Drug tested only on mice saves Australian baby

Sydney - An Australian doctor who used a German experimental drug that had been tested only on mice to save a baby's life left Friday to brief US and European medical authorities about the amazing success. In a race against time, doctors at the Monas...
Posted : Fri, 06 Nov 2009 04:28:19 GMT
By : dpa
Category : Health
News Alerts by Email ( click here )
Health News | Home
Sydney - An Australian doctor who used a German experimental drug that had been tested only on mice to save a baby's life left Friday to brief US and European medical authorities about the amazing success. In a race against time, doctors at the Monash Medical Centre argued before their hospital's ethics committee and finally the law courts to allow them to use the experimental drug on the baby.

The baby, known only as Baby Z as the parents want to remain anonymous, suffered from a rare metabolic brain disease which had no known cure and her condition was worsening by the hour.

The disease stops the body expelling sulphite and causes babies to suffer increasingly severe seizures and brain damage until they die.

Baby Z was born on May 1, 2008, with the metabolic disorder which affects one in 500,000 babies and started having seizures 60 hours after her birth.

She was deteriorating fast as doctors desperately searched medical literature in the hope that somewhere in the world there was help.

They found a medical paper written by German plant biologist Professor Guenter Schwartz of Cologne University who had been working on an experimental drug called cPMP for 15 years, but had tested it only on lab mice, the Australian Associated Press said.

It normally takes years for new drugs to get approval but Baby Z's parents refused to let their baby die without a fight. They urged doctors to break normal medical procedures and let their baby be the human guinea pig for the unapproved drug.

The doctors contacted Schwartz who immediately sent all of his available compound to Australia.

The parents argued before the hospital's ethics board that their baby was about to die an agonizing death so there was nothing to lose in giving the drug.

But the hospital insisted they also get approval from a court. A court hearing was hastily arranged and after a tense day of arguing, the judge allowed use of the unapproved drug.

The doctors led by neo-natal specialist Dr Alex Veldman raced back to the hospital as the baby was fast deteriorating.

"The hospital pharmacist sprinted up the stairs with the substance in his hand and we started to treat the baby on that afternoon, actually about 40 minutes after we got the court order," Dr Veldman told reporters in Melbourne.

"What then happened was really amazing, because the baby was waking up, she was starting to move around, starting to look around, she was starting to drink milk from a bottle, she just improved massively."

Dr Veldman said the girl is now 18 months old and is doing well although she has some problems and has to be injected with Schwartz's compound every day.

"She is such a delightful little lady and the parents love her and she has a very happy life," he said.

"The amazing thing is that I spoke to her mum and she said that she never believed that her baby would die, she always knew that she would fight for it until we find something."

Baby Z's mother told reporters through a telephone link-up that it was the most difficult thing anyone could go through.

"It was the most challenging and most traumatic time of our lives," she said.

She never doubted her baby should be the human guinea pig for the untried German compound.

"There was courage and there was death - we opted for courage," she said. "If she wasn't treated, she would die a very painful death."

Dr Veldman left Australia Friday to present his findings to the United States Food and Drug Administration and European regulators next week.

Copyright DPA

Share/Save/Bookmark

Article : Drug tested only on mice saves Australian baby
Print this article
Email this article

Stay Updated
News gadget on your Google homepage
Subscribe to a news feed in Google Reader


Related News

Second twin stirs after successful separation in Australia
Sydney - The second of the Bangladeshi conjoined twins that Australian surgeons separated this week is being brought out of an induced coma. Trishna was the first to be woken and doctors at Melbourne's Royal Children's Hospital said Friday that her s...

23 per cent of Taiwan city kids have considered suicide
Taipei - Twenty-three per cent of Taiwan's city children have considered suicide due to school pressure and family problems, a survey showed. The Child Welfare League Foundation surveyed 1,547 primary school pupils across Taiwan to find out the diffe...

Police seize illicit medicines from web merchants - Summary
Wiesbaden, Germany/Washington - Police in 24 nations raided illegal internet pharmacies this week, intercepted parcels at mail depots and seized stocks of illicit medicines, German police and US officials said Thursday. The raids, which began Monday,...

Police seize illicit medicines from web merchants in Interpol raids
Wiesbaden, Germany - Police in 24 nations raided illegal internet pharmacies this week, intercepted parcels at mail depots and seized stocks of illicit medicines, German police said Thursday. The raids, which began Monday were aimed at confiscating c...

Child mortality drops in 20th year of rights convention
New York - Child mortality rates have dropped by 28 per cent since the Convention on the Rights of the Child took effect 20 years ago, the UN Children's Fund said Thursday. An estimated 8.8 million children under five died from various diseases in 20...

One twin talking after successful separation in Australia
Sydney - One of the Bangladeshi conjoined twins Australian surgeons separated this week is talking and cuddling her stand-in mother while the other is wiggling her fingers and soon will be woken from her induced coma. Doctors at Melbourne's Royal Chi...

Macedonia reports its first swine flu death
Skopje - Macedonia on Wednesday reported its first swine flu death - a 32-year-old man who died in Skopje hospital according to local media. The man was hospitalized earlier this week with a serious case of pneumonia. ...

Have your Say
Name
Email
Subject
Your Comment

Enter Verification code
 
  

 

 

More Health News click here
Follow The Earth Times
Subscribe to RSS Follow Earth Times on TwitterNews by email
Share/Save/Bookmark

 
 



 
Subscribe to free Earthtimes
News Alerts by Email Click here
For RSS Feeds Click here
or Create your own RSS

Add to Google Toolbar
Breaking News
Press Releases

 


The Earth Times
News Category

© 2009 www.earthtimes.org, The Earth Times, All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy
Earth Times accept no responsibility or liability either directly or indirectly for views or opinions expressed in articles or comments.