Pediarix Vaccine Fraud
Pediarix vaccine
Townsend Letter
for Doctors and Patients, Oct, 2003, by
Jule Klotter
In December 2002, the FDA approved a new combination vaccine for use in
children under 6 months of age. GlaxoSmithKline's Pediarix is for diphtheria,
tetanus, whooping cough, hepatitis B, and polio. Marketers boast that Pediarix
cuts down on an infant's pain (and tears) because it requires only 3 injections
instead of 9 to get the same amount of protection. Dr. Mark M. Blatter of
Primary Physicians Research in Pittsburgh, one of the Glaxo-funded study sites,
said that "Scientists are working to create vaccines against more and more
diseases, and without combining shots there simply won't be room on babies' tiny
thighs for more inoculations." An Associated Press article said that side
effects were similar in babies who got Pediarix and those who got separate
shots, although the Pediarix group had a higher incidence of low fever.
Dr. Sherri Tenpenny, DO, a nationally renowned and respected vaccine expect,
criticized the studies that led to Pediarix's FDA approval. Instead of comparing
a new vaccine to a known inert substance, such as sterile water or saline,
vaccine researchers now compare the new vaccine to a vaccine with a 'known side
effect profile.' In the case of Pediarix, researchers, coordinated by the UCLA
Center for Vaccine Research, divided 400 children into 4 groups. One group
received 3 doses of Pediatrix with HiB (flu). The second group got two doses of
the same combination plus another Glaxo investigational combination (DTaP and
HepB) plus oral polio. The third also received the DTaP--HepB combination and
vaccines for polio and flu. The fourth group received individual doses of DTaP,
HepB, HiB and oral polio. All of the children produced antibodies so the
combinations were deemed effective.
The study also claimed that "there were no vaccine-related serious adverse
events to any group after any vaccine dose," but serious adverse events did
occur. Quoting the study, Dr. Tenpenny writes: "Two subjects withdrew from the
study because of serious adverse events that were determined by the safety
monitor to be unrelated to vaccination. One subject in Group A was diagnosed
with a seizure disorder 14 days after the first immunization. Another subject in
Group B had a neuroblastoma detected 6 weeks after the first immunization. Six
other reported serious adverse events involved hospitalizations for
brochiolitis/pneumonia (4), meningitis (1) and apnea (1) and were also
determined to be unrelated to vaccination. "Why is it," she asks, "that whenever
an adverse event occurs during the course of a vaccine clinical trial, that
'event' is never related to vaccination?"
Dr. Tenpenny urges consumers to read the package inserts for vaccines with
care, especially the one for Pediarix. Pediarix contains a troubling list of
additives, adjuvants and contaminants including formaldehyde, glutaraldehyde,
2-Phenoxyethanol (antifreeze), Thimerosal (12.5 nanograms), VERO (monkey) cells,
neomycin, polymyxin B, polysorbate 80, and yeast protein.
Neergaard, Lauran. New vaccine to cut 6 of 20 shots for babies. The
Herald-Sun, 17 December 2002.
Tenpenny, Sherri, DO. Commentary on Pediarix. January 25, 2003
www.mercola.com.
COPYRIGHT 2003 The Townsend Letter Group in association with The Gale Group
and LookSmart.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group
Townsend Letter
for Doctors and Patients, Oct, 2003, by
Jule Klotter