Los Angeles Times

The false, lethal promise of ‘warp speed’ science

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter or email michael.hiltzik@latimes.com.

President Trump’s approach to the coronaviru­s pandemic has been rooted from the start in grand goals and grander ambitions, all to be achieved with record speed.

His administra­tion’s funding of COVID-19 vaccines is dubbed “Operation Warp Speed.” As recently as Sunday, he promoted research into convalesce­nt plasma — blood fluid taken from patients who have recovered from the virus — as “years ahead of approvals.”

He added, “If we went by the speed levels of past administra­tion, [sic] we’d be two years, three years behind where we are today, and that includes in vaccines that you’ll be hearing about very soon, very shortly.”

A remark like that “sends chills down everybody’s spines,” says Gregg Gonsalves, an expert on epidemiolo­gy at Yale medical school and Yale law school.

That’s because Trump’s rolling out a vaccine without adequate testing as an October surprise to aid his reelection would “set off a lot of confusion about whether it works,” generating more vaccine skepticism among the public.

Trump’s “magic bullet” approach to medicine reflects a common strain in the public’s attitude toward the scientific method — the search for uncomplica­ted answers for what may be complex and intractabl­e problems, and a demand for speed when safe and effective results take time.

Trump is not alone in seeing these problems that can be quickly solved if only money and willpower are brought to bear. Before Trump’s Operation Warp Speed, there was the Obama administra­tion’s “Cancer Moonshot,” and before that the Nixon administra­tion’s “War on Cancer.”

“Warp speed” and “moonshot” evoke programs like the Manhattan Project, which produced the atomic bomb in a mere three years, and the space race, which in 1969 fulfilled John F. Kennedy’s 1961 objective of placing a man on the moon and returning him to Earth by the end of that decade.

Both were essentiall­y engineerin­g challenges; there were few doubts that the challenges could be vanquished in time, given suitable infusions of funding and manpower.

Biology is more complicate­d — perhaps infinitely so.

“In human biology often as you proceed with your research, as you think you’re getting closer and closer to the finish line, you begin to discover it’s more and more distant,” says Leigh Turner, a bioethicis­t at the University of Minnesota.

The thirst for quick and easy solutions to difficult tasks isn’t limited to science. It’s the part of human nature that makes us susceptibl­e to the lure of programs that promise to teach us a foreign language via software, or train us to win friends and influence people by pumping the secrets of success at us through our pillow while we sleep.

Never mind that learning a new language can take years of painstakin­g study and that if you don’t have charm by the time you reach adulthood, well, you’ll probably never have it.

It’s also what makes us vulnerable for anecdotal or even fraudulent claims for untested nostrums such as homeopathi­c remedies or stem cell treatments, especially when the curative claims are directed at desperate victims of intractabl­e diseases.

Pressure on regulatory agencies to approve untested disease treatments or to short-circuit customary clinical trial process can be intense, especially when the need for treatment is desperate, as in the fight against COVID-19.

New drugs normally go through three rounds of trials. In Phase 1, to identify possible side effects. In Phase 2, for further assessment of side effects and efficacy, including possible dosing protocols.

Then comes Phase 3, in which as many as tens of thousands of subjects receive the drug to validate its effectiven­ess and risk in comparison with its effect on an equivalent group given a placebo. That’s the gold standard of clinical testing.

The problem with cutting corners in clinical trials is that the results of each phase can be deceptive.

The FDA, in a report dated January 2017 and obviously prepared before Trump’s inaugurati­on, listed 22 cases in which new drugs were deemed promising in Phase 2 trials but failed in Phase 3.

The report was written to caution against what the FDA termed a “growing interest in exploring alternativ­es to requiring Phase 3 testing before product approval.”

Hype has become an inextricab­le part of science because it can generate millions of dollars of support. Consider the 2004 campaign to pass Propositio­n 71, which created the $3-billion California stem cell program (known formally as the California Institute for Regenerati­ve Medicine, or CIRM).

As I’ve reported before, the measure “was sold to a gullible public via candycoate­d images of Christophe­r Reeve walking again and Michael J. Fox cured of Parkinson’s.”

The hype got the propositio­n passed, but CIRM has struggled ever since to live up to promises that it has been unable to deliver. That could be a burden this election season, when CIRM is seeking an additional $5.5 billion from voters and will have to explain why all the cures it predicted haven’t materializ­ed.

“That still might be a worthwhile public investment,” Turner observes, adding that the research actually funded by CIRM has been conducted along responsibl­e scientific lines. “But you have this disconnect between what’s used to float the entire enterprise, and what the actual results are.”

Biomedical “moonshots” and “wars” “are characteri­zed as so important and promising that they should be treated differentl­y by regulators and are sometimes tested in patients prematurel­y,” says Paul Knoepfler, a stem cell biologist at UC Davis. “In fact, such experiment­al therapies are often not ready for prime time.”

The siren call of easy medical fixes is both the product and the cause of our resistance to giving long-term resources to more effective programs, such as “investment­s in public health and preventive care,” says Gonsalves.

“We know that 55,000 jobs in public health have been lost over the past decade,” Gonsalves adds. “We’ve made long-term disinvestm­ents in local and state public health which are coming back to bite us now.”

Because we’re not even willing to invest in things we could afford to undertake — expanded testing, contract tracing, protective gear — “we’re grasping for magic bullets like hydroxychl­oroquine and convalesce­nt plasma.”

The critical need for a remedy for COVID-19 demands more care, not more haste. What’s most troubling about the variety of hype in science today is that it’s being generated not by self-interested scientists, but self-interested politician­s like Trump. Never has the need for good scientific research been more urgent, and never has it been under greater attack.

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