In the United States Court of Federal Claims
OFFICE OF SPECIAL MASTERS
No. 17-792V
(to be published)
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
LAURA and BOJAN * Chief Special Master Corcoran
KALAJDZIC on behalf of A.K., a minor *
child, *
* Dated: June 17, 2022
Petitioners, *
v. *
*
SECRETARY OF HEALTH *
AND HUMAN SERVICES, *
*
Respondent. *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Amber Wilson, Esq., Wilson Science Law, Washington, DC, for Petitioners.
Claudia Gangi, Esq., U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, DC, for Respondent.
ENTITLEMENT DECISION 1
On June 13, 2017, Laura and Bojan Kalajdzic filed a petition on behalf of their minor son,
A.K., seeking compensation under the National Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (“Vaccine
Program”). 2 Petitioners allege that A.K. developed narcolepsy and associated symptoms after
receipt of two doses of the “FluMist” form of the influenza (“flu”) vaccine on October 30, 2014,
and December 2, 2014, respectively. Petition at 1, 3 (ECF No. 1).
1
This Decision will be posted on the Court of Federal Claims’s website in accordance with the E-Government Act of
2002, 44 U.S.C. § 3501 (2012)). This means that the Decision will be available to anyone with access to the
internet. As provided by 42 U.S.C. § 300aa-12(d)(4)(B), however, the parties may object to the Decision’s inclusion
of certain kinds of confidential information. Specifically, under Vaccine Rule 18(b), each party has fourteen days
within which to request redaction “of any information furnished by that party: (1) that is a trade secret or commercial
or financial in substance and is privileged or confidential; or (2) that includes medical files or similar files, the
disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of privacy.” Vaccine Rule 18(b). Otherwise, the
whole Decision will be available to the public. Id.
2
The Vaccine Program comprises Part 2 of the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986, Pub. L. No. 99-660,
100 Stat. 3758, codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. §§ 300aa-10 through 34 (2012) (“Vaccine Act” or “the Act”).
Individual section references hereafter will be to § 300aa of the Act (but will omit that statutory prefix).
1
I proposed (after the case’s transfer to me in January 2021) that the matter could reasonably
be decided on the record, and the parties have offered briefs in support of their respective positions.
Petitioner’s Motion, dated July 2, 2021 (ECF No. 84) (“Mot.”); Respondent’s Opposition, dated
September 13, 2021 (ECF No. 88) (“Opp.”); Petitioner’s Reply, dated October 12, 2021 (“Reply”).
Now, after review of the medical record, briefs, and multiple expert reports, I deny entitlement.
Petitioners have not preponderantly established that narcolepsy can be caused by the relevant
version of the flu vaccine. An almost-identical contention was addressed at great length in several
prior actions, but rejected, and no new scientific findings are offered herein that would fill holes
in the theory as previously identified.
I. Factual Background
Vaccination and Six-Month Period Thereafter
A.K. was born on March 16, 2006. See generally Ex. 12. He was eight years old and in
good health when he received doses of the FluMist vaccines, intranasally, on October 30, 2014,
and December 2, 2014. See, e.g., Ex. 1 at 1.3. FluMist is a live attenuated influenza vaccine
(“LAIV”). 3 Ex. A at 5.
The record memorializes no reaction to the vaccination in the days or weeks immediately
after either dose was received. Mrs. Kalajdzic, however, has asserted in a witness declaration that
she specifically recalls a February 2015 school field trip that she participated in, noting that her
decision to attend was motivated by the concern that by this time “[A.K.] had started to become
withdrawn and was exhibiting mood changes in addition to his increased fatigue issues,” and that
she had been pleased that he seemed interested and lively during the field trip. Ex. 28 at 2 ¶ 13.
She maintains that his symptoms were appearing well before that date. Id. at ¶¶ 8–12.
Nevertheless, it was not until April 13, 2015—over four months after administration of the
second FluMist dose—that any arguably-related symptoms are mentioned in the treatment record.
At that time, A.K. was taken to Dr. Hien Tran at High Desert Pediatrics in Albuquerque, New
Mexico, with Petitioners reporting a one-week history of fatigue, weakness, poor sleep, and
irritability. Ex. 3 at 17. No reference in this record is made to symptoms occurring any earlier.
Despite an examination that revealed only nasal congestion in addition to the complained-of
3
As noted in Agnew v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs., No. 12-551V, 2016 WL 1612853, at *3 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr.
Mar. 30, 2016), FluMist is a cold-adapted vaccine administered intranasally. It contains live, but attenuated (meaning
reduced in virulence), strains of the wild flu virus. The formulation received by A.K. was trivalent meaning it
contained three separate wild virus strains. See Dorland's Illustrated Medical Dictionary 1940 (33rd ed. 2020)
(“Dorland's”). To achieve an immune response from the body’s adaptive immune system, the viral strains contained
in the vaccine replicate at a temperature consistent with that found in the nasal cavity, but not at the higher temperatures
found elsewhere in the body. Agnew, 2016 WL 1612853, at *3. As a result, the strains can replicate sufficiently to
produce the antibodies necessary to fight a wild infection, but not enough to cause infection.
2
fatigue, Dr. Tran’s assessment was right otitis media (although the record provides no evidence
for this determination), and he prescribed amoxicillin. Id. at 17–18.
A.K.’s symptoms persisted, however, leading Petitioners to bring him back to Dr. Tran on
April 21, 2015, for further evaluation. Ex. 3 at 16. Sleep issues were not discussed at this time, and
the records reflect the primary concerns were related to fatigue “for at least several weeks now.”
Id. Blood testing performed a few days later revealed the presence of an acute Epstein-Barr virus
(“EBV”) infection. Ex. 2 at 3. On May 4, 2015, Dr. Tran reassessed A.K. for ear pain (attributed
in part to ear wax build-up), noting that “[t]here has been no associated fever, decreased appetite,
difficulty sleeping, fatigue, fussiness, malaise, nasal congestion, runny nose or cough.” Ex. 3 at
14.
Manifestations of Sleep-Related Problems
More time passed with no evidence of treatment or sleep concerns. Then, on December
17, 2015, A.K. returned to Dr. Tran with complaints of acute onset of depression that had been
persistent for over eight months, i.e., since approximately mid-April 2015 (although as noted above these
symptoms are not evident from the contemporaneous record). Ex. 3 at 12. The symptoms were described
as feeling blue/sad and tired and were associated with a lack of energy. Id. In addition, behavioral
concerns that were deemed “[r]elatively new per mother” were also reported. Ex. 3 at 13.
Dr. Tran ordered multiple lab tests, all of which came back normal with the exception of
positive evidence of ANA antibodies. 4 Ex. 2 at 3. Approximately two weeks later, on December
29, 2015, A.K. followed up with Dr. Tran with complaints of chronic joint pain. The medical history
from this visit recorded a familial history of rheumatoid arthritis along with other autoimmune
conditions. Ex. 3 at 11. Dr. Tran’s assessment included “chronic fatigue and malaise,” and he referred
A.K. to a rheumatologist, Dr. Jennifer Soep (although Petitioners have acknowledged A.K. never saw
Dr. Soep). See July 2, 2018 Status Rep. (ECF No. 18).
Several more months passed with no additional treatment. Then, on March 10, 2016 (now
about fifteen months after administration of the second dose in December 2014), A.K. returned to
Dr. Tran with complaints of “[u]ncontrollable falling asleep and losing tone suddenly [with] laughing.”
Ex. 3 at 10. Although it is not evident from this record what kind of exam was performed, if any, Dr.
Tran’s assessment was “[n]arcolepsy and cataplexy,” and he referred A.K. to a pediatric neurologist.
Ex. 3 at 10.
4
ANA stands for antinuclear antibodies. Dorland's at 70. An elevated ANA can reflect the presence of some
autoimmune disease process, although follow-up testing and analysis is required for confirmation. K. Pagana et al.,
Mosby's: Manual of Diagnostic and Laboratory Tests 80 (6th ed. 2018)
3
Narcolepsy Treatment
The Kalajdzics learned that there would be a five-month wait for a pediatric neurology
appointment at the University of New Mexico Hospital (Petition at ¶ 14), so they made alternative
arrangements for A.K. to be evaluated at Colorado Children’s Hospital (“CCH”) on May 27, 2016.
Ex. 2 at 1. A.K. was there seen by neurologists Elizabeth Halperin, M.D., and Padmini Palat, M.D.
Ex. 2 at 1–9. The record from this visit reveals Petitioners’ concerns about several narcolepsy-
associated symptoms (e.g., daytime somnolence, cataplexy, etc.), which were reported to have
begun in January 2015, “shortly after he received two Flumist vaccines at school.” Ex. 2 at 2.
Although (they reported) the positive EBV titers revealed by Dr. Tran’s testing had been thought to
potentially explain these symptoms, their persistence concerned Mrs. Kalajdzic, and after some research
of her own she began to suspect A.K. might suffer from narcolepsy with cataplexy. Id. She also made
mention of the positive ANA findings. Id. Based on an overview of the prior lab results and their own
exam, Drs. Halperin and Palat assessed A.K. with narcolepsy with cataplexy. Id. at 6. A.K. was referred
to the CCH Sleep Clinic for additional testing and evaluation. Id.
Nurse Practitioner Susan Hines conducted the initial sleep evaluation that month. She was
now informed (contrary to the contemporaneous medical record) that A.K.’s symptoms began in
the fall of 2014, with “sleepiness after the first dose and cataplexy after the second dose.” Ex. 2 at
13. The Kalajdzics also noted the EBV findings from the spring of 2015, proposing that treaters had
assumed (incorrectly) that this explained A.K.’s presentation. Id. at 14. Additional lab testing performed
in May 2016 revealed the presence of the DQB1*0602 allele of the Human Leukocyte Antigen5 (the
“narcolepsy HLA”), which is believed to be highly associated with the condition, and elevated
Antistreptolysin O (“ASO”) titers, which are also similarly associated. Id. at 2, 21. Based upon the
foregoing, NP Hines’s impression confirmed the earlier narcolepsy diagnosis, and she added the
opinion that the FluMist vaccine likely explained its cause (although this record does not set
forth the basis for this opinion, which does largely seem to have relied on Petitioners’ assertions
about symptoms onset that are not reflected in the medical record). Id. at 16.
From this point on, A.K. underwent additional sleep studies and evaluations yielding results
consistent with narcolepsy and cataplexy. Ex. 2 at 32, 38. A variety of medicinal treatments plus exercise
were employed. Id. at 41. A.K. was later in the early fall of 2016 diagnosed with a depressive disorder
thought to be secondary to his other sleep-related symptoms. Id. at 53. His narcolepsy-associated
symptoms continued into 2017. Ex. 7 at 47 (May 2017 follow-up visit to NP Hines). It appears he
continues today to suffer from narcolepsy. Ex. 28 (Second Declaration of Laura Kalajdzic) (ECF
No. 41-2) at 1, 4.
5
HLAs are polymorphic molecules that present foreign antigens (like what would be contained in vaccines) to the
immune system. Dorland’s at 103. Certain genes are responsible for encoding cell-surface HLA proteins that regulate
the immune system through their presentation of antigens. Id.
4
II. Expert Reports
A. Benjamin Hughes, M.D.
Dr. Hughes, a pediatrician with expertise in sleep medicine, offered a single written report for
Petitioners. Report, dated March 24, 2019, filed as Ex. 16 b (ECF No. 31-2) (“Hughes Rep.”). He
proposed the FluMist vaccine A.K. received was likely a substantial factor in causing his narcolepsy.
Dr. Hughes attended The University of Texas, Austin for his undergraduate degree, and
The University of Texas Medical Branch for his medical degree. See Curriculum Vitae, filed Mar.
25, 2019 (ECF No. 31-3) (“Hughes CV”) at 1; Hughes Rep. at 1. He then completed his residency
in pediatrics, fellowship in sleep medicine, and fellowship in pediatric pulmonary medicine at the
University of Colorado School of Medicine. Hughes Rep. at 1; Hughes CV at 1. He is an Assistant
Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Colorado School of Medicine. Hughes Rep. at 1; Tr. at
7. He is licensed to practice medicine and is board certified in pediatrics, sleep medicine, and
pediatric pulmonary medicine. Hughes CV at 2–3; Hughes Rep. at 1.
Type 1 narcolepsy, Dr. Hughes explained, is attributable to “the destruction of neurons located
within the lateral hypothalamus” in the brain. Hughes Rep. at 6. Those neurons are responsible for
producing hypocretin, a neurotransmitter that plays an important role in regulation of wake/sleep
cycles. Id.; T. Scammell, Narcolepsy, 373 N. Engl. J. Med. 2654 (2015), filed as Ex. 25 (ECF No. 32-
1) (“Scammell”), at 2657. Symptoms associated with narcolepsy include persistent daytime sleepiness,
impaired REM sleep (which typically occurs during deep sleep periods), plus cataplexy—
definitionally part of Type 1 narcolepsy, and featuring “sudden episodes of partial or complete
paralysis of voluntary muscles” that can immediately occur in response to strong, usually-positive
emotions (laughter or pleasure at seeing someone). Scammell at 2654. Being positive for the
narcolepsy HLA is also associated with the actual development of narcolepsy, although several
environmental triggers (in particular certain kinds of upper respiratory infections) are also thought to
be causal. Hughes Rep. at 6.
The bulk of Dr. Hughes’s report featured a summary of A.K.’s medical history relevant to the
claim. Hughes Rep. at 1–4. He deemed A.K.’s pre-vaccination history “unrevealing”—which would
include the approximately five-week gap between the two doses of flu vaccine A.K. had received in
the fall of 2014. Id. at 2. By April 15, 2015, however, (A.K.’s first medical visit post-vaccination),
Petitioners were reporting to treaters that A.K. had (as of the week before) begun to display the kind
of fatigue that would be reflective of narcolepsy. Id. at 2, 4, 5.
Although at this time A.K.’s treaters suspected an ear infection to explain in part his symptoms,
Dr. Hughes proposed that the diagnostic criteria for otitis media were not fully met—in particular
because A.K. displayed no fever or other direct proof of ear structure inflammation. Hughes Rep. at 4.
5
Dr. Hughes similarly rejected the possibility that an EBV infection around that time had caused A.K.’s
fatigue, noting that (a) EBV is not associated with narcolepsy, and (b) A.K.’s evolving symptoms went
beyond mere fatigue, to include classic narcolepsy features like excessive daytime sleepiness or weight
gain. Id. at 5. It was thus Dr. Hughes’s opinion that had A.K. been more formally tested in the spring
or summer of 2015, he would have been shown to meet the primary diagnostic criteria for narcolepsy.
Id.
Thereafter, and over the next year, Petitioners more regularly had A.K. assessed for his
symptoms, and by May 2016 he had tested positive for the narcolepsy HLA (which Dr. Hughes
deemed the “narcolepsy gene”). Hughes Rep. at 3. A sleep test in June 2016 fully confirmed the
diagnosis of type 1 narcolepsy, or narcolepsy with cataplexy. Id. at 4. Dr. Hughes embraced this
diagnosis as proper given A.K.’s overall history. Id. at 1, 5–6, 7.
Dr. Hughes’s report also addressed whether a LAIV version of the flu vaccine, like FluMist,
could cause narcolepsy, although this aspect of his report was thin in comparison to his lengthier
evaluation of A.K.’s medical history. See generally Hughes Rep. at 6–7. Narcolepsy, he explained, is
believed to occur via an autoimmune process, either through the mechanism of molecular mimicry
between foreign antigens and the hypocretin-producing structures on the hypothalamus neurons, in
which antibodies produced in response to the antigens attack the self-structures, or through “bystander
activation” as an indirect result of other ongoing infectious occurrences. Id. at 6; J. Mahlios et al., The
Autoimmune Basis of Narcolepsy, 23 Curr. Opin. Neurobiol. 5 (2013), filed as Ex. 26 (ECF No. 32-2)
(“Mahlios”). It has been specifically associated with a streptococcus wild bacterial infection, or an
influenza A viral infection. Mahlios at 2.
Of most relevance herein is the fact that studies have shown that the H1N1 influenza virus has
also been deemed likely causal of narcolepsy, via the mechanism of molecular mimicry. Hughes Rep.
at 6–7; Mahlios at 2–3; G. Luo et al., Autoimmunity to Hypocretin and Molecular Mimicry to Flu in
Type 1 Narcolepsy, 115 PNAS 52: E12323 (2018), filed as Ex. 27 (ECF No. 32-3) (“Luo”). Luo
specifically observed Type 1 narcolepsy to be associated with at least two flu peptide sequences
derived from the viral strain used in the Pandemrix vaccine (an adjuvanted H1N1 flu vaccine
administered for a period in Europe and elsewhere—but not in the U.S.). Luo at E12330. Dr. Hughes
emphasized that although researchers had at one time thought that Pandemrix’s association with
narcolepsy (which other studies he filed have established) 6 was most likely attributable to its adjuvant
(included to boost the vaccine’s immunogenicity), other comparable H1N1 vaccines had been similarly
linked. Because FluMist also included a live attenuated strain of H1N1 influenza virus, it too could be
causal, in Dr. Hughes’s view. Id. at 6.
6
As discussed below, the literature offered in this case to substantiate the link between Pandemrix and narcolepsy has
been reviewed extensively in prior narcolepsy cases that I have decided, and I therefore do not repeat those citations
herein.
6
Dr. Hughes otherwise had little to say in his opinion regarding the other causation test prongs
applied in Program cases. He deemed an onset of anywhere of three to four months after receipt of the
second dose of FluMist in December 2014 to be medically acceptable (Hughes Rep. at 7), but he did
not elaborate on why the putative autoimmune process would take this long to unfold. He was more
affirmative in stating that the time after onset it took for treaters to recognize that A.K. had Type 1
narcolepsy (and thus formally offer the diagnosis) was not unexpected, since it could be difficult to
make the diagnosis. Id. at 5–6. He did not explain what in the record suggested that in this case A.K.’s
narcolepsy was likely vaccine-caused.
B. S. Sohail Ahmed, M.D.
Dr. Ahmed, a rheumatologist with specific academic expertise in the study of vaccines and
autoimmune conditions, prepared two additional reports for the Petitioners. Report, dated June 29,
2020, filed as Ex. 30 (ECF No. 47-1) (“First Ahmed Rep.”); Report, dated May 4, 2021, filed as
Ex. 43 (ECF No. 65-1) (“Second Ahmed Rep.”). In the context of responding to the first report
offered by Respondent’s expert, he opined (consistent with Dr. Hughes) that A.K.’s Type 1
narcolepsy was caused by the FluMist vaccine doses A.K. had received.
Dr. Ahmed attended Johns Hopkins University for his undergraduate degree and the
University of Texas at Houston for his medical degree. See Curriculum Vitae, filed June 29, 2020
(ECF No. 47-2) (“Ahmed CV”) at 5; First Ahmed Rep. at 1. Dr. Ahmed has over 20 years of
experience in academic and clinical research that facilitates translational approaches to drug
development. Ahmed CV at 2; First Ahmed Rep. at 2. He currently serves as a medical and
scientific consultant for pharmaceutical and vaccine-producing companies. Ahmed CV at 2; First
Ahmed Rep. at 2–3. He has published several peer-reviewed articles on multiple topics including
immune-meditated diseases, vaccine adjuvant safety, autoimmune diseases, immune mechanisms
triggered by vaccination, autoantibodies linked to autoimmune diseases, and genetic susceptibility
in patients developing autoimmune diseases. First Ahmed Rep. at 3; Ahmed CV at 6. He is licensed
to practice medicine in Italy and Massachusetts and is board certified in rheumatology and internal
medicine. First Ahmed Rep. at 3; Ahmed CV at 5–6.
First Report
Dr. Ahmed began with an extensive discussion of the nature of narcolepsy, elaborating on
medical science’s progress in understanding how a wild flu infection might be associated with it.
First Ahmed Rep. at 4–5. He defined narcolepsy as a “rare brain disorder” attributable to
dysfunction in the hypothalamus neurons responsible for producing hypocretin. Id. at 4. Dr.
Ahmed deemed the need for an external trigger for narcolepsy to be “well-known”—although his
report also accepted that the narcolepsy HLA is “strongly associated” with the condition, thus
supporting the conclusion that individuals who experience it usually have some genetic
predisposition. Id. at 4, 9.
7
An infectious trigger essentially instigates an inflammatory immune response leading to
damage to the relevant neurons, thereby disrupting sleep regulation. First Ahmed Rep. at 4. And
the wild flu virus has been reliably associated with triggering narcolepsy. Indeed, Dr. Ahmed
noted, an increase in narcolepsy cases was observed after the 1918 Spanish Influenza Pandemic.
Id. More recently, an increase in narcolepsy incidence was observed after the H1N1 2009
Pandemic, and the increase was specifically associated with the H1N1 wild virus strain. Id.; K.
Edwards et al., Narcolepsy and Pandemic Influenza Vaccination: What We Know and What We
Need to Know Before the Next Pandemic? A Report from the 2nd IABS Meeting, 60 Biologicals 1
(2019), filed as Ex. 38 (ECF No. 47-9) (“IABS Report”), at 3–4. 7 Reliable research thus associates
the H1N1 flu virus strain with narcolepsy, and its pathogenesis as due to the infection-caused
destruction of hypocretin-producing neurons. First Ahmed Rep. at 9.
In addition, many things are known scientifically about how a wild flu infection could gain
access to the hypothalamus—with the infectious process possibly beginning in the olfactory
neurons, moving from there to the brain. IABS Report at 4. (Notably, the IABS Report lists other
hypotheses for narcolepsy’s pathogenesis, but does not seem to favor one over another as the most
likely explanation. Id.). Narcolepsy could also be mediated by an autoimmune process. First
Ahmed Rep. at 5, 7.
Dr. Ahmed proposed such an autoimmune process could proceed via molecular mimicry
(in which self-structure similarity to a foreign antigen can result in an immune-driven attack on
both), but admitted that not only was mimicry a “common normal physiological function of the
immune response” (but does not inherently produce disease), but admitted that the theory “falls to
critique” because it fails to explain why or how a mimic can “break normal immune tolerance,” or
what role the innate, immediate immune response plays in an autoimmune disease. First Ahmed
Rep. at 5–6, 7. Alternatively, “bystander activation”—a process in which non-specific immune
cells are stimulated into inducing “pre-primed autoreactive immune cells to induce pathogenesis”
was also a potential mechanism. Id. at 7. Ultimately Dr. Ahmed’s report focused more on
molecular mimicry as the relevant mechanism herein, and he maintained that “strong
confirmation” that antigenic similarity between H1N1 amino acid sequence components and the
human hypocretin receptors drives the disease had been provided by reliable scientific studies. Id.
at 9; see also IABS Report at 4.
Dr. Ahmed next turned to the central question of whether vaccination could also trigger
narcolepsy. He acknowledged at the outset that vaccines, by design, generally possess a “poor
ability” to cause infection, to greatly reduce the possibility that the vaccine’s viral components
7
Dr. Ahmed’s report cites the IABS Report (a product of the 2nd International Alliance of Biological Science
(“IABS”) as authored by “C. Siegrist,” although that name appears nowhere in the filed article.
8
could replicate and (in the process) more closely mirror a full, damaging wild virus reaction. First
Ahmed Rep. at 6. It is for this reason that vaccines are typically formulated with inactivated or
attenuated wild virus components. At the same time, vaccines must stimulate some kind of immune
response to be effective. Id. Thus, in Dr. Ahmed’s view the possibility of an aberrant reaction to
vaccination remains even though vaccines are engineered to be inherently less dangerous to the
human immune system.
In particular, Dr. Ahmed noted that a specific form of flu vaccine—Pandemrix, an H1N1
adjuvanted flu vaccine—has been reliably associated with some narcolepsy “outbreaks” elsewhere
in the world. First Ahmed Rep. at 8; IABS Rep. at 3–4 (citations omitted). Dr. Ahmed’s own
research had helped show that “specific H1N1 viral proteins . . . are known to have homology with
hypocretin receptors, a putative target antigen for selective hypothalamic neuron loss.” First
Ahmed Rep. at 8; S. Ahmed et al., Antibodies to Influenza Nucleoprotein Cross-React with Human
Hypocretin Receptor 2, 7 Sci. Translational Med. 294 (S2015), filed as Ex. 33 (ECF No. 47-4)
(“Ahmed Study”).
In this article, Dr. Ahmed and his co-authors examined the sera of 20 Pandemrix-
vaccinated narcoleptic patients, noting that prior studies had suggested an increased risk of
narcolepsy was specific to Pandemrix—but not other, highly similar adjuvanted H1N1 vaccines.
Ahmed Study at 1, 10. The Ahmed Study’s authors attempted to identify the specific mimic
between protein sequences from the flu strain contained in Pandemrix and the hypocretin
receptors, finding that there was a homologous flu nucleoprotein peptide, an antibody likely
responsible for the cross-reaction, and that it was found in the studied patients. Id. at 2–3. However,
the nucleoprotein antibody content found in individuals who had received different versions of the
flu vaccine was lower. Ahmed Study at 4. 8 Thus, the Ahmed Study’s findings are more specific to
the Pandemrix vaccine than the causal capacity of the antigenic wild virus contents common to
differently-formulated vaccines. 9
Although the FluMist vaccine is not identical in formulation to Pandemrix, Dr. Ahmed
nevertheless opined that it too could cause narcolepsy—and that the facts of A.K.’s medical history
reflected this likely occurred here. First, because FluMist is a LAIV, it has a “key advantage” over
an inactivated-virus vaccine, in that it has a “greater ability to elicit cellular immunity and activate
the nonspecific innate immune system” without an adjuvant, since the live portions of the virus
can elicit a strong immune reaction on their own. First Ahmed Rep. at 6, 7. The administration of
8
FluMist was not one of the versions of the flu vaccine considered in the Ahmed Study.
9
In addition, the IABS Report emphasized that it has been hypothesized that vaccination with Pandemrix only led to
narcolepsy in places where “there was considerable circulation of the pandemic virus . . . before the vaccine was
introduced,” and that overall more confirming evidence was needed to deem the vaccine association reliable. IABS
Report at 3, 6.
9
FluMist is thus inherently more likely to create the circumstances for an aberrant reaction than
when receiving a comparable inactivated, but unadjuvanted, vaccine.
Second, Dr. Ahmed opined, the close temporal interval for the vaccine doses A.K. received
likely played a role in further encouraging a strong immune reaction (that in turn could have
produced an autoimmune cross-reaction). The doses were administered approximately a month
apart, with the second dose prompting an “enhanced immune response” both from an innate and
adaptive standpoint. First Ahmed Rep. at 7–8. Thus, even if Respondent were correct that the
H1N1 vaccine antigen alone (without an adjuvant) could not induce narcolepsy in an otherwise-
susceptible individual, the second dose of a LAIV like FluMist would inherently impact the
immune response more strongly. Id. at 8. The two doses, in Dr. Ahmed’s view, mirrored the
“multiple triggering factors” that had been observed by research considering Pandemrix-triggered
narcolepsy in a context of background H1N1 infections. Id.
In addition to the above, Dr. Ahmed attempted to rebut certain points raised by Respondent
in reaction to Dr. Hughes’s initial report. He disputed, for example, the contention that the FluMist
vaccine version A.K. had received had proven to be immunogenically “weak”—and hence
formulaically incapable of inducing a strong, aberrant autoimmune reaction. First Ahmed Rep. at
9. In fact, studies had proven unable to measure the antibody response to a LAIV like FluMist,
making it speculative to propose what kind of immune response it elicited. Id; I. Shannon et al.,
Understanding Immunity in Children Vaccinated with Live Attenuated Influenza Vaccine, 9 J. Ped.
Infec. Dis. Soc. 1:S10 (2020), filed as Ex. 37 (ECF No. 47-8) (“Shannon”). Shannon, however,
more reflects a discussion of how LAIVs are intended to work (by eliciting cellular
immunity/activation of T cells plus mimicking a natural infection’s stimulation of an innate
response) than a rigorous evaluation of the expected efficacy of this version of flu vaccine.
Shannon at 3–4.
Dr. Ahmed also took note of the fact that there was an absence of alternative explanations
for A.K.’s narcolepsy. A.K.’s onset occurred when he was eight—younger than the age of most
patients who first experienced narcolepsy (12-25 years old, with a peak around 15). First Ahmed
Rep. at 7; M. Partinen et al., Increased Incidence and Clinical Picture of Childhood Narcolepsy
Following the 2009 H1N1 Pandemic Vaccination Campaign in Finland, 7 PLoS ONE 3:e33723,
filed as Ex. A, Tab 15 (ECF No. 36-16) (“Partinen”) (deeming onset before the age of ten “rare”).
This alone made it unlikely, in Dr. Ahmed’s view, that A.K.’s disease could be attributed to a
natural, if unidentified, cause. And he otherwise provided a common objection often interposed by
Program petitioners when responding to contrary epidemiologic evidence undermining their
causation assertions (or when attempting to explain their inability to provide affirmative
epidemiologic evidence supporting causation): that the rarity of the injury itself limited the “signal
detection” power of most large studies. First Ahmed Rep. at 7. No study could ever eliminate the
possibility of a vaccine as having caused the relevant injury to a specific, susceptible person.
10
In addition, Dr. Ahmed proposed that the timeframe for A.K.’s post-vaccination onset was
medically acceptable. The medical record, coupled with witness statements, suggested that A.K.’s
onset of initial symptoms (mainly tiredness) occurred in the early winter of 2015—since in mid-
February of that year, Mrs. Kalajdzic “attended a field trip to validate A.K.’s claims of being tired
all day at school,” even though she did not seek care for his symptoms until two months later. First
Ahmed Rep. at 10. Such an onset (which, if measured from the second FluMist dose in early
December 2014, would be within 60 days) was reasonably consistent with what literature says
about how narcolepsy can present—as well as Respondent’s expert’s contention that literature like
Partinen supported a 40 to 67-day post-vaccination onset. First Ahmed Rep. at 10; Partinen at 5
(Table 1—“Clinical Findings” (deriving onset data on 50 studied subjects who received Pandemrix
or a closely similar H1N1 flu virus vaccine)). It was thus in Dr. Ahmed’s view an acceptable
timeframe sufficient to implicate the vaccine. Id.
In any event, Dr. Ahmed maintained that it was “far from settled science” when narcolepsy
symptoms would manifest post-trigger—with periods of between one or two months versus six or
more all acceptable as established by reliable medical literature. First Ahmed Rep. at 10–11; F.
Han et al., Narcolepsy Onset is Seasonal and Increased Following the 2009 H1N1 Pandemic in
China, 70 Ann. Neurol. 410, (2011), filed as Ex. A, Tab 10 (ECF No. 36-11) (“Han I”). Han I,
however, observed a four to six-month delay from a putative infection in the winter months to the
following spring and summer, when the incidence of narcolepsy was highest. Han I at 414–15.
Moreover, Han I’s authors expressly stated that based on its own subjects, “H1N1 vaccination is
not the culprit for increased narcolepsy onsets in China,” further diminishing its value in providing
a potential timeframe for onset after vaccination. Id. at 415. Dr. Ahmed proposed that a more
abrupt onset would be seen in connection with adjuvanted vaccines—but here (and even though
he maintained elsewhere in his report that the two-dose regime for a LAIV somewhat copied the
impact of an adjuvant), it was nevertheless medically acceptable for the overall disease to have
progressed via a “slower, gradual” course than what might be expected for an adjuvanted vaccine
like Pandemrix. First Ahmed Rep. at 11.
Second Report
Dr. Ahmed’s supplemental report purported to rebut, point by point, certain arguments that
Respondent’s expert’s second report raised, although in so doing Dr. Ahmed ended up simply
repeating many of his prior contentions. 10
10
Dr. Ahmed’s “supplemental” report ended up exceeding the length of his initial report by several pages, rather than
constituting a succinct response to specific issues raised in Dr. Dye’s supplemental report. The second report was also
two times as long as Respondent’s expert’s supplemental report, but repeated many prior arguments instead of adding
detail to existing ones. A second report of this nature was unjustified and unnecessary—especially since the Petitioners
had already submitted an initial report from Dr. Hughes.
11
First, Dr. Ahmed expanded on his prior contention that A.K.’s narcolepsy was unusual for
someone of his age (thus making it more likely the vaccination was causal, given the H1N1 strain
association). Second Ahmed Rep. at 1–2. He insisted that narcolepsy occurring in those under ten
was “rarely observed,” and that his citation to literature like Partinen for this contention was
accurate. Id. at 2.
In fact, Dr. Ahmed purported that epidemiologic studies supported a higher incidence of
narcolepsy during the H1N1 Pandemic for slightly older children, with children the same age as
A.K. far less likely to develop it. Second Ahmed Rep. at 3; Y. Dauvilliers et al., Age at Onset of
Narcolepsy in Two Large Populations of Patients in France and Quebec, 57 Neurol. 2029 (2001),
filed as Ex. C Tab 2 (ECF No. 58-3) (“Dauvilliers”), at 2031–032 (narcolepsy “peaks” occurring
in studied sample at 15 and then 35 years of age). And he undertook an extensive discussion of the
findings of studies focusing on Type 1 narcolepsy in China, with the goal of showing that a young
child possessing the narcolepsy HLA, like A.K., was far more likely to have developed his
condition due to vaccination, since studies did not otherwise reveal a high risk in the very young.
Second Ahmed Rep. at 4–5. (In fact, some of these articles squarely support—albeit only regarding
the specific sample in question—Respondent’s contention that narcolepsy onset was not
uncommon in children the same age as A.K. See, e.g., F. Han et al., Presentations of Primary
Hypersomnia in Chinese Children, 34 SLEEP 5:627 (2011), filed as Ex. C Tab. 5 (ECF No. 58-6)
(“Han II”), at 631 (three-fourths of Chinese sample group experienced Type 1 narcolepsy prior to
the age of ten)).
Second, Dr. Ahmed reiterated his assertion that the one-month gap between A.K.’s receipt
of FluMist doses had played a role in the purported pathogenic process they instigated. Second
Ahmed Rep. at 5–7. In reaction to epidemiologic evidence referenced by Respondent’s expert
showing that large numbers of children also received FluMist according to the same schedule, but
without any increased incidence of narcolepsy, Dr. Ahmed contended that the results of such
studies cannot “preclude biological plausibility,” 11 since a vaccine-caused injury in inherently rare,
and therefore large-scale evidence of vaccine safety on the population level can never “disprove”
the possibility of a vaccine-narcolepsy relationship. Id. at 6. The theory that narcolepsy could
proceed via an autoimmune process actually predated the evidence that more specifically
associated the Pandemrix vaccine with it (in the context of the H1N1 Pandemic). Id. at 7.
Ultimately, Dr. Ahmed deemed the two-dose, close-in-time vaccination schedule to raise the
11
Plausibility is of course not the standard governing Vaccine Act claims. Boatmon v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs.,
941 F.3d 1351, 1359 (Fed. Cir. 2019). Rather, any causation theory must not only be generally plausible, but must
also be corroborated and supported with reliable evidence and constitute a reputable theory otherwise—and petitioners
must ultimately make this showing with preponderant evidence overall. However, I do not take Dr. Ahmed’s
contention here to reflect an admission that he cannot meet the proper legal standard, but instead to conflate
“plausibility” with likelihood, and hence in accordance with the standard. (I nevertheless find, as discussed below,
that overall the evidence offered in this case to associate FluMist with narcolepsy does not rise above a level of
plausibility—independent of Dr. Ahmed’s intent when using the term.
12
possibility of an aberrant immune response, especially in a child with demonstrated genetic
susceptibility, as here. Id. at 7.
Dr. Ahmed next discussed Respondent’s expert’s assertions about purported distinctions
between the H1N1 vaccines components and what was found in the FluMist version. See generally
Second Ahmed Rep. at 7–8. In the context of this argument, Dr. Ahmed contested the contention
that the relevant formulation of FluMist from 2014-15 had been deemed ineffective in prompting
an immune response (and therefore the impacts of the vaccine proposed by Dr. Ahmed would not
be realized)—although the basis for his argument was highly confusing.
Thus, Dr. Ahmed agreed that for the 2014-15 flu season (the relevant timeframe in which
A.K. was vaccinated), FluMist “was ineffective against the predominant A/H3N2 strain” that was
prevalent (although he also argued that its efficacy was no worse than the normal, inactivated
version of the vaccine that would be administered by injection). Second Ahmed Rep. at 7; L.
Grohskopf et al, Update: ACIP Recommendations for the Use of Quadrivalent Live Attenuated
Influenza Vaccine (LAIV 4) – United States, 2018-19 Influenza Season, 67 Morbidity and Mortality
Weekly Rep. 22:643 (2018), filed as Ex. A Tab 8 (ECF No. 36-9) (“Grohskopf I”). He also seemed
to accept that the LAIV version had not proven effective against H1N1. Second Ahmed Rep. at 7.
However, he emphasized that “the peptide sequence in H1N1 influenza nucleoprotein that cross-
reacts with the human receptor regulating narcolepsy” was also found in the H3N2 strain—
meaning, in his estimation, that it could “trigger the same immune response as the H1N1.” Id. at
7–8.
Why this would be so, when Dr. Ahmed’s own research suggests that it is things outside
of the viral strain that impact vaccine-narcolepsy causality far more than the strain at issue (in
particular, a manufacturing process that results in higher nucleoprotein levels) is not clear.
Otherwise, he maintained that vaccine efficacy generally did not preclude the possibility of an
individual aberrant response—although this argument was in essence in equivalent to his same
broader argument about the inability of large-scale epidemiologic studies to “disprove” the
possibility of causation. Second Ahmed Rep. at 8. 12
Dr. Ahmed then commented on his own research regarding narcolepsy—which
Respondent’s expert had noted did not involve FluMist specifically, but was instead focused on
causation involving a wholly-distinguishable version of the flu vaccine never administered in the
U.S., Pandemrix. Second Ahmed Rep. at 8–10. Somewhat ignoring Respondent’s point (that the
Ahmed Study itself only showed a limited association with a specific, but distinguishable, version
of the flu vaccine), Dr. Ahmed focused on the fact that his research had more generally
12
In fact, after FluMist’s discontinuance for a period of time, it was again recommended (for the 2018-2019 season,
but included a different H1N1 strain. Second Ahmed Rep. at 13. And it was the earlier strain—which was in the
version A.K. received—that was relevant. Id.
13
demonstrated the narcolepsy-causing potentiality of a cross-reaction (facilitated by antibodies)
between H1N1 strain-carrying flu vaccines—a pathophysiologic process that he deemed pertinent
to FluMist as well. Id. at 8. In so arguing, he embarked on an extended explanation of the cross-
reactive immune process, again finding significant that A.K.’s symptoms appeared after receipt of
a booster dose of the vaccine, resulting in a “reactivation process.” Id. at 9. Even though FluMist
was not adjuvanted (like Pandemrix is), its LAIV character gave it, in his view, a similar “charged”
capacity, especially in the context of ongoing exposure to the wild virus, as was thought to have
occurred in the 2009 H1N1 Pandemic. Id. at 9–10. (In actuality, literature discussing that
background exposure was specific to Europe. See, e.g., Partinen at 1–2). This, plus the dosage
schedule, made FluMist more likely to cause narcolepsy in a genetically-susceptible child. Id. at
14.
In addition, other factors meant that what Dr. Ahmed’s own research showed about how
Pandemrix had caused narcolepsy almost did not matter herein. For example, he proposed that
“[o]rexin specific T cells” could be generated by a molecular mimicry-caused cross-reaction
instigated by FluMist, even without need of the H1N1 nucleoproteins that were the subject of his
research. Second Ahmed Rep. at 10. And A.K.’s demonstrated possession of the narcolepsy HLA
enhanced the possibility that he would have a lowered threshold for how much foreign antigen was
required to trigger an autoimmune cross-reaction. Id.
Turning more directly to the FluMist vaccine itself, Dr. Ahmed maintained that there was
evidence directly connecting it to narcolepsy—although the support for this contention came from
the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (“VAERS”), 13 or case reports involving adverse
events after receipt of LAIVs. Second Ahmed Rep. at 10–13 (citations omitted). In response to the
critique that this kind of proof was (for purposes of determining causation) the “lowest form of
evidence,” Dr. Ahmed responded that “case reports and case series significantly contribute towards
the progression of scientific and medical knowledge,” deeming their “real-world” context a value
over a “controlled clinical research environment.” Id. at 10–11. Indeed, VAERS reporting had
helped disclosed issues with an earlier version of the rotavirus vaccine. Id. at 11.
Dr. Ahmed admitted that of the 49 reports he found (in total) associating narcolepsy with
the flu vaccine, many were distinguishable because they did not include sufficiently precise
information about relevant factors, or involved an earlier flu season. Second Ahmed Rep. at 11–
12. But he was able to identify five VAERS reports involving FluMist (one of which was
specifically a report of A.K.’s experience) administered in the same timeframe, observing the
factual similarities between those cases and this one. Id. at 12–13. He noted as well that reports of
13
The Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (“VAERS”) is a national warning system designed to detect safety
problems in U.S.-licensed vaccines. See About VAERS, VAERS, https://vaers hhs.gov/about html (last visited June 6,
2022). It is managed by both the CDC and the FDA. VAERS monitors and analyzes reports of vaccine related injuries
and side effects from both healthcare professionals and individuals.
14
an association had dropped since the 2013-14 flu season, but suggested that those reports that did
observe an association either involved a LAIV like FluMist, or the receipt of several vaccines at
once. Id. at 13.
Dr. Ahmed also disputed one item of literature offered by Respondent to show that the two-
dose flu vaccine regimen was specifically intended for children, to guarantee vaccine efficacy (and
thus not, as Dr. Ahmed proposed, a likely factor in enhancing the vaccine’s potentially aberrant
impact). Second Ahmed Rep. at 13; X. Lin et al., Trends in Compliance with Two-Dose Influenza
Vaccine Recommendations in Children Aged 6 Months Through 8 Years, 2010-2015, 34 Vaccine
5623 (2016), filed as Ex. C Tab 8 (ECF No. 58-9) (“Lin”). Lin considered records for more than
2.6 million children who received some form of flu vaccine (whether a LAIV delivered intranasally
or injected) to evaluate if dosage recommendations were met, finding that while full vaccination
compliance had increased over the relevant timeframe, it generally remained lower than optimal.
Lin at 5624, 5628. Dr. Ahmed argued in reaction that Lin did not distinguish between a nasally-
administered vaccine, like FluMist, and the injected version—and since the former’s LAIV
formulation gave it an adjuvant-like immunologic impact, the risk of an aberrant response (in
comparison to the unadjuvanted flu vaccine itself) had to be higher, especially for children like
A.K. carrying the narcolepsy HLA. Second Ahmed Rep. at 13–14. Dr. Ahmed did not substantiate
this contention with other evidence comparing the effects of the two versions directly, however.
Otherwise, throughout his supplemental report Dr. Ahmed reiterated prior points about the
acceptable timeframe in which A.K.’s narcolepsy symptoms manifested. Although he felt FluMist
could heighten the risk of narcolepsy in a person carrying the narcolepsy HLA for up to one year,
he deemed the period of six months after vaccination generally to be the “the strongest risk period.”
Second Ahmed Rep. at 10. The case reports that stood as the best comparables to A.K.’s
circumstances involved onset of one to three months—a timeframe that would include the 72-day
onset of A.K.’s symptoms that Dr. Dye had seemed to embrace in his first report. Id. at 12–14.
C. Thomas J. Dye, M.D.
Dr. Dye was Respondent’s sole expert, and he prepared two written reports. Report, dated
September 23, 2019, filed as Ex. A (ECF No. 36-1) (“First Dye Rep.”); Report, dated October 19,
2020, filed as Ex. C (ECF No. 58-1) (“Second Dye Rep.”).
Dr. Dye is a practicing physician at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. First Dye
Rep. at 1. His clinical focus is on the assessment and treatment of neurologically based sleep disorders,
including central disorders of hypersomnolence such as narcolepsy. He completed residency training
in child neurology and fellowship training in sleep medicine at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical
Center, where he is now an Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Neurology. See Curriculum Vitae of
Dr. Dye, filed Sept. 30, 2019 (ECF No. 36-19) as Ex. B (“Dye CV”) at 2. He is board certified in
Neurology (with a Special Qualification in Child Neurology) and Sleep Medicine through the American
15
Board of Psychiatry and Neurology. He has authored peer reviewed articles on the epidemiology,
pathophysiology, and presentation of pediatric narcolepsy. First Dye Rep. at 1; Dye CV at 4–6.
First Report
Like Dr. Hughes before him, Dr. Dye devoted a large portion of his written report to reviewing
facts from A.K.’s medical history. See generally First Dye Rep. at 1–3. He deemed it “quite clear” that
A.K. was properly diagnosed with Type 1 narcolepsy. Id. at 3. He also (consistent with Dr. Hughes)
rejected initial treater views that A.K.’s symptoms were either the product of an ear or EBV infection.
Id. at 3, 4. At most, A.K.’s initial presentation was “non-specific,” but he later began to display
symptoms clearly reflective of narcolepsy, which diagnostic testing supported. Id.
Dr. Dye’s report included a discussion of narcolepsy itself, and while it was consistent with
what Petitioners’ experts presented, there were some distinctions or nuances in Dr. Dye’s emphasis. He
opined, for example, that narcolepsy was not all that “rare,” despite its overall-low prevalence. First Dye
Rep. at 3. He agreed that it was attributable to a loss of hypocretin cells, likely resulting from an immune-
driven process, and that external infectious triggers (comparable to those identified by Dr. Hughes)
could instigate some process leading to narcolepsy. Id. But he also specified that T cells (rather than
autoantibodies produced more directly in reaction to a viral or bacterial antigen) were the likely immune
cell mediators responsible for the hypocretin destruction—although he otherwise accepted that the
cross-reaction of these T cells with the relevant neurons could be the product of mimicry or bystander
reaction in connection with an overarching, prior-in-time infectious process. Id.
In addition, Dr. Dye maintained that narcolepsy tended to follow a seasonal pattern of
manifestation—with symptoms onset usually occurring in spring (which characterized A.K.’s
experience) and peaking by mid-summer. First Dye Rep. at 4; Han I at 414–15.14 And he noted that
wild H1N1 influenza infections were specifically understood to be associated with narcolepsy. First
Dye Rep. at 4. A “marked increase” in individuals diagnosed with narcolepsy had been observed after
the 2009 H1N1 pandemic, with diagnoses reducing in number once it subsided. Id; Han II at 630–31.
But Dr. Dye did not accept the contention that any vaccine containing some form of H1N1 wild
flu virus strain would have the propensity to cause narcolepsy. Rather, reliable literature had observed
an association only between narcolepsy and Pandemrix, an adjuvanted H1N1 flu vaccine. First Dye
Rep. at 3; Partinen at 8 (50 out of 54 child narcolepsy patients had received Pandemrix within eight
months of symptoms onset). Indeed, it was speculated in Partinen that the adjuvant itself (known as
AS03 adjuvanted Pandemrix) might be causal. Partinen at 7. A smaller case-oriented study looking at
16 patients with narcolepsy had later demonstrated that other versions of the H1N1 flu vaccine could
14
Dr. Dye even proposed that there was an association between narcolepsy and a patient’s birthday, with some studies
showing a particular correlation with March birthdays (and A.K.’s birthday was also in March). First Dye Rep. at 4
(citation omitted). But he acknowledged this was likely a coincidence.
16
also be associated with narcolepsy. Dauvilliers at 1428–429. But although the majority of the 16 subjects
in Dauvilliers received a vaccine (14), 11 of the 14 received one that included the ASO3 adjuvant (and
7 of the 11 involved Pandemrix)—thus further seeming to implicate the adjuvant, or the Pandemrix
version alone, as causal, as opposed to the wild virus component alone. Id. at 1429.
In the ten-plus years since such publications, a number of larger scale studies found no
association between narcolepsy and any non-adjuvanted versions of the flu vaccine. First Dye Rep. at
5; T. Sarkanen et al., Incidence of Narcolepsy After H1N1 Influenza and Vaccinations: Systemic Review
and Meta-Analysis, 38 Sleep Med. Rws. 177 (2018), filed as Ex. A Tab 16 (ECF No. 36-17)
(“Sarkanen”), at 180, 185 (consideration of all published studies on topic through 2015, including ones
from countries where Pandemrix was not used, revealed no elevated risk for narcolepsy associated with
any vaccine other than Pandemrix). Sarkanen did cite Ahmed Study findings about the possible
mechanism of antibody cross-reaction with hypocretin nucleoproteins as causal of narcolepsy, but noted
that the role they played in Type 1 narcolepsy’s pathogenesis “remains controversial.” Sarkanen at 184.
Sarkanen also references a notable epidemiologic study highly relevant to this case, and Dr. Dye
saw fit to offer it as well. First Dye Rep. at 5; Sarkanen at 180, 182; J. Duffy et al., Narcolepsy and
Influenza A (H1N1) Pandemic 2009 Vaccination in the United States, 83 Neurology 1823 (2014), filed
as Ex. A Tab 5 (ECF No. 36-6) (“Duffy”). Duffy attempted to assess whether there existed an
association between narcolepsy and the version of the H1N1 vaccine administered in the United States,
surveying 650,995 individuals in the United States vaccinated with the 2009 Pandemic vaccine, and
870,530 who received the seasonal vaccine. Duffy at 1823. Both the inactivated form of the vaccine and
LAIVs were among the forms of flu vaccine received by the studied patients. None of the evaluated
patients developed symptoms during the 180 days following vaccination, despite an expected incidence
of 6.52. Id. In the 2010-11 seasonal flu vaccine study, only two subjects had onset of narcolepsy
symptoms during the defined time period, compared to 8.83 expected. Id. at 1827. And out of the 45,246
individuals between the ages of 10 and 19 who received a LAIV, none developed narcolepsy despite an
incidence rate of 3.84 per 100,000 individuals (meaning .83 cases of narcolepsy would have been
expected). Id. Duffy’s authors concluded that the forms of influenza vaccines in the United States
containing the A(H1N1) virus strain could not be associated with an increased risk of narcolepsy, and
also hypothesized that the antigens reflecting the relevant strain were not themselves likely to cause
narcolepsy. Id. at 1823.
The fact that A.K. received FluMist (and not Pandemrix) was especially significant to Dr. Dye
in concluding that the vaccine could not have been causal, since “no cases of narcolepsy have been
linked to the FluMist vaccine.” First Dye Rep. at 5. To the extent the H1N1 viral strain might be the
cause of narcolepsy (rather than the ASO3 adjuvant in Pandemrix and comparable vaccines), that same
viral strain was also contained in the FluMist formulation A.K. received—and yet studies like Duffy
observed no LAIV-narcolepsy association. Id. Moreover, this form of the vaccine (like almost all flu
vaccines administered in the U.S.) does not contain any adjuvant at all. First Ahmed Rep. at 6–7; First
17
Dye Rep. at 5. And Dr. Dye noted the existence of questions in medical science as to its overall
effectiveness (contrary to Dr. Ahmed’s argument later about the immunogenic power of a LAIV). First
Dye Rep. at 5-6; Grohskopf at 643 (“[r]eview of LAIV effectiveness for previous seasons in the United
States confirms low to no significant effectiveness of LAIV against influenza A(H1N1) pdm09-like
viruses”). Dr. Dye thus deemed it a “highly dubious” contention that A.K. even received much exposure
to this particular flu strain at all, let alone enough to trigger an aberrant reaction, further foreclosing the
possibility that any association between narcolepsy and a Pandemrix version (containing both the
relevant strain and adjuvant) would also be seen with FluMist.
Finally, Dr. Dye considered whether the timeframe for A.K.’s onset was medically acceptable.
A.K. received his second dose of FluMist on December 2, 2014—and if his onset had begun close-in-
time to his April 2015 initial treatment for unusual fatigue or sleepiness, more than 100 days would have
passed since the vaccinations were administered. First Dye Rep. at 1–2, 4, 5. Yet even the best literature
associating some versions of the flu vaccine with narcolepsy, like Partinen, only supported a post-
vaccination onset interval (based on 50 patients) of 40-67 days. Partinen at 5, Table 1. Thus, A.K.’s
onset occurred far too long after receipt of the December 2014 vaccine dose to be deemed reasonably
associated. First Dye Rep. at 5.15
Second Report
Dr. Dye’s second report contained responses to a number of specific contentions made by Dr.
Ahmed. First, Dr. Dye disagreed that A.K. was younger than would be expected for a person with
narcolepsy (and hence that it was more likely an unusual factor had caused it). Second Dye Rep. at 1–
2. For this contention, Dr. Ahmed had relied on a proposed age range for narcolepsy derived from
Partinen. Partinen at 1. But the purported range did not reflect an actual studied finding, and was more
a summary of statements found in other papers—which in turn observed statistically-significant
instances of onset before the age of 10. Second Dye Rep. at 1–2 (citations omitted). Indeed, a more
recent 2017 study noted almost half of the cases evaluated for “pediatric” narcolepsy involved children
experiencing onset at the age of eight or younger.16 And Dr. Dye noted the existence of specific
15
Dr. Dye also briefly touched on a possible alternative explanation for A.K.’s narcolepsy. He noted that A.K. had in
testing revealed an elevated titer for an antibody specific to β hemolytic streptococcus, or “ASO”. First Dye Rep. at
5; Ex. 2 at 16, 21 (referencing testing from May 2016). He maintained that elevations in the levels of this ASO antibody
are associated with narcolepsy (leading researchers to conclude that streptococcal infections likely are a narcolepsy
trigger. First Dye Rep. at 5; A. Aran et al., Elevated Anti-Streptococcal Antibodies in Patients with Recent Narcolepsy
Onset, 32 SLEEP 8:979 (2009), filed as Ex. A Tab 2 (ECF No. 36-3). Although this contention is both tantalizing and
finds some support in the record, however, I cannot conclude that preponderant evidence establishes this as an
alternative cause for A.K.’s Type 1 narcolepsy—especially since the testing results were obtained a year after
symptoms onset (whether in the winter or spring of 2015).
16
Dr. Dye only filed the abstract for the relevant article, however, making it difficult to assess the reliability of the
study in question. See generally Ex C Tab 5 (ECF No. 58-5) (specific citation omitted). But the more general point—
whether narcolepsy onset at an age younger than ten is so uncommon that A.K.’s experience inherently suggests some
unusual causative factor, like vaccination—was not specifically well-developed by Dr. Ahmed, given other evidence
undercutting his contention, and thus my inability to fully analyze the persuasiveness of this article does not impact
18
pharmacologic treatments intended for children younger than ten experiencing narcolepsy. Second Dye
Rep. at 2.
Next, Dr. Dye took issue with the Dr. Ahmed’s emphasis on the significance of A.K’s receipt
of two FluMist doses, which Dr. Ahmed proposed had increased the likelihood of a pathologic response.
Second Dye Rep. at 2–4. In Dr. Dye’s view, there was nothing “unique” about the temporal scheduling
of the doses, but rather that this schedule was recommended. Id. at 3; L. Grohskopf et al., Prevention
and Control of Seasonal Influenza with Vaccines: Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices (ACIP) – United States, 2014-15 Influenza Season, 63 Morbidity and Mortality
Weekly Rep. 32:691 (2014), filed as Ex. C Tab 7 (ECF No. 58-8) (“Grohskopf II”), at 692. Indeed, a
huge number of children received FluMist in the same two-dose regimen timeframe in 2014-15, when
A.K. also was vaccinated—and a significant percentage of those children were (like A.K.) carriers of
the narcolepsy HLA, but never developed narcolepsy. Second Dye Rep. at 3. Dr. Dye deemed this latter
fact especially unsupportive of a vaccine association since it stood as direct epidemiologic proof of a
kind. Id. at 4.
Dr. Dye relatedly attempted to bulwark his prior contention that the FluMist LAIV had proven
to be ineffective immunologically (thus further undermining Dr. Ahmed’s claim that the vaccine had
an inherently high potential to be pathogenic). Second Dye Rep. at 4. He noted that the U.S. Influenza
Vaccine Effectiveness Network had specifically observed in 2016 that a version of FluMist comparable
to what A.K. received had only an efficacy of three percent for children—compared to a 63 percent
efficacy of the inactivated flu vaccine for that same period. Id.; “ACIP Votes Down use of LAIV for
2016-17 Flu Season,” CDC Newsroom, https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2016/s0622-laiv-flu.html
(last visited June 2, 2022), filed as Ex. C Tab 11 (ECF No. 58-12) (the “CDC Article”). The CDC Article
acknowledged Dr. Ahmed’s point that the inclusion of the live virus in a LAIV was usually correlated
with a stronger immune response, and was specific to a different season (2015-2016)—but also added
that it followed “two previous seasons (2013-2014 and 2014-2015) showing poor and/or lower than
expected vaccine effectiveness . . . for LAIV.” CDC Article at 1. It was thus “unclear how the LAIV
would be able to trigger an H1N1 based immune response leading to [Type 1 narcolepsy] when it was
unable to trigger enough of an immune response to provide any degree of protection against any form
of influenza.” Second Dye Rep. at 4 (emphasis added). A.K.’s possession of the narcolepsy HLA did
not change Dr. Dye’s analysis, since a large percentage of the population carried it as well—but there
was no observed increase in narcolepsy incidence in the relevant period. Id.
More fundamentally, Dr. Ahmed’s own research showed why FluMist was not likely causal,
when viewed from a mechanistic angle. Dr. Dye admitted that this research, associating the Pandemrix
version of the flu vaccine with narcolepsy, “makes a very compelling case for antibody cross reactivity
between influenza nucleoprotein specific to the Pandemrix vaccine and hypocretin neurons.” Second
my overall take on the point’s evidentiary strength.
19
Dye Rep. at 4. But the very study setting forth these conclusions also observed that a comparable, but
different, adjuvanted flu vaccine, Focetria, was not also associated with narcolepsy. Ahmed at 5; see
also IASB Report at 4. And these two vaccines, in turn, were formulated and manufactured in a manner
distinguishable from a LAIV like FluMist—further undermining the comparison to Pandemrix. Second
Dye Rep. at 4.
Dr. Dye concluded with a fairly detailed discussion of Dr. Ahmed’s contention that FluMist’s
method of administration (intranasally) presented a pathologic mechanism for how the vaccine could
trigger narcolepsy. Second Dye Rep. at 5. Dr. Ahmed had proposed, as one possible mechanism, that a
wild flu virus could theoretically “reach” the brain via the olfactory bulb, citing animal study research
in support. See C. Tesoriero et al., H1N1 Influenza Virus Induces Narcolepsy-like Sleep Disruption and
Targets Sleep-Wake Regulatory Neurons in Mice, PNAS E368 (Dec. 14, 2015),
www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1521463112 (last accessed June 1, 2022), filed as Ex. 39 (ECF No.
48-1) (“Tesoriero”), at E369. But Dr. Dye contested the relevance of Tesoriero, noting that (a) it
involved genetically altered mice as well as an exaggerated form of the virus not comparable to the
attenuated flu vaccine, and (b) the hypocretin loss was also seen in the context of widespread neuronal
damage throughout the brain. Tesoriero at E372–73.
As a result, the Tesoriero experiment did not, in Dr. Dye’s view, offer a “model of narcolepsy,”
but instead reflected an influenza-caused encephalitis—an illness not at all comparable to the Type 1
narcolepsy A.K. had likely experienced (in which the sole damage at issue was to hypocretin receptors,
with no other evidence brain harm or neurologic complications). Second Dye Rep. at 5. Indeed, the
hypocretin receptor loss measured in Tesoriero was substantially less than what is seen in Type 1
narcolepsy. Id.; Tesoriero at E372–73. Dr. Dye more broadly disagreed, on similar grounds, with Dr.
Ahmed’s contention that a wave of narcolepsy in the years after the Spanish Flu Pandemic was likely
wild virus-associated, nothing that the formal medical term at the time for the condition, “encephalitis
lethargica,” was not comparable to Type I narcolepsy, featuring many additional neurologic symptoms.
Id.17
III. Procedural History
As noted above, this case was initiated in the early summer of 2017, approximately five
years ago, and assigned to a different special master. After the filing of medical records was
completed, Respondent offered a Rule 4(c) Report contesting entitlement in March 2018 (ECF No.
16). The following year, the parties began the process of obtaining expert reports, with the final
report from Dr. Ahmed filed in May 2021. The month before (April 2021), the case was reassigned
17
Dr. Dye also noted that there was doubt that the 1918 Pandemic even explained the subsequent narcolepsy-like
condition observed in the 1920s, and that this view was supported by subsequent studies showing an absence of wild
flu virus RNA in the brains of encephalitis lethargica patients from the time period. R. Dale et al., Encephalitis
Lethargica Syndrome: 20 New Cases and Evidence of Basal Ganglia Autoimmunity, 127 Brain 1:21 (2004), filed as
Ex. C Tab 13 (ECF No. 58-14).
20
to me, and I proposed a schedule for briefing ruling on the record. Since the filing of Petitioner’s
reply brief in December 2021, the matter has been fully ripe for resolution.
IV. Parties’ Arguments
A. Petitioners
Petitioners maintain that they have preponderantly established that the FluMist vaccine can
cause Type 1 narcolepsy and did so to A.K., given his established genetic susceptibility. Mot. at
4–5. After a summary of the expert opinions of Drs. Hughes and Ahmed and a short review of the
relevant legal standards, Petitioners provided an argument for how they had satisfied each of the
prongs in the causation test set forth in the Federal Circuit’s decision in Althen v. Sec’y of Health
& Hum. Servs., 418 F.3d 1274, 1278 (Fed. Cir. 2005). Id. at 6–29.
First, Petitioners assert that they established that the FluMist version of the flu vaccine can
cause narcolepsy. Mot. at 6–19. They argue that in a susceptible individual (i.e., a person
possessing the narcolepsy HLA) an external trigger can provoke circumstances sufficient to result
in hypocretin interference, as proposed by Dr. Ahmed. Id. at 7. They note that wild virus influenza
infections (in particular, the H1N1 strain) have been associated with narcolepsy, with some studies
providing biological mechanisms for how this could occur—a foundation for the possibility that a
vaccine incorporating such wild virus components, as here, could also be causal. Id. at 8–11, 13.
A “vaccine safety signal” connecting receipt of specific versions of the flu vaccine with narcolepsy
also began to be seen in passive surveillance reporting of adverse events. Id. at 11–12. A LAIV
version of the vaccine, like FluMist, was likely to have a greater immunologic impact (given its
similarity to a live infection), and even to mimic the impact of an adjuvanted vaccine, and thus
could act as that trigger, based on Dr. Ahmed’s explanation for how flu virus components are
thought to relate to the hypocretin interference in the brain leading to sleep disfunction. Id. at 13–
15.
Second, Petitioners posit that A.K.’s own medical history underscores that his illness was
vaccine-caused. Mot. at 19–25. They maintain that the record in this case supports the following
fact findings: (a) A.K. possessed the narcolepsy HLA, making him inherently more susceptible to
the condition; (b) he was exposed to the FluMist vaccine at a young age, and when narcolepsy is
less commonly observed; and (c) his receipt of two doses in a short timeframe increased the
likelihood of an aberrantly robust immune response—sufficient under Dr. Ahmed’s theory to
provoke the biological mechanisms leading to narcolepsy. Id. at 20–24. Finally, they assert that
A.K.’s onset was medically acceptable, when measured from his receipt of the last FluMist dose.
Id. at 25. In this regard, they place earliest onset reflected in the records as February 12, 2015. Id.
at 25–27. That timeframe was consistent with when post-trigger narcolepsy would be expected to
manifest (within six months of exposure), independent of when the condition itself could be
formally diagnosed. Id. at 27–28.
21
Petitioners’ reply exceeded in length their initial 30-page motion. See generally Reply.
Petitioners emphasize in it that the parties largely do not dispute facts specific to A.K.’s disease
course, but instead disagree about the weight to be given certain evidence as it bears on causality.
Reply at 1–3. They then reiterate prior arguments, addressing specific contentions contained in
Respondent’s opposition brief.
Regarding the first Althen prong in particular, Petitioners note Dr. Ahmed’s credentials as
bolstering the reliability of his opinion. Reply at 7–9. The opinion he offers is consistent with
reliable science about narcolepsy, its likely pathogenesis, and its association with wild infections—
as well as certain versions of the H1N1 flu vaccine. Id. at 10–14. Assertions by Respondent’s
expert that the association has not been preponderantly shown amount to requiring Petitioners to
prove causation to a degree of scientific certainty—a standard that does not apply to Program
claims—or to offer categories of evidence, such as epidemiologic proof, that are not required of
Program petitioners. Id. at 15–21, 23–24. By contrast, Petitioners propose that case studies or
passive surveillance reporting of post-vaccination narcolepsy are reasonable evidence supporting
causation. Id. at 24–26. At bottom, Petitioners assert that their theory was reliable and sufficient
to meet the Program’s preponderant standard.
The Reply also seeks to address a fundamental issue raised by their claim: whether prior
Program determinations on the capacity of FluMist to cause narcolepsy—which have been
overwhelmingly unfavorable to the theory—suggest that this claim cannot succeed as well. Reply
at 28–31. In reaction, Petitioners note that more recent studies, like the IABS Report, show that
some combination of vaccination and background wild virus exposure is likely the explanation for
prior narcolepsy “outbreaks,” and that Respondent’s arguments otherwise are applying a
heightened standard of scientific certainty to evaluation of the theory. Id. at 31.
B. Respondent
Respondent offered a succinct brief in opposition to an entitlement determination in this
case. After a summary of the medical history (Opp. at 3–7) and a review of applicable legal
standards, Respondent specifically contends that the Althen prongs cannot be deemed satisfied
given the evidentiary showing in this matter. The first, “can cause” prong, is not met in
Respondent’s estimation because FluMist was not reliably associated with narcolepsy—even if a
wild virus strain contained in the vaccine has been, or where other forms of the vaccine are deemed
connected. Id. at 12–14. Meanwhile, epidemiologic studies like Duffy, or meta-analyses like
Sarkanen, discredit the conclusion that non-adjuvanted versions of the vaccine (like FluMist) are
associated. Id. at 14–15. FluMist also was not found to be effective, undermining Dr. Ahmed’s
contentions about its high likelihood to promote a robust immune response. Id. at 15–16.
Respondent highlights prior determinations in the Program (two of which I decided) that are highly
relevant herein and suggest why denial of entitlement is appropriate. Id. at 16–18.
22
Respondent otherwise disputed the success of Petitioner’s “did cause” showing, arguing
that (a) A.K.’s possession of the narcolepsy HLA did not guarantee his development of narcolepsy,
since others carry it but do not similarly experience narcolepsy after receipt of FluMist, (b) A.K.’s
age did not make him a notable outlier in contracting the condition (and hence did not point to
vaccine causation), and (c) the dosing schedule was a recommended part of the vaccination course
—not a dangerous cofactor likely to contribute to a milieu in which an aberrant response was more
likely. Id. at 18–20. And Respondent questioned whether an onset of narcolepsy in mid-February
2015, 72 days after receipt of the second dose (and without evidence of an initial reaction to the
first) had been shown to be medically acceptable. Id. at 21–22.
V. Applicable Legal Standards
A. Standards for Vaccine Claims
To receive compensation in the Vaccine Program, a petitioner must prove either: (1) that
he suffered a “Table Injury”—i.e., an injury falling within the Vaccine Injury Table—
corresponding to one of the vaccinations in question within a statutorily prescribed period of time
or, in the alternative, (2) that his illnesses were actually caused by a vaccine (a “Non-Table
Injury”). See Sections 13(a)(1)(A), 11(c)(1), and 14(a), as amended by 42 C.F.R. § 100.3; §
11(c)(1)(C)(ii)(I); see also Moberly v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 592 F.3d 1315, 1321 (Fed.
Cir. 2010); Capizzano v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 440 F.3d 1317, 1320 (Fed. Cir. 2006). 18
In this case, Petitioners do not assert a Table claim.
For both Table and Non-Table claims, Vaccine Program petitioners bear a “preponderance
of the evidence” burden of proof. Section 13(1)(a). That is, a petitioner must offer evidence that
leads the “trier of fact to believe that the existence of a fact is more probable than its nonexistence
before [he] may find in favor of the party who has the burden to persuade the judge of the fact’s
existence.” Moberly, 592 F.3d at 1322 n.2; see also Snowbank Enter. v. United States, 6 Cl. Ct.
476, 486 (1984) (mere conjecture or speculation is insufficient under a preponderance standard).
Proof of medical certainty is not required. Bunting v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 931 F.2d
867, 873 (Fed. Cir. 1991). In particular, a petitioner must demonstrate that the vaccine was “not
only [the] but-for cause of the injury but also a substantial factor in bringing about the injury.”
Moberly, 592 F.3d at 1321 (quoting Shyface v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 165 F.3d 1344,
1352–53 (Fed. Cir. 1999)); Pafford v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 451 F.3d 1352, 1355 (Fed.
Cir. 2006). A petitioner may not receive a Vaccine Program award based solely on his assertions;
18
Decisions of special masters (some of which I reference in this ruling) constitute persuasive but not binding
authority. Hanlon v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 40 Fed. Cl. 625, 630 (1998). By contrast, Federal Circuit rulings
concerning legal issues are binding on special masters. Guillory v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 59 Fed. Cl. 121,
124 (2003), aff’d 104 F. Appx. 712 (Fed. Cir. 2004); see also Spooner v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., No. 13-159V,
2014 WL 504728, at *7 n.12 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr. Jan. 16, 2014).
23
rather, the petition must be supported by either medical records or by the opinion of a competent
physician. Section 13(a)(1).
In attempting to establish entitlement to a Vaccine Program award of compensation for a
Non-Table claim, a petitioner must satisfy all three of the elements established by the Federal
Circuit in Althen, 418 F.3d at 1278: “(1) a medical theory causally connecting the vaccination and
the injury; (2) a logical sequence of cause and effect showing that the vaccination was the reason
for the injury; and (3) a showing of proximate temporal relationship between vaccination and
injury.”
Each of the Althen prongs requires a different showing. Under Althen prong one, petitioners
must provide a “reputable medical theory,” demonstrating that the vaccine received can cause the
type of injury alleged. Pafford, 451 F.3d at 1355–56 (citations omitted). To satisfy this prong, a
petitioner’s theory must be based on a “sound and reliable medical or scientific explanation.”
Knudsen v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 35 F.3d 543, 548 (Fed. Cir. 1994). Such a theory must
only be “legally probable, not medically or scientifically certain.” Id. at 549.
Petitioners may satisfy the first Althen prong without resort to medical literature,
epidemiological studies, demonstration of a specific mechanism, or a generally accepted medical
theory. Andreu v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 569 F.3d 1367, 1378–79 (Fed. Cir. 2009) (citing
Capizzano, 440 F.3d at 1325–26). Special masters, despite their expertise, are not empowered by
statute to conclusively resolve what are essentially thorny scientific and medical questions, and
thus scientific evidence offered to establish Althen prong one is viewed “not through the lens of
the laboratorian, but instead from the vantage point of the Vaccine Act’s preponderant evidence
standard.” Id. at 1380. Accordingly, special masters must take care not to increase the burden
placed on petitioners in offering a scientific theory linking vaccine to injury. Contreras, 121 Fed.
Cl. at 245.
In discussing the evidentiary standard applicable to the first Althen prong, the Federal
Circuit has consistently rejected the contention that it can be satisfied merely by establishing the
proposed causal theory’s scientific or medical plausibility. See Boatmon v. Sec’y of Health & Hum.
Servs., 941 F.3d 1351, 1359 (Fed. Cir. 2019); see also LaLonde v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs.,
746 F.3d 1334, 1339 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (“[h]owever, in the past we have made clear that simply
identifying a ‘plausible’ theory of causation is insufficient for a petitioner to meet her burden of
proof” (citing Moberly, 592 F.3d at 1322)). And petitioners always have the ultimate burden of
establishing their overall Vaccine Act claim with preponderant evidence. W.C. v. Sec’y of Health
& Hum. Servs., 704 F.3d 1352, 1356 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (citations omitted); Tarsell v. United States,
133 Fed. Cl. 782, 793 (2017) (noting that Moberly “addresses the petitioner’s overall burden of
proving causation-in-fact under the Vaccine Act” by a preponderance standard).
24
The second Althen prong requires proof of a logical sequence of cause and effect, usually
supported by facts derived from a petitioner’s medical records. Althen, 418 F.3d at 1278; Andreu,
569 F.3d at 1375–77; Capizzano, 440 F.3d at 1326; Grant v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 956
F.2d 1144, 1148 (Fed. Cir. 1992). In establishing that a vaccine “did cause” injury, the opinions
and views of the injured party’s treating physicians are entitled to some weight. Andreu, 569 F.3d
at 1367; Capizzano, 440 F.3d at 1326 (“medical records and medical opinion testimony are favored
in vaccine cases, as treating physicians are likely to be in the best position to determine whether a
‘logical sequence of cause and effect show[s] that the vaccination was the reason for the injury’”)
(quoting Althen, 418 F.3d at 1280). Medical records are generally viewed as particularly
trustworthy evidence, since they are created contemporaneously with the treatment of the patient.
Cucuras v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 993 F.2d 1525, 1528 (Fed. Cir. 1993).
Medical records and statements of a treating physician, however, do not per se bind the
special master to adopt the conclusions of such an individual, even if they must be considered and
carefully evaluated. Section 13(b)(1) (providing that “[a]ny such diagnosis, conclusion, judgment,
test result, report, or summary shall not be binding on the special master or court”); Snyder v. Sec’y
of Health & Hum. Servs., 88 Fed. Cl. 706, 746 n.67 (2009) (“there is nothing . . . that mandates
that the testimony of a treating physician is sacrosanct—that it must be accepted in its entirety and
cannot be rebutted”). As with expert testimony offered to establish a theory of causation, the
opinions or diagnoses of treating physicians are only as trustworthy as the reasonableness of their
suppositions or bases. The views of treating physicians should be weighed against other, contrary
evidence also present in the record—including conflicting opinions among such individuals.
Hibbard v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 100 Fed. Cl. 742, 749 (2011) (not arbitrary or capricious
for special master to weigh competing treating physicians’ conclusions against each other), aff’d,
698 F.3d 1355 (Fed. Cir. 2012); Veryzer v. Sec’y of Dept. of Health & Hum. Servs., No. 06-522V,
2011 WL 1935813, at *17 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr. Apr. 29, 2011), mot. for review denied, 100 Fed.
Cl. 344, 356 (2011), aff’d without opinion, 475 F. Appx. 765 (Fed. Cir. 2012).
The third Althen prong requires establishing a “proximate temporal relationship” between
the vaccination and the injury alleged. Althen, 418 F.3d at 1281. That term has been equated to the
phrase “medically-acceptable temporal relationship.” Id. A petitioner must offer “preponderant
proof that the onset of symptoms occurred within a timeframe which, given the medical
understanding of the disorder’s etiology, it is medically acceptable to infer causation.” de Bazan
v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 539 F.3d 1347, 1352 (Fed. Cir. 2008). The explanation for what
is a medically acceptable timeframe must align with the theory of how the relevant vaccine can
cause an injury (Althen prong one’s requirement). Id. at 1352; Shapiro v. Sec’y of Health & Hum.
Servs., 101 Fed. Cl. 532, 542 (2011), recons. denied after remand, 105 Fed. Cl. 353 (2012), aff’d
mem., 503 F. Appx. 952 (Fed. Cir. 2013); Koehn v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., No. 11-355V,
2013 WL 3214877 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr. May 30, 2013), mot. for review denied (Fed. Cl. Dec. 3,
2013), aff’d, 773 F.3d 1239 (Fed. Cir. 2014).
25
B. Law Governing Analysis of Fact Evidence
The process for making determinations in Vaccine Program cases regarding factual issues
begins with consideration of the medical records. Section 11(c)(2). The special master is required
to consider “all [ ] relevant medical and scientific evidence contained in the record,” including
“any diagnosis, conclusion, medical judgment, or autopsy or coroner's report which is contained
in the record regarding the nature, causation, and aggravation of the petitioner's illness, disability,
injury, condition, or death,” as well as the “results of any diagnostic or evaluative test which are
contained in the record and the summaries and conclusions.” Section 13(b)(1)(A). The special
master is then required to weigh the evidence presented, including contemporaneous medical
records and testimony. See Burns v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., 3 F.3d 415, 417 (Fed. Cir.
1993) (determining that it is within the special master's discretion to determine whether to afford
greater weight to contemporaneous medical records than to other evidence, such as oral testimony
surrounding the events in question that was given at a later date, provided that such determination
is evidenced by a rational determination).
As noted by the Federal Circuit, “[m]edical records, in general, warrant consideration as
trustworthy evidence.” Cucuras, 993 F.2d at 1528; Doe/70 v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., 95
Fed. Cl. 598, 608 (2010) (“[g]iven the inconsistencies between petitioner's testimony and his
contemporaneous medical records, the special master's decision to rely on petitioner's medical
records was rational and consistent with applicable law”), aff'd, Rickett v. Sec'y of Health & Hum.
Servs., 468 F. App’x 952 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (non-precedential opinion). A series of linked
propositions explains why such records deserve some weight: (i) sick people visit medical
professionals; (ii) sick people attempt to honestly report their health problems to those
professionals; and (iii) medical professionals record what they are told or observe when examining
their patients in as accurate a manner as possible, so that they are aware of enough relevant facts
to make appropriate treatment decisions. Sanchez v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., No. 11–685V,
2013 WL 1880825, at *2 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr. Apr. 10, 2013); Cucuras v. Sec'y of Health & Hum.
Servs., 26 Cl. Ct. 537, 543 (1992), aff'd, 993 F.2d at 1525 (Fed. Cir. 1993) (“[i]t strains reason to
conclude that petitioners would fail to accurately report the onset of their daughter's symptoms”).
Accordingly, if the medical records are clear, consistent, and complete, then they should
be afforded substantial weight. Lowrie v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., No. 03–1585V, 2005 WL
6117475, at *20 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr. Dec. 12, 2005). Indeed, contemporaneous medical records
are often found to be deserving of greater evidentiary weight than oral testimony—especially
where such testimony conflicts with the record evidence. Cucuras, 993 F.2d at 1528; see also
Murphy v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., 23 Cl. Ct. 726, 733 (1991), aff'd per curiam, 968 F.2d
1226 (Fed. Cir. 1992), cert. den'd, Murphy v. Sullivan, 506 U.S. 974 (1992) (citing United States
v. United States Gypsum Co., 333 U.S. 364, 396 (1947) (“[i]t has generally been held that oral
testimony which is in conflict with contemporaneous documents is entitled to little evidentiary
weight.”)).
26
However, the Federal Circuit has also noted that there is no formal “presumption” that
records are accurate or superior on their face to other forms of evidence. Kirby v. Sec’y of Health
& Hum. Servs., 997 F.3d 1378, 1383 (Fed. Cir. 2021). There are certainly situations in which
compelling oral testimony may be more persuasive than written records, such as where records are
deemed to be incomplete or inaccurate. Campbell v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., 69 Fed. Cl.
775, 779 (2006) (“like any norm based upon common sense and experience, this rule should not
be treated as an absolute and must yield where the factual predicates for its application are weak
or lacking”); Lowrie, 2005 WL 6117475, at *19 (“[w]ritten records which are, themselves,
inconsistent, should be accorded less deference than those which are internally consistent”)
(quoting Murphy, 23 Cl. Ct. at 733)). Ultimately, a determination regarding a witness's credibility
is needed when determining the weight that such testimony should be afforded. Andreu, 569 F.3d
at 1379; Bradley v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., 991 F.2d 1570, 1575 (Fed. Cir. 1993).
When witness testimony is offered to overcome the presumption of accuracy afforded to
contemporaneous medical records, such testimony must be “consistent, clear, cogent, and
compelling.” Sanchez, 2013 WL 1880825, at *3 (citing Blutstein v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs.,
No. 90–2808V, 1998 WL 408611, at *5 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr. June 30, 1998)). In determining the
accuracy and completeness of medical records, the Court of Federal Claims has listed four possible
explanations for inconsistencies between contemporaneously created medical records and later
testimony: (1) a person's failure to recount to the medical professional everything that happened
during the relevant time period; (2) the medical professional's failure to document everything
reported to her or him; (3) a person's faulty recollection of the events when presenting testimony;
or (4) a person's purposeful recounting of symptoms that did not exist. La Londe v. Sec'y of Health
& Hum. Servs., 110 Fed. Cl. 184, 203–04 (2013), aff'd, 746 F.3d 1334 (Fed. Cir. 2014). In making
a determination regarding whether to afford greater weight to contemporaneous medical records
or other evidence, such as testimony at hearing, there must be evidence that this decision was the
result of a rational determination. Burns, 3 F.3d at 417.
C. Analysis of Expert Testimony
Establishing a sound and reliable medical theory often requires a petitioner to present
expert testimony in support of his claim. Lampe v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 219 F.3d 1357,
1361 (Fed. Cir. 2000). Vaccine Program expert testimony is usually evaluated according to the
factors for analyzing scientific reliability set forth in Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharm., Inc., 509
U.S. 579, 594–96 (1993). See Cedillo v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 617 F.3d 1328, 1339 (Fed.
Cir. 2010) (citing Terran v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 195 F.3d 1302, 1316 (Fed. Cir. 1999).
Under Daubert, the factors for analyzing the reliability of testimony are:
(1) whether a theory or technique can be (and has been) tested; (2) whether the
theory or technique has been subjected to peer review and publication; (3) whether
there is a known or potential rate of error and whether there are standards for
27
controlling the error; and (4) whether the theory or technique enjoys general
acceptance within a relevant scientific community.
Terran, 195 F.3d at 1316 n.2 (citing Daubert, 509 U.S. at 592–95).
In the Vaccine Program the Daubert factors play a slightly different role than they do when
applied in other federal judicial settings, like the district courts. Typically, Daubert factors are
employed by judges (in the performance of their evidentiary gatekeeper roles) to exclude evidence
that is unreliable or could confuse a jury. By contrast, in Vaccine Program cases these factors are
used in the weighing of the reliability of scientific evidence proffered. Davis v. Sec'y of Health &
Hum. Servs., 94 Fed. Cl. 53, 66–67 (2010) (“uniquely in this Circuit, the Daubert factors have
been employed also as an acceptable evidentiary-gauging tool with respect to persuasiveness of
expert testimony already admitted”). The flexible use of the Daubert factors to evaluate the
persuasiveness and reliability of expert testimony has routinely been upheld. See, e.g., Snyder, 88
Fed. Cl. at 742–45. In this matter (as in numerous other Vaccine Program cases), Daubert has not
been employed at the threshold, to determine what evidence should be admitted, but instead to
determine whether expert testimony offered is reliable and/or persuasive.
Respondent frequently offers one or more experts in order to rebut a petitioner’s case.
Where both sides offer expert testimony, a special master's decision may be “based on the
credibility of the experts and the relative persuasiveness of their competing theories.”
Broekelschen v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., 618 F.3d 1339, 1347 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (citing
Lampe, 219 F.3d at 1362). However, nothing requires the acceptance of an expert's conclusion
“connected to existing data only by the ipse dixit of the expert,” especially if “there is simply too
great an analytical gap between the data and the opinion proffered.” Snyder, 88 Fed. Cl. at 743
(quoting Gen. Elec. Co. v. Joiner, 522 U.S. 146 (1997)); see also Isaac v. Sec'y of Health & Hum.
Servs., No. 08–601V, 2012 WL 3609993, at *17 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr. July 30, 2012), mot. for
review denied, 108 Fed. Cl. 743 (2013), aff'd, 540 F. App’x. 999 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (citing Cedillo,
617 F.3d at 1339). Weighing the relative persuasiveness of competing expert testimony, based on
a particular expert's credibility, is part of the overall reliability analysis to which special masters
must subject expert testimony in Vaccine Program cases. Moberly, 592 F.3d at 1325–26
(“[a]ssessments as to the reliability of expert testimony often turn on credibility determinations”);
see also Porter v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., 663 F.3d 1242, 1250 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (“this court
has unambiguously explained that special masters are expected to consider the credibility of expert
witnesses in evaluating petitions for compensation under the Vaccine Act”).
D. Consideration of Medical Literature
Both parties filed numerous items of medical and scientific literature in this case, but not
every filed item factors into the outcome of this Decision. While I have reviewed all the medical
literature submitted in this case, I discuss only those articles that are most relevant to my
determination and/or are central to Petitioner’s case—just as I have not exhaustively discussed
28
every individual medical record filed. Moriarty v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 844 F.3d 1322,
1328 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (“[w]e generally presume that a special master considered the relevant record
evidence even though he does not explicitly reference such evidence in his decision”) (citation
omitted); see also Paterek v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 527 F. Appx. 875, 884 (Fed. Cir.
2013) (“[f]inding certain information not relevant does not lead to—and likely undermines—the
conclusion that it was not considered”).
E. Standards for Ruling on the Record
I am resolving Petitioners’ claim on the filed record, and the parties have not challenged
my determination to do so. Opp. at 1; Reply at 34. The Vaccine Act and Rules not only contemplate
but encourage special masters to decide petitions on the papers where (in the exercise of their
discretion) they conclude that doing so will properly and fairly resolve the case. Section
12(d)(2)(D); Vaccine Rule 8(d). The decision to rule on the record in lieu of hearing has been
affirmed on appeal. Kreizenbeck v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 945 F.3d 1362, 1366 (Fed. Cir.
2020); see also Hooker v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., No. 02-472V, 2016 WL 3456435, at *21
n.19 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr. May 19, 2016) (citing numerous cases where special masters decided
case on the papers in lieu of hearing and that decision was upheld). I am simply not required to
hold a hearing in every matter, no matter the preferences of the parties. Hovey v. Sec’y of Health
& Hum. Servs., 38 Fed. Cl. 397, 402–03 (1997) (determining that special master acted within his
discretion in denying evidentiary hearing); Burns, 3 F.3d at 417; Murphy v. Sec’y of Health &
Hum. Servs., No. 90-882V, 1991 WL 71500, at *2 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr. Apr. 19, 1991).
ANALYSIS
I. Prior Treatment of Narcolepsy Claims in Vaccine Program
There are a handful of reasoned Program decisions 19 involving claims that a vaccine caused
narcolepsy—some of which were the product of cases before me. Hardly any have resulted in a
favorable entitlement decision. See generally A.T. v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., No. 16-393V,
2021 WL 6495241 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr. Dec. 17, 2021) (HPV vaccine and narcolepsy); Dougherty
v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., No. 15-1333V, 2018 WL 3989519 (Fed. Cl. July 5, 2018), mot.
for review den’d, 141 Fed. Cl. 223 (2018) (non-adjuvanted, inactivated flu vaccine and
narcolepsy); McCollum v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., No. 14-790V, 2017 WL 5386613 (Fed.
19
Prior decisions from different cases do not control the outcome herein. Boatmon, 941 F.3d at 1358–59; Hanlon v.
Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 40 Fed. Cl. 625, 630 (1998). But special masters reasonably draw upon their experience
in resolving Vaccine Act claims. Doe v. Sec’y of Health & Hum. Servs., 76 Fed. Cl. 328, 338–39 (2007) (“[o]ne reason
that proceedings are more expeditious in the hands of special masters is that the special masters have the expertise and
experience to know the type of information that is most probative of a claim”) (emphasis added). They would therefore
be remiss in ignoring prior cases presenting similar theories or factual circumstances, along with the reasoning
employed in reaching such decisions.
29
Cl. Sept. 15, 2017) (non-adjuvanted, inactivated flu vaccine and narcolepsy), mot. for review
den’d, 135 Fed. Cl. 735 (2017), aff’d, 760 F. App’x 1003 (Fed. Cir. 2019); D’Toile v. Sec’y of
Health & Human Servs., No. 15-085V, 2016 WL 7664475 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr. Nov. 28, 2016)
(FluMist and narcolepsy), mot. for review den’d, 2017 WL 2729570 (Fed. Cl. Mar. 2, 2017), aff’d,
726 F. App’x 809 (Fed. Cir. 2018). 20 Because the contentions in this case substantially replicate
arguments made, and rejected, in these prior determinations (the most in-depth of which involve
FluMist, as here), they warrant more discussion than might be appropriate in other contexts.
In D’Toile, I had the occasion to consider the scientific reliability and evidentiary
persuasiveness of the theory that flu vaccines administered in the U.S. and containing the H1N1
influenza strain can provoke an autoimmune process that (via molecular mimicry) results in
blockage of the hypocretin receptors in the brain responsible for sleep regulation, thereby
producing narcolepsy. D’Toile, 2016 WL 7664475 at *20–24. I denied entitlement, however,
because I determined that the version of the flu vaccine at issue—FluMist—could not (based upon
the evidence presented) be reliably shown to cause narcolepsy as opposed to other, more well-
studied forms such as Pandemrix. Not only was FluMist manufactured differently (and therefore
contained fewer of the nucleoproteins proposed by some of the reliable literature to be the trigger
for the autoimmune process leading to narcolepsy), but the expert testimony and literature offered
in that case acknowledged (directly and indirectly) that the theory could not be reliably extended
to cover the relevant form of the vaccine for other reasons. D’Tiole, 2016 WL 7664475, at *20–
28. This was so even though the general theory that certain formulations of H1N1—containing flu
vaccines can cause narcolepsy had reliable components. Id. at 20. At bottom, not enough evidence
connected FluMist to narcolepsy in the same way. My decision was upheld at the Court and by the
Circuit.
My determination in McCollum was consistent, although that case did not involve FluMist.
Rather (and although proof of vaccination was itself a disputed matter in the case), the vaccine at
issue was an H1N1-containing inactive, unadjuvanted version, akin to the version most often
administered in the U.S. today. McCollum, 2017 WL 5386613, at *16. Nevertheless, I found the
first Althen prong was not met, since (a) the most reliable literature on the subject implicated
vaccine formulation or the inclusion of an adjuvant as the likely causal factors associating H1N1-
containing vaccines with narcolepsy, and (b) a large-scale epidemiologic study directly
20
One earlier reasoned decision was favorable to the petitioner. See Garrison v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs., No.
14-762V, 2015 WL 7424016 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr. Oct. 29, 2015). However, Respondent did not defend the claim—
meaning the sole evidence before the special master in that case was the causation theory contained in Petitioner’s
expert report. Garrison, 2015 WL 7424016, at *1. In addition, the Garrison petitioner received the flu vaccine and
then began experiencing sleepiness and related symptoms within a week or two—far sooner than even the earliest
onset in this case. Garrison, 2015 WL 7424016, at *1–2. And Garrison contains no evaluation of the distinction
between Pandemrix and the forms of flu vaccine administered in the U.S. There are also one or two cases in which
the parties stipulated to damages, but no reasoned determination was made in those cases as to the persuasiveness or
sufficiency of the petitioner’s evidentiary showing.
30
undermined an association involving the unadjuvanted version. Id. at *17–19. This decision was
also affirmed after two rounds of appeals.
II. Petitioners Have Not Carried Their Preponderant Burden
A. FluMist Does not Likely Cause Narcolepsy
This case largely if not wholly turns on whether the FluMist version of the flu vaccine can
cause narcolepsy with cataplexy (also known as Type 1 narcolepsy). I find, based on the evidence
before me, that it likely cannot. In so determining, I am unquestionably relying on my prior
determinations on that topic—but that is because Petitioner’s experts offer virtually the same
theory and literature to support causation as was at issue in the prior relevant cases. Nothing
published or determined since the time of my prior decisions has been identified in this case that
would alter the analysis.
Petitioners’ argument in this case mirrors closely the same rejected causation theory
offered in D’Toile. There, as here, a claim was premised on the idea that findings specific to not
just the adjuvanted version of the flu vaccine, but a specific version of that vaccine (Pandemrix)
that was never offered in the U.S., could be transitively applied to FluMist—solely based on the
flu virus strains common to both. But I rejected that premise—even though I acknowledged the
reliability of research like that reflected in the Ahmed Study, which does persuasively provide a
specific biologic mechanism for how hypocretin interference could cause narcolepsy. The problem
with the theory is that it is too specific to Pandemrix, and thus cannot be then re-applied to a
different vaccine formulation. IABS Report at 3, 6. 21 Dr. Ahmed’s expert opinion in this case
simply fails to address the implications of his own, otherwise-reliable study.
Admittedly, I decided D’Toile over five years ago—allowing for the reasonable possibility
that more recent scientific or medical studies have “connected the dots” between what was then
known about the Pandemrix-narcolepsy association and distinguishable versions of the flu vaccine
like FluMist. But nothing filed in this case demonstrates this. On the contrary—the “meta-
analysis” 22 Sarkanen, plus the IABS Report, are two more recent, comprehensive overviews on
21
In addition, it remains possible that either the adjuvant included in the inactivated vaccine, or the background of the
2009 H1N1 Pandemic (with ample wild virus circulating in certain populations), played some causal role in sparking
narcolepsy independent of the nucleoprotein cross-reaction proposed in the Ahmed Study. See generally IABS Report
at 4. However, here (as in D’Toile), I make no determination as to the strength of alternative explanations for why
narcolepsy cases might have seen an increased incidence in the context of H1N1 wild virus Pandemics.
22
A meta-analysis is “any systematic method that uses statistical analysis to integrate the data from a number of
independent studies.” Dorland’s at 1126. Admittedly, this kind of scientific study can reasonably be criticized as
abstracting from studies with disparate methodologies, thereby potentially overstating the strength of the results of
combined studies. See, e.g., Dinh v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., No. 16-171V, 2022 WL 730258, at *11 (Fed. Cl.
Spec. Mstr. Feb. 14, 2022). But at bottom, articles like Sarkanen or the IABS Report do set forth contemporary findings
on the relevant subject—and overall they demonstrate no individual recent scientific determinations more supportive
of Petitioners’ theory than what was known previously.
31
what is known about causality in connection with narcolepsy, yet neither at all suggest that a
FluMist-narcolepsy association has become any more likely than it was. Indeed, the IABS Report
concludes with the sentence “[t]here are no clear associations observed between development of
narcolepsy and the other pandemic adjuvanted vaccines.” IABS Report at 6 (emphasis added). It
does not even bother to mention the lack of association with non-adjuvanted vaccines like FluMist,
or LAIVs for that matter—since the latter contention simply has not been credibly explored. The
Duffy epidemiologic study (while not perfect—as no such studies are) also strongly undermines
the contention that versions of the vaccine other than Pandemrix are at all associated with
narcolepsy. Duffy at 1823; Sarkanen at 180, 185.
Besides the above, Dr. Ahmed’s other contentions regarding the unique nature of FluMist
(and hence its additional capacity to cause a heightened, aberrant response) were contradictory or
unpersuasive. First, the relevant research does not connect all adjuvanted vaccines with
narcolepsy. See, e.g., IABS Report at 6. Hence, the mere possibility that FluMist’s LAIV character
might approximate the immunologic effect of an adjuvant is wholly undercut by evidence (like Dr.
Ahmed’s own research) that connects primarily Pandemrix to narcolepsy, independent of
adjuvants. Thus, why does it matter that FluMist can, in Dr. Ahmed’s contention, replicate the
immunogenic impact of an adjuvanted vaccine, when that factor is not the best explanation for
why a particular vaccine is associated with narcolepsy?
Second, the evidence offered preponderantly establishes that FluMist was intended to be
administered in a two-dose course, diminishing the persuasiveness of Dr. Ahmed’s claims that this
regimen was unusual or presented the opportunity for heightened risk. I have observed in many
cases that the intended effect of vaccination (such as the fast stimulation of cytokine production,
in the service of causing an adaptive response to the vaccine antigens) cannot simply be flipped to
also demonstrate pathology, absent some evidence showing that the relevant factors do cause harm,
or have been studied to that end. D’Toile, 2016 WL 7664475 at *24. The same is true here: a
vaccine that sound medical science directs be administered in two, close-in-time doses is not per
se more dangerous, immunologically-speaking, without some scientific or medical proof that this
kind of temporally-close dosing produces bad outcomes of any kind. Dr. Ahmed is merely
speculating that this could be a problem. Finally, it is not at all clear from the studies or other
evidence filed in this case that narcolepsy is as rare an occurrence in children under the age of ten
as Dr. Ahmed proposed—and hence I do not give A.K.’s age at time of onset any weight.
I also give little weight to the VAERS data or case reports filed in support of Petitioners’
theory. The Program has generally not deemed VAERS data about associations between vaccines
and injury to be especially probative (even if it does suggest a “signal” worthy of further
evaluations). Tompkins v. Sec'y of Dep't of Health & Hum. Servs., No. 10-261V, 2013 WL
3498652, at *16 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr. June 21, 2013) (stating VAERS is a stocked pond because
32
it only contains reports of adverse events after vaccinations and does not consider data about the
relative rate of these same events for unvaccinated individuals). Case reports otherwise do not
establish causation, and thus are not a compelling substitute for the kind of evidence otherwise
lacking herein. Indeed, as Dr. Ahmed admits, one of the relevant case reports in this case involves
A.K.’s very circumstances—making it a particularly reflexive piece of evidence. Second Ahmed
Rep. at 12.
None of the above reflects my determination that Dr. Ahmed’s qualifications to comment
on the matter at hand were lacking. Indeed, he has substantial personal experience relevant to the
injury at issue, and his expert reports were fairly comprehensive (despite my overall finding that
aspects of the opinion were not bulwarked with sufficient reliable proof). Portions of his opinion—
the association between the H1N2 wild virus and narcolepsy; the same association with the
Pandemrix version of the flu vaccine; and scientific theories about how an infection-caused cross-
reaction could instigate the necessary hypocretin receptor damage—set forth reputable, tested
scientific matters. But the opinion he offered overall did not provide me with reasons to conclude
otherwise than I did in D’Toile or McCollum: that science that demonstrates a connection between
a different form of the flu vaccine cannot be applied reliably to a LAIV like FluMist.
My rejection of a FluMist-narcolepsy association also does not reflect a mistaken
substitution of a standard of scientific certainty in place of the Program’s lower standard of
preponderance. Indeed, even the reliable evidence I highlight herein associating some versions of
the flu vaccine with narcolepsy does not amount to a showing at a level of certainty, as the IABS
Report indicates—since there remains much to learn about narcolepsy causation. IABS Report at
5–6. Rather (and as in cases like D’Toile), I am observing that the overall chain of contentions that
constitute Petitioner’s theory has too many omissions and gaps to conclude “more likely than not”
that FluMist can cause narcolepsy. At bottom, any association between narcolepsy and the flu
vaccine is specific to a single vaccine version—not other versions (as other evidence offered in
this case, like Duffy, underscores). And Petitioners’ contentions about FluMist’s capacity
generally to prompt a robust immune reaction ultimately try to leverage what is known and
expected about the vaccine into conclusions about its pathologic impact—but without any
bulwarking evidence showing that FluMist does so. In fact, as Dr. Dye established, there is sound
science suggesting that FluMist was not all that immunogenic.
More than five years have passed since my entitlement decisions on this topic issued,
allowing medical science an opportunity to look further at the issue. Yet the more recently-
published articles only underscore the degree to which the narcolepsy association remains specific
to the Pandemrix version of the vaccine (as opposed to its component strains), or to background
matters (such as vaccination in the context of an ongoing wild virus pandemic) not relevant to the
facts of this case. It is thus—still—unlikely that FluMist can cause narcolepsy.
B. Analysis of the Remaining Althen Prongs
33
Although the disposition of this case turns almost wholly on the “can cause” prong, I will
note my general conclusions with respect to the other two Althen prongs.
Regarding the second prong, the experts on both sides agree A.K. experienced Type I
narcolepsy. But the overall record does not include sufficient evidence that would permit me to
find that the FluMist vaccine likely did cause A.K. to experience narcolepsy. First, A.K.’s treaters
never implicated the vaccine as causal. Ordinarily, treater opinions should be given some weight—
although their speculation need not be deemed dispositive in any case, and I also note that given
the insidious nature of narcolepsy, it is less likely that treaters would be “on the lookout” for
vaccine causation under such circumstances in any event. Second, both parties agree that A.K.
possessed the narcolepsy HLA, but this stands only as a risk factor associated with narcolepsy
generally—not one associated with vaccination as the specific trigger. Medical literature was
unsupportive of a vaccine association, with some articles looking at samples of children—a
significant percentage who were also carriers of the narcolepsy HLA—who received the FluMist
vaccine during the timeframe when A.K., but never developed narcolepsy. Grohskopf II at 692.
There is also little evidence of “challenge-rechallenge,” 23 that would underscore a vaccine
reaction, since (a) A.K. experienced no demonstrated reaction at all to his receipt of the first
FluMist dose, permitting no comparison to the degree of reaction to the second dose, and (b) there
is no independent evidence of a faster or more robust response to the second dose. The fact alone
that A.K. eventually experienced narcolepsy after the second dose, temporally, is hardly proof
challenge-rechallenge.
The timing of A.K.’s onset (relevant to the third prong) was also problematic, although it
presents a closer call. Here, onset occurred likely no earlier than two to four months after receipt
of the second dose, depending on how that fact question is resolved. Ms. Kalajdzic’s witness
testimony that she had been noticing symptoms in A.K. as early as mid-February 2015 (thereby
prompting her to attend a school field trip with him) merits weight. Moreover, since narcolepsy is
not easily diagnosed, and can insidiously progress, it is wholly reasonable that Petitioners’ first
efforts to seek treatment in April 2015 do not demarcate temporally when A.K.’s symptoms began
to manifest. Thus, an onset within six weeks to two months of the second FluMist dose is
cognizable, and was not rebutted by Respondent—meaning in turn that it was preponderantly
established.
23
“A ‘challenge/rechallenge’ circumstance exists when a person has a reaction to one administration of a vaccine or
drug and then suffers worsening symptoms after an additional administration of the same vaccine or drug.” R.S. v.
Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., No. 15-1207V, 2021 WL 6502227, at *14 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr. Dec. 15, 2021); see
also DePena v. Sec'y of Health & Hum. Servs., 133 Fed. Cl. 535, (2017) (describing challenge/rechallenge as “when
an individual ... exhibits a more severe reaction to a second administration of that vaccine”).
34
But Petitioners’ causation theory is unreasonably expansive about how long it would take
for vaccine-caused narcolepsy to progress to obvious symptoms. Under their theory, any case of
narcolepsy experienced by an individual within six months of vaccination, or even longer, could
be attributed to that vaccination, assuming no other obvious intervening incidents that might
undermine the conclusion that the vaccine was causal. This kind of open-ended timeframe is
problematic for a Program case—especially where, as here, the underlying theory itself lacks
sufficient preponderant heft. Prior cases have observed that some timeframes are simply too
expansive in scope to be preponderant (in the absence of more specific evidence). See, e.g.,
McCollum, 2017 WL 5386613, at *22.
Here, I acknowledge Petitioner’s preferred onset is better established than one later in time,
and that temporal onset is consistent with Petitioner’s theory, despite my questions about how
reliable a timeframe it is. But because my disposition of the case mostly turns on the first Althen
prong, success in determining the third makes no difference to the outcome.
III. The Case Was Properly Decided Without a Hearing
In ruling on the record, I am choosing not to hold a hearing—a determination that the
parties largely accepted. Opp. at 1; Reply at 34. Determining how best to resolve a case is a matter
that lies generally within my discretion, but I shall explain why I determined that a hearing was
unnecessary.
Prior decisions have recognized that a special master’s discretion in deciding whether to
conduct an evidentiary hearing “is tempered by Vaccine Rule 3(b),” or the duty to “afford[] each
party a full and fair opportunity to present its case.” Hovey, 38 Fed. Cl. at 400–01 (citing Rule
3(b)). But that rule also includes the obligation of creation of a record “sufficient to allow review
of the special master’s decision.” Id. Thus, the fact that a claim is legitimately disputed, such that
the special master must exercise his intellectual faculties to decide a matter, is not itself grounds
for a trial (for if it were, trials would be required in every disputed case). Special masters are
expressly empowered to resolve fact disputes without a hearing—although they should only so act
if a party has been given the proper “full and fair” chance to prove their claim.
This claim was fairly resolved without a hearing. Despite the extensive expert report
filings, Petitioners’ causation theory did not substantively “add” new or more persuasive evidence
that would militate in favor of reconsidering my prior determinations on FluMist and narcolepsy,
and hence I did not need to hear live from the experts. Indeed, my familiarity with these arguments
and theories made a hearing even less necessary—many of the same items of literature I have
evaluated in prior cases were offered in this one as well. See, e.g., Partinen, Duffy. The most
efficient means of resolving such a case is on the papers.
35
CONCLUSION
A Program entitlement award is only appropriate for claims supported by preponderant
evidence. Here, Petitioners have not made such as showing. They are therefore not entitled to
compensation.
In the absence of a motion for review filed pursuant to RCFC Appendix B, the Clerk of the
Court SHALL ENTER JUDGMENT in accordance with the terms of this Decision. 24
IT IS SO ORDERED.
/s/ Brian H. Corcoran
Brian H. Corcoran
Chief Special Master
24
Pursuant to Vaccine Rule 11(a), the parties may expedite entry of judgment if (jointly or separately) they file notices
renouncing their right to seek review.
36