Accord ends feud over AIDS blood test.In an attempt to quench quench, v to cool a hot object rapidly by plunging it into water or oil. quench to put out, extinguish, or suppress; to cool (as hot metal) by immersing in water. the fiery debate over the distribution of profits from the AIDS blood test, the U.S. government this week reached a historic agreement with the Pasteur Institute of Paris. The new accord will give the French a better deal on royalties garnered from the worldwide sales of such tests, which are used to determine whether someone has been infected with HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States. , the AIDS virus AIDS virus n. See HIV. . "The agreement aims to equalize e·qual·ize v. e·qual·ized, e·qual·iz·ing, e·qual·iz·es v.tr. 1. To make equal: equalized the responsibilities of the staff members. 2. To make uniform. the amount of royalties each country will receive from the worldwide sale of test kits," says National Institutes of Health (NH) Director Harold Varmus. The pact represents the first official NIH "Not invented here." See digispeak. NIH - The United States National Institutes of Health. acknowledgement that U.S. scientists, led by NIH's Robert C. Gallo, based their blood test on a French virus. "Scientists at the NIH used a virus provided to them by the Pasteur Institute to invent the American HIV test HIV test Various tests have been used to detect HIV and production of antibodies thereto; some HTs shown below are no longer actively used, but are listed for completeness and context. See HIV, Immunoblot. kit," Varmus said. A March 30, 1987, settlement between then-President Ronald Reagan and French Prime Minister Jacques Chirac gave equal credit for discovering the AIDS virus and developing the blood tests to French and U.S. scientists. Since that time, however, the United States has reaped about $20 million in royalties (mostly from the sales of the U.S. AIDS test AIDS test Lab medicine Any test performed on a standard venipuncture blood specimen which detects HIV antibodies–ELISA, or antigens–eg, Western blot, or viral nucleic acid–eg, viral load by RNA. See Western blot. ), while the French have garnered just $14 million. The imbalance occurred because of the wording of the 1987 settlement and because the U.S. AIDS test sells better than its French counterpart. The new agreement attempts to equalize the profits from now until the patent expires in the year 2002. "If past experience holds, the new formula will give the French several hundred thousand dollars per year more than they would have gotten under the old formula," Varmus says. The patent pact does not resolve the lingering issue of how the French virus came to play a starring role in the development of the U.S. blood test in the first place. As early as 1985, the Pasteur Institute's lawyers charged that the U.S. blood test was based on a French virus. In 1991, Pasteur scientists demonstrated proof of that allegation in a paper published in SCIENCE. Soon after, Gallo acknowledged in a letter in the May 30, 1991 NATURE that the virus he relied on to create the U.S. AIDS blood test was indeed French in origin. However, Gallo said then--and still maintains--that his laboratory inadvertently used the French virus, which had contaminated the cultures growing in his NIH laboratory. Critics continue to assert that Gallo misappropriated mis·ap·pro·pri·ate tr.v. mis·ap·pro·pri·at·ed, mis·ap·pro·pri·at·ing, mis·ap·pro·pri·ates 1. a. To appropriate wrongly: misappropriating the theories of social science. the French virus and knowingly passed it off as his own. The official file on Gallo's conduct during and after the development of the AIDS blood test remains littered with contradictory conclusions. In January 1993, the Department of Health and Human Services' Office of Research Integrity produced a report concluding that Gallo was guilty of scientific misconduct scientific misconduct, n the fabrication, falsification, or plagiarism of research data, or other violations of ethical standards of the scientific community. (SN: 1/9/93, p.20). Later that year, the office, in response to new misconduct standards, dropped its case against Gallo (SN: 12/4/93, p.383). The latest salvo in the Gallo case occurred last month, with a widely publicized HHS HHS Department of Health and Human Services. Inspector General report. That report, although it didn't provide any new information, reiterated a damaging chronology of events as they relate to the feud over the AIDS blood test. With the dissemination of the Inspector General report, Pasteur Institute lawyers, who had threatened legal action if NIH did not come through with a more equitable patent agreement (SN: 7/18/92, p.46), stepped up their demands. On June 11, Varmus complied, and the new patent-sharing agreement was signed. AIDS activist Martin E. Delaney, executive director of Project Inform in San Francisco, expressed relief that the feud may be over. "It's not a productive use of anybody's time to keep squabbling over this," he said. |
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