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Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed

by "Jan Drew" <jdrew1374@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Jun 26, 2008 at 01:07 AM

CDC Director Dr. Julie Gerberding has delivered a potentially explosive 
re****t to the powerful House Appropriations Committee, in which she admits

to a startling string of errors in the design and methods used in the
CDC's 
landmark 2003 study that found no link between mercury in vaccines and 
autism, ADHD, speech delay or tics.

Gerberding was responding to a 2006 re****t from the National Institute of 
Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), which concluded that the CDC's 
flag****p thimerosal safety study was riddled with "several areas of 
weaknesses" that combined to "reduce the usefulness" of the study.

"CDC concurs," Dr. Gerberding wrote in an undated mea culpa to Congress, 
(provided to me through a Capitol Hill staffer) adding that her agency
"does 
not plan to use" the database in question, the Vaccine Safety Datalink, 
(VSD) for any future "ecological studies" of autism.

In fact, Gerberding's re****t said, any continued use of the VSD for
similar 
ecological studies of vaccines and autism "would be uninformative and 
potentially misleading."

Ecological vaccine studies are large, epidemiological analyses of risks
and 
trends using computerized data from large populations -- in this case 
children enrolled at several big HMOs -- without ever examining a single 
patient in person.

CDC officials conducted at least five separate analyses of the data over a

four-year period from 1999-2003. The first analysis showed that children 
exposed to the most thimerosal by one month of age had extremely high 
relative risks for a number of outcomes, compared with children who got 
little or no mercury: The relative risk for ADHD was 8.29 times higher,
for 
autism, it was 7.62 times higher, ADD, 6.38 times higher, tics, 5.65
times, 
and speech and language delays were 2.09 more likely among kids who got
the 
most mercury.

Over time, however, all of these risks declined into statistical 
insignificance, statistical inconsistency or else outright oblivion: The 
relative risk for autism plummeted from 7.62 in the first analysis, to
2.48 
in the second version, to 1.69 in the third round, to 1.52 in the fourth, 
and down to nothing at all in the fifth, final, and published analysis 
printed in the Journal Pediatrics in November of 2003.

Vaccine officials attributed the steady drop to the elimination of 
"statistical noise" from the data through due diligence and the endeavor
for 
excellence in governmental statistical analysis.

Indeed, the VSD study was the main pillar of a hugely influential 2004 
re****t by the Institute of Medicine, which also concluded that there was
no 
evidence of link between mercury, vaccines and autism.

To this day, public health officials routinely point to five "large 
epidemiological studies" representing the "highest quality science," none
of 
which found any link to thimerosal.

In fact, the American VSD study has long been held up as the best and 
brightest of them all (the others were in Sweden, the UK, and two in 
Denmark). And this reputation has stuck in the minds of medicine and the 
media.

Curiously though, even the study's lead author -- Dr. Thomas Verstraeten,
an 
employee of vaccine maker GlaxoSmithKline -- protested that the VSD study 
"found no evidence against an association, as a negative study would. In 
fact, he said that additional study was needed, which "is the conclusion
to 
which a neutral study must come."

That's when Congress stepped in.

In 2005, a group of Senators and Representatives headed by Sen. Joe 
Lieberman wrote to the NIEHS (an agency of the National Institutes of 
Health) saying that many parents no longer trusted the CDC to conduct 
independent minded studies of its own vaccine program. Lieberman et al
asked 
NIEHS to review the CDC's work on the vaccine database and re****t back
with 
critiques and suggestions.

The final NIEHS re****t was a serious and thoughtful critique of where the 
CDC went wrong in its design, conduct and analysis of the study. The NIEHS

panel "identified several serious problems," with the CDC's effort, 
criticism to which the agency had not responded -- until now.

In her letter to the House Appropriations Committee, the CDC Director 
responded directly to many -- though not all -- of the most im****tant 
criticisms and recommendations contained in the NIEHS panel re****t.

For example, the NIEHS had criticized CDC for failing to account for other

mercury exposures, including maternal sources from flu shots and immune 
globulin, as well as mercury in food and the environment.

"CDC acknowledges this concern and recognizes this limitation," the 
Gerberding reply says.

The NIEHS also took CDC to task for eliminating 25% of the study
population 
for a variety of reasons, even though this represented, "a susceptible 
population whose removal from the analysis might unintentionally reduce
the 
ability to detect an effect of thimerosal." This strict entry criteria 
likely led to an "under-ascertainment" of autism cases, the NIEHS
re****ted.

"CDC concurs," Gerberding wrote, again noting that its study design was
"not 
appropriate for studying this vaccine safety topic. The data are intended 
for administrative purposes and may not be predictive of the outcomes 
studied."

Another serious problem was that the HMOs changed the way they tracked and

recorded autism diagnoses over time, including during the period when 
vaccine mercury levels were in decline. Such changes could "affect the 
observed rate of autism and could confound or distort trends in autism 
rates," the NIEHS warned.

"CDC concurs," Dr. Gerberding wrote again, "that conducting an ecologic 
analysis using VSD administrative data to address potential associations 
between thimerosal exposure and risk of ASD is not useful."

Read that sentence one more time. The head of the CDC is saying that its 
most powerful and convincing piece of exonerating evidence for thimerosal 
is, in effect, "useless."

I hope everyone will read it, including the recommendations to make the
VSD 
better, and the CDC's agreement with all of the suggestions.

As questionable at the US thimerosal study was, "it was an improvement on 
other studies, including the two in Denmark, both of which had serious 
weaknesses in their designs," Dr. Irva Hertz-Picciotto, Professor of
Public 
Health at UC Davis Medical School and Chair of the NIEHS panel, told 
re****ter Dan Olmsted at UPI.

That leaves very little for the CDC to go on in terms of proving that 
thimerosal and autism are not associated in any way.

Yes, there is always the study of disability services data from 
California -- which seem to be rising among the youngest cohorts of kids, 
who presumably received little or no mercury because thimerosal was
largely 
removed from childhood shots.

But California is an "ecological study" with problems of its own.

"Although (this) information is often used by media and research entities
to 
develop statistics and draw conclusions, some of these findings may 
misrepresent the quarterly figures," cautions the website of the
California 
Department of Developmental Services (DDS). "Increases in the number of 
persons re****ted from one quarter to the next do not necessarily represent

persons who are new to the DDS system."

Even the CDC admits that "there are several limitations" with linking a
VSD 
study design with the California data, Gerberding wrote to Congress, 
because, among other things, California only counts "persons who were 
referred to and/or voluntarily entered" the disability system."

It will be interesting to see how the House Committee -- and the
mainstream 
media -- react to this rather breathtaking confession by the CDC, which
does 
seem to want to conduct the best vaccine-autism science possible (see 
Gerberding's replies to NIEHS recommendations for improving the VSD: CDC 
officials are currently conducting in- depth follow up studies with VSD 
patients).
 




 15 Posts in Topic:
CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
"Jan Drew" <  2008-06-24 18:30:42 
Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
Citizen Jimserac <Jims  2008-06-25 05:06:42 
Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
Mark Probert <mark.pro  2008-06-25 05:20:10 
Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
"Jan Drew" <  2008-06-26 01:07:27 
Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
"Jan Drew" <  2008-06-26 20:54:13 
Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
"D. C. Sessions"  2008-06-25 05:47:36 
Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
Citizen Jimserac <Jims  2008-06-25 07:19:25 
Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
"D. C. Sessions"  2008-06-25 08:09:35 
Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
Citizen Jimserac <Jims  2008-06-26 03:56:13 
Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
Mark Probert <mark.pro  2008-06-26 06:27:21 
Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
Citizen Jimserac <Jims  2008-06-26 14:46:01 
Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
Mark Probert <mark.pro  2008-06-26 15:13:50 
Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
"Jan Drew" <  2008-06-26 21:00:19 
Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
Citizen Jimserac <Jims  2008-06-27 03:43:41 
Re: CDC Admits Thimerosal Safety Study Flawed
"Jan Drew" <  2008-06-26 01:13:46 

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tan12V112 Wed Dec 3 19:05:14 CST 2008.