As elaborated upon in the OTA report, only 10 to 20 percent
of all procedures currently used in medical practices have
been shown to be efficacious by controlled trial.8
The efficacy of chelation therapy has been clinically demonstrated
to thousands of doctors through positive results in hundreds of
thousands of cases where this treatment was utilized. One pilot
double blind study has already been completed with strongly favorable results.9
The safety of this therapy, when properly administered, is not
an issue. It is estimated that over 500,000 patients nationally
have been safely treated with this therapy by physicians utilizing
the protocol developed by the American College for Advancement
in Medicine.10 No reported fatalities have occurred in the United
States when the ACAM protocol has been followed. Whenever chelation
is used in its widely-accepted role to combat lead poisoning,
the dosages given even to children are administered much more
rapidly than those administered to adults under this protocol.
The risks associated with surgical procedures are far greater
by comparison. The Food and Drug Administration determined
that EDTA chelation therapy was safe prior to approving the
Investigational New Drug protocol for the ongoing double-blind
placebo-controlled studies.
It is the treating, clinical physician who is best acquainted
with the patient's medical history, examination results, condition
and needs. It is the attending physician who is in the best position
to assess the condition (medical, socioeconomic, and psychological)
of the patient as well as what constitutes the best treatment
for the patient. Despite criticism in the form of opinions from
physicians who characteristically have never utilized the treatment
modality, not a single valid study has ever been shown to support
or warrant such distraction.
Physician use of Innovative Therapies
As noted earlier in this Position Paper, physicians who utilize
chelation therapy are treating atherosclerotic vascular disease
in accordance with sound scientific principles, and they should
not be discriminated against for using safe and efficacious innovative
therapies.
When a physician becomes licensed by the state, the physician
is recognized by the state as capable of the diagnosis and treatment
of any human disease, pain, injury, deformity or other physical
or mental condition.
Such a licensed physician has the right, and indeed, the ethical
duty, to treat a patient as he or she thinks best, within the
parameters of his or her professional judgment and with the highest
regard for the health and welfare of the public.
It has long been held that deference must be given to the state
of advancement of the profession at the time of treatment. Whether
or not a particular therapy should be undertaken is a decision
which should be made by the treating physician, who is in the
best position to determine whether EDTA chelation therapy is indicated
for a particular patient.
In Stuart v. Wilson, 211 F. Supp. 700 (D.C. 1963), aff'd,
371 U.S. 576, it was noted that "the requirements of learning,
skill and examination provided by the Texas Medical Practices
Act for obtaining a license to practice medicine bear a direct,
substantial and reasonable relation to the practice of medicine."
It seems incongruous that having demonstrated the required learning
and skill, and having passed the examination and obtained a license,
a physician should not be permitted to exercise the judgment developed
from his experience.
Moreover, as one court has described the healing arts, medicine
is an inexact science, and eminently qualified physicians may
legitimately diverge in their beliefs as to what constitutes the
best treatment. However, such a difference does not amount to
unprofessional conduct. See Fitzgerald v. Manning, 679
F.2d 341, 347 (4th Cir. 1982).
This does not mean that the State is required to give credence
to every peculiar theory or school of medicine. "Without
doubt, it is reasonable for the State to outlaw witch doctors,
voodoo queens, bee-stingers and various other cults, which no
reasonably intelligent man would choose for the treatment of his
ills." England vs. Bd. of Medical Examiners,
259 F.2d 626, 627 (5th Cir. 1958). Asking rhetorically, "Just
where is the dividing line?" The England court held:
Under all of the cases, we think it is that the State cannot
deny to any individual the right to exercise a reasonable choice in the method of treatment
of his ills, nor the correlative right of practitioners to engage in the practice of a useful
profession. Id. at 627.
The critical question, therefore, is whether or not EDTA chelation
therapy is a reasonable choice of treatment modality. Given the
fact alone that ACAM's membership of hundreds of doctors nationwide
have successfully treated hundreds of thousands of patients with
EDTA chelation therapy, it is difficult to fathom how anyone could
assert that this treatment is not a reasonable choice of
therapy.
Merely because a particular method of treatment is not the method
which is "prevailing" does not support a proposition
that the method is ineffective or deceitful. A review of all
of the available medical articles discloses that chelation therapy
is firmly based upon accepted scientific principles and that both
current professional theory and practice have demonstrated the
efficacy of this treatment.
An enlightening article entitled The Tomato Effect-Rejection
of Highly Efficacious Therapies was published by the American
Medical Association in JAMA, 1984; 251:2387-2390. In this article,
Drs. James S. Goodwin and Jean M. Goodwin describe the tomato
effect in medicine:
The tomato effect in medicine occurs when an efficacious treatment
for a certain disease is ignored or rejected because it does not "make sense"
in the light of accepted theories of disease mechanism and drug action. The tomato was largely
ignored because it was clearly poisonous; it would have been foolish to eat one. In
analogous fashion, there have been many therapies in the history of medicine that, while later
proved highly efficacious, were at one time rejected because they did not make sense. ...We
contend that the tomato effect is in its own way every bit as influential in shaping
modern therapeutics as the placebo effect... Recognition of the reality of the tomato effect,
while not preventing future errors, may at least help us better understand our mistakes.
***
It would seem, ...that modern medicine is particularly vulnerable
to the tomato effect. Pharmaceutical companies have increasingly turned to theoretical
over practical arguments for using their drugs... What is lost in such discussions
are the only three issues that matter in picking a therapy: Does it help? How
toxic is it? How much does it cost? In this atmosphere we are at risk for rejecting
a safe, inexpensive, effective therapy in favor of an alternative treatment perhaps less
efficacious and more toxic, which is more interesting in terms of our latest views of disease
pathogenesis. (Emphasis added)
In an age when nearly half of the coronary artery bypass surgeries
conducted in the United States are recognized as being conducted
for inappropriate reasons and the efficacy of such surgery has
been frequently called into question, in contrast to the successful
experience physicians have had with chelation, it appears that the "tomato effect" has indeed taken place with chelation therapy. The efficacious use of this therapy in
treating arteriosclerosis has been demonstrated in patients world-wide.
It is only in recent years that the scientific rationale to explain
the benefits of chelation therapy has been elucidated in published
research on free radical pathology.
In Rogers v. State Board of Medical Examiners, 371 So.
2d 1037 (Fla. App. 1979) aff'd, 387 So. 2d 937 (Fla. 1980),
the court discussed the right of the State Board of Medical Examiners
to prohibit a physician from administering chelation therapy.
Acting Chief Judge Boyer noted that provisions of the Constitution
grant a person certain inalienable rights, from which derive the
right of a patient to receive, pursuant to a voluntary election,
chelation therapy, and in the absence of unlawfulness, harm, fraud,
coercion of misrepresentation, the Board was without authority
to prohibit the physician from administering such therapy. Id,
at 1041.
Utilization of a therapy which is different is not unprofessional
or unethical conduct. The converse would also hold true. General
acceptance of a therapy does not mean that utilization of that
therapy is necessarily professional or competent. Many therapies
and treatments thought to be "proper" have now been
abandoned as barbaric. The use of alternative means of treatment
should not arbitrarily be deemed incompetent care.
Time and time again, especially in the field of medicine, experience
has taught us that the orthodox view is not necessarily the correct
view. As noted by Justice Boyer, and in the concurrence, Justices
Melvin and Mills in Rogers, supra:
History teaches us that virtually all progress in science
and medicine has been accomplished as a result of the courageous efforts of those members of
the profession willing to pursue their theories in the face of tremendous odds despite the
criticism of fellow practitioners. Copernicus was thought to be a heretic when he theorized that
the earth was not the center of the universe. Banishment and prison was the reward for discovery
that the world was round. Pasteur was ridiculed for his theory that unseen organisms caused
infection. Freud met only resistance and derision in pioneering the field of psychiatry.
In our own era chiropractic treatment has been slow in receiving the approval of the other
professions of the healing arts. We can only wonder what would have been the condition
of the world today and the field of medicine in particular had those in the midstream
of their profession been permitted to prohibit continued treatment and therapy and impede progress in those and other fields of science and the healing arts (emphasis added). Id, at
1041.
Any restriction on the use of chelation therapy beyond prescribing
conformity with the ACAM protocol is entirely unwarranted. EDTA
chelation therapy has long been recognized by a substantial, respected
minority of physicians as an acceptable method of treatment, provided
that it is administered properly and adheres to the accepted standard
of practice.
One should not confuse the clear distinction existing between
innovative therapy and experimentation. Experimentation has been
defined as a procedure with no therapeutic intent, designed to
test a hypothesis and/or to develop new knowledge. However, innovative
therapy is one which is designed to benefit the individual patient
and to manage or solve a particular clinical problem. EDTA has
been utilized for nearly 50 years by physicians in this country
for various symptoms and ailments. Physicians utilizing EDTA
for vascular and other diseases are not intending to generate
new knowledge but, rather, to treat the particular needs of the
patient with the therapy he or she believes is most appropriate.
The National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects
of Biomedical and Behavioral Research, established by Congress
in 1974, has identified innovative therapies as those designed
solely to enhance the well-being of an individual patient, even
if such therapies are not approved by a peer group agency. See,
DHEW Pub. No. (05)77-0004, 1977. A significant fear
in allowing the use of innovative therapies concerns alleged risks
to the patient. This is where the physician's intent comes into
play. The intent to treat the individual patient's symptoms and
needs, not advance the personal goals of the physician, allows
the physician to determine the risk-benefit ratios involved.
It also causes the physician to follow established protocols in
the use of the innovative therapy, which will also protect the
needs of the patient.