Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
which, later, emerged a fiery sword.
It began with a telephone call when Celia was away from her office. When
she returned, a message-one of several-informed her that Mr. Alexander
Stowe, of Exeter & Stowe Laboratories, had phoned and would like her to
call him. There was nothing to indicate the request was urgent, and she
dealt with several other matters first.
An hour or so later, Celia asked for a call to be placed to Stowe, and
soon after was informed by a secretary that he was on the line.
She pressed a button and said into a speakerphone, "Hello, Alex. I was
thinking about you this morning, wondering how your Arthrigo-Hexin W
program is going."
There was a moment's silence, then a surprised voice, "We canceled our
contract with you four days ago, Celia. Didn't you know?"
Now the surprise was hers. "No, I didn't. If you told someone at your
place to cancel, are you sure they followed through?"
"I handled it myself," Stowe said, obviously still puzzled. "I talked
directly with Vince Lord. Then today, realizing I hadn't spoken with you,
thought I should, as a courtesy. It's why I called."
Annoyed at being told something she should have known sooner, Celia
answered, "I'll have something to say to Vince." She stopped. "What was
your reason for canceling?"
"Well . . . frankly, we're worried about those deaths from infections.
We've had two ourselves in patients we were monitoring, and while it
doesn't look as if either drug-Arthrigo or Hexin Wwas directly
responsible, there are still unanswered questions. We're
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uneasy about them, so we decided not to go on, particularly in view of
those other deaths elsewhere."
Celia was startled. For the first time since the conversation began, a
shiver of chill ran through her. She had a sudden premonition there was
more to come and she would not like hearing it.
"What other deaths?"
This time the silence was longer. "You mean you don't know about those
either?"
She said impatiently, "If I did, Alex, I wouldn't be asking."
"There are four we actually know about here, though without details,
except that all the deceased were taking Hexin W and died from differing
types of infection." Stowe stopped, and when he resumed his voice was
measured and serious. "Celia, I'm going to make a suggestion, and please
don't think this presumptuous since it concerns your own company. But I
think you need to have a talk with Dr. Lord."
"Yes," Celia agreed. "So do P'
"Vince knows about the deaths-the other ones and ours-because we
discussed them. Also, he'll have had details, so as to inform the FDA."
Another hesitation. "I truly hope, for everyone's sake in your shop, that
FDA has been informed."
"Alex," Celia said, "there appear to be some gaps in my knowledge and I
intend to fill them right away. I'm obliged to you for what you've told
me. Meanwhile, there doesn't seem much point in our continuing this
conversation."
"I agree with you," Stowe said. "But do please call me if there's any
other information you need, or any way I can be of service. Oh, and the
real purpose of my calling was to say I'm genuinely sorry we had to
cancel. I hope, some other time, we can work together."
Celia answered automatically, her mind already on what must be done next.
"Thank you, Alex. I hope so too."
She terminated the call by touching a button. She was about to press
another which would have connected her with Vincent Lord, then changed
her mind. She would go to see him personally. Now.
The first report of death where a patient had been taking Hexin W arrived
at Felding-Roth headquarters two months after the drug's introduction.
It had come, as was usual, to Dr. Lord. Moments after reading it, he
dismissed it entirely.
The report was from a physician in Tampa, Florida. It revealed that while
the deceased had been taking Hexin W in conjunction
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with another drug, the cause of death was a fever and infection. Lord
reasoned that the death could have had no relation to Hexin W, therefore he
tossed the report aside. However, later that day, instead of sending it for
routine filing, he placed the report in a folder in a locked drawer of his
desk.
The second report came two weeks later. It was from a FeldingRoth detail
man and was mailed after a conversation with a doctor in Southfield,
Michigan. The salesman had been conscientious in recording all the
information he could find.
Reports about side effects of drugs, including adverse effects, came to
pharmaceutical companies from several sources. Sometimes physicians wrote
directly. At other times, hospitals did so as routine procedure.
Responsible pharmacists passed on what they learned. Occasionally, word
came from patients themselves. As well, the companies' detail men and women
had instructions to report anything they were told about a product's
effect, no matter how trivial it seemed.
Within any pharmaceutical company, reports of side effects of drugs were
accumulated and, in quarterly reports, passed to the FDA. That was required
by law.
Also required by law was that any serious reaction, particularly with a new
drug, must be passed to FDA, and flagged as "urgent," within fifteen days
of the company's learning of it. The rule applied whether the company
believed its drug to be responsible or not.
The detail man's report from Southfield, again read by Lord, revealed that
the patient, while taking Hexin W and another antiarthritic drug, died from
a massive liver infection. This was confinned at autopsy.
Again, Lord decided that Hexin W could not possibly have been the cause of
death. He put the report in the folder with the first.
A month went by, then two reports came in, separately but at the same time.
They recorded deaths of a man and a woman. In both cases they had been
taking Hexin W with another drug. The woman, elderly, developed a serious
bacterial infection of a foot after it was cut in a home accident. As an
emergency measure the foot was amputated, but the infection spread quickly,
causing death. The man, who had been in poor health, died from an over-
whelming infection of the brain.
Lord's reaction was one of annoyance with the two dead people. Why had
their damned diseases, from which they would have expired anyway, had to
involve Hexin W, even though the drug was
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clearly not responsible in either case? Just the same, the accumulaing
reports were becoming an embarrassment. Also a worry.
By this time Lord was aware of his failure to comply with federal law by
not reporting the earlier incidents immediately to FDA. Now, he was in
an impossible position.
If he sent the latest reports to FDA, he could not omit the earlier ones.
Yet those were long overdue under the fifteen-day reporting rule, and if
he sent them, both Felding-Roth and he personally would be shown as
guilty of a law violation. Anything could happen. He was uncomfortably
conscious of Dr. Gideon Mace probably waiting at FDA to pounce on such
an opportunity.
Lord put the two latest reports in his folder with the others. After all,
he reminded himself, he was the only one with knowledge of the total
number. Each bad arrived separately. None of the individuals making a
report was aware of the others.
By the time Alexander Stowe telephoned, canceling Exeter & Stowe's
contract for the use of Hexin W, Lord had accumulated twelve reports and
was living in fear. He also learned-increasing his anxiety-that Stowe had
somehow heard about four of those Hexin-W-related deaths. Lord did not
tell Stowe that the actual number was twelve, plus the two Stowe knew
about directly, which Lord 11-amed of for the first time.
Since, legally, Lord could not ignore what Stowe had told him, the total
of known deaths was now fourteen.
A fifteenth report came in on the day that Stowe telephoned Celia. By
then, reluctantly but unable to avoid the scientific truth, Lord had
gained an idea of what was causing the deaths--most of them, if not all.
Several months earlier in Celia's office, during that sales planning
meeting where afterward his words had been applauded, he had described
the effect of Hexin W. " . . . stops free-radical production, so that
leukocytes-white blood cells-are not attracted to a disease site . . .
Result-no inflammation . . . pain disappears.
All of that was true.
What was also becoming clear, by deduction and some hasty new
experiments, was that banishment of leukocytes opened up a weakness, a
vulnerability. In the ordinary way, leukocytes at a disease site killed
off foreign material-bacteria. Thus leukocytes, though causing pain, were
also a protection. But in their absence-an absence caused by the
quenching of free radicals-bacteria and other
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organisms flourished, creating massive infections in various body locales.
And death.
Though it had yet to be proved, Vincent Lord was sure that Hexin W was,
after all, the cause of at least a dozen deaths, perhaps more.
He also realized, too late to be of use, that there had been a weakness in
the Hexin W clinical testing program. Most of the patients observed had
been in hospitals under controlled conditions where infections were less
apt to flourish. All of the deaths recorded in his folder had occurred away
from hospitals, in homes or other noncontrolled environments where bacteria
could live and breed . . .
Lord reached the conclusion-acknowledging his failure, shattering his
dreams, reinforcing his present, desperate fears-only a few minutes before
Celia arrived.
He knew now that Hexin W would have to be withdrawn. He knew, with despair,
that he was guilty of concealment-a concealment causing deaths that could
have been prevented, As a result he faced disgrace, prosecution, and
perhaps imprisonment.
Strangely, his mind went back to twenty-seven years before . . .
Champaign-Urbana, the University of Illinois, and the day in the dean's
office when he had asked for accelerated promotion, which had been refused.
He had sensed then that the dean believed he, Vincent Lord, was flawed by
some defect of character. Now, for the first time, peeling the layers from
his soul, Lord asked himself. Had the dean been right?
Walking unannounced into Lord's office, closing the door behind her, Celia
wasted no time.
"Why was I not told that Exeter & Stowe canceled their contract four days
ago?"
Lord, startled by the sudden entry, said awkwardly, "I was going to tell
you. I hadn't got around to it."
"How long would you have taken if I hadn't asked?" Then, without waiting
for an answer, "I had to learn from outside that there have been adverse
reports about Hexin W. Why haven't I heard of those either?"
Lord said lamely, "I've been studying . . . collating them."
She ordered, "Let me see them. Every one. Now."
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