people who were already there but not previously recognized. Remember
we're talking about a spectrum of diagnoses here, autism spectrum
diseases, which range in severity from relatively mild to relatively
severe.
MR. RUSSERT: For a layman, in a few words, how would you explain
autism?
DR. FINEBERG: Autism is a severe neurodevelopmental disorder that
is characterized by social withdrawal, by repetitive behaviors and by some
kind of focal attention in its classic form. Basically, it's an inability
to relate to others.
MR. RUSSERT: Let me go back and review two of the studies that the
Institute of Medicine did because this has helped feed much of this
controversy and discussion. Back in 2001, the headline on your press
release was "Link Between Neurodevelopment Disorders And Thimerosal
Remains Unclear. Current scientific evidence neither proves nor disproves
a link between the mercury-containing preservative thimerosal and
neurodevelopmental disorders in children, says a new report from the
Institute of Medicine... While very few vaccines given to children in the
United States today still contain thimerosal, prudence dictates that
precautionary measures be taken to decrease thimerosal exposure even
further. ... It is medically plausible that some children's risk of a
neurodevelopmental disorder could rise in part through increased mercury
exposure from thimerosal-containing vaccines."
Thimerosal being a preservative
that is put into the vaccine. Then about three years later in May of
2004, the Institute of Medicine issued this headline: "MMR Vaccine And
Thimerosal-Containing Vaccines Are Not Associated With Autism, IOM Report
Says. Based on a thorough review of clinical and epidemiological
studies"--I always destroy that word--"neither the mercury-based vaccine
preservative thimerosal nor the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine are
associated with autism, says a new report from the Institute of
Medicine..."
What changed in those three years?
DR. FINEBERG: When you're dealing with a problem as complex as
autism, Tim, you have to look at it from many different points of view and
assemble evidence from many different vantage points. Biological evidence
in humans and in animals, toxicologic evidence, how does the body deal
with toxins, and evidence looking at the actual experience in
populations. When the 2001 report was written, there was a lot of
suggestive information about the toxic properties of mercury and the
problem of autism incompletely understood. By 2004, the main change was
that there were completed additional studies that were actually looking in
the population at the relationship of receipt of vaccines containing
thimerosal and the development of autism.
These studies were carried out in the United States, in Great Britain, in
Denmark and Sweden. These studies covered hundreds of thousands of
individuals, children, in these populations. They compared systematically
in different ways whether you received vaccine with no thimerosal, with
some thimerosal, with more thimerosal, and they looked at the relationship
of those experiences with the development of autism. Uniformly, the best
of those studies all show no association between receiving vaccine of
different amounts with thimerosal or without and the development of
autism. It was the absence of that association which was the main reason
for reaching the conclusion that the evidence points to no association
between vaccines and autism.
MR. KIRBY:
Well, I think those flawed epidemiological studies range from severely
flawed to seriously questionable. And I also think that you cannot rely
solely on epidemiology to prove or disproof causation. In fact, I have
right here--this is from the federal court system, but they ruled that
epidemiology is not acceptable to prove there is no causal link between an
adverse event and a pharmaceutical.
MR. RUSSERT: Explain that in layman's language.
MR. KIRBY: Well, it means that you really, like the doctor said,
you can look at the kids as well as look at the large population studies.
You need to look at the biology, the toxicology; you need to look at the
cellular level. You need to look at immunology, and I would say that what
the IOM did last year--I was at that meeting on February 9. Virtually
half of the evidence that was presented against the theory was
epidemiological--I have the same problem as you. The other half
supporting the theory was largely biological. And yet the committee gave a
preponderance of evidence or emphasis to the epidemiological evidence and
rather, I would say, gave short shrift to the biological evidence.
Dr. Fineberg has mentioned that there are 215 references in the report. I
counted them up. By my count, it's roughly a 2:1 ratio, about 115
references for epidemiology, 60 references for biology, and of those, only
seven were toxicological reports. Now, we're talking about a known
neurotoxin, and there were no toxicologists on the committee, either. So
I think even Dr. McCormick, the chairwoman of the committee, told me that
there was definitely an emphasis on the epidemiology over the biological
evidence.
MR. RUSSERT: When we announced this program, as you might expect,
we heard from both sides who are very emotional and passionate about this
topic. The National Autism Associations, Dr. Fineberg, wrote a letter to
us including this: "The five studies the Institute of Medicine based its
conclusion upon are fatally flawed, have never been replicated and have
ties to the CDC"--Center for Disease Control-- "(or foreign equivalent
mandating vaccines in other countries) and/or the pharmaceutical industry.
However, the Institute of Medicine chose to completely ignore the
biological and clinical data supporting the link between thimerosal
exposure and injuries to children conducted by independent, appropriately-
credentialed researchers."
DR. FINEBERG: Tim, the Institute of Medicine panel that came
together represented a spectrum of experts who were asked to look at all
of the evidence, and they did. They assessed the evidence that bears on
the question. Some of it is biological, as I mentioned; some of it has to
depend on what you actually find when you go out and look in the
population. Is there or is there not an association? Keep in mind that
there are many neurotoxins in the world. Dozens of natural and industrial
substances have neurotoxic properties. When you're trying to assess a
specific association, there are biological studies that are relevant, and
there are epidemiological studies that are relevant. All of these studies
are not equally valid. Some have more deficiencies and limitations than
others.
The committee went through very carefully and assessed each of those
studies representing its strengths and weaknesses. All of this is laid
out in its report, which is available for download to anyone who wants it
from the IOM Web site, www.iom.edu. And anyone can read for themselves
how the committee evaluated critically and carefully all of this evidence.
When the letter you read states that these five studies were not
replicated, I can't help but think that each one of them has been
replicated four times. We have now a growing body of evidence, while
imperfect, altogether convincing and all reaching the same conclusion,
even though they vary in their methods and in their approaches. And that
conclusion was no association between the receipt of vaccines containing
thimerosal and the development of autism.
MR. RUSSERT: Why was thimerosal then taken out of the vaccination?
DR. FINEBERG: There's no question that mercury is a neurotoxin.
And if there were ways, which there are, to protect vaccines without using
mercury-containing substances, it was prudent to remove it, not because
there was evidence that it caused autism or even definitive evidence that
the amounts in those vaccines caused any neuro problems, but because it
was an added measure of precaution that was sensible and correct. And I
might add that the latest vaccines that contained any thimerosal as a
preservative, with the exception of some flu vaccines, were completed in
2001 and outdated in 2003. So anyone watching this program, any parent
can be confident that when they take their child to the pediatrician to be
immunized this year, they will receive vaccines without thimerosal as a
preservative.
MR. RUSSERT: But prior to this year, there may be some concern?
DR. FINEBERG: Prior to 2003, there were some that still had
thimerosal, but the concern is not reaching the level of evidence related
to the development of autism. The concern is a more general concern about
mercury as a potential neurotoxin.
MR. KIRBY: Well, if I could get back to the IOM report, that
meeting was held 14--or the report was actually issued 14 months ago.
This story is moving very, very fast. In those last 14 months, there has
been an equally growing body of evidence, again on the biological side,
that would suggest that, in a small subset of children with a certain
genetic predisposition, they are unable to properly process the mercury
that they were exposed to. And, by the way, the rates of exposure were
quite high in the 1990s. At two months of age, children got three shots
for a total of 62.5 micrograms of mercury. For their body weight, that's
125 times over the EPA level. For me to reach that level, that would be
about 1,125 micrograms.
We know that certain children with autism, again, seem to have higher
levels of mercury accumulating in their body. We know that when we give
mercury to infant primates, the--there's two types of organic mercury:
ethyl mercury in vaccines, methyl mercury in fish. What they found was
that the ethyl mercury, once it got into the brain, it converted to
inorganic mercury very, very quickly. Inorganic mercury basically gets
trapped in the brain, and there's evidence to suggest that, in an infant
brain, in the first six months to a year when the brain is still growing,
when inorganic mercury gets trapped in that brain, you're going to have
this hyper neuro inflammation, or the rapid brain growth that we see in
autistic children.
These are the types of things that I think need to be researched further.
Yes, we need to look at the epidemiology. There's a whole lot of new
biology. This has all been published. None of the biology was published
at the time of the IOM hearing. It has since been published, and I
actually wonder if the IOM would consider reconvening a new committee or a
new hearing to consider the evidence that's come out in the year and a
half since the last report.
DR. FINEBERG: Tim, Mr. Kirby's description about the certitude of
this evidence, I think, exceeds the actual balance of evidence that is
produced when you look at the totality. It's true that mercury is handled
differently in the body when it's in the form of so-called ethyl mercury,
which is in vaccines, and methyl mercury, which was actually the form
which was--on which the standards of exposure were based. That's the type
found in fish, as has been mentioned. But when you look back at the
studies of actual poisonings of children with large amounts of methyl
mercury and ethyl mercury, most toxicologists believe that the ethyl form
of the mercury is less toxic than the methyl form--less toxic to the
nervous system. And that's based on many experiences with poisoning by
these different forms of mercury.
MR. RUSSERT: Many parents have written us over the last couple of
days saying that they have put their child in the process of collation,
which removes the mercury poisoning from the system, and they say they've
seen vast improvement. Wouldn't that suggest that there may be some
relationship between the mercury from thimerosal and the removal from the
child?
DR. FINEBERG: Tim, autism is a complicated illness, and children
with a variety of treatments and non-treatments show improvement over
time, which is all to the good. But when you have a single story and a
repeated story of an experience that a parent has with a treatment like
chelation, you have to keep in mind that the history of medicine is strewn
with discarded treatments that people at one time believed in very, very
strongly. When you have one case after another, it's one anecdote after
another, and the plural of anecdote in scientific terms is not evidence.
The only way to know whether a treatment works or does not work compared
to other things is to do the clinical trial, comparing those who are given
the treatment in a systematic and balanced way with those who are not.
MR. RUSSERT: Mr. Kirby, in your book, you talk about a conference
on June 7 to 8 in 2000 in Simpsonwood, Georgia. We've gotten many e-mails
and letters about a government conspiracy, that the CDC and the FDA and
the Institute of Medicine and everyone has gotten together and really
tried to deny information to the parents of children with autism. Do you
believe that?
MR. KIRBY: Well, I think the word "conspiracy" and "cover-up,"
those are very loaded words and I never use them. I do think there has
been a lack of transparency and I would think Dr. Fineberg would probably
agree with that statement. In this entire process...
MR. RUSSERT: Do you agree with that?
DR. FINEBERG: I don't agree that the lack of transparency had had
any bearing on conclusions, and I'm not sure what we mean by a lack of
transparency.
MR. RUSSERT: Right now many parents are seeking information from
studies from the CDC through the Freedom of Information Act, and they're
being told that the HMOs now have that information and they cannot share
it because of privacy. And the parents are saying that's outrageous. It
could easily be obtained by the CDC and disburse that science, that data
so people can look at it and make their own judgments. Should the CDC at
least do that?
DR. FINEBERG: In fact, Tim, the Institute of Medicine looked
separately in a different study at this system that was in place and did
urge the CDC to make these records more available to qualified
researchers. But that is not the same as a lack of transparency in the
studies or in the reports. All anyone has to do in the case of the
Institute of Medicine report is to read the report. All of the logic is
laid out, all of the weighing of considerations. Not everyone may agree
with each assessment, but they have all the relevant evidence right before
them.
MR. RUSSERT: Mr. Kirby, you have said, "I am totally willing to
accept there are other factors at play. It may turn out not to be
thimerosal at all." What do you think should be done?
MR. KIRBY: Well, I think, first of all, we need clinical trials
for treatments. We need to try to help these children as best we can.
There is a clinical trial of chelation therapy under way right now at
University of Arizona. Dr. Fineberg said we need these trials. I wish
the government was funding them. We need to listen to these parents as
well. And I think that they've gotten a lot of dismissal from the
scientific community. Parents were telling scientists that their children
were born normally and then regressed. A lot of people dismissed that and
said that couldn't be the case. We now know from a brand- new study from
the University of Washington using videotapes of one-year birthday and
two-year birthday that is indeed the case. If the parents were right
about regression, maybe they're right about chelation.
Just getting back to transparency for one second if I could and this whole
safety data base that we're trying to get access to from the report that
Dr. Fineberg cited, it says right here, "The lack of transparency of some
of the processes also affects the trust relationship between the NIP, the
National Immunization Program, and the general public." The lack of trust
and the lack of transparency is what's threatening the vaccine program,
not talk about mercury. So the doctor's own committee said that there was
a lack of transparency again inside this process of analyzing this data
that was presented at that conference in Georgia.
MR. RUSSERT: Many of the National Autism Association and other
groups, Doctor, point to Task Order 74.
MR. RUSSERT: This is the arrangement between the CDC and the
Institute of Medicine, a one-page memo which helps define the study and
why it won't be released. Is there a reason?
DR. FINEBERG: I don't know what exactly that's referring to, Tim,
but when the Centers for Disease Control contracts with the Institute of
Medicine to undertake a study, they do pay the actual costs of the study.
But keep in mind that the panel of experts that are assembled by the
Institute of Medicine receive no compensation whatsoever for their
volunteer service. And when a government agency conveys money to the
Institute of Medicine, it's not the agency's money. It's the American
people's money. And our obligation is to do the best we can to assess the
evidence on behalf of the American public.
MR. RUSSERT: Since thimerosal is now out of the vaccine, latest as
of 2003, we will know in a few years whether or not there is a
connection...
MR. KIRBY: That's correct.
MR. RUSSERT: ...definitively by the number of cases?
MR. KIRBY: I think so, but again I think we need to look at the
biology, but the epidemiology is very important. If the case rates start
to drop in the next couple years, I think that will be hugely significant.
If I could also just get back to this commission by the CDC of the
report, I'd like to do that as well.
MR. KIRBY: Well, there's evidence that there was pressure put on
the committee by the CDC, and we have internal transcripts. I think
that's what you were referring to. There are transcripts of private
meetings. Some of them were leaked. They're not obtainable through the
Freedom of Information Act. Many people are trying to get copies of the
other transcripts, and I do hope that the IOM will make those available in
the name of transparency in this.
MR. RUSSERT: Was there pressure?
DR. FINEBERG: Absolutely not, Tim. In fact, the whole reason why
the Institute of Medicine, the National Academy of Sciences, the National
Research Council exists is to be an independent voice outside of
government to work on behalf of the needs of the American people. That's
what we do. Agencies do not always hear from us what they want to hear.
Sometimes the evidence does not point in a direction that is welcome.
Stem cell guidelines or information about climate change or, for example,
the ways to fix the Hubble Telescope which came out of the national
academies--all of these are studies undertaken on behalf of the American
public and the same was true for our assessment of vaccine safety.
MR. RUSSERT: You're absolutely convinced there's no connection
between thimerosal and autism?
DR. FINEBERG: I'm convinced that the best evidence all points to
the lack of an association. These studies can never prove to the point of
absolute certainty an absence of an association. But I would say this,
other avenues of research looking at other possible causes today are much
more promising ways to spend our precious resources.
MR. RUSSERT: And our viewers should know that there is no
thimerosal now in vaccinations, other than flu vaccinations, and so it's
safe for your children to do--have that done.
DR. FINEBERG: And even some flu vaccines for children are now
available without thimerosal, as well.
MR. RUSSERT: You believe there is a possibility of a connection?
MR. KIRBY: Absolutely. And I think one day we'll find out that
there might have been--this has contributed to some of the cases in autism
in this country.
R. RUSSERT: Thank you for a very civil discussion. To be
continued. We'll be right back.
MR. RUSSERT: And we are back.
Forty years ago, August 6, 1965, Lyndon Baines Johnson signed into law the
Voting Rights Act. One year later, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. appeared on
MEET THE PRESS and talked about that very legislation.
(Videotape, August 21, 1966):
MR. ROWLAND EVANS (Publishers Nsp. Syndicated): You said recently that
the "extravagant promises" made a year ago in connection with the Voting
Rights bill, have now become a shattered mockery. What exactly did you
mean by that, Dr. King?
DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.
(SCLC): Well, I mean that this Voting Rights bill came into being to end
not only discrimination in its overt expressions and voter registration
but also to remove the atmosphere for intimidation, for economic reprisals
and for the creation of fear that cause people not to vote. And one of the
things we have found is that when you have federal registrars in
communities, many more Negroes go out to register because they see a
different atmosphere and they are not overarched or undergirded with the
fear of intimidation and economic reprisals as much as they do in dealing
with some of the local registrars that they have dealt with so long.
Now, the problem is that
after that bill came into being, very few registrars were sent into the
South; I mean, federal registrars, and even today, all too few have been
sent, and this is even true in some communities where we know that there
are outright patterns of discrimination.
MR. RUSSERT: Yesterday, thousands marched in Atlanta, Georgia, to
commemorate the 40th anniversary of the Voting Rights Act and to urge the
re-authorization of some of its expiring provisions.
We'll be right back.
MR. RUSSERT: Well, much more information on today's discussion on
autism and our guests--you can find many helpful links on Viewer Resources
page of our Web site, www.mtp.msnbc.com.
Viewer Resources.
That's all for today. We'll be back next week. If it's Sunday, it's MEET
THE PRESS.
