Agency Weighs Buying Drug to Protect Against Radiation-Induced Ailments
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http://www.nytimes.com/2001/11/29/national/29RADI.html November 29, 2001
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The earlier recommendation was based on data from the Hiroshima atomic bomb
blast in 1945.
William Beecher, the commission's chief spokesman, said that the agency was
eager to proceed. The F.D.A. document, he said, is "the missing
piece," and when it is completed, his agency will enter negotiations with
pharmaceutical companies for a large order, and then ship pills to any state
that wants to stockpile them near a nuclear plant.
But the new recommendation is far more complex, establishing different
recommended doses and different conditions for use for eight categories of
people: newborns; infants younger than 3 years old; children 3 to 12; youths 12
to 18; adults 18 to 40; adults older than 40; and women who are lactating or
are pregnant.
For those younger than 18 and for pregnant or lactating women, the F.D.A.
will recommend giving the drug at a level of radiation exposure a fifth as
large as advised in the 1980's.
Dr. Orloff, director of the division of metabolic and endocrine drug
products at the Food and Drug Administration, said, "What's happened
between 1982 and now is Chernobyl, and the rash of thyroid cancers that
occurred in the aftermath, notably in children who were between zero and 4
years old at the time of the accident."
The World Health Organization has called for giving children potassium
iodide at an anticipated radiation dose one-fifth of the standard to be
proposed by the F.D.A.
But Dr. Orloff said the disparity is not serious. The larger problem, he
said, is predicting the radiation dose from an unfolding accident.
"The ability to predict in advance, when you see smoke starting to
billow, what the precise exposure is going to be, is pretty poor," he
said.
When reactors split uranium atoms, one of the fragments is an intensely
radioactive form of iodine, which can be absorbed by people directly or can
land in pastures, where it is eaten by cows and concentrated in their milk. One
reason children are vulnerable is that they drink more milk than adults do.
Potassium iodide works by saturating the human thyroid gland with normal
iodine so it cannot absorb radioactive iodine. Potassium iodide can cross the
placenta, but the prime protective mechanism in pregnant women is that its use
reduces the ability of the mother to absorb the radioactive variety.
But the drug must be given before the radiation exposure, or very soon
after, which means it must be stored near the site of potential exposure.
Adverse reactions are rare, but are more common among people older than 40,
said the F.D.A., which set a radiation exposure threshold for those people at
100 times the level for children and adolescents.
ALL
INFORMATION, DATA, AND MATERIAL CONTAINED, PRESENTED, OR PROVIDED HERE IS FOR
GENERAL INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED AS REFLECTING THE
KNOWLEDGE OR OPINIONS OF THE PUBLISHER, AND IS NOT TO BE CONSTRUED OR INTENDED
AS PROVIDING MEDICAL OR LEGAL ADVICE. THE DECISION WHETHER OR NOT TO
VACCINATE IS AN IMPORTANT AND COMPLEX ISSUE AND SHOULD BE MADE BY YOU, AND YOU
ALONE, IN CONSULTATION WITH YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.