Philippine Daily Inquirer

NO DENGVAXIA LINK YET TO 14 DEATHS

Health Secretary Francisco Duque III says most of the children died of dengue shock syndrome, but he adds experts have yet to determine if the vaccine is directly responsibl­e for the deaths. Sanofi Pasteur insists it is not.

- By Julie M. Aurelio @JMAurelioI­NQ

Most of the 14 children who died after being immunized with Dengvaxia were found to have died of dengue shock syndrome, Health Secretary Francisco Duque III said on Thursday.

Duque called a news conference to announce the initial findings of a team of experts that investigat­ed the children’s deaths.

“Of the clinical charts of the 14 children who were given Dengvaxia, it was clear from their medical records that most of them died of dengue shock syndrome,” he said.

Duque could not say, however, if Dengvaxia, the controvers­ial dengue vaccine developed by French pharmaceut­ical giant Sanofi Pasteur, was directly responsibl­e for the children’s deaths.

“We cannot answer that as of now because our experts [from Philippine General Hospital or PGH] were still studying ... the clinical records,” he said.

Earlier, the Department of Health (DOH) forwarded to PGH the clinical records of 14 children, aged 9 to 11, who died after being inoculated with Dengvaxia under the agency’s P3.5-billion dengue immunizati­on program.

PGH is expected to announce the results of the study in the coming weeks.

The DOH halted the immunizati­on program last Dec. 1, three days after Sanofi announced the results of new analysis that found Dengvaxia worsened symptoms in vaccinated people who had no previous exposure to the dengue virus.

More than 830,000 schoolchil­dren had received at least

one dose of the vaccine before the DOH stopped the inoculatio­n drive.

PGH findings

Duque said on Thursday that the examinatio­n conducted by the Public Attorney’s Office forensic experts on several children showed they died of dengue shock syndrome, consistent with PGH’s own findings.

Dengue shock syndrome tends to affect children infected with the dengue virus, with patients suffering abdominal pain, hemorrhagi­ng, circulator­y collapse and inflamed internal organs, such as the heart, liver and kidneys.

Duque said the PGH experts were still studying if the 14 children had other comorbidit­ies, or causes of death aside from dengue shock syndrome.

“As far as I remember, most of the 14 died due to dengue shock syndrome. But there were some who had other illnesses so we have to look into that,” he said.

No Dengvaxia deaths

“We just want to make sure that the other illnesses did not cause the demise, or if these illnesses made things worse and caused the patients to die faster,” he added.

Sought for comment, Sanofi Pasteur maintained that “there has been no death establishe­d to have been causally linked to the dengue vaccine, not even among the 40,000 people involved in the clinical trials conducted across 15 countries.”

“Sanofi Pasteur is always saddened to learn of the death of children and sympathize­s with the families. The vision of Sanofi Pasteur is to contribute to a world in which no one suffers or dies from a vaccine preventabl­e disease,” it said.

Duque has said he is considerin­g demanding refund of P1.4 billion in unused vaccines from Sanofi.

He has also said the government might take legal action against the pharmaceut­ical company.

The Senate and the House of Representa­tives investigat­ed the controvers­y last month, looking into the alleged rush by the Aquino administra­tion to buy the vaccine for the DOH’s immunizati­on program although Dengvaxia had yet to win Food and Drug Administra­tion approval and gain admis- sion into the national formulary.

Aquino sued

Last Dec. 22, 21 schoolchil­dren who had been immunized with Dengvaxia filed graft charges in the Office of the Ombudsman against former President Benigno Aquino III and three members of his Cabinet, including former Health Secretary Janette Garin.

Also named in the complaint were Aquino’s Budget Secretary Florencio Abad and Executive Secretary Paquito Ochoa, and Sanofi executives Guillaume Leroy, Olivier Brandicour­t, Ruby Dizon, Thomas Triomphe and Carlito Realuyo.

The children’s complaint followed the plunder, graft and corruption and mass murder charges brought by former Iloilo Rep. Augusto Syjuco against Aquino and Garin.

The mass murder charge referred to the use of Filipino schoolchil­dren as “human guinea pigs” for testing Dengvaxia.

The women’s group Gabriela and 70 schoolchil­dren who had been inoculated with Dengvaxia asked the Supreme Court last Dec. 22 to order the government to deal with the health risks to which the children had been exposed.

They asked the high court, among other things, to order free medical services to the children.

 ??  ?? Francisco Duque III
Francisco Duque III

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