Report Linking Vaccine To Autism Was Fraudulent, Says British Medical Journal

Report Linking Vaccine To Autism Was Fraudulent, Says British Medical Journal

LONDON -- The first study to link a childhood vaccine to autism was based on doctored information about the children involved, according to a new report on the widely discredited research.

The conclusions of the 1998 paper by Andrew Wakefield and colleagues was renounced by 10 of its 13 authors and later retracted by the medical journal Lancet, where it was published. Still, the suggestion the MMR shot was connected to autism spooked parents worldwide and immunization rates for measles, mumps and rubella have never fully recovered.

A new examination found, by comparing the reported diagnoses in the paper to hospital records, that Wakefield and colleagues altered facts about patients in their study.

The analysis, by British journalist Brian Deer, found that despite the claim in Wakefield's paper that the 12 children studied were normal until they had the MMR shot, five had previously documented developmental problems. Deer also found that all the cases were somehow misrepresented when he compared data from medical records and the children's parents.

Wakefield's recent book claims there is a connection between vaccines and autism that has been ignored by the medical establishment. He now lives in the U.S. where he enjoys a vocal following including celebrity supporters like Jenny McCarthy.

On Wednesday night, CNN's Anderson Cooper interviewed Wakefield, who acknowledged he had not read the latest analysis. Still, Wakefield defended his work against what he dismissed as "false allegations," suggested that Deer didn't actually conduct interviews with the parents, and characterized Deer as a "hitman" funded by the pharmaceutical industry. Cooper pointed out that Deer had signed a document asserting that he had no financial interest.

WATCH:

Deer's article was paid for by the Sunday Times of London and Britain's Channel 4 television network. It was published online Thursday in the medical journal, BMJ.

In an accompanying editorial, BMJ editor Fiona Godlee and colleagues called Wakefield's study "an elaborate fraud." They said Wakefield's work in other journals should be examined to see if it should be retracted.

Last May, Wakefield was stripped of his right to practice medicine in Britain. Many other published studies have shown no connection between the MMR vaccination and autism.

But measles has surged since Wakefield's paper was published and there are sporadic outbreaks in Europe and the U.S. In 2008, measles was deemed endemic in England and Wales.

___

Online:

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot