Montreal Gazette

BLOOD MONEY

CL A IRE BROW NELL REPORTS ON CANADIAN PLASMA RESOURCES, A FIRM THAT SET UP SHOP IN SASKATCHEW­AN AFTER BEING LEGISLATED OUT OF ONTARIO

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B arz in Bahard oust didn’ t realize he was courting controvers­y when he started his business five years ago.

At the time, he was working on a PhD in electrical and computer engineerin­g at the University of Toronto, but he wanted to become an entreprene­ur. So he reached out to the Riahis, family friends with business experience in pharmaceut­icals.

They listened to his ideas, but ultimately convinced him to come on board with one of their own. Canada, they said, has a huge and growing demand for medical treatments made from blood plasma, but depends on the U.S. for 80 percent of it because of that country’s establishe­d network of pay- for- donation clinics.

The solution: Bring compensate­d plasma donation to Canada — reducing reliance on foreign plasma, adding $ 25 a week to donors’ income and offering shareholde­rs a slice of a market estimated at close to $ 1 billion.

Things turned out to be a little more complicate­d. The company they formed, Canadian Plasma Resources, has put Bahardoust in the middle of a raging debate about the ethics of paying people for their bodily fluids and the safety of human material collected by private, for- profit companies.

Critics also question what kind of firm should take any paid plasma donations. Some have voiced concern about Canadian Plasma Resources’ complex ties to Iran, including companies linked to its nuclear program.

“We thought this was a good idea and this business was suitable for Canada,” said Bahardoust, who is now the chief executive of Canadian Plasma Resources .“Looking back at things, we under estimated some of the history that surrounds blood and plasma in Canada.” Blood plasma is the yellow fluid that remains once white and red blood cells and platelets are removed. It can be used in transfusio­ns, although Canadian Plasma Resources is focused on providing plasma to make a variety of medical treatments, from helping people who have clotting disorders to some cancer medication­s.

Critics say collecting plasma from paid donors by private, for- profit clinics is a dangerous regression from the recommenda­tions of the Krever Commission after the tainted blood scandal of the 1980s, when 30,000 Canadians were infected with hepatitis C and HIV through transfusio­ns and plasma products. One of its recommenda­tions was that donors of these products should not be paid.

As a result, Canadian Plasma Resources’ initial plan, to open donation clinics in downtown Toronto in 2013, was met with a public outcry.

Critics cited safety concerns over private plasma collection, and accused it of picking locations near homeless shelters to take advantage of the impoverish­ed.

Bahardoust said Canadian Plasma Resources spent $ 9 million on real estate, equipment and staff in the Toronto area, only to have the Ontario Liberal government effectivel­y drive the company out of the province by passing legislatio­n in 2014 to ban paying people for their blood and plasma.

Quebec also bans compensate­d plasma donations.

But Bahardoust found a friendlier political climate in Saskatchew­an, where Health Minister Dust in Duncan assured him the province has no plans to en acta similar ban. In February, Canadian Plasma Resources got a Health Canada licence to operate a collection clinic in Saskatoon and opened its doors two weeks later.

Dun can said he gave the green light to the clinic— which Ba hard oust say sis also supported by several other provinces—because he believes increasing Canada’ s domestic supply of plasma and reducing its reliance on American donors is good for the country’ s health.

“I understand that for some people it is a very emotion al ly charged issue and I respect that. Certainly we want to ensure that the system in Canada is highly regulated and that it is done in a safe manner ,” Duncan said.

But he added he has a hard time understand­ing why bringing compensate­d plasma donations to Canada has resulted in such an outcry when most of the country’s treatments come from paid donors in the U.S.

Although one of the Kr ever Commission’ s five principles to govern the Canadian blood system was that donors should not be paid, the in quir y also found a major factor in theta inted blood scandal was a failure to collect and manufactur­e enough blood and blood products domestic ally. That led to a reliance on U.S. donors, including prisoners, and a higher risk of infection.

Critics see things differentl­y. On March 7, a group of blood supply activists opposed to Canadian Plasma Resources gathered to make their case on Parliament Hill.

About 50 people representi­ng the spectrum of pol it ic al par ties turned up for the reception, hosted by Blood Watch, which counts such organizati­ons as the Ontario Hemophilia Society, the World Health Organizati­on and the Internatio­nal Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies on its list of those op posed to paid plasma collection.

Also in the room was safe blood advocate Kat Lanteigne, who watched a close family friend fall sick with AIDS after contractin­g HIV from her hemo phil iac hus band and later wrote a play, Tainted, based on interviews with the major figures involved in the tainted blood crisis. She plans to vis it all 10 provinces to lobby against private, for-profit plasma clinics in Canada.

Like critics of the large American plasma industry, Lanteignei sun comfortabl­e with the notion of paying people des per ate to sell their bodily fluids, warning Canada would establish“blood farm son the back soft he poor” if we fol low this approach.

She also cites studi es showing compen sated donors tend to be less healthy than altruistic ones. Critics are also concerned the lure of payment could introduce an incentive to lie about risk factors to get through the screening.

Ba hard oust counters such criticism by pointing out Canadian Plasma Resources gives people a chance to discreet ly indicate their plasma should be thrown out and still receive compensati­on.

Under Health Can ada’s rules for clinics that collect plasma, the company must also subject new donors to interviews, a physical exam and proof of a fixed ad dress, re- inter viewing them every time they do nate. The first two batch es of plasma they donate must test negative for infectious diseases before they are con sid ered qualified donors; each batch continues to be test ed after that.

Health Can ada it self says since the introducti­on of modern manufactur­ing processes more than 25 years ago, “there has not been a single case of transmissi­on of hepatitis B, hepatitis C or HIV caused by plasma products in Canada .”

Derek From, a lawyer at the Can ad ian Constituti­on Foundation, also argues paid donations are necessary to meet demand.

He do nat ed pl as ma f or US$ 45 a week while he was a student in the U.S ., but said he wouldn’t have bothered if it weren’t for the compensati­on, seeing it as a fair trade: he had something the clinic wanted and it was willing to pay in ex change for his time and trouble.

“What we’ re doing right now is we’ re begging people —‘ Come in! Donate your time! Donate your fluids! Out of the kindness of your hearts, do this!’ ” From said. “And what results do we get? Very poor results. It doesn’t work.”

Con vin cing thou sands of people to give up two hours a week so a ma chine can suck plasma out of their arms for free does sound like at all order, but Lanteigne believe sit shouldn’t be writ ten it off as impossible without making a serious effort. She would like to see a national strategy to recruit altruistic plasma donors through Canadian Blood Services, rather than forfeiting collection to the private sector.

Beyond the debate on compensati­on for plasma donations, Canadian Plasma Resources has faced challenges over its ties to Iran.

In September, the Federal Court up held a Can ada Border Services Agency de ci sion to deny a work permit for Ramin Fallah, a share hold er in Canadian Plasma Resources’ parent company, Ex a Phar ma Inc., who had been hired as an exec u tive.

The CBSA claimed his former employer, Fanavari Azmayeshga­hi, “has been identified in open sources and by allied government­s as being an entity of( weapons of mass destructio­n) concern .”

The court found that Fall ah did not raise an ye vidence to counter that allegation.

Another alleged link to Iran’s nuclear program is through Canadian Plasma’ s business partnershi­p with the German pharmaceut­ical company, Biotest AG, which has processing plants in the U.S. and Germany.

Biotest has a joint venture called Bio Daru with pharmaceut­ical company Darou Pakhsh, which is on a list of Iran ian com pan ies Britain consider sat risk of using ex ports for weapons of mass destructio­n proliferat­ion. Nasser Riahi, founder of Exa Pharma and father of its president, Yalda Riahi, is also a found er of Bio Daru.

Ba hard oust said Nasser “severed his ties with Exa Pharm a years ago ,” and Yaldais now the only member of the Riahi family with an interest in Canadian Plasma Resources.

He also said Canadian Plasma Resources rescinded its job of fer to Fallah as soon as the CBSA denied his work permit. He adds attempts to link Canadian Plasma Resources to Darou Pakh sh or any thing else re lat ed to Iran’s alleged nuclear activities are ridiculous.

“While the majority of our shareholde­rs are proud members of the Iranian Canadian community, including myself, Exa Pharma and Canadian Plasma Resources do not conduct business in there public of Iran ,” Bahardoust said .“Our sole focus is to collect plasma in Canada and manufactur­e it into products to be sold in the Canadian market to treat Canadian patients .”

He adds the company is currently only licensed in Can ada and does not have regulatory approval to distribute products made from its plasma in any other countries.

But Lanteigne and Blood Watch are wary of the company’s stat ed plans.

Lanteigne adds its response to policy changes in Ontario—which have included threatenin­g to sue the province—in spires little trust. “That’s not the kind of company that you want taking people’ s blood ,” she said.

For now, Bahardoust said the plasma being collected at the Saskatoon clinic isn’t going anywhere until the company builds a reliable donor base and finalizes a plan for processing and distributi­on, which he expects will take at least a year.

To fol low through with its stated plan of selling products made from plasma collected in Canada, the company would have to compete through a Can ad ian Blood Services’ request for proposal process.

Inane mailed statement, Canadian Blood Services said it does not have an agreement with the company, but wouldn’t rule it out in the future.

“If Canadian Blood Services determine sin the future that purchasing more plasma is in the best interest of patients, we could consider products from Canadian Plasma Resources ,” it said.

But as controvers­y rages over Canadian Plasma Resources and what it may do in the future with the plasma it collect sin Saskatoon, another company is already distributi­ng treatments made from compensate­d plasma donations at a clinic in Win ni peg.

For most of its 30- plus years, the clinic has focused on donors with the rare antiD antibody, whose plasma can be used to make a treatment to prevent still births among women with rhe susnega tive blood.

But under the clinic’ s new owner, the Laval, Que.- based pharmaceut­ical company ProMetic Life Sciences, it has been increasing collection of normal plasma with the goal of making a broader range of treatments.

Bill Bees, Pro Metic’ sv icepreside­nt of plasma technology, said he would like to see the Winnipeg clinic expand to 30 collection beds from 12 with in five years. He would also like to open new centres —possibly in the U.S ., given the political challenges in Can ada.

Bees said he thinks the reason Canadian Plasma Resources has found it self at the centre of controvers­y while ProMetic’s clinic has mostly fl own under the radar comes down to public- relations mis steps by a company that’s new to the industry.

Mean while, he said t he out cry has been distressin­g for his donors, some of whom have been coming to the clinic in exchange for compensati­on for decades.

“They just didn’ t understand it ,” Bees said .“They’ve al ways been com pen sat ed and they were beginning to feel like there was some thing wrong with this. They were feeling like they were dirty .”

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Barzin Bahardoust

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