Wednesday, September 13, 2017

Charlie Gard 6

Lantos JD. The Tragic Case of Charlie Gard. JAMA Pediatr. 2017 Aug 11. doi:
10.1001/jamapediatrics.2017.3079. [Epub ahead of print]

The determination of Charlie’s interests focused on 2 major uncertainties. One was whether Charlie was in pain; the other was whether nucleoside therapy offered any hope of benefit.

Those closest to Charlie were unsure if he was in pain. One physician said that it was possible that he felt pain but acknowledged that Charlie did not demonstrate typical signs.  A nurse testified that it was “impossible to know whether Charlie suffers pain, pleasure, or comfort.”  His mother testified that he responded to head stroking and tickling.5 Clinicians and parents also disagreed about the likelihood that nucleoside therapy would be beneficial. Charlie’s clinicians repeatedly noted that the therapy had never been tried in this particular condition. The disagreement, then, was about whether data from one genetic subtype of MDDS could be generalized to a different MDDS. Were these distinct diseases or variants of a common syndrome? Everybody agreed that the treatment itself was safe.

Neither of the central questions—whether Charlie was in pain and whether the experimental treatment could help—could be answered precisely. The first required a subjective opinion; the second, a probabilistic extrapolation from scant prior data. Charlie’s lawyers argued that even a small chance of benefit from the experimental therapy outweighed the potential harms. More importantly, they argued that parents and a physician of their choice should be allowed make the decision: “(I)t is for the parents, in the exercise of their parental rights and duties, to decide what course of treatment is in the child’s best interests.”4 Charlie’s mother said, “If it is only being a matter of him dying or a matter of him having a chance at life, the parents should have a say.”6 Judges of the High Court of Justice of England and Wales, Her Majesty’s Court of Appeal in England and Wales, Supreme Court of the United Kingdom, and European Court of Human Rights all ruled that nucleoside therapy was not in Charlie’s best interest and thus that his life support should be withdrawn. Eventually, the outside consultant came to agree that Charlie’s disease had progressed to the point where therapy would no longer be beneficial. At that point, the parents gave up their fight, and Charlie was transferred to hospice, where he died.

This case challenges us to think about the limits of parental rights. Physicians, policy makers, and judges will need to articulate clear principles for deciding when parental perceptions and values should guide treatment choices when (1) we are uncertain about whether a patient is in pain, (2) a physician is willing to administer a safe treatment that might be beneficial, (3) the parents want to try that treatment, and (4) the only alternative to experimental therapy is death.

The case has disturbing implications for the process of shared decision making in such circumstances. Generally, when physicians disagree, we defer to parents and allow them to choose which physician’s recommendations to follow. In the United States, this is true even in states that permit unilateral physician decisions to withdraw life support, such as Texas.  Under Texas law, when physicians determine that further life support is inappropriate, parents are given 10 days to find another physician. If they do, their child will be transferred to the care of that physician.8 In California, this was even true for a child who was declared brain dead.9 Instead, the precedent set in the Gard case suggests that courts may make an independent evaluation of which medically endorsed treatment is best. This is a significant encroachment on both physicians’ medical authority and parents’ rights.

The case also has implications for the use of genomic information. Charlie’s parents and their chosen physician thought that data from treatment of patients with a related disease was relevant. The courts thought that this prior experience was irrelevant because Charlie’s disease was genetically different. We are entering an era in which every patient and disease will be genetically distinct. In this new era, questions will arise about how much to generalize from experience with each discrete genotype to patients with related diseases but distinct genotypes. Personalized genomics could lead to a world in which all therapies become experimental because each patient is genetically unique. All clinical care will then become N-of-1 research studies.

Ultimately, the cost of treatment may guide such decisions in the future. Considerations of justice may dictate that some expensive treatments will not be offered if cost outweighs the likely benefits. If such decisions are made, they should be explicit.


The powerful public reaction against the court decisions suggests that, in future similar cases, a different approach might be preferable. If there was any hope for Charlie, or for other patients with relentless progressive degenerative diseases, it is only if treatment was given early. As Savulescu10 noted, if the physicians had started nucleoside therapy at the same time that they went to court, we’d have known whether it worked before we had the final legal verdict. Surely that would have been a better result for all concerned.

2 comments:

  1. Charlie Gard, the British baby who caught the world’s attention as he struggled with a rare genetic disorder while his parents fought the courts for the right to place him on an experimental treatment plan, died Friday, July 28, 2017, according to multiple news sources.

    Born Aug. 4, 2016, Charlie initially appeared to be a perfect, healthy baby. Within weeks, however, he began to exhibit symptoms that would lead doctors to diagnose him with infantile onset encephalomyopathic mitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome. Charlie spent much of his short life in a hospital bed at Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) in London on life-support machines, unable to hear, see, or breathe on his own.

    “We would like to thank everybody who has supported us throughout this journey in this country and thousands of people worldwide,” wrote Charlie’s parents, Connie Yates and Chris Gard, in a statement this week, “and we also would like to thank the staff at GOSH who have looked after Charlie and kept him comfortable and stable for so long. The care he has received from the nurses who’ve cared for him has been second to none. But most of all, we would like to thank Charlie for the joy he has brought to our lives. The love we have for you is too much for words, and we love you so very much.”

    “One little boy has brought the world together,” Charlie’s parents said, “and whatever people’s opinions are, no one can deny the impact our beautiful son has had on the world, and his legacy will never ever die. Charlie has had a greater impact on and touched more people in this world in his 11 months than many people do in a lifetime. We could not have more love and pride for our beautiful boy. His body, heart, and soul may soon be gone, but his spirit will live on for eternity, and he will make a difference to people’s lives for years to come.”

    http://www.legacy.com/ns/charlie-gard-obituary/186221873

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  2. Charlie Gard, the British baby who caught the world’s attention as he struggled with a rare genetic disorder while his parents fought the courts for the right to place him on an experimental treatment plan, died Friday, July 28, 2017, according to The Guardian.

    Charlie spent much of his short life in a hospital bed at Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) in London on life-support machines, unable to hear, see, or breathe on his own. Born Aug. 4, 2016, he initially appeared to be a perfect, healthy baby. But within weeks, he began to exhibit symptoms that would lead doctors to diagnose him with infantile onset encephalomyopathic mitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome.

    The first of the symptoms that drove his parents, Connie Yates and Chris Gard, to take him to the doctor was a delay in weight gain. By the time Charlie was hospitalized in mid-October, he had already begun to undergo brain damage.

    Charlie’s parents held out hope that his condition was reversible. An experimental treatment, nucleoside bypass therapy, was available in the U.S., though it had never been tested on Charlie’s extremely rare condition. It did show promise with patients who had a similar disorder, one that attacks just the muscles – unlike Charlie’s, which also affected the brain and other organs.

    Yates and Gard felt confident enough about the treatment that they began a crowdfunding campaign to raise money for transportation and treatments. Within two months, they had raised 1.3 million pounds – about $1.72 million – and were ready to take Charlie to America.

    But they were blocked by the British courts: GOSH had considered offering the experimental treatment to Charlie, but it was determined that his condition had already progressed beyond the point of reversibility, and his brain damage was too severe to be helped. GOSH’s doctors, in consultation with other experts, decided that Charlie should be taken off life support and allowed to die with dignity.

    Yates and Gard disagreed with this analysis and were determined to fight for their son’s life, so they took the case to England’s High Court. Justice Nicholas Francis sided with the doctors, ruling that Charlie had no chance of positive quality of life and should be removed from life support. His parents appealed the case to the Supreme Court, which also ruled with the doctors’ decision.

    As Charlie’s parents protested the rulings and continued to insist that they should be allowed to fight for their son’s life however they could, they began making international news. World leaders weighed in, with both Pope Francis and U.S. President Donald Trump offering to help Charlie obtain treatment.

    Dr. Michio Hirano, the U.S. doctor whose lab was developing the experimental treatment, was allowed to examine Charlie in mid-July amid rumors of new evidence in support of the treatment. His diagnosis was that the damage to Charlie’s brain and muscles had progressed past the point of no return and that the experimental treatment had no chance of helping him.

    In a subsequent statement, Yates and Gard announced their decision that it was no longer in Charlie’s best interest to continue pursuing treatment, and that they would spend the child’s final moments with him in hospice care.

    “One little boy has brought the world together,” they said, “and whatever people’s opinions are, no one can deny the impact our beautiful son has had on the world, and his legacy will never ever die. Charlie has had a greater impact on and touched more people in this world in his 11 months than many people do in a lifetime. We could not have more love and pride for our beautiful boy. His body, heart, and soul may soon be gone, but his spirit will live on for eternity, and he will make a difference to people’s lives for years to come.”

    http://www.legacy.com/news/celebrity-deaths/notable-deaths/article/charlie-gard-2016-2017

    ReplyDelete