95-2945. National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program Revision of the Vaccine Injury Table  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 26 (Wednesday, February 8, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 7678-7696]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-2945]
    
    
    
    
    [[Page 7677]]
    
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    Part V
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Health and Human Services
    
    
    
    
    
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    Public Health Service
    
    
    
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    42 CFR Part 100
    
    
    
    National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program Revision of the Vaccine 
    Injury Table; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 26 / Wednesday, February 8, 1995 / 
    Rules and Regulations 
    [[Page 7678]] 
    
    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    
    Public Health Service
    
    42 CFR Part 100
    
    RIN 0905-AD64
    
    
    National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program Revision of the 
    Vaccine Injury Table
    
    AGENCY: Health Resources and Services Administration, PHS, HHS.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This final rule amends the existing regulations governing the 
    National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (VICP) by adding a new 
    section regarding the Vaccine Injury Table (Table) to the regulations, 
    pursuant to section 312 of the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 
    1986 and section 2114(c) of the Public Health Service Act (the Act). 
    The VICP provides a system of no-fault compensation for certain 
    individuals who have been injured by specific childhood vaccines. The 
    Vaccine Injury Table included in the Act establishes presumptions about 
    causation of certain illnesses and conditions, which are used by the 
    Court to adjudicate petitions. The amendments to the Vaccine Injury 
    Table will affect only those petitions filed for compensation under the 
    VICP after the effective date of this rule.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: This regulation is effective March 10, 1995.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    Geoffrey Evans, M.D., Chief Medical Officer and Deputy Director, 
    Division of Vaccine Injury Compensation, Bureau of Health Professions, 
    (301) 443-4198, or David Benor, Senior Attorney, Office of the General 
    Counsel, (301) 443-2006.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 
    
    Introduction and Procedural History
    
        On August 14, 1992, the Assistant Secretary for Health, with the 
    approval of the Secretary of Health and Human Services (the Secretary), 
    published in the Federal Register (57 FR 36878) a Notice of Proposed 
    Rulemaking (NPRM) to amend the Vaccine Injury Table (the Table). (A 
    correction notice to the NPRM was also published on September 11, 1992, 
    57 FR 41809). The NPRM was issued pursuant to section 2114(c) of the 
    Act, which authorizes the Secretary to promulgate regulations to modify 
    the Table.
        As stated in the preamble to the proposed rule, under section 312 
    of the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986 (Pub. L. 99-660), 
    Congress mandated that the Secretary review the scientific literature 
    and other information on specific adverse consequences of pertussis and 
    rubella vaccines. The Secretary entered into a contract with the 
    Institute of Medicine (IOM), as recommended by Congress, to perform 
    this review. The IOM published a report of its review entitled, 
    ``Adverse Effects of Pertussis and Rubella Vaccines,'' on August 27, 
    1991 (hereinafter ``IOM Report''). The Public Health Service Task Force 
    on the VICP evaluated the IOM report and made the initial 
    recommendations regarding possible revision of the Table.
        These recommendations were reviewed by a special subcommittee of 
    the National Vaccine Advisory Committee (NVAC) (a committee authorized 
    under section 2105 of the Act). The subcommittee overwhelmingly 
    endorsed all of the proposed revisions except for the addition of 
    chronic arthritis to the Table. The full NVAC endorsed the 
    subcommittee's recommendations for revising the Table.
        The Advisory Commission on Childhood Vaccines (ACCV), whose 
    membership by statutory directive reflects a variety of views relating 
    to childhood immunizations (authorized under section 2119 of the Act), 
    considered the NVAC report as well as the PHS Task Force 
    recommendations. The ACCV deliberations included public policy 
    considerations, whereas the NVAC charge was to consider only the 
    scientific issues raised by the existing Table, the recent IOM report, 
    and other scientific information. The ACCV voted approval of all of the 
    PHS Task Force recommendations except for the removal of the condition 
    of Encephalopathy. The ACCV voted unanimously to retain Encephalopathy 
    on the Table provided the existing definition in the Aids to 
    Interpretation was clarified. The Secretary proposed changes to the 
    Table after reviewing the recommendations of these three entities.
        As provided by section 2114(c) of the Act, the Department provided 
    for a 6-month comment period, which closed on February 11, 1993. On 
    December 3, 1992, the Department held a public hearing for the purpose 
    of receiving oral testimony on the proposed rule.
        During the process of analyzing the comments received in response 
    to the NPRM, the Agency became aware of the imminent publication of a 
    10-year follow-up study to the National Childhood Encephalopathy Study 
    (NCES) (Madge N., Diamond J., Miller D., Ross E., McManus C., Wadsworth 
    J., Yule W. The National Childhood Encephalopathy Study: A 10-year 
    follow-up. A report of the medical, social, behavioural and educational 
    outcomes after serious, acute, neurologic illness in early childhood. 
    Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology 1993; Supplement No. 
    68;35(7):1-118; Miller D.L., Madge N., Diamond J., Wadsworth J., Ross 
    E. Pertussis immunization and serious acute neurological illness in 
    children. British Medical Journal 1993; 307:1171-1176, hereinafter 
    ``Miller study.''). Because the Miller study looked specifically at the 
    relationship between vaccine administration and subsequent neurological 
    damage, the Department determined that it should not proceed with 
    publication of the final rule until there had been a sufficient 
    opportunity to consider the conclusions of the new Miller study. 
    Accordingly, the Department asked the IOM to convene a Committee for 
    purposes of evaluating the Miller study in light of the conclusions of 
    its initial report. On March 2, 1994, the Institute of Medicine issued 
    a report entitled ``DPT Vaccine and Chronic Nervous System Dysfunction: 
    A New Analysis.'' On March 24, 1994, the Department published a notice 
    in the Federal Register affording members of the public and additional 
    30 days to comment on the Miller study and the IOM report. See Federal 
    Register March 24, 1994, (59 FR 13916).
        The Agency also asked a subcommittee of the NVAC to review the 
    IOM's conclusions regarding the implications of the Miller study. On 
    March 15, the NVAC subcommittee met to review (among other things) the 
    Miller study. The subcommittee was composed of members of the NVAC, and 
    received input from outside experts from the fields of epidemiology, 
    pediatric infectious disease, and pediatric neurology. The views of the 
    NVAC are discussed below where relevant.
        The ACCV reviewed the IOM report on the Miller study at its 
    meetings in March and June, 1994. In addition, the ACCV was asked to 
    provide comments during the additional public comment period. Comments 
    received from two individual Commission members will be discussed 
    below. At the June meeting, the Commission discussed in detail the 
    Miller study and the IOM report. The consensus of the Commission was 
    that the original table in the statute requires modification to make it 
    consistent with current medical and scientific knowledge regarding 
    adverse events associated with certain vaccines. The Commission was 
    split, however, on the appropriate frame of reference for modifying the 
    Table. Some [[Page 7679]] Commission members expressed the view that 
    the starting point for revisions to the Table should be the original 
    Table in the statute. The other commissioners agreed that the Secretary 
    should further refine the Table, but that the starting point for 
    additional revisions should be the modified Table as published in the 
    NPRM on August 14, 1992.
        The Department has listened carefully to the Commissioners' 
    concerns. After weighing all the varied opinions expressed at the June 
    meeting, as well as the written comments received from two commission 
    members, the Department has decided that a final rule which is a 
    revised and refined version of the proposed rule published in 1992 will 
    reflect best the scientific evidence. However, in drafting the final 
    rule, the Department made many of the changes suggested by members of 
    the Commission. These changes will be explained below. In this regard, 
    the Department recognizes that one of the objectives of the National 
    Vaccine Plan, which was released recently by the National Vaccine 
    Program Office/OASH, is to ensure that the Vaccine Injury Table is 
    updated periodicall to reflect the latest scientific knowledge. The 
    final rule is consistent with this goal, as well as the statutory 
    directive that the Secretary revise the Table.
        Although by law the regulation will only affect those petitions 
    filed after the effective date specified above, the Department 
    encourages the Special Masters of the U.S. Court of Federal Claims to 
    apply the scientific findings which form the basis of the revised Table 
    where appropriate. For instance, in cases where petitioners are 
    intending to prove causation in fact, the IOM's conclusions regarding 
    causation may be relevant for consideration by the Special Master. In 
    addition, the Special Master could find, based on the conclusions of 
    the IOM, that a particular injury was due to a factor unrelated to 
    vaccine administration. Prior to promulgation of this rule, several 
    Special Masters viewed the IOM report as instructive regarding certain 
    illnesses and conditions and their relationship to vaccine 
    administration. The Department hopes that the use of the IOM report 
    continues, and that the findings and conclusions made by the Secretary 
    in promulgating this rule will be applied by the Masters where the 
    facts of the case make it appropriate to do so. In some cases, as 
    explained below, the Secretary's findings as set forth in the NPRM at 
    57 FR 36879 were not incorporated into the final rule. This decision 
    does not affect the Secretary's findings and should not deter the 
    Special Masters from applying the findings where appropriate.
        The Department received 41 written comments and five oral comments 
    on the NPRM, and five comments in response to the Federal Register 
    Notice to Extend the Public Comment Period (March 24, 1994). Comments 
    were received from health professional organizations, parent 
    organizations, medical professionals, attorneys, and the general 
    public. All comments were carefully considered. The Department's 
    responses to the comments are discussed below in two separate sections. 
    Section I discusses the comments addressing legal issues, and Section 
    II discusses those comments addressing medical issues. The discussion 
    does not address comments that either generally supported or generally 
    criticized the proposed Table changes without making a specific point. 
    In preparing this final rule, the Department also made a number of 
    changes, both editorial and substantive in nature. The substantive 
    changes are discussed where appropriate as follows:
    
    I. Legal Issues
    
    The Secretary's Authority To Promulgate the Regulation
    
        Several commenters suggested that the Department had exceeded its 
    authority in promulgating the regulation. First, commenters argued that 
    this is a function which belongs to the legislative branch and which 
    cannot be delegated to the Department based on the Separation of Powers 
    doctrine. The Department disagrees with this legal argument for several 
    reasons. In enacting a particular statutory scheme, Congress will often 
    leave particular gaps with instructions to the Department charged with 
    executing the statute to promulgate regulations to fill the gaps and 
    interpret the statutory language. See Chevron v. Natural Resources 
    Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984). In promulgating 
    regulations, the Department is limited to the authority delegated by 
    Congress, and is obligated to act consistent with Congressional intent. 
    See Bowen v. Georgetown University Hospital, 488 U.S. 204 (1988). 
    Pursuant to these basic principles of administrative law, the Secretary 
    is promulgating this regulation to amend the Vaccine Injury Table.
        The statute explicitly authorizes the Secretary in section 2114(c) 
    of the Act to modify the Table and states that the ``Secretary may 
    promulgate regulations to modify * * * the Vaccine Injury Table.'' See 
    42 U.S.C. 300aa-14(c)(1). The statute further provides that ``a 
    modification of the Vaccine Injury Table under paragraph (1) may add 
    to, or delete from, the list of injuries, disabilities, illnesses, 
    conditions, and deaths for which compensation may be provided, or may 
    change the time periods for the first symptom or manifestation of the 
    onset of the significant aggravation of any such injury, disability, 
    illness, condition, or death.'' See 42 U.S.C. 300aa-14(c)(3). Under 
    section 312 of Pub. L. 99-660, Congress mandated that the Secretary 
    review the scientific literature and other information on specific 
    adverse consequences of pertussis and rubella vaccines. As mandated by 
    the statute, after completion of this study (undertaken by the 
    Institute of Medicine), and the consultation required by section 
    2114(c) of the Act, the Department proposed the revisions to the Table. 
    In so doing, the Department was acting exactly within the authority 
    delegated to it by the Congress.
        Further, as stated in the preamble to the Notice of Proposed 
    Rulemaking, the legislative history explains that Congress intended the 
    Secretary to modify the Table. The Conference Report states as follows:
    
        The Committee recognizes that there is public debate over the 
    incidence of illnesses that coincidentally occur within a short time 
    of vaccination. The Committee further recognizes that the deeming of 
    vaccine-relatedness adopted here may provide compensation to some 
    children whose illness is not, in fact, vaccine-related. The 
    Committee anticipates that the research on vaccine injury and 
    vaccine safety now ongoing and mandated by this legislation will 
    soon provide more definitive information about the incidence of 
    vaccine injury and that, when such information is available, the 
    Secretary or the Advisory Commission on Childhood Vaccines * * * may 
    propose to revise the Table, as provided below in section 2114 
    [Initial Table]. Until such time, however, the Committee has chosen 
    to provide compensation to all persons whose injuries meet the 
    requirements of the petition and the Table and whose injuries cannot 
    be demonstrated to be caused by other factors.
    
    See H.R. Rept. 99-908, Part 1, September 26, 1986, page 18 (reprinted 
    in 1986 U.S. Code Cong. and Admin. News, Vol. 6, page 6359). This 
    passage indicates that the Department is acting consistent with 
    Congressional intent.
        At least two commenters argued that the Department exceeded its 
    authority in modifying the ``Qualifications and Aids to 
    Interpretation'' (Qualifications) found in section 2114(b) of the Act. 
    This argument, too, is misplaced. First, section 312 requires that the 
    Secretary make findings regarding which illnesses [[Page 7680]] and 
    conditions can reasonably be determined to be caused by certain 
    vaccines. It further requires the Secretary to make findings regarding 
    ``the circumstances under which such causation or aggravation can 
    reasonably be determined to occur.'' 42 U.S.C. 300aa-1 note. The 
    purpose of the Qualifications and Aids to Interpretation is to describe 
    those circumstances under which certain conditions occur. Congress 
    stated that the Qualifications provide ``various descriptions and 
    definitions that the Committee intends be used in interpreting the 
    meaning of the Table.'' See H.R. Rept. 99-908, Part 1, September 26, 
    1986, page 19 (reprinted in 1986 U.S. Code Cong. and Admin. News, Vol. 
    6, page 6360). Given that Congress required the Secretary to make 
    findings regarding the circumstances under which causation can occur, 
    and that she was then required to promulgate regulations as a result of 
    such findings, she could not have fulfilled her obligations under 
    section 312 without modifying the Qualifications as well as the Table 
    itself.
        Moreover, the statutory language and the legislative history quoted 
    above indicate that the Qualifications must be viewed as part of the 
    Table. The statute states that ``the following qualifications and aids 
    to interpretation shall apply to the Vaccine Injury Table in subsection 
    (a).'' See 42 U.S.C. 300aa-14(b). Thus, Congress intended the Table and 
    the Qualifications to be viewed as one unit because the Qualifications 
    explain and clarify the terms of the Table. It stands to reason, 
    therefore, that if the Table is changed, the Qualifications must be 
    changed accordingly.
        In fact, Congress anticipated that changes to the Table would 
    require similar changes to the Qualifications and Aids to 
    Interpretation in order to guarantee that the two sections are 
    consistent. The statute states that ``if a provision of the table to 
    which paragraph (1), (2), (3), or (4) [the paragraphs of the 
    Qualifications and Aids to Interpretation] applies is revised under 
    subsection (c) or (d), such paragraph shall not apply to such provision 
    after the effective date of the revision unless the revision specifies 
    that such paragraph is to continue to apply.'' (42 U.S.C. 300aa-
    14(b)(4)). Thus, the Qualifications contained in the original statute 
    become null and void once that initial Table is changed, unless the 
    Secretary specifies that they are to apply. Implicit in this authority 
    is the authority to promulgate by regulation Qualifications applicable 
    to the revised Table.
        Two commenters stated that the regulation exceeded the Department's 
    authority by attempting to prescribe elements of proof necessary to 
    prevail in a petition for vaccine compensation. They argued that this 
    function is reserved to the United States Court of Federal Claims. As 
    explained above, the Secretary is authorized to revise the 
    Qualifications as well as the Table. The statute states that the 
    Secretary may ``add to, or delete from, the list of injuries, 
    conditions, and deaths for which compensation may be provided or may 
    change the time periods for the first symptom or manifestation of the 
    onset or the significant aggravation of any such injury, disability, 
    illness, condition or death.'' The original Table and Qualifications 
    delineate those elements which must be proven in order to take 
    advantage of a presumption of causation.
        In this regard, the commenters should understand the function of 
    the Table. The purpose is not to set forth standards of proof for 
    establishing causation-in-fact. Rather, the purpose is to set out a 
    standard for establishing presumed causation, which, absent a finding 
    of a factor unrelated to the vaccine, will allow a petitioner to 
    receive compensation without the burden of proving causation for those 
    conditions included on the Table. Accordingly, the Qualifications 
    properly set out standards for defining those conditions on the Table. 
    Petitioners remain free to establish causation in fact by producing 
    credible scientific information peculiar to their conditions.
        Although the commenters assert that the Department is impermissibly 
    creating elements of proof, the Qualifications as drafted originally 
    contain numerous requirements that are, in essence, elements of proof. 
    For example, the paragraph describing the requirements for a `residual 
    seizure disorder' states the number of seizures which must have 
    occurred in the year after the vaccine was administered for the 
    petitioner to be found to have suffered a residual seizure disorder. In 
    addition, section 2114(b)(3)(A) of the Act describing the definition of 
    encephalopathy states that ``Encephalopathy usually can be documented 
    by slow wave activity on an electroencephalogram.'' Similarly, the 
    revised Qualifications indicate the elements which must be proven to 
    establish a presumption of causation for those injuries and conditions 
    listed in the modified Table.
        In objecting to this aspect of the Qualifications, the commenters 
    assume erroneously that the revised Qualifications alter the Special 
    Master's role in determining whether a Table Injury has been proven. 
    The Special Master's role is to consider the information contained in 
    the record, including oral testimony, medical records and medical 
    opinion. The Master must weigh the evidence, examine the credibility of 
    the witnesses, reconcile the points of disagreement between the parties 
    and issue a final decision. The revised Qualifications do not alter 
    this role. As did the former Qualifications, they require the 
    petitioner to demonstrate a Table condition by proving that various 
    events occurred. The Special Master must still analyze the evidentiary 
    issues which arise in the context of attempting to prove a Table 
    injury.
    
    The Effect of the Regulation on Other Statutory Sections
    
        One commenter stated that the Qualifications and Aids to 
    Interpretation are inconsistent with section 2113(b) of the Act, which 
    permits the Special Master to find that the injury occurred within the 
    Table period even if the symptoms were not recorded or were incorrectly 
    recorded in the medical records. The commenter specifically took issue 
    with the section of the revised Qualifications which states that an 
    ``an acute encephalopathy should be sufficiently severe to require 
    health care intervention and hospitalization.'' In addition, during the 
    June 1994 meeting of the ACCV, at least one member of the Commission 
    objected to this requirement as being overly restrictive because 
    hospitalization is required. The Commission member voicing this concern 
    felt that the rule should recognize that not all parents would respond 
    to a possible encephalopathic event by taking the child to the 
    hospital.
        The revised Qualifications and Aids to Interpretation are not 
    inconsistent with section 2113(b) of the Act, because the Special 
    Master may still find that a preponderance of the evidence indicates 
    that the encephalopathy was severe enough to require medical 
    intervention or hospitalization, but that because of error or omission 
    the event was either not recorded or was incorrectly recorded. In 
    addition, under the revised Qualifications, although medical records 
    should be provided in most cases, the language ``sufficiently severe'' 
    is meant to be consistent with section 2113(b)(2) of the Act and would 
    permit a finding in favor of petitioner if the Special Master found 
    that a preponderance of the evidence indicated that the injury was 
    sufficiently severe such that medical intervention should have been 
    sought. [[Page 7681]] 
        In the Department's view, the original statute does not intend the 
    Special Master to find that the injury occurred within the Table period 
    in the absence of any records recording the injury, unless the 
    petitioner is able to produce clear, cogent, and consistent testimony 
    to explain the absence of records. The Court has found in favor of 
    petitioners in the absence of corroborating medical records where the 
    preponderance of evidence, including oral testimony, demonstrates that 
    the adverse event occurred within the Table timeframe. The requirement 
    contained within the revised Aids to Interpretation is meant to include 
    only those events which are so serious that they require medical 
    intervention (whether or not medical intervention was actually sought), 
    and are, therefore, properly referred to as encephalopathies. The 
    requirement is simply meant to exclude those conditions which are not 
    serious enough to warrant medical attention. These types of minor 
    symptoms (e.g., excessive crying, sleepiness) were specifically 
    excluded from the definition of encephalopathy contained within the 
    original statute, but have been alleged by some petitioners to be signs 
    and symptoms of an encephalopathy. The revised Qualifications and Aids 
    to Interpretation simply seek to make clear the intent of Congress.
        The Department recognizes, however, that the language ``should be 
    sufficiently severe,'' is somewhat confusing. In addition, the 
    Department recognizes that the phase ``medical intervention and 
    hospitalization'' is redundant, and open to various interpretations. 
    Accordingly, the regulatory language in Sec. 100.3(b)(2)(i) as proposed 
    has been revised to read ``An acute encephalopathy is one that is 
    sufficiently severe so as to require hospitalization.'' The Department 
    is making this change in the interests of clarity, consistent with the 
    explanation articulated above. In order to demonstrate a Table 
    encephalopathy, the petitioner must prove that the injury was indeed 
    serious enough to warrant hospitalization, whether or not records of 
    such hospitalization exist. Certainly, however, contemporaneous medical 
    records are of extreme importance in proving that a Table injury 
    occurred.
    
    The Sufficiency of the IOM Report as the Basis for the Changes to the 
    Vaccine Injury Table
    
        Several commenters stated that the Department relied on 
    insufficient data in proposing modifications to the Table. These 
    commenters argued that Congress intended that more definitive 
    information be available before the Table is revised. The commenters 
    took issue with both the conclusions of the Institute of Medicine and 
    the Department's interpretation of those conclusions. Section 312 of 
    Pub. L. 99-660 (42 U.S.C. 300aa-1, note) required the Secretary to 
    complete a review of ``all relevant medical and scientific information 
    regarding the connection between various vaccines and specified adverse 
    events.'' The Secretary was then required to publish in the Federal 
    Register findings regarding ``whether each of the illnesses or 
    conditions set forth in subsection (a) can reasonably be determined in 
    some circumstances to be caused or significantly aggravated by 
    pertussis containing vaccines.'' See 42 U.S.C. 300aa-1, note. 
    Simultaneously, the statute required that the Secretary propose changes 
    to the Table as a result of the findings.
        This language indicates that Congress intended that the Secretary 
    modify the Table consistent with the conclusions of the review 
    undertaken by the Institute of Medicine. Nowhere is there a 
    requirement, however, that the causal connection between the 
    administration of vaccines and certain adverse events be definite and 
    conclusive before any changes are made. The IOM concluded that ``the 
    evidence is insufficient to indicate a causal relation between vaccines 
    containing pertussis'' and certain adverse events. Because the evidence 
    was determined as ``insufficient,'' the Department concluded that it 
    could not ``reasonably determine'' that a causal connection exists, and 
    the Table is being revised accordingly.
        The section of the legislative history cited by the commenter in 
    support of the objection states that ``the Committee anticipates that 
    the research on vaccine injury and vaccine safety now ongoing and 
    mandated by this legislation will soon provide more definitive 
    information about the incidence of vaccine injury and that, when such 
    information is available, the Secretary or the Advisory Commission on 
    Childhood Vaccines (discussed below in section 2119) may propose to 
    revise the Table as provided below in section 2114.'' This statement 
    merely indicates a recognition by Congress that the original Vaccine 
    Injury Table was overinclusive, and that more research would yield more 
    definitive information. As described in the preamble to the proposed 
    regulation, and consistent with the statutory requirements, the 
    findings of the Institute of Medicine represented a comprehensive 
    review of the existing evidence as well as numerous opportunities for 
    comment from various experts and members of the public. The systematic 
    process undertaken by the Department to evaluate the findings of the 
    IOM demonstrates that the Department reviewed sufficiently the findings 
    of the IOM and their applicability to the Table. These findings clearly 
    indicated that the original Table was out of step with the state of 
    medical knowledge. Accordingly, the Secretary was obliged to propose 
    revisions. Although the IOM's original conclusion was modified somewhat 
    in the 1994 report regarding pertussis vaccine and chronic nervous 
    system damage, the Department has determined that the major changes to 
    the Table published in the NPRM reflect the IOM's latest conclusions 
    regarding this difficult issue. Nevertheless, as discussed below, the 
    final rule reflects some minor changes made to the proposed rule in 
    light of the Miller study and comments provided to the Department in 
    connection with this study.
        Two commenters felt that the Department had ignored relevant 
    information in revising the Table. Specifically, they believed that the 
    Department should have viewed the claims that have either been 
    compensated or conceded by the Department as proof that the 
    presumptions conferred by the Table are accurate. However, the fact 
    that a particular case has either been adjudicated compensable or 
    conceded by HHS does not imply that a medical conclusion regarding 
    vaccine-relatedness has been made. The process of deciding claims is 
    based on whether the claim fits the parameters of the Table, or whether 
    causation has been proven. Most claims have been adjudicated ``table 
    cases,'' meaning that the petitioners were afforded the presumption of 
    causation conferred by the statute. This determination involves an 
    analysis of various evidentiary and other legal issues, but does not 
    prove or disprove whether a causal relationship exists in fact between 
    certain vaccines and adverse events. The outcome of these cases does 
    not have any bearing on whether the Table should be revised to reflect 
    the findings of the Institute of Medicine.
        One commenter referred to a letter written by the organization 
    Dissatisfied Parents Together on May 8, 1991, to then Secretary 
    Sullivan regarding concerns that members of the Immunization Practices 
    Advisory Committee (ACIP) who have advised pharmaceutical companies, or 
    conducted research funded by such companies may have a conflict of 
    interest which precludes their serving [[Page 7682]] on the ACIP. The 
    Department has determined that this comment is irrelevant as far as the 
    modification of the Table is concerned. In undertaking its review, the 
    IOM did not rely on the views of members of the ACIP or the work-
    product of that Committee.
    
    The Effect of the Proposed Changes on the Vaccine Injury Compensation 
    Program
    
        Two commenters suggested that the result of the proposed revisions 
    would be an increase in the transaction costs of the Program because 
    many petitioners will pursue their cases by attempting to prove 
    causation-in-fact. The Department has taken this concern into 
    consideration and has concluded that the benefits of the proposed 
    regulation outweigh the possibility of more protracted and complex 
    hearings. The intent of the regulation is to make the Table consistent 
    with medical knowledge regarding the relationship between vaccines and 
    certain adverse events. The Department notes that Congress recognized 
    that the original Vaccine Injury Table would permit individuals whose 
    conditions were not related to vaccine administration to be adjudicated 
    eligible for compensation. If the Table is revised to permit 
    compensation only in those cases where vaccine relatedness is more 
    accurately proven, greater resources will be available to compensate 
    those truly deserving of compensation.
        In a similar vein, several commenters expressed concern that the 
    Department was seeking to prevent children deserving of compensation 
    from receiving assistance under the Program. In fact, exactly the 
    opposite is true. The revised Table merely affects the presumption of 
    causation available to certain petitioners. Petitioners will, of 
    course, continue to have the option of proving causation by a 
    preponderance of evidence if they are unable to prove a Table injury. 
    Moreover, the Department recognizes that there is a desperate need for 
    parents to obtain resources to cover the significant medical costs of 
    caring for a sick child. However, the intent of the VICP was to 
    compensate only those individuals whose injuries are vaccine-related. 
    The proposed regulation is simply an attempt to come closer to 
    realizing this goal than was possible with the language of the original 
    Vaccine Injury Table.
        Three commenters suggested that the proposed regulation would 
    result in an increased number of civil actions filed against vaccine 
    manufacturers and administrators. In enacting the National Childhood 
    Vaccine Injury Act, Congress determined that one of the goals of the 
    Act was to reduce the number of civil actions filed against vaccine 
    administrators and manufacturers. The other major goal was to provide 
    compensation to those individuals whose conditions were caused by 
    vaccines. See H.R. Rept. 99-908, Part 1, September 26, 1986, page 6 
    (reprinted in 1986 U.S. Code Cong. & Admin News, Vol. 6, page 6347). 
    The Committee recognized, however, that the Table would possibly 
    provide compensation to some children whose illnesses are not vaccine-
    related, but that further research and modifications to the Table would 
    result in a more equitable distribution of funds. In balancing these 
    two Congressional goals, the Department has determined that the 
    benefits of fulfilling the latter requirement outweigh the risk that an 
    increased number of civil actions will be filed against vaccine 
    administrators or manufacturers.
        Furthermore, the Department believes that the combined effect of 
    the IOM's review and this regulatory action may reduce the extent of 
    tort litigation by giving the courts (and potential plaintiffs weighing 
    the wisdom of filing suit) definitive guidance as to the state of 
    scientific knowledge regarding vaccine-related injuries. As causation 
    must typically be proven in tort actions, the Department believes that 
    the findings on these issues may well reduce the amount of tort 
    litigation and may allow easier resolution of any such claims that are 
    litigated.
    
    II. Medical Issues
    
    The Department's Interpretation of the IOM Report
    
        Six commenters suggested that the Department's findings are a 
    misinterpretation of the IOM Report. In the Department's view, however, 
    the proposed changes do reflect accurately the conclusions of the IOM 
    report.
        Both the NPRM and the final rule (with some revisions are discussed 
    below), reflect most closely the package of recommendations as 
    developed by the PHS Task Force, reviewed by the NVAC, and endorsed by 
    the ACCV. The proposed changes are in accordance with the scientific 
    findings of the IOM Committee. In instances where the IOM found 
    information suggesting a causal relation and continued effects, the 
    Department acted to ensure coverage under the Program (e.g., adding 
    chronic arthritis to the Table). However, where the IOM found that the 
    evidence did not support a causal relation and continued effects, the 
    Department removed the legal presumption of causation by removing or 
    redefining the current injury listed on the Table. The fact that the 
    proposed revisions received overwhelming approval from three 
    independent science and health policy committees, and the endorsement 
    of two national health professionals associations (American Academy of 
    Pediatrics and American Medical Association), confirms the basic 
    soundness of the initial proposed revisions.
        One of the commenters addressing the Miller study suggested that in 
    light of the 1994 IOM Report, the Department should rescind certain 
    findings made after release of the 1991 Report and published in the 
    preamble to the NPRM. In the NPRM, published on August 14, 1992, the 
    Department made certain findings as required by section 312(b) of Pub. 
    L. 99-660 (42 U.S.C. 300aa-1 note). The Department has reviewed these 
    findings again in light of the commenter's concerns, and has determined 
    that the findings remain valid. In fact, the conclusions of the IOM and 
    the NVAC subcommittee (discussed below) with respect to pertussis 
    vaccine and chronic neurological damage confirm the soundness of 
    findings three and four as listed in the NPRM. These findings read, in 
    pertinent part, as follows:
    
        3. The evidence is insufficient to indicate a causal relation 
    between vaccines containing pertussis and: Epilepsy * * * chronic 
    neurologic damage, * * * learning disabilities and attention-
    deficient disorder, * * * or permanent neurologic damage or death 
    following hypotonic-hyporesponsive episodes.
        4. The evidence is consistent with a causal relation between 
    vaccines containing pertussis and? Acute encephalopathy and shock 
    and ``unusual shock-like state.''
    
    The recent IOM report was confined to a review of the Miller study, and 
    is, therefore, limited to the circumstances of that particular study. 
    Given the conclusions articulated by the IOM and the accompanying 
    caveats, and the discussion and conclusions of the NVAC subcommittee, 
    the Department concludes that the findings published with the NPRM 
    reflect best the state of scientific knowledge. It should be noted 
    again that in drafting the revised Qualifications and Aids to 
    Interpretation, the Department decided not to eliminate the presumption 
    of causation for encephalopathy despite the conclusions of the 1991 IOM 
    study. Rather, consistent with the recommendation of the ACCV, the 
    Department included a presumption of vaccine causation for those 
    individuals who experience an acute encephalopathy within 3 days after 
    vaccination, who go on to suffer 6 [[Page 7683]] months of residual 
    effects, and who experience chronic neurological dysfunction. This 
    presumption is consistent with the IOM's conclusions articulated in its 
    1994 report.
        Four commenters suggested that the IOM's causation category of 
    ``insufficient evidence'' should not be interpreted to mean that DTP 
    vaccine does not cause the condition. Furthermore, they suggest that 
    both the IOM and the Department present no data which support the 
    proposition that acute encephalopathy, subsequent to the receipt of a 
    pertussis vaccine, has a more benign neurological outcome than acute 
    encephalopathies from other agents. The Department has considered these 
    comments but maintains that the IOM report provides a foundational 
    basis for the proposed changes.
        The 1991 IOM report concluded the evidence was insufficient to 
    indicate a causal relationship between vaccines containing pertussis 
    and chronic neurological damage for a variety of conditions including 
    encephalopthy, shock collapse or Hypotonic-Hyporesponsive Episode 
    (HHE), epilepsy, and other neurologic and non-neurologic disorders. 
    Comments that expressed concern over this classification focused for 
    the most part on acute encephalopathy and chronic neurologic damage, 
    while a few discussed shock-collapse (HHE) or recurrent seizures 
    (epilepsy). The issue of encephalopathy following pertussis vaccination 
    is a difficult one. On one hand, in its 1991 Report, the TOM found 
    evidence ``consistent with a familiar evidence ``consistent with a 
    causal relation'' for acute encephalopathy, yet on the other hand, it 
    decided there was ``insufficient evidence'' regarding chronic 
    nuerologic damage. Due to limitations in the data, the IOM could not 
    conclude with any certainty whether there is any causal relationship 
    between pertussis vaccine and shock-collapse (HHE), epilepsy, or any of 
    the other disorders under this classification category. In its 1994 
    report addressing the Miller study, the IOM concluded that ``evidence 
    is insufficient to indicate whether or not DTP increases the overall 
    risk in shildren of chronic nervous system dysfunction.'' They 
    concluded further, that the ``balance of evidence is consistent with a 
    causal relation between DTP and the forms of chronic nervous system 
    dysfunction described in the NCES in those children who experienced a 
    serious acute neurological illness within 7 days after vaccine 
    administration.'' The IOM also concluded, however, that ``the evidence 
    remains insufficient to indicate the presence or absence of a causal 
    relation between DTP and chronic nervous system dysfunction under any 
    other circumstances.'' See 1994 IOM Report, Executive Summary.
        Because section 2111(c) of the Act requires that a Petitioner must 
    show 6 months of residentual effects of a Table injury, a finding of a 
    relation pertussis-containing vaccines and acute, but not chronically, 
    does not justify the presumption of causation for long-term neurologic 
    damage. However, should the evidence show that abnormal neurologic 
    signs continued beyond the acute state, and therefore the injured 
    indidivual never returned to a ``normal neurological state,'' than 
    title may be granted. This conclusion is consistent with the 1994 IOM 
    report.
        The language of section 312 of Pub. L. 99-660 (42 U.S.C. 300aa-1, 
    note) also supports the Department's conclusion. The IOM determined in 
    its 1991 report that the evidence is insufficient to support a 
    conclusion that a causal relationship between DTP vaccine and chronic 
    neurologic damage exists. The 1994 IOM finding was limited to the 
    conditions described in the NCES and to those children who experienced 
    an acute event following vaccination. Therefore, the Department 
    concluded that it could not ``reasonably determine'' that as a general 
    rule a causal relationship exists, and the Table is being modified 
    accordingly. Because section 312 requires such a determination in order 
    to sustain the presumption of causation, the Department was obligated 
    to revise the Table consistent with the conclusions of the IOM.
        The removal of the legal presumption of causation has been applied 
    to other conditions in the ``insufficient evidence'' category (i.e., 
    HHE and residual seizure disorder). The Department notes, however, that 
    the removal of a condition from the Table, or the inclusion of a 
    revised definition thereof, will not necessarily result in compensation 
    being denied where it would have previously been awarded. Petitioners 
    may still prevail by providing proof that the vaccine actually caused 
    the specific injury alleged to have occurred.
        Three commenters suggested that the IOM's burden of proof standard 
    was too high. They suggested that the IOM should develop a confidence 
    level that is more lenient than 95 percent, particularly when it is 
    applied to the ``preponderance of the evidence'' burden of proof 
    standards present in the VICP. After consideration of the process used 
    by the IOM in developing its report, it is the Department's view that 
    the IOM's standard was appropriate.
        Congress mandated that the IOM review the scientific literature and 
    other information on specific adverse consequences of pertussis and 
    rubella vaccines. The Committee was composed entirely of physicians and 
    scientists, whose task it was to evaluate the literature on adverse 
    events following these vaccines. Any ``burden of proof'' standard had 
    to be consistent with the standard applied throughout the science of 
    epidemiology, policy considerations notwithstanding. It is the 
    Secretary's responsibility under section 312 of Pub. L. 99-660 (42 
    U.S.C. 300aa-1, note) to utilize the IOM's conclusions to provide a 
    better scientific rationale for any presumptions of vaccine causation 
    under the Program.
        Moreover, although the statute requires merely a ``preponderance of 
    the evidence'' standard in evaluating compensation claims, there is no 
    requirement that anything other than the standard commonly used among 
    scientific and medical professionals be applied in re-defining those 
    conditions which will receive a presumption of causation by use of the 
    Table. The preponderance of evidence standard is only relevant when a 
    Master is evaluating a particular case.
        One commenter suggested that the IOM conclusions were incorrect 
    regarding DTP's pathological effects in animals or children. The 
    commenter stated that the IOM erred in diminishing the importance of, 
    or incorrectly judged, the conclusions of controlled epidemiologic 
    studies. Furthermore, the commenter suggested that the IOM Committee 
    was remiss in its examination of the evidence concerning long-term 
    sequelae for HHE. Finally, two commenters criticized the IOM because no 
    original research was done in putting together its conclusions. As 
    stated above, the Department has considered these comments, but has 
    determined that the process used by the IOM was appropriate.
        The 1991 IOM Committee was made up of 11 experts in infectious 
    disease, pediatrics, internal medicine, neurology, epidemiology, 
    biostatistics, decision analysis, immunology and public health. During 
    the 20 months of their work, approximately 1,400 citations were 
    reviewed and 5 public meetings were held. No new research was 
    conducted. Committee members considered new or controversial data and 
    various points of view and sought to identify gaps in knowledge. The 
    IOM cited many gaps and limitations of knowledge. Its conclusions were 
    reached, however, after an exhaustive analysis of the best 
    epidemiologic data available, and other information. 
    [[Page 7684]] Congress did not mandate any specific research, but 
    rather, an extensive review of all the available information on adverse 
    events.
        One commenter suggested the IOM incorrectly judged the conclusions 
    of the British National Childhood Encephalopathy Study (NCES). Another 
    commenter stated that the NCES is the only ``suitable'' study that has 
    been done, and that it concluded that there was a causal relationship 
    between the DTP vaccine and permanent neurologic injuries. One 
    commenter also suggested that the NCES proved the onset of a neurologic 
    disorder, including seizures, within 7 days of a DTP vaccination is 
    vaccine-related. The Department has reviewed the conclusions of the 
    NCES in light of these comments, but disagrees for the following 
    reasons.
        The 1991 IOM Report considered carefully the results of the NCES, 
    which concluded there is an increased risk of acute neurologic illness 
    (encephalopathy and seizures) within 7 days following DTP immunization, 
    and that in some instances, this may lead to permanent neurologic 
    illness. The methods and results of the NCES have been thoroughly 
    analyzed since publication of the study, which has led to continued 
    controversy about the study's findings and a reassessment of the role 
    of pertussis vaccine as a cause of permanent neurologic damage. (IOM 
    Report, page 99-107)
        In its 1991 report, the IOM described potential areas of error and 
    bias regarding the study's conclusions on acute neurologic illness and 
    chronic neurologic damage. Regarding acute neurologic illness, the 
    Committee cited three areas of potential study weakness: case 
    ascertainment, determination of the onset of illness, and the lack of 
    control for potential confounding factors. Despite these limiting 
    factors, the IOM believed that the NCES demonstrated statistical 
    significance for acute neurologic illness where onset is within 7 days 
    of DTP vaccination. Their conclusion was based on the fact that only 
    controlled epidemiological studies can address the relationship between 
    neurologic illness and vaccine causation. Of the four controlled 
    studies reviewed (including the NCES), only the NCES demonstrated a 
    statistically significant risk following DTP vaccine. However, the IOM 
    noted that the ``total number of cases reported in the other three 
    studies was consistent with attributable risk found in the NCES,'' and 
    on this basis concluded the evidence was consistent with a causal 
    relation between DTP vaccine and acute encephalopathy. (IOM Report, 
    page 117)
        The NCES' conclusion regarding permanent neurologic damage was 
    viewed differently by the 1991 IOM Committee. The Committee described 
    concerns over (1) the number and composition of cases on which the 
    estimates were based and (2) the nature of the relationship between an 
    episode of acute neurologic illness and subsequent demonstration of 
    neurologic or developmental abnormalities. Both concerns cast doubt 
    upon the NCES' conclusion that DTP vaccine causes residual neurologic 
    injury.
        The conclusion regarding permanent injury was based on seven 
    children who were found to have residual neurologic illness on follow-
    up. Since the NCES was published, some of these seven children have 
    been diagnosed with non-vaccine related conditions. Thus, the risk 
    estimates are ``very fragile'' at best, since the number of children 
    with new unexplained neurologic illness was very small. (IOM Report, 
    page 106).
        Similarly, the NCES' conclusions on residual effects begs the 
    central question of causation. All seven children found to have 
    ``permanent neurologic illness'' on follow-up were presumed to be 
    normal prior to vaccination. However, no baseline neurologic 
    examination was performed on any of these children. Additionally, two 
    of the seven had seizures as their manifestation of acute neurologic 
    illness within 7 days of DTP vaccination. As the IOM noted, many 
    experts question whether seizures alone cause neurologic illness, or 
    rather are the ``markers'' of those children with pre-existing 
    neurologic disease. (IOM Report, page 107).
        As explained above, a follow-up study to the NCES was published by 
    Miller, et al. in the fall of 1993. The Department asked the IOM to 
    look at the Miller study's conclusions regarding DTP vaccine and 
    subsequent neurological damage. The Department then asked a 
    subcommittee of the National Vaccine Advisory Committee (NVAC) to 
    review this later IOM report, as well as the Miller study. The NVAC 
    Subcommittee acknowledged the original NCES (and Miller follow-up) as 
    the most comprehensive long-term study on this subject to date, yet 
    noted there are limitations in the data. These include the lack of 
    neuropathologic studies on case children, the fact that young infants 
    with pre-existing neurologic disorders (damage) can be normal on 
    physical examination at the time of immunization, the failure to 
    exclude alternative etiologic diagnoses, and the non-specific range of 
    disorders classified by NCES authors under the rubric ``chronic nervous 
    system dysfunction.'' The subcommittee noted also that the working 
    definition of ``acute neurologic illness'' used in the NCES is not 
    consistent with the current medical understanding of acute 
    encephalopathy as an acute, generalized disorder of the brain. Children 
    were placed in the NCES case definition who experienced only febrile 
    seizures, a benign condition known to be triggered by DTP vaccine, yet 
    never proven to have lasting effects, absent signs of acute 
    encephalopathy. These limitations disallow definitive causal 
    conclusions that would necessitate changes to the Secretary's 
    definition of encephalopathy in the NPRM.
        In reviewing the Miller study, the IOM Committee reached three 
    conclusions:
        (a) The evidence is insufficient to indicate whether or not DTP 
    increases the overall risk in children of chronic nervous system 
    dysfunction.
        (b) The balance of evidence is consistent with a causal relation 
    between DTP and the forms of chronic nervous system dysfunction 
    described in the NCES in those children who experienced a serious acute 
    neurologic illness within 7 days after vaccine.
        (c) The evidence remains insufficient to indicate the presence or 
    absence of a causal relation between DTP and chronic nervous system 
    dysfunction under any other circumstances.
        After extensive review and discussion, the NVAC subcommittee agreed 
    with the IOM's conclusion that children who experience serious, acute 
    neurological events after DTP vaccination can go on to exhibit 
    ``chronic nervous system dysfunction.'' The NVAC subcommittee concluded 
    that despite the conclusions of the Miller study, the information 
    remains insufficient to accept or reject whether DTP administration 
    prior to the acute, serious neurologic event influenced the likelihood 
    of neurologic dysfunction. In order to avoid any confusion on this 
    point, the Subcommittee approved the following summary statement:
    
        Children immunized with whole-cell DTP vaccines rarely 
    experience acute, serious neurologic events that require 
    hospitalization. An important question pertains to the long-term 
    complications of these events. Among all children hospitalized with 
    serious neurologic events, irrespective of their etiology or 
    relationship to DTP, there is a potential for the presence of 
    neurologic dysfunction when they are evaluated 10 years later. 
    However, the data are insufficient to accept or reject whether DTP 
    administration prior to the acute, serious neurologic event 
    influenced the potential for neurologic dysfunction. See National 
    Vaccine Advisory Committee (NVAC), Report of the Ad Hoc Subcommittee 
    on Childhood Vaccines, p.7.
    
        [[Page 7685]] The Agency has reviewed carefully the IOM's 
    conclusions and the NVAC subcommittee's evaluation of the IOM report, 
    recognizing that questions will continue regarding DTP vaccine and 
    chronic nervous system dysfunction. In addition, the Agency has 
    considered comments provided by three individuals in response to the 
    March 24, 1994 Federal Register Notice. These commenters suggested that 
    the Department should retract some of the changes to the Vaccine Injury 
    Table proposed in 1992, arguing that those changes are not inconsistent 
    with the 1994 IOM report. The Agency has determined that despite the 
    uncertainty regarding causation, the final rule is consistent with both 
    the IOM report and the NVAC subcommittee's conclusions regarding the 
    Miller study. The final rule permits an individual to receive a 
    presumption of causation if the DTP vaccine recipient ``manifests, 
    within the applicable period, an injury meeting the description * * * 
    of an acute encephalopathy, and then a chronic encephalopathy persists 
    in such person for more than six months beyond the date of 
    vaccination.'' See Sec. 100.3(b)(2). Thus, the final rule is consistent 
    with the IOM's conclusion that some children have been shown to have 
    experienced an acute encephalopathy following vaccine administration 
    and then have gone on to develop chronic neurologic dysfunction. See 
    1994 IOM Report, Executive Summary.
        The only circumstances under which a presumption of causation would 
    not be available to an individual with chronic neurological dysfunction 
    would be (1) where the child had not experienced an acute 
    encephalopathy within several days after DTP vaccination, or (2) where 
    the child experienced an acute encephalopathy within several days of 
    DTP vaccination, but returned to a normal neurological state, and did 
    not suffer 6 months of residual effects after the administration of the 
    vaccine.
        The denial of a presumption of causation for the former is 
    consistent with the IOM's conclusions as articulated in both its 1991 
    and 1994 reports. The IOM did not conclude that chronic neurological 
    dysfunction should be presumed to be caused by DTP vaccine in the 
    absence of an acute encephalopathy that occurs within several days 
    following vaccination. See 1994 IOM Report at page 10. The IOM stated 
    the following:
    
        The evidence remains insufficient to indicate the presence or 
    absence of a causal relation between DTP and chronic nervous system 
    dysfunction under any other circumstances. That is, because the NCES 
    is the only systematic study of chronic nervous system dysfunctions 
    after DTP, the committee can only comment on the causal relation 
    between DPT and those chronic nervous system dysfunctions under the 
    conditions studied by the NCES. In particular, it should be noted 
    that the chronic nervous system dysfunctions associated with DTP 
    followed a serious acute neurologic illness that occurred in 
    children within 7 days after receiving DPT. 1994 IOM Report at page 
    11.
    
    Neither the IOM report nor the Miller study addressed the scenario 
    where a child would experience an acute encephalopathy within several 
    days following vaccine administration, would return to a normal 
    neurological state, but at some point in the future would exhibit signs 
    of chronic neurological dysfunction. The most recent report by the IOM 
    does not present any information which warrants a modification of the 
    presumptions in the final rule. Therefore, the final rule is consistent 
    with the IOM's conclusions and the NVAC subcommittee's assessment of 
    those conclusions.
        The NVAC subcommittee was also asked to look at whether the 
    evidence as described in the IOM report would support a conclusion that 
    the time period in the vaccine injury table for acute encephalopathy 
    following DTP vaccine should be changed from 3 to 7 days. The 
    subcommittee concluded that there is presently insufficient information 
    to justify such a change. The Department has reviewed the conclusions 
    of the IOM report as well as those of the NVAC subcommittee and has 
    determined that the rule should not be modified. In this regard, the 
    Department recognizes that it is accepting the analysis of the NVAC 
    subcommittee, rather than acting solely on the basis of this particular 
    statement from the 1994 IOM report. However, it is important to note 
    that the 1991 IOM report, which included a review of numerous 
    scientific studies and other medical literature, did not draw any 
    conclusions regarding the appropriate time period.
        In preparing the latest report, the IOM confined its analysis to 
    the Miller study, which was a follow-up to the original NCES. Given the 
    limitations of the IOM's conclusions, including the lack of primary 
    data analysis, as well as the methodologic limitations that have been 
    noted with regard to the NCES, the NVAC subcommittee determined that 
    the conclusions of the Miller study with respect to the appropriate 
    timeframe could not be extended beyond the parameters of this one 
    particular study. After careful consideration, and recognizing the 
    extensive expertise of the NVAC subcommittee, the Department has 
    decided to accept the conclusions of the NVAC subcommittee. 
    Accordingly, the 3 day timeframe, as originally determined by Congress, 
    will not be changed. Petitioners may seek to prove causation in fact 
    for conditions arising between 3 and 7 days after vaccination and may, 
    of course, introduce the Miller study and the IOM report as evidence 
    bearing on such an argument.
        One commenter suggested that the 1991 IOM report contradicts an 
    earlier 1985 IOM report which gave risk estimates for reactions 
    following whole cell pertussis vaccination, and stated that pertussis 
    vaccine causes permanent neurologic damage.
        The 1985 IOM Report focused on building a model to help evaluate 
    the risks and benefits for existing and new vaccines to allow informed 
    judgments on priorities for developing new vaccines. In drafting their 
    conclusions, the 1985 group used informed judgments on vaccine risks, 
    and the financial benefits of reducing disease. Because of the larger 
    number of vaccines studied in the 1985 report, the review of the 
    scientific literature on specific adverse events in this report was far 
    less extensive than that in the 1991 report.
    
    Analysis of Other Data
    
        Before any changes should be made to the Table, four commenters 
    suggested that the Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS) data 
    and/or Vaccine Injury Compensation Program records should be examined 
    and analyzed. VAERS is a passive reporting system which relies in large 
    part on reports of events temporally related to vaccine administration. 
    Therefore, no reliable conclusions about causation could be drawn from 
    the reported VAERS data without its undergoing substantial analysis. 
    While the Department recognizes the importance of VAERS, it is 
    unwilling to overstate its importance by using temporal relationships 
    to define a new Table.
        Further, the IOM's section 312 study involved a thorough review of 
    scientific and medical information contained in peer reviewed journals. 
    However, information based on anecdotal reports (e.g., VAERS), or a 
    series of case reports, such as claims filed under the VICP, has less 
    certain scientific reliability, and therefore should also not be used 
    as a basis for revising the Table. Because of the limitations of these 
    types of evidence, the Department does not concur with this suggested 
    approach.
        The ACCV's Scientific Review Subcommittee reviews cumulative data 
    [[Page 7686]] collected through the VAERS system at each quarterly 
    meeting. In December 1992, the Subcommittee wrote the following 
    concerning: ``VAERS as a means of surveillance of temporally-related 
    adverse events, has definite limitations and does not allow the 
    evaluation of possible causal relationships between vaccine 
    administration and adverse events.'' VAERS's data potentially serve as 
    a ``signal'' of possible causal relationships, which can then be 
    investigated through what are termed Large Linked Data Bases (LLDB's). 
    The Subcommittee encouraged increased utilization of LLDB data because 
    of its potential for surveillance of adverse events and their possible 
    causal relationship to vaccine administration.
        The Department will monitor future analysis of VAERS and LLDB data. 
    Should information suggest modifications to the Table, the Department 
    will publish a new NPRM reflecting this new information with proposals 
    for change.
        One commenter suggested that the Department ignored cases in the 
    medical literature (and VICP case files) that show a pattern of 
    increasingly severe reactions after succeeding DTP shots in the same 
    child. The commenter argued that the IOM Report indicated it would tend 
    to support the hypothesis of a causal link between pertussis vaccine 
    and permanent neurologic damage if case histories show such a pattern.
        In its analysis, the IOM reviewed case reports and case series 
    along with controlled epidemiologic studies. It is true that the IOM 
    suggested that the increasing severity of a reaction following 
    immunization in the same individual might indicate a causal link to the 
    vaccine. The Department did not view this hypothesis as strong enough 
    to warrant a presumption of causation. The results of the 1994 IOM 
    Report have not changed this conclusion. However, any petitioner who 
    can demonstrate evidence of progressive or repetitive adverse effects 
    following vaccination may be eligible for compensation by proving 
    causation in fact.
        Three commenters suggested there should be no changes to the Table 
    before the section 313 study (of other vaccine risks) is completed. One 
    commenter suggested specifically that changes to the timeframe under 
    Residual Seizure Disorder are not appropriate before results of the 
    section 313 study have been published.
        In publishing the final rule, the Department has considered the 
    effect of the section 313 study. Section 313 of The National Childhood 
    Vaccine Injury Act of 1986, Pub. L. 99-660, mandated that the Secretary 
    arrange with the IOM for an additional broad study of the risks 
    associated with each vaccine set forth in the Table, other than the 
    vaccines (pertussis and rubella) previously identified in the section 
    312 study discussed above. The IOM section 313 study, entitled 
    ``Adverse Events Associated with Childhood Vaccines: Evidence Bearing 
    on Causality,'' was released on September 14, 1993. The study covers 
    adverse events following these commonly-administered vaccines: measles, 
    mumps, diphtheria, tetanus, polio, Hemophilus influenza type b, and 
    Hepatitis B.
        On March 15, 1994, a subcommittee of the NVAC met to consider the 
    section 313 report. The subcommittee was composed of members of the 
    NVAC and received testimony from outside experts in the fields of 
    epidemiology, pediatric infectious disease, and pediatric neurology. 
    The Department determined that the conclusions of the subcommittee 
    regarding the section 313 report do not provide a basis for changing 
    the final rule at this time. However, the Department is presently 
    reviewing the conclusions of the NVAC subcommittee regarding the 
    section 313 report. It is likely that after this review the Department 
    will initiate further rulemaking proceedings. The Department has 
    concluded, however, that there are no compelling reasons which would 
    justify delaying the promulgation of the final rule pending completion 
    of that review.
    
    Anaphylaxis
    
        One commenter suggested that the examples of anaphylaxis given by 
    the IOM do not provide a basis for the proposed revisions.
        The IOM examined case reports and epidemiologic studies concerning 
    anaphylaxis and anaphylactic shock. There was considerable variability 
    in the onset and clinical signs of what was defined as ``anaphylaxis.'' 
    One ``suspected association'' with pertussis vaccine was a case report 
    of twins from 1946, both of whom died within 24 hours of pertussis 
    vaccination (IOM Report, page 146). Forensic examination confirmed 
    tissue evidence of anaphylaxis. However, both exhibited clinical signs 
    within 4 hours of vaccination. Other than the 1946 case reports, none 
    of the other examples of ``anaphylaxis'' cited by the IOM, that began 
    after 4 hours of vaccination, was associated with permanent injury. 
    Again, Petitioners may receive compensation under the Program if they 
    prove their injury was caused by the vaccination, even if the onset was 
    after the 4 hours specified in the Table.
        One commenter noted that the IOM Committee did not address the 
    timeframe within which to expect anaphylaxis. The commenter suggested 
    further that the Department should have taken into account the fact 
    that infants react differently than children and adults.
        Although it is true that infants may react differently to illness 
    or medications, the pediatric literature is clear in stating that 
    severe anaphylactic reactions occur immediately with antigen exposure 
    and rarely show their first manifestation after 4 hours.
        One commenter suggested that the proposed revision for DTP, MMR and 
    Polio fail to allow for delayed hypersensitivity.
        The medical literature supports the conclusion that the more severe 
    anaphylactic reactions occur closer in time to the antigen exposure. An 
    anaphylactic reaction that shows its first manifestation greater than 4 
    hours after antigen exposure is likely to be a mild reaction and thus 
    very unlikely to lead to any permanent injury or sequelae. If a 
    petitioner is injured by a delayed hypersensitivity reaction, 
    compensation still can be awarded if causation in fact is proven.
        One commenter suggested that the changes do not allow for hypoxia, 
    ischemia, or hypoxia/ischemia, which are common complications of 
    anaphylaxis and anaphylactoid shock. However, the proposed Table allows 
    for any sequela whose first sign or clinical manifestation falls within 
    Table guidelines, as long as the sequela is caused by the Table injury.
    
    Encephalopathy
    
        Much of the discussion of comments related to ``encephalopathy'' is 
    set forth above under the heading ``The Department's Interpretation of 
    the IOM Report.'' Set forth below are the remaining issues regarding 
    encephalopathy.
        One commenter suggested that the initial sentence under the 
    definition of ``encephalopathy'' which states, ``[t]he term 
    encephalopathy means any acute or chronic significant acquired 
    abnormality of, or injury to, or impairment of function of the brain,'' 
    is too vague and seems to contradict the more specific definitions 
    which follow the proposed subparagraphs (i) and (ii).
        The Department had proposed to retain the language of the original 
    Aids to Interpretation to serve as an introduction to the definition of 
    encephalopathy. The Department agrees that it is imprecise, and that it 
    tends to differ from the guidance provided in the definitions for acute 
    and chronic [[Page 7687]] encephalopathy which immediately follow. 
    Accordingly, the proposed language in Sec. 100.3(b)(2) has been revised 
    to clarify the definitions for acute and chronic encephalopathy.
        Comments concerning the criteria for the diagnosis of acute 
    encephalopathy (paragraphs (b)(2)(i) (A) and (B)) were offered by three 
    individuals. One commenter suggested that the criteria for the 
    diagnosis in the less than 24-month-old age group were too narrow and 
    restrictive. All three commenters felt there were clinical 
    inconsistencies in the specific criteria. One commenter felt it was an 
    unwarranted burden to require two out of three criteria in order to 
    satisfy the definition of acute encephalopathy (for children 24 months 
    of age or older). Some members of the ACCV felt that the definition of 
    acute encephalopathy for children over 24 months implies that a seizure 
    must last 24 hours to be within the definition. One commenter suggested 
    the definition was unlike any other employed in medicine or science. 
    The Department has considered carefully the concerns regarding the 
    definition of encephalopathy and offers the following responses.
        The current Qualifications and Aids to Interpretation do not 
    reflect precisely medical knowledge of the condition 
    ``encephalopathy.'' Many medical experts testifying in proceedings 
    under the VICP have stated the definition is too vague and needs 
    clarification. The term ``encephalopathy'' refers generally to a 
    disturbance of brain function. Clinical definitions vary, as do 
    opinions on the relationship between encephalopathy and seizures. After 
    several pages of discussion, the IOM finally defined it as 
    ``encephalopathy, encephalitis, or encephalomyelitis.'' Unfortunately, 
    this definition is clinically imprecise, and in part circular. While it 
    may serve to evaluate studies on neurologic disease, it does not impart 
    guidance to physicians or attorneys on the specific clinical signs of a 
    child or adult with encephalopathy.
        In an effort to define encephalopathy better, the Department used 
    the definition approved by the ACCV in 1991. The basic criteria were 
    taken from a peer-reviewed multi-center study assessing adverse events 
    following immunization in all age groups. (Fenichel GM., Lane DA, 
    Livengood JR, Horwitz SJ, Menkes JH, Schwartz JF. Adverse events 
    following immunization: Assessing probability of causation. Pediat 
    Neurol 1989; 5:287-290) One of its authors, a pediatric neurologist and 
    former ACCV Chairman, proposed that the Commission use the criteria as 
    the basic framework to define encephalopathy for purposes of making 
    changes to the Aids to Interpretation. Following its approval by the 
    ACCV, additional clarifications were needed to define better clinical 
    signs in the pre-verbal (less than 24-month) age group, and identify 
    correctly infants or children who may be experiencing temporary 
    medication effects, rather than true signs of encephalopathy. The 
    Department appreciates that the criteria are viewed by some as overly 
    burdensome. Any clarifications to the definition were for the sole 
    purpose of allowing non-physicians to identify correctly infants or 
    children with clinical signs of encephalopathy. However, the ACCV 
    during its June 1994 meeting suggested that some modifications be made 
    to the age criteria to reflect the fact that some children under 24 
    months have more advanced verbal skills. The Department agrees with 
    this suggestion and has, therefore, changed the age marker from 24 to 
    18 months for purposes of distinguishing between preverbal and verbal 
    children. Sec. 100.3(b)(2)(i).
        Additionally, the Department agrees that the term ``stupor'' is 
    imprecise and somewhat restrictive, and has therefore decided to 
    specify the clinical signs reflective of an acute encephalopathy and 
    delete the terms ``stupor and coma.'' Acknowledging the difficulty of 
    defining ``encephalopathy,'' the Department has focused on clinical 
    criteria that clearly distinguish infants and children with brain 
    dysfunction from those with transient ``lethargy.'' The diminished 
    alertness and motor activity, which characterize the lethargic infant 
    or child, are frequently observed as the physiological response to 
    fever, infection or other acute illness. The severity and duration of 
    the behavioral changes differentiate mere lethargy from the more 
    serious impairment of consciousness that is the hallmark of 
    encephalopathy (i.e., obtundation, stupor and coma). To provide the 
    clearest guidance to petitioners' attorneys and the Court, the 
    Department has added a new paragraph (b)(2)(i)(D) to the section to 
    identify specific clinical signs constituting ``a significantly 
    decreased level of consciousness.''
        As to concerns articulated by members of the ACCV during the June 
    1-2, 1994 meeting, the Department did not intend, in listing the signs 
    for identifying acute encephalopathy in children older than 24 months, 
    that a ``seizure associated with loss of consciousness'' persist for 24 
    hours. Rather, the Department intends that in order to be experiencing 
    an acute encephalopathy a child must experience a significantly altered 
    mental state or decreased level of consciousness. It is the child's 
    overall condition which must persist for 24 hours, rather than any one 
    particular seizure.
        One of the ACCV members questioned the Department's decision to use 
    24 hours, rather than some other period, as the appropriate time period 
    under the definition of acute encephalopathy. The Department decided to 
    use 24 hours because this was the marker used in the multi-center study 
    cited above which established the criteria used by the Department in 
    drafting the definition of encephalopathy. See Fenichel, et al. The 
    choice of this time period is also consistent with the way in which 
    medical professionals gauge and document clinical changes over time.
        One commenter suggested there is not a clear distinction between 
    acute and chronic encephalopathy. In response to this comment, the 
    Department has added additional language in the final rule for 
    clarification. For example, the Department revised the introductory 
    language of Sec. 100.3(b)(2) to make clear that an individual may be 
    found to have suffered an encephalopathy only if ``such recipient 
    manifests, within the applicable time period, an injury meeting the 
    description below of an acute encephalopathy, and then a change in 
    mental or neurological status persists in such person for more than 6 
    months beyond the date of vaccination.'' In addition, the Department 
    added similar language to Sec. 100.3(b)(2)(ii) to clarify the meaning 
    of chronic encephalopathy.
        Two commenters suggested that the term ``neurologically normal'' 
    may be inappropriate because children ``who return to a normal 
    neurological state after an acute encephalopathy,'' but later develop 
    signs of a chronic encephalopathy, may easily be misdiagnosed as normal 
    during this time period. Two commenters questioned whether the 
    definition ``neurologically normal'' should be based on various testing 
    criteria (e.g., CT or MRI scans, electroencephalogram (EEG), or lumbar 
    puncture). The Department has considered these comments and has revised 
    the first sentence in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) for clarification.
        It is expected that any child or adult with a chronic 
    encephalopathy as a result of a vaccine-related acute encephalopathy 
    would show evidence of abnormalities in mental or neurological status 
    in the days to weeks following the vaccination. In the case of an 
    infant or child, these would be seen as a loss or slowing of 
    developmental milestones during this time period 
    [[Page 7688]] following the acute event. Because testing criteria and 
    the interpretation of results may vary with age group and medical 
    condition, no additional criteria are suggested for the diagnosis of 
    chronic encephalopathy. The Department agrees, however, that the Aids 
    to Interpretation should contain a clear distinction between acute and 
    chronic encephalopathy. As explained above, additional language has 
    been added in the final rule for clarification.
        Members of the ACCV suggested the phrase ``return to a normal 
    neurological state'' was too vague, and failed to specify the methods 
    to be used for gauging a ``normal neurological state.'' These members 
    also suggested that there might not be any evidence in the medical 
    records to document this fact. The Department has considered this 
    suggestion, but has determined that the language in the definition of 
    chronic encephalopathy need not be changed. It is the Department's 
    intent that if all other parts of the definition are satisfied, the 
    presumption remains intact unless there is affirmative evidence that 
    the child returned to a normal neurological state; such evidence could 
    consist of documented subjective descriptions of the child's behavior 
    and development and/or objective findings on physical examinations 
    performed by physicians in the post-immunization period. Thus, in those 
    cases where this issue is unclear, or not documented, the presumption 
    would be that a child whose acute encephalopathy was followed by signs 
    of a persistent neurologic deficit did not return to a normal 
    neurological state.
        During the June 1-2, 1994 meeting, members of the ACCV also 
    suggested that parts of the definition of encephalopathy in the 
    Qualifications and Aids to Interpretation as published in the NPRM were 
    too restrictive. Specifically, they took issue with the underlined 
    phrase of the introductory language of Sec. 100.3(b)(2)(i)(D), which 
    states that ``[t]he following clinical features alone, or in 
    combination, do not qualify as evidence of an acute encephalopathy or a 
    significant change in either mental status or level of consciousness as 
    described above * * *.'' The Department agrees with the commenters and 
    notes that this language did not reflect accurately the Department's 
    intent. The point of this language as written in the NPRM was further 
    to clarify the language as written in the NPRM was further to clarify 
    the language in the statute, which states that certain signs and 
    symptoms are compatible with an encephalopathy but ``in and of 
    themselves are not conclusive evidence of encephalopathy.'' 42 U.S.C. 
    300aa-14(b)(3)(A). The language in the statute has been interpreted in 
    many different ways by the Special Masters and has led to results in 
    some cases which the Department believes are inconsistent with the 
    medical and scientific literature on this topic. The medical evidence 
    indicates that certain symptoms do not conclusively establish an 
    encephalopathy, but instead are merely symptoms that are compatible 
    with an encephalopathy. Nevertheless, in order to take account of the 
    concerns of the ACCV, the Department has changed the underlined 
    language above to ``do not demonstrate.''
        One commenter suggested that DTP may aggravate pre-existing genetic 
    or congenital conditions, and for that matter, other acquired 
    conditions.
        The Department is aware that, in rare instances, a vaccine may 
    alter the clinical course of a pre-existing condition. Under section 
    2111(c)(1)(C) of the Act, ``significant aggravation'' of a pre-existing 
    condition may establish eligibility for compensation provided the 
    Petitioner is able to demonstrate that a Table injury occurred and that 
    the prior condition was significantly aggravated during the Table 
    timeframe, or is able to demonstrate proof of causation in fact.
        In considering the comment, the Department realized that there 
    could be confusion regarding the issue of significant aggravation of 
    pre-existing conditions. Accordingly, the Department decided to 
    eliminate the proposed Sec. 100.3(b)(2)(v). Because the statute 
    includes a definition of ``significant aggravation,'' it is unnecessary 
    for this term to be defined in the final rule. See 42 U.S.C. 300aa-33; 
    section 2133 of Act.
        As noted above, the Department received five comments in response 
    to the March 24, 1994, Federal Register notice soliciting comments 
    regarding the 1994 IOM report. Two comments, one submitted by the 
    American Academy of Pediatrics, and the other by a vaccine 
    manufacturer, expressed support for the revised Vaccine Injury Table as 
    presented in the NPRM. The commenters stated that further revisions to 
    the proposed Vaccine Injury Table are not warranted based on the 
    conclusions of the latest IOM review. The Academy of Pediatrics did 
    suggest, however, that the Table should reflect the ``possibility that 
    in some children with acute encephalopathy, chronic dysfunction may 
    subsequently exist, but this is a rare event and the data do not allow 
    confirmation or rejection of whether this is a direct association.''
        The final rule reflects the concern articulated by the Academy. The 
    revised Table confers a presumption of causation on those individuals 
    who suffer an acute encephalopathy within 3 days after vaccine 
    administration, and who then go on to exhibit 6 months of residual 
    effects, followed by chronic neurological dysfunction.
        The other three comments are discussed, where relevant, under the 
    heading ``The Department's Interpretation of the IOM Report.''
    
    Hypotonic-Hyporesponsive Episode (HHE)
    
        One commenter supported the removal of hypotonic-hyporesponsive 
    episode (HHE) from the original Table as proposed by stating that HHE 
    has no long-term effects and does not lead to death; the remaining 
    commenters were critical of the change. One commenter pointed out that 
    HHE is a heterogeneous term, which includes features of HHE and 
    anaphylaxis. It also includes a subset of children with ``unusual 
    shock-like states'' who have a ``lot-dependent, bimodal, or other form 
    of onset.'' It was suggested that the Department should give the 
    benefit of doubt in terms of causation to this group. One commenter 
    suggested features of collapse are life-threatening. The Department 
    responds as follows.
        Although HHE is not well understood, there are consistent, albeit 
    rare, clinical signs reported to occur transiently following DTP 
    immunization. The onset in young infants is usually within 12 hours 
    following pertussis immunization. Clinical features include pallor, 
    fever, and decreased activity and responsiveness. Although these 
    infants may have a significantly decreased activity level and ``shock-
    like'' appearance, actual loss of consciousness and hypotension (shock) 
    have not been demonstrated to occur. Disorders such as anaphylaxis 
    should easily be distinguishable from shock-collapse or HHE because of 
    the clearly defined physiologic changes known to occur with 
    anaphylaxis, which do not occur in HHE. See 1991 IOM Report, 171-186; 
    Cody CL, Baraff LJ, Cherry JD, March SM, Manclark CR. 1981. Nature and 
    rates of adverse reactions associated with DTP and DT immunizations in 
    infants and children. Pediatrics 68:650-660.
        The 1991 IOM report found evidence ``consistent with a causal 
    relation'' between the pertussis vaccine and HHE (shock collapse), but 
    concluded there was insufficient evidence concerning chronic neurologic 
    damage. Because there is no proven relationship between HHE and 
    residual neurologic damage, [[Page 7689]] no purpose is served by 
    retaining HHE on the Table. Removing HHE as a Table injury places the 
    burden of proof on the petitioner that an HHE was caused by a vaccine 
    and that it resulted in death or residual effects lasting at least 6 
    months.
        Additional comments were received in response to the Notice 
    published on March 24, 1994, requesting comments on the Miller study 
    and 1994 IOM report. Two commenters argued that the conclusions of this 
    IOM report are inconsistent with the Department's proposal to remove 
    HHE from the Vaccine Injury Table. The commenters suggested that 
    because the Qualifications and Aids to Interpretation include ``loss of 
    consciousness'' as one of the symptoms of HHE, and because the NCES 
    would have included a severe shock-collapse resulting in 
    hospitalization as a serious, acute neurologic illness, it is 
    appropriate for HHE to continue to receive the presumption of causation 
    conferred by the Table.
        It is important to understand that the Miller study did not purport 
    to set forth a definition of ``encephalopathy'' for purposes of the 
    VICP or the Vaccine Injury Table. Rather, it simply defined a set of 
    conditions which fell under the rubric of ``acute neurologic illness'' 
    that could be studied in relation to the administration of DTP vaccine. 
    Loss of consciousness is not a recognized sign of HHE (see Cody et 
    al.), notwithstanding its inclusion in the original statutory 
    Qualifications and Aids to Interpretation. The Department recognizes 
    that the 1991 IOM Report included among the symptoms of HHE a loss of 
    consciousness. However, the Department believes that this simply 
    reflected some of the case reports in the literature that were reviewed 
    by the IOM. Given the IOM's statement that the cases reported may 
    include other conditions, such as anaphylaxis, the Department does not 
    view the IOM's discussion as a sufficient basis to expand its view of 
    what properly constitutes HHE. See 1991 IOM Report, p. 171-177. Rather, 
    children experiencing a loss of consciousness should properly be 
    considered under the rubric of encephalopathy. Furthermore, there is no 
    clear evidence that HHE (1) represents acute neurologic dysfunction, 
    (2) requires medical intervention (although medical consultation is 
    frequently sought), or (3) leads to any permanent sequelae or death. It 
    is unlikely that nay of the cases described in the NCES were those of 
    infants experiencing HHE. In light of these considerations, the 
    Department concludes that there is an insufficient basis to retain HHE 
    as a separate category on the Table.
    
    Residual Seizure Disorder
    
        One commenter suggested that some of the seizure classifications 
    under Residual Seizure Disorder are out of date. They cited the example 
    of ``grand mal'' seizures which has been dropped from the International 
    Classification of Diseases. The commenter also questioned the use of 
    the word ``signs'' in this section. The Department agrees with the 
    commenter that some of the original seizure terminology has changed 
    over time. Section 100.3(b)(4) has been revised and the word ``signs'' 
    has been deleted from the text.
        One commenter objected to proposed paragraph (b)(3)(ii) regarding 
    the 24-hour requirement for separation of seizures under Residual 
    Seizure Disorder. The commenter disagreed that a 24-hour separation in 
    seizures makes the diagnosis of recurrent seizures (epilepsy) more 
    likely, and that seizures occurring on the same day are generally 
    regarded as part of the same event.
        The Department intends that the 24-hour requirement for the 
    separation of seizures will make it more likely that a Petitioner who 
    qualifies under Residual Seizure Disorder has a recurring seizure 
    disorder (epilepsy). The study cited in the NPRM, (Reference: Hauser 
    WA. et al: Seizure recurrence after a first unprovoked seizure. NEJM 
    1982; 307(9):522-528), shows that seizures separated by more that 24 
    hours make a recurrent disorder more likely. Its importance is 
    underscored by the fact that seizures commonly occur in clusters. For 
    purposes of predicting recurrence of seizures, those occurring within a 
    24-hour period are generally viewed as a single event (with the same 
    cause). It is likely that any petitioner who experiences a vaccine-
    related epileptic disorder will still qualify by having further 
    seizures over the 12-month period specified under the statute. See 
    section 2114(b)(2)(A) of the Act.
        Recognizing the commenter's concerns, and in the interest of 
    clarity, the Department has modified slightly the definition of a 
    distinct seizure episode for purposes of this section. The last 
    sentence of Sec. 100.3(b)(3)(i) now reads, ``A distinct seizure or 
    convulsion episode is ordinarily defined as including all seizure or 
    convulsive activity occurring within a 24-hour period, unless competent 
    and qualified expert neurologic testimony is presented to the contrary 
    in a particular case.''
        Two commenters did not agree with the language in paragraph (b)(4) 
    that absence (petit mal) epilepsy is not associated with acute 
    encephalopathy secondary to DTP immunization. Both suggested that the 
    diagnosis be determined by requiring such a child to have an EEG with 
    3-per-second spike-and-wave, since it is known that children who have 
    such minor seizures with different EEG's are often the victims of 
    severe brain damage and should not be excluded. Finally, it was 
    suggested that the phrase ``if properly diagnosed'' be used under these 
    conditions. The Department's response to these comments is as follows.
        There is little credible evidence to support the conclusion that 
    absence (petit mal) epilepsy is associated with acute encephalopathy 
    following vaccination. It is true, however, that atypical absence and 
    other forms of spike-and-wave epilepsy may be the sequelae of an acute 
    encephalophathy, but are not in themselves the features of such. 
    Following acute encephalopathy, features of atypical absence seizures 
    may develop months to years later as part of the sequelae to the acute 
    injury. Other types of staring behavior may constitute seizure activity 
    associated with an acute encephalopathy, such as an individual with 
    Herpes simplex type 1 encephalitis. However, these patients typically 
    present with other clinical signs of acute encephalopathy. (Generalized 
    Seizures: Absence. In Dreifuss F. (ed): Pediatric Epileptology. Boston, 
    J. Wright/PSG, 1983, p. 65-91.) It also should be noted that seizures 
    alone do not constitute an encephalopathy. (1991 IOM Report, page 87).
        Requiring EEG confirmation of 3-per-second spike-and-wave to make 
    the diagnosis of absence (petit) epilepsy may be excessively 
    restrictive. While patients may have these characteristic EEG findings, 
    it is neither practical nor advisable to require that the EEG 
    constitute the basis for diagnosis. Frequently, absence (petit mal) 
    epilepsy is diagnosed on clinical criteria alone, (i.e., expected age 
    group, seizure behavior, relationship to hyperventilation and/or 
    response to ethosuximide therapy). It is therefore impractical to 
    require EEG confirmation. Furthermore, inserting the phrase ``if 
    properly diagnosed'' would create confusion as to whether EEG 
    confirmation is necessary for the diagnosis of this condition.
        One commenter suggested it is incorrect to state that petit mal and 
    absence seizures are the only types of seizure activity with which 
    staring can be associated. The Department agrees, and did not intend to 
    imply such in the Preamble to the NPRM. Other [[Page 7690]] conditions 
    associated with staring, such as atypical absence epilepsy, or various 
    sequelae to central nervous system injury are noted above in the 
    Department's response under absence (petit mal) epilepsy.
        One commenter suggested that the Department has shown no evidence 
    that pertussis-related febrile seizures have more benign outcomes than 
    those induced by other agents. The commenter states that because the 
    literature shows that a small percentage of children who experience 
    febrile seizures go on to have permanent problems, the Department's 
    findings that there is insufficient evidence are erroneous. One 
    commenter suggested febrile seizures produce brain damage. Another 
    commenter suggested that not every seizure which is contemporaneous 
    with a fever is a febrile seizure. The Department agrees in part, and 
    disagrees in part with these comments for the following reasons.
        The term ``febrile seizure'' refers to seizures in infancy or 
    childhood (between 3 months to 5 years of age) associated with fever, 
    but without evidence of intracranial infection or other defined cause. 
    Infants or children who have a pre-existing history of an afebrile 
    seizure, or recurrent afebrile seizures (epilepsy) are not included in 
    this category.
        While it is true that children with a history of ``febrile 
    seizures'' may eventually show neurologic deficits, there is no 
    persuasive experimental or epidemiologic evidence that these deficits 
    are a result of neurologic injury occurring at the time of the febrile 
    seizure. Furthermore, there is no evidence that febrile seizures affect 
    intellectual performance as judged by comparison of affected children 
    to their siblings. (Consensus Statement. 1980. Febrile seizures: long 
    term management of children with fever-associated seizures. Pediatrics 
    66:1009-1012) (Ellenberg JH, Nelson KB. Febrile seizures and later 
    intellectual performance. Arch Neurol 1978;35:17-21)
        Although the IOM concluded ``febrile seizures'' are causally 
    related to DTP vaccine, most experts believer that febrile seizures do 
    not cause permanent damage. The clinical courses of children 
    experiencing febrile seizures following DTP vaccination are 
    indistinguishable from the clinical courses of children who experience 
    febrile seizures from other causes. (Hirtz DG, et al. Seizures 
    following childhood immunizations. J. Pediatr. 1983;314:1085-1088)
        While febrile seizures are by their very nature benign, and 
    therefore not associated with permanent damage, not all seizures 
    contemporaneous with fever are ``febrile seizures.'' This latter group 
    of seizures may be the result of pre-existing neurologic disease or 
    injury, which produces a predisposition to seizure activity with 
    elevated temperature. Alternatively, one can have an acute 
    encephalopathy which presents itself as fever and seizures (e.g., 
    meningitis). In such a case, the other requisite clinical 
    manifestations of clinical encephalopathy should be present (i.e., 
    diminished consciousness and/or focal or generalized neurologic signs).
        One commenter disagreed with the exclusion of infantile spasms. One 
    commenter noted that the diagnosis for infantile spasms has no 
    etiological significance. It was suggested there is no medical support 
    to eliminate this type of seizure disorder from those potentially 
    compensated. One commenter suggested that it is inappropriate to 
    exclude infantile spasms, as the U.S. Court of Federal Claims has ruled 
    that DTP causes infantile spasms. The Department has considered these 
    comments and offers the following clarification.
        The IOM concluded infantile spasms is not casually related to DTP 
    vaccination. Therefore, there is no basis for a legal presumption of 
    causation for this condition when it follows DTP vaccination. 
    Petitioners have the right to prove causation in fact in instances in 
    which infantile spasms has its onset following immunization.
        The U.S. Court of Federal Claims has held that seizures diagnosed 
    as infantile spasms can be considered a Table injury if the requisite 
    timeframes are met. The Court has held that the respondent cannot claim 
    that infantile spasms is a factor unrelated to vaccine administration 
    unless the precise cause of the infantile spasms can be identified. The 
    Court's reasoning was based on a technical interpretation of the 
    statute, and does not purport to be an analysis of the medical issues 
    involved. Furthermore, the Court's analysis relied, of course, on the 
    initial Table. It cannot be viewed as relevant to the actual causation 
    issue which is the basis for revising the Table. See Johnston v. 
    Secretary of HHS, 22 Cl. Ct. 75 (1990).
        Nevertheless, the Department has decided to remove all references 
    to infantile spasms from the final rule. This decision was made based 
    purely on procedural grounds. The Department concluded that this issue 
    is more appropriately addressed in the ``factor unrelated'' section of 
    the statute (42 U.S.C. 300aa-13(b)), rather than as part of the Vaccine 
    Injury Table. The decision to revise the rule in this manner does not 
    affect the Department's findings regarding infantile spasms (based on 
    the IOM report), nor should it be viewed as inconsistent with the 
    Department's response to the commenters' concerns. The Department 
    continues to believe that deciding cases involving infantile spasms, 
    the Court of Federal Claims should rely heavily on the IOM's conclusion 
    that the evidence does not indicate a causal relationship between 
    pertussis vaccine and infantile spasms.
        One commenter claims to have concluded ``within medical certainty'' 
    that chronic neurologic damage occurred in children who had acute 
    afebrile seizures within the timeframes of the current Table of 
    injuries, and as manifestations of acute encephalopathies. The 
    commenter does not, however, provide sufficient evidence to justify a 
    revision of the proposed language.
        The IOM concluded that afebrile seizures are not causally related 
    to DTP vaccine. They considered many studies, including one which 
    showed that short-lived convulsions, with or without fever, have not 
    been demonstrated to cause permanent sequelae, regardless of whether 
    the seizures occur in association with receipt of DTP. vaccine. (IOM 
    Report p. 118) (Hirtz DG. et al. Seizures following childhood 
    immunizations. J. Pediatr. 1983; 102:14-18. and Ellenberg JH, Hirtz DG, 
    Nelson KB. Do seizures in children cause intellectual deterioration? 
    NEJM 1986; 314:1085-1088) (Ad Hoc Committee for the Child Neurology 
    Society. Consensus Statement: Pertussis immunization and the central 
    nervous system. Ann. of Neuro. 1991; 29 (4): 458-460).
        The Department also reversed the order of Sec. 100.3(b)(3)(i) and 
    Sec. 100.3(b)(3)(ii). This change was made to make the order of these 
    two subparagraphs more logical.
        In response to the March 24, 1994, Federal Register Notice 
    requesting comments on the 1994 IOM Report, two commenters argued that 
    because seizures were included in the definition of encephalopathy and 
    chronic nervous system dysfunction used by the NCES, the Department 
    should not remove residual seizure disorder from the Table.
        The Department disagrees with the commenters on this point. As 
    discussed above, the 1991 IOM report concluded that no causal 
    relationship can be proven between DTP and afebrile seizures. In its 
    1994 report, the IOM did not retract any of its 1991 conclusions 
    regarding DTP and seizure disorders. It merely recognized that the NCES 
    included seizures as one of those conditions to be monitored or 
    purposes [[Page 7691]] of tracking long-term dysfunction. This 
    recognition does not provide any information one way or the other 
    regarding causation.
        Crucial to understanding the Department's response is the knowledge 
    that the working definition of ``acute neurologic illness'' used in the 
    NCES is not consistent with the current medical understanding of acute 
    encephalopathy as an acute, generalized disorder of the brain. Children 
    were placed in the NCES case definition who experienced only febrile 
    seizures, a benign condition know to be triggered by DTP vaccine, yet 
    never proven to have lasting effects absent signs of acute 
    encephalopathy. Thus, placing seizures in the NCES case definition of 
    encephalopathy is inconsistent with the current medical understanding 
    of acute encephalopathy. Moreover, both the IOM and the NVAC 
    subcommittee agreed that there is no evidence that chronic 
    encephalopathy in the absence of acute post-immunization encephalopathy 
    is causally related to the vaccine. Therefore, there is no basis for 
    providing a legal presumption of vaccine causation for chronic effects 
    based solely on the occurrence of a seizure following DTP immunization. 
    There is simply no need for, nor is there medical evidence to support, 
    a separate presumption for residual seizure disorder in connection with 
    DTP vaccine.
    
    Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
    
        Two commenters suggested there is not a clear distinction between a 
    death characterized as Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) and one that 
    is vaccine-related (paragraph (b)(2)(iii) of the NPRM).
        The IOM concluded that SIDS is not causally related to DTP vaccine. 
    This conclusion was based on several controlled epidemiologic studies 
    involving hundreds of thousands of vaccinations. Although the diagnosis 
    of SIDS is one of exclusion of other causes, there are specific 
    guidelines as to the history preceding death, findings on forensic 
    examination, and the ruling out of other causes by death scene 
    examination (when possible). Moreover, the possibility that DTP-related 
    deaths are commonly misclassified as SIDS was also considered by the 
    IOM Committee. Since there was no evidence of an increased risk of SIDS 
    following DTP immunization, or of any observable ``pertussis death 
    syndrome,'' the committee considered that such effects were not 
    supported by the medical literature. In addition, those studies that 
    examined infant deaths other than SIDS in relation to DTP vaccine also 
    demonstrated no excess risk in the post-immunization interval. This 
    observation argues against the possibility that DTP-related deaths were 
    missed as a result of their being misclassified as deaths other than 
    SIDS. (Correspondence from Christopher P. Howson, Ph.D., Project 
    Director, Committee to Review the Adverse Consequences of Pertussis and 
    Rubella Vaccines to Dr. George Curlin, Deputy Director, Division of 
    Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, National Institute of Allergy and 
    Infectious Diseases: 9/18/91)
        Nevertheless, as with infantile spasms, the Department has decided 
    to remove all references to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome from the final 
    rule. This decision, too, was made based purely on procedural grounds. 
    The Department concluded (as with infantile spasms) that this issue is 
    more appropriately addressed in the ``factor unrelated'' section of the 
    statute (42 U.S.C. Sec. 300aa-13(b)), rather than as part of the 
    Vaccine Injury Table. The decision to make this change does not affect 
    the Department's findings regarding SIDS (based on the IOM report), nor 
    should it be viewed as inconsistent with the above analysis regarding 
    the Department's response to the commenters' concerns. The Department 
    continues to believe that in deciding cases involving SIDS, the Court 
    of Federal Claims should rely heavily on the IOM's conclusion that the 
    evidence does not indicate a causal relationship between pertussis 
    vaccine and SIDS.
    
    Tuberous Sclerosis Complex
    
        One commenter suggested that the proposed revisions do not take 
    into account the condition of tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC), which 
    some believe can be aggravated by DTP vaccine. Since DTP vaccine can 
    cause fevers which trigger seizures, there remains a question whether 
    someone with TSC would have a worse outcome as a result of a seizure 
    following a DTP shot. One commenter suggested that infantile spasms is 
    frequently associated with TSC and the U.S. Court of Federal Claims has 
    found compensable infantile spasms cases that manifested after DTP 
    vaccine. The Department provides the following clarification regarding 
    the effect the new Table will have on individuals with TSC.
        TSC is a genetic disorder manifested chiefly as mental deficiency, 
    epilepsy and skin lesions. Seizures occur in 80-90 percent of 
    individuals with tuberous sclerosis. This disorder frequently presents 
    in infancy, commonly in the form of infantile spasms. Some petitioners 
    have argued that administration of a DTP vaccine can significantly 
    aggravate a case of TSC.
        The Act provides two avenues of proof in order to establish 
    eligibility for compensation. A petitioner is afforded a presumption of 
    causation if he/she can establish that an injury listed in the Table 
    occurred within the specified time period. Otherwise, the petitioner 
    may argue that an injury occurred which is not listed in the Table, but 
    which was nonetheless caused by the vaccine. The TSC cases presented to 
    the Court, some petitioners who sought to establish a Table case argued 
    that the child experienced seizures within 3 days of receipt of a 
    vaccine and that this event significantly aggravated the pre-existing 
    TSC. Some petitioners who were unable to establish Table cases argued 
    that although the child did not sustain an injury listed in the Vaccine 
    Injury Table, the vaccine nonetheless was the cause-in-fact of the 
    aggravation of the underlying Tuberous Sclerosis. In either case, the 
    petitioner had the burden of proving that the clinical course of the 
    pre-existing condition had been significantly aggravated. Typically, 
    petitioners presented expert testimony to support this theory.
        The revisions to the Vaccine Injury Table do not, by and large, 
    change the petitioner's burden of proof in TSC cases. The only 
    difference is that there is not a presumption of causation for residual 
    seizure disorders for DTP vaccine. As explained in the preamble to the 
    NPRM, and reiterated here, the IOM concluded that there is no causal 
    relation between pertussis vaccine and afebrile seizures. However, to 
    receive a presumption of causation, petitioners may still argue that an 
    encephalopathy (as defined in the revised Qualifications) occurred 
    within 3 days of vaccine administration and that this encephalopathy 
    significantly aggravated the pre-existing Tuberous Sclerosis. In 
    addition, petitioners may continue to argue that the vaccine was the 
    cause-in-fact of the aggravation of the TSC. As far as infantile spasms 
    is concerned, the Department has removed all references to this 
    condition from the final rule as explained above. Therefore, 
    petitioners have available to them the same avenues of proof open to 
    individuals with other types of seizures.
        One commenter noted that MMR frequently triggers epilepsy in 
    children with TSC. The same analysis as above applies. Here, the 
    petitioner may take advantage of the presumption of causation if he or 
    she is able to prove either a Table encephalopathy, or a Table residual 
    seizure disorder, and that that injury significantly aggravated the 
    underlying TSC. If the evidence does [[Page 7692]] not demonstrate that 
    the case meets the requirements of the Table, the case will be 
    evaluated based on a causation theory.
    
    Diphtheria/Tetanus Vaccines (DT, TD, TT)
    
        One commenter suggested that making changes to non-pertussis 
    components based on studies of pertussis vaccine is inappropriate.
        Although the section 312 study (``IOM Report'') did not 
    specifically study the non-pertussis antigens of DTP vaccine (i.e., 
    diphtheria, tetanus), most individuals receiving pertussis antigen, 
    also were given these antigens. Therefore, some inferential data is 
    present. Moreover, studies reveal little evidence that these antigens 
    are causally related to the injuries currently listed in the Table 
    under DTP, other than Anaphylaxis. In the section 313 study, the IOM 
    concluded that the evidence favored rejection of a causal relation 
    between DT/Td/TT and encephalopathy. After review of the section 313 
    Report, the Department may promulgate additional changes to the Table.
    
    MMR Vaccines
    
        One commenter suggested that the requirement for at least 5 days of 
    viral replication is inappropriate. One commenter suggested that the 
    changes for encephalopathy are wrong because there is a broad spectrum 
    of severity. Sequelae may occur after less serious acute 
    encephalopathy. The proposed changes would exclude all but the most 
    severe acute encephalopathies from the Table. The Department has 
    considered these comments, but has concluded that the medical evidence 
    supports the proposed changes.
        Since viral replication is required for a viral vaccine-associated 
    encephalopathy, a window for the expected time of onset is appropriate. 
    The onset of vaccine-related illness following MMR (or any of its 
    components) is generally from 7 to 14 days, thus a time interval of 5 
    to 15 days would be all-inclusive. Any acute encephalopathy of unknown 
    cause, regardless of severity or duration, that occurs during the 5 to 
    15 day time frame would be eligible for the Table presumption, provided 
    the child or adult has continued evidence of ``chronic 
    encephalopathy.'' The 1991 NVAC Subcommittee felt there was strong 
    support in the literature to narrow the timeframe as above. Some felt 
    Residual Seizure Disorder should be removed from the Table based on the 
    lack of evidence for causation in the current medical literature. This 
    was not done because it went significantly beyond the scope of changes 
    proposed by the PHS Task Force. However, at that time, the Subcommittee 
    recognized additional changes may be forthcoming once the section 313 
    study results are published and have been reviewed. Since the 
    Subcommittee's original discussion on this issue, the IOM issued its 
    section 313 report. The IOM concluded for both encephalopathy and 
    residual seizure disorder that the evidence is inadequate to accept or 
    reject a causal relation. After review of the 313 Report, the 
    Department may promulgate additional changes to the Table based on this 
    conclusion.
        One commenter suggested that the evidence for an association 
    between rubella vaccine and chronic arthritis is inconclusive. The 
    section 312 IOM Committee concluded that the evidence is ``consistent 
    with a causal relation'' between the currently used rubella vaccine (RA 
    27/3) and chronic arthritis in adult women, although the evidence is 
    limited in scope and confined to reports from one institution. To 
    establish this biologically plausible relation more firmly, the 
    Committee expressed the need for prospective, double-blind, controlled 
    trials in which individuals are followed for at least 12 months after 
    vaccination with attempts to isolate and identify rubella virus. At 
    least one medical research center is pursuing this research to try and 
    obtain better data on causation.
        Many investigators still view the evidence as inconclusive with 
    regard to chronic arthritis. However, the IOM's finding justifies the 
    inclusion of chronic arthritis on the Vaccine Injury Table since there 
    is biologic plausibility of causation, and the term ``chronic 
    arthritis'' is defined as effects lasting greater than 6 months. In 
    this instance, the IOM is stating there is ``consistent'' evidence for 
    both acute onset and residual effects lasting greater than 6 months. 
    Previously described changes for Table injuries under DTP involved 
    conditions (i.e., HHE and Residual Seizure Disorder) that the IOM did 
    not view as having strong evidence for both acute and chronic effects.
        Although the Department added chronic arthritis to the Table, 
    guidelines written into the Aids to Interpretation will preclude 
    patients with pre-existing conditions or other non-vaccine related 
    musculoskeletal disorders from being legally presumed to have a 
    vaccine-related injury. As information from prospective studies becomes 
    available, modifications may be made to the Table or Aids to 
    Interpretation based on this data.
    
    Polio Vaccines
    
        Two commenters suggested that Inactivated Polio Vaccine (IPV), 
    known as the Salk vaccine, may be proven to be causally related to 
    poliomyelitis. The IOM evaluated the relationship between polio 
    vaccines and adverse events in its section 313 study. Except for the 
    1955 incident with inadequate inactivation of live polio virus in the 
    Cutter Company supply of IPV, there have been no serious adverse events 
    causally tied to this vaccine. Since the ``Cutter Incident,'' when 
    manufacturing and testing difficulties were identified and corrected, 
    the safety of released inactivated Poliovirus vaccine has been assured. 
    (See IOM Section 313 Report at 188,; see also Bodian, D., et al. 
    Interim Report, Public Health Service Technical Committee on 
    Poliomyelitis Vaccine. JAMA:1444-7, 1955) Furthermore, no serious side 
    effects of currently available inactivated poliovirus vaccines have 
    been documented. (Report of the Committee on Infectious Diseases, 
    American Academy of Pediatrics 1991:389) Because these earlier problems 
    have been cured, and there is no current evidence bearing on a causal 
    relationship, the section 313 study does not discuss specifically the 
    connection between IPV and poliomyelitis. Therefore, there is no 
    evidence of a causal relationship which would justify adding 
    poliomyelitis to the Table for IPV.
    
    Other Changes
    
        At the meeting on June 1-2, 1994, members of the ACCV suggested 
    that the definition of ``sequela'' imposes a higher burden of proof 
    than that required by the statute. The Department disagrees that the 
    definition affects the burden of proof, but agrees that the definition 
    as written should be simplified. Accordingly, the definition in 
    Sec. 100.3(b)(5) has been modified to read as follows: ``The term 
    sequela means a condition or event which was actually caused by a 
    condition listed in the Vaccine Injury Table.'' This definition is 
    consistent with current scientific understanding that in order for a 
    subsequent event to be considered a sequela of an initial event, there 
    must be a causal relationship between the two.
    
    Technical Changes
    
        First, in publishing the NPRM, the Department inadvertently 
    misquoted the statutory introduction to the Vaccine Injury Table. 
    Accordingly, the introductory paragraph of Sec. 100.3(a) now reads as 
    follows: ``In accordance with section 312(b) of the National Childhood 
    Vaccine Injury Act of 1986, [[Page 7693]] title III of Pub. L. 99-660 
    (42 U.S.C. 300aa-note) and section 2114(c) of the Public Health Service 
    Act (42 U.S.C. 300aa-14(c)), the following is a table of vaccines, the 
    injuries, disabilities, illnesses, conditions, and deaths resulting 
    from the administration of such vaccines, and the time period in which 
    the first symptom or manifestation of onset or of the significant 
    aggravation of such injuries, disabilities, illnesses, conditions, and 
    deaths is to occur after vaccine administration for purposes of 
    receiving compensation under the Program:''
        Second, we are revising Sec. 100.3(c), entitled ``Effective date 
    provisions.'', to change the term ``United States Claims Court'' 
    wherever it appears to read ``United States Court of Federal Claims'', 
    in accordance with section 902(b) of title IX, Pub. L. 102-572, the 
    Federal Courts Administration Act of 1992 (See 106 Stat. 4516).
        In addition, the Department is making a technical change to the 
    existing regulations (42 CFR part 100) by revising the currently 
    codified acronym used to refer to the National Vaccine Injury 
    Compensation Program from ``NVIC'' to ``VICP'' wherever it appears 
    under part 100. ``VICP'' has been used for the entire history of the 
    program to avoid confusion with the parents' advocacy group known as 
    the National Vaccine Information Center (NVIC), Dissatisfied Parents 
    Together (DPT).
        Since these changes are of a technical nature, the Secretary has 
    determined pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553 and departmental policy that it is 
    unnecessary and impractical to follow proposed rulemaking procedures.
    
    Economic Impact
    
        The NPRM preamble erred in not explaining that this rule will not 
    have a significant impact on a substantial number of small businesses 
    because it will have only small effects, and those primarily on 
    individuals. Attorneys, while small entities within the meaning of the 
    Act, will still be awarded costs and fees for cases they bring on a 
    reasonable basis. The reduced number of vaccine cases brought will be 
    negligible measured against overall business opportunities for lawyers. 
    Therefore, SBA is incorrect in saying that a regulatory flexibility 
    analysis is required. Therefore, the Secretary certifies that this 
    final rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
    number of small entities.
        Executive Order 12866 requires that all regulations reflect 
    consideration of alternatives, of costs, of benefits, of incentives, of 
    equity, and of available information. Regulations must meet certain 
    standards, such as avoiding unnecessary burden. Regulations which are 
    ``significant'' because of cost, adverse effects on the economy, 
    inconsistency with other agency actions, effects on the budget, or 
    novel legal or policy issues, require special analysis.
        As stated above, this final regulation modifies the Vaccine Injury 
    Table based on legal authority, and under that authority the Court will 
    award such fees and costs as appropriate under the law. As such, the 
    regulation would have little direct effect on the economy or on Federal 
    or State expenditures. For the same reasons, the Secretary has also 
    determined that this is not a ``significant'' rule under Executive 
    Order 12866.
    
    Effect of the New Rule
    
        The NPRM failed to explain the effect of the rule for individuals 
    who were not eligible to file petitions based on the original Vaccine 
    Injury Table, but who may be eligible to file petitions based on the 
    revised Table. The Act permits such individuals to file a petition for 
    such compensation not later than 2 years after the effective date of 
    the revision if the injury or death occurred no more than 8 years 
    before the effective date of the revision of the Table. See 42 U.S.C. 
    300aa-16(b). As part of the Omnibus Reconciliation Act of 1993, 
    Congress amended this section to permit individuals to file claims 
    within this 2-year period, even if they had already filed a claim 
    involving a particular vaccine, but only if the Table revision will 
    ``significantly increase the likelihood of obtaining compensation.'' 
    See Pub. L. 103-66, sec. 13632(a)(1). (August 10, 1993). For example, 
    this amendment would permit an individual whose claim alleging vaccine-
    related arthritis had been dismissed by the Claims Court to file a new 
    claim for the same vaccine-related injury, if the individual can show 
    that the addition of arthritis to the Table as a rubella vaccine-
    related condition has significantly increased the likelihood of 
    obtaining compensation. The Department believes that the amendment 
    would not permit someone who had had a claim for an alleged vaccine-
    related encephalopathy subsequent to DTP vaccine to refile a claim that 
    had been dismissed by the Claims Court, as the changes in the Table 
    related to DTP and encephalopathy do not appear to significantly 
    increase the likelihood of obtaining compensation.
    
    Possible Effect on Other Legislation
    
        This rule will not have an effect on the Vaccines for Children 
    Program, implemented by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 
    under section 1928 of the Social Security Act, as enacted by section 
    13631 of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 (Pub. L. 103-66, 
    August 10, 1993). This section provides for the establishment of a 
    program to distribute free vaccines to all vaccine-eligible children, 
    as defined by this section. The final rule modifies the existing 
    Vaccine Injury Table, a mechanism by which compensation is awarded to 
    individuals who have been found to have suffered from vaccine-related 
    injuries. Because the two authorities are not related, the publication 
    of this rule should not have any impact on the Vaccines for Children 
    Program.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980
    
        This final rule has no information collection requirements.
    
    List of Subjects in 42 CFR Part 100
    
        Biologics, Health insurance, Immunization.
    
        Dated: November 16, 1993.
    Philip R. Lee,
    Assistant Secretary for Health.
        Approved: November 9, 1994.
    Donna E. Shalala,
    Secretary.
    
        Accordingly, 42 CFR part 100 is amended as set forth below.
    
    PART 100--VACCINE INJURY COMPENSATION
    
        1. The authority citation for part 100 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Sec. 215 of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 
    216); sec. 2115 of the PHS Act, 100 Stat. 3767, as amended (42 
    U.S.C. 300aa-15); Sec. 100.3, the Vaccine Injury Table, issued under 
    sec. 312 of Pub. L. 99-660, 100 Stat. 3779 (42 U.S.C. 300aa-1 note) 
    and sec. 2114(c) of the PHS Act (42 U.S.C. 300aa-14(c)).
    
        2. Section 100.1 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 100.1  Applicability.
    
        This part applies to the National Vaccine Injury Compensation 
    Program (VICP) under subtitle 2 of title XXI of the Public Health 
    Service (PHS) Act.
        3. The first sentence in Sec. 100.2 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 100.2  Average cost of a health insurance policy.
    
        For purposes of determining the amount of compensation under the 
    VICP, section 2115(a)(3)(B) of the PHS Act, 42 U.S.C. 
    300aa.15(a)(3)(B), provides that certain individuals are entitled to 
    receive an amount reflecting [[Page 7694]] lost earnings, less certain 
    deductions. * * *
        4. Section 100.3 is added to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 100.3  Vaccine injury table.
    
        (a) In accordance with section 312(b) of the National Childhood 
    Vaccine Injury Act of 1986, title III of Pub. L. 99-660, 100 Stat. 3779 
    (42 U.S.C. 300aa-1 note) and section 2114(c) of the Public Health 
    Service Act (42 U.S.C. 300aa-14(c)), the following is a table of 
    vaccines, the injuries, disabilities, illnesses, conditions, and deaths 
    resulting from the administration of such vaccines, and the time period 
    in which the first symptom or manifestation of onset or of the 
    significant aggravation of such injuries, disabilities, illnesses, 
    conditions, and deaths is to occur after vaccine administration for 
    purposes of receiving compensation under the Program:
    
                                                  Vaccine Injury Table                                              
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                    Time period for first symptom or
                                                                                      manifestation of onset or of  
                   Illness, disability, injury or condition covered                  significant aggravation after  
                                                                                         vaccine administration     
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    I. DTP; P; DT; Td; or Tetanus Toxoid; or in any combination with Polio; or                                      
     any Other Vaccine Containing Whole Cell Pertussis Bacteria, Extracted or                                       
     Partial Cell Pertussis Bacteria, or Specific Pertussis Antigen(s):                                             
        A. Anaphylaxis or anaphylactic shock.....................................  4 hours.                         
        B. Encephalopathy (or encephalitis)......................................  72 hours.                        
        C. Any sequela (including death) of an illness, disability, injury, or     Not applicable.                  
         condition referred to above which illness, disability, injury, or                                          
         condition arose within the time period prescribed.                                                         
    II. (a). Measles, mumps, rubella, or any vaccine containing any of the                                          
     foregoing as a component:                                                                                      
        A. Anaphylaxis or anaphylactic shock.....................................  4 hours.                         
        B. Encephalopathy (or encephalitis)......................................  5-15 days (not less than 5 days  
                                                                                    and not more than 15 days) for  
                                                                                    measles, mumps, rubella, or any 
                                                                                    vaccine containing any of the   
                                                                                    foregoing as a component.       
        C. Residual seizure disorder in accordance with subsection (b)(3)........  5-15 days (not less than 5 days  
                                                                                    and not more than 15 days) for  
                                                                                    measles, mumps, rubella, or any 
                                                                                    vaccine containing any of the   
                                                                                    foregoing as a component.       
        D. Any sequela (including death) of an illness, disability, injury, or     Not applicable.                  
         condition referred to above which illness, disability, injury, or                                          
         condition arose within the time period prescribed.                                                         
    II. (b). In the case of measles, mumps, rubella (MMR), measles, rubella (MR)                                    
     or rubella vaccines only:                                                                                      
        A. Chronic arthritis.....................................................  42 days.                         
        B. Any sequela (including death) of an illness, disability, injury, or     Not applicable.                  
         condition referred to above which illness, disability, injury, or                                          
         condition arose within the time period prescribed.                                                         
    III. Polio Vaccine (other than Inactivated Polio Vaccine):                                                      
        A. Paralytic Polio                                                                                          
            In a non-immunodeficient recipient...................................  30 days.                         
            In an immunodeficient recipient......................................  6 months.                        
            In a vaccine associated community case...............................  Not applicable.                  
        B. Any acute complication or sequela (including death) of an illness,      Not applicable.                  
         disability, injury, or condition referred to above which illness,                                          
         disability, injury, or condition arose within the time period prescribed.                                  
    IV. Inactivated Polio Vaccine:                                                                                  
        A. Anaphylaxis or anaphylactic shock.....................................  4 hours.                         
        B. Any acute complication or sequela (including death) of an illness,      Not applicable.                  
         disability, injury, or condition referred to above which illness,                                          
         disability, injury, or condition arose within the time period prescribed.                                  
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (b) Qualifications and aids to interpretation. The following 
    qualifications and aids to interpretation shall apply to the Vaccine 
    Injury Table in paragraph (a) of this section:
        (1) Anaphylaxis and anaphylactic shock. For purposes of paragraph 
    (a) of this section, Anaphylaxis and anaphylactic shock mean an acute, 
    severe, and potentially lethal systemic allergic reaction. Most cases 
    resolve without sequelae. Signs and symptoms begin minutes to a few 
    hours after exposure. Death, if it occurs, usually results from airway 
    obstruction caused by laryngeal edema or bronchospasm and may be 
    associated with cardiovascular collapse. Other significant clinical 
    signs and symptoms may include the following: Cyanosis, hypotension, 
    bradycardia, tachycardia, arrhythmia, edema of the pharynx and/or 
    trachea and/or larynx with stridor and dyspnea. Autopsy findings may 
    include acute emphysema which results from lower respiratory tract 
    obstruction, edema of the hypopharynx, epiglottis, larynx, or trchea 
    and minimal findings of eosinophilia in the liver, spleen and lungs. 
    When death occurs within minutes of exposure and without signs of 
    respiratory distress, there may not be significant pathologic findings.
        (2) Encephalopathy. For purposes of paragraph (a) of this section, 
    a vaccine recipient shall be considered to have suffered an 
    encephalopathy only if such recipient manifests, within the applicable 
    period, an injury meeting the description below of an acute 
    encephalopathy, and then a chronic encephalopathy persists in such 
    person for more than 6 months beyond the date of 
    vaccination. [[Page 7695]] 
        (i) An acute encephalopathy is one that is sufficiently severe so 
    as to require hospitalization.
        (A) For children less than 18 months of age who present without an 
    associated seizure event, an acute encephalopathy is indicated by a 
    significantly decreased level of consciousness lasting for at least 24 
    hours. Those children less than 18 months of age who present following 
    a seizure shall be viewed as having an acute encephalopathy if their 
    significantly decreased level of consciousness persists beyond 24 hours 
    and cannot be attributed to a postictal state (seizure) or medication.
        (B) For adults and children 18 months of age or older, an acute 
    encephalopathy is one that persists for at least 24 hours and 
    characterized by at least two of the following:
        (1) A significant change in mental status that is not medication 
    related; specifically a confusional state, or a delirium, or a 
    psychosis;
        (2) A significantly decreased level of consciousness, which is 
    independent of a seizure and cannot be attributed to the effects of 
    medication; and
        (3) A seizure associated with loss of consciousness.
        (C) Increased intracranial pressure may be a clinical feature of 
    acute encephalopathy in any age group.
        (D) A ``significantly decreased level of consciousness'' is 
    indicated by the presence of at least one of the following clinical 
    signs for at least 24 hours or greater (see paragraphs (b)(2)(i)(A) and 
    (b)(2)(i)(B) of this section for applicable timeframes):
        (1) Decreased or absent response to environment (responds, if at 
    all, only to loud voice or painful stimuli);
        (2) Decreased or absent eye contact (does not fix gaze upon family 
    members or other individuals); or
        (3) Inconsistent or absent responses to external stimuli (does not 
    recognize familiar people or things).
        (E) The following clinical features alone, or in combination, do 
    not demonstrate an acute encephalopathy or a significant change in 
    either mental status or level of consciousness as described above: 
    Sleepiness, irritability (fussiness), high-pitched and unusual 
    screaming, persistent inconsolable crying, and bulging fontanelle. 
    Seizures in themselves are not sufficient to constitute a diagnosis of 
    encephalopathy. In the absence of other evidence of an acute 
    encephalopathy, seizures shall not be viewed as the first symptom or 
    manifestation of the onset of an acute encephalopathy.
        (ii) Chronic Encephalopathy occurs when a change in mental or 
    neurologic status, first manifested during the applicable time period, 
    persists for a period of at least 6 months from the date of 
    vaccination. Individuals who return to a normal neurologic state after 
    the acute encephalopathy shall not be presumed to have suffered 
    residual neurologic damage from that event; any subsequent chronic 
    encephalopathy shall not be presumed to be a sequela of the acute 
    encephalopathy. If a preponderance of the evidence indicates that a 
    child's chronic encephalopathy is secondary to genetic, prenatal or 
    perinatal factors, that chronic encephalopathy shall not be considered 
    to be a condition set forth in the Table.
        (iii) An encephalopathy shall not be considered to be a condition 
    set forth in the Table if in a proceeding on a petition, it is shown by 
    a preponderance of the evidence that the encephalopathy was caused by 
    an infection, a toxin, a metabolic disturbance, a structural lesion, a 
    genetic disorder or trauma (without regard to whether the cause of the 
    infection, toxin, trauma, metabolic disturbance, structural lesion or 
    genetic disorder is known). If at the time a decision is made on a 
    petition filed under section 2111(b) of the Act for a vaccine-related 
    injury or death, it is not possible to determine the cause by a 
    preponderance of the evidence of an encephalopathy, the encephalopathy 
    shall be considered to be a condition set forth in the Table.
        (iv) In determining whether or not an encephalopathy is a condition 
    set forth in the Table, the Court shall consider the entire medical 
    record.
        (3) Residual Seizure Disorder. (i) A petitioner may be considered 
    to have suffered a residual seizure disorder for purposes of paragraph 
    (a) of this section, if the first seizure or convulsion occurred 5-15 
    days (not less than 5 days and not more than 15 days) after 
    administration of the vaccine and 2 or more additional distinct seizure 
    or convulsion episodes occurred within 1 year after the administration 
    of the vaccine which were unaccompanied by fever (defined as a rectal 
    temperature equal to or greater than 101.0 degrees Fahrenheit or an 
    oral temperature equal to or greater than 100.0 degrees Fahrenheit). A 
    distinct seizure or convulsion episode is ordinarily defined as 
    including all seizure or convulsive activity occurring within a 24-hour 
    period, unless competent and qualified expert neurological testimony is 
    presented to the contrary in a particular case.
        (ii) For purposes of paragraph (a) of this section, a petitioner 
    shall not be considered to have suffered a residual seizure disorder, 
    if the petitioner suffered a seizure or convulsion unaccompanied by 
    fever (defined as a rectal temperature equal to or greater than 101.0 
    degrees Fahrenheit or an oral temperature equal to or greater than 
    100.0 degrees Fahrenheit) before the fifth day after the administration 
    of the vaccine involved.
        (4) Seizure and convulsion. For purposes of paragraphs (b) (2) and 
    (3) of this section, the terms, ``seizure'' and ``convulsion'' include 
    myoclonic, generalized tonic-clonic (grand mal), and simple and complex 
    partial seizures. Absence (petit mal) seizures shall not be considered 
    to be a condition set forth in the Table. Jerking movements or staring 
    episodes alone are not necessarily an indication of seizure activity.
        (5) Sequela. The term ``sequela'' means a condition or event which 
    was actually caused by a condition listed in the Vaccine Injury Table.
        (6) Chronic Arthritis. (i) For purposes of paragraph (a) of this 
    section, chronic arthritis may be found in a person with no prior 
    history of arthropathy (joint disease) on the basis of:
        (A) Medical documentation, recorded within 30 days after the onset, 
    of objective signs of acute arthritis (joint swelling) that occurred 
    within 42 days after a rubella vaccination; and
        (B) Medical documentation (recorded within 3 years after the onset 
    of acute arthritis) of the persistence of objective signs of 
    intermittent or continuous arthritis for more than 6 months following 
    vaccination.
        (ii) For purposes of paragraph (a) of this section, the following 
    shall not be considered as chronic arthritis: Musculoskeletal disorders 
    such as diffuse connective tissue diseases (including but not limited 
    to rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus 
    erythematosus, systemic sclerosis, mixed connective tissue disease, 
    polymyositis/dermatomyositis, necrotizing vasculitis and vasculopathies 
    and Sjogren's Syndrome), degenerative joint disease, infectious agents 
    other than rubella (whether by direct invasion or as an immune 
    reaction), metabolic and endocrine diseases, trauma, neoplasms, 
    neuropathic disorders, bone and cartilage disorders and arthritis 
    associated with ankylosing spondylitis, psoriasis, inflammatory bowel 
    disease, Reiter's syndrome, or blood disorders.
        (iii) Arthralgia (joint pain) or stiffness without joint swelling 
    shall not be viewed as chronic arthritis for purposes of paragraph (a) 
    of this section.
        (c) Effective date provisions. The Table of Injuries set forth in 
    paragraph [[Page 7696]] (a) of this section applies to petitions for 
    compensation under the Program filed with the United States Court of 
    Federal Claims on or after March 10, 1995. The Qualifications and Aids 
    to Interpretation set forth in paragraph (b) of this section apply to 
    petitions filed with the United States Court of Federal Claims on or 
    after March 10, 1995. The petitions for compensation filed with the 
    United States Court of Federal Claims before March 10, 1995 shall be 
    governed by section 2114(a) (initial ``Table'') and section 2114(b) 
    (initial ``Qualification and Aids to Interpretation'') of the Public 
    Health Service Act as in effect on February 8, 1995.
    
    [FR Doc. 95-2945 Filed 2-7-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4160-15-M
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
3/10/1995
Published:
02/08/1995
Department:
Public Health Service
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
95-2945
Dates:
This regulation is effective March 10, 1995.
Pages:
7678-7696 (19 pages)
RINs:
0905-AD64
PDF File:
95-2945.pdf
CFR: (6)
42 CFR 100.3(b)(5)
42 CFR 100.3(b)(3)(ii)
42 CFR 312
42 CFR 100.1
42 CFR 100.2
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