"Rather than the clinical trial data, I've been more impressed by the testimony of the many long-term, very sick patients, including doctors, who have responded very strongly to Ampligen and of the clinicians who have had many years of using Ampligen and have seen patients do well on it."
With respect, and as I am sure you are perfectly well aware, the plural of 'testimony' is not 'evidence'. What individuals have to say, whether doctors or patients, about open-label use, without controls of any kind, of any medication, is not the sort of thing by which the FDA will be, or is supposed to be, persuaded. It is always worth remembering that the US supplement industry, aided by its bought-and-paid for shill in the Senate Orrin Hatch, spent $2.5 bn (in 1994 money) to make sure that the FDA could, by law, assess only the safety, not the effectiveness, of vitamins etc.
"Normally we'd want clinical trials to be showing efficacy but it's clear that Ampligen doesn't work for everyone and without identifying the subset it works for, it would need a very large trial to show efficacy and we haven't had that yet."
I do not see why Ampligen should be treated differently from any other drug that would 'normally' be subjected to at least one more large clinical trial. If it is indeed effective only for a subgroup of ME patients, then, obviously, members of the other subgroup who tried it would be spending their money, or someone else's money (and it's a lot of money), to no purpose whatsoever, except to enrich Hemispherx shareholders. Hemispherx know that ME sufferers are desperate, and that many of us will try anything, if told it has helped someone else with ME. I do not want to see any ME sufferer become the sucker who gets taken for (say) $15K p.a. for the foreseeable future.
You may perhaps reply that that is their choice: but the FDA is legally barred from choosing to allow US citizens 'try anything' provided it's safe, where that thing is marketed as a medication and not as a supplement.
"Cort has done some good pieces on the effectiveness of Ampligen on his blog, such as this one (there are more if you go to his home page and look through recent articles:"
http://www.cortjohnson.org/blog/201...-effort-to-approve-ampligen-hitting-the-news/[/quote]
I would say that the key datum in all that material is this: that the 2012 paper, summarising the 2004 trial, was composed by doctors most of whom had a financial interest, one way or another, in the success of Ampligen. Why doesn't Hemispherx sell Ampligen as a supplement? Because it's so expensive only medical insurance would cover it.
best wishes
Apollonia