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Wednesday
Dec222004
Wednesday, December 22, 2004 at 08:38PM
Joyce Ann Hafford died without ever holding the son she had
tried to save from AIDS by taking an experimental drug regimen
administered by government-funded researchers during her pregnancy. But
even before her stunned family could grieve, the death of the
33-year-old Memphis, Tenn., woman was reverberating among the
government's top scientists in Washington. They quickly realized the
drugs she was taking likely caused the liver failure that killed her.
Reports of her declining health were being monitored in late July 2003
at the National Institutes of Health as she lay on a respirator, and
the case eventually reached the nation's chief AIDS researcher,
according to documents obtained by the Associated Press. "Ouch! Not
much we can do about dumb docs," Dr. Edmund Tramont, NIH's AIDS
Division chief, responded in an e-mail after his staff reported that
doctors continued to administer the drugs nevirapine and Combivir to
Hafford despite signs of liver failure. Nevirapine is an antiretroviral
AIDS drug used since the mid-1990s, and the government has warned since
at least 2000 that it could cause lethal liver problems or rashes when
taken in multiple doses over time. Hafford's family says they were
never told NIH had concluded that the experimental drug regimen likely
caused her death until AP gave them copies of NIH's internal case
documents this month. They were left to believe Hafford had died from
AIDS complications but began pursuing litigation to learn more. "They
tried to make it sound like she was just sick. They never connected it
to the drug," said Rubbie King, Hafford's sister. "If it were the
disease, solely the disease, and the complications associated with the
disease, that would be more readily acceptable than her being
administered medication that came with warnings that the medical
community failed to get ... to her." NIH officials acknowledge that
experimental drugs, most likely nevirapine, caused her death, and that
keeping the family in the dark was inappropriate. But NIH usually
leaves disclosures like that to the doctors who treated her. [more]