Parenthood Federation of America ("PP")
Parenthood Federation of America ("PP")
Parenthood Federation of America ("PP")
25 July 2014
Speakers:
-Deborah Nucatola, MD, Senior Director of Medical Services, Planned
Parenthood Federation of America (PP)
-Two actors posing as Fetal Tissue Procurement Company (Buyer)
frame counts are approximate
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Buyer: So, I have a dilemma to ask the doctor.
PP: OK.
Buyer: I really, after this week was looking forward to a glass of wine, maybe a
bottle, to share of course. I have such a sinus headache though, I have advil
sinus, not over the counter though. Can I mix them?
PP: Uh-huh. Oh yea.
Buyer: Please tell me yes. Ok.
PP: Absolutely. I recommend that you drink as much water as you do wine, or
your headache is going to get worse. But yea, no that should be fine. So, where
are you guys based?
Buyer: Here we go, Norwalk. Based out of Norwalk.
PP: oh. I was sitting here trying to figure out when we ended up where we are. I
was like, are you close you close to here?
Buyer: Youre based out of Sherman Oaks right?
PP: Yes, and Im actually seeing a patient in Calabasas today.
Buyer: So you ok now? Glad to be out of your car?
PP: Oh, Im so happy to out of my car. Luckily I can take Beverly Glen home, so
Im very happy. I wont have to deal with any freeways after.
Buyer: Well, again we appreciate, I give you time to look over the menu.
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PP: Im actually going to talk to the waiter and be annoying. But, I pretty much
know what Im going to do.
Buyer: What kind of wines do you like?
PP: Im generally big red fan, myself.
Buyer: No. All girls are white.
PP: You know, I think what is, I justify the red because it has health benefits.
Where the white is purely pleasure.All go for anything, and whites cold and its
ninety degrees outside, so whatever you like.
Buyer: Well, I love red, but I was for sure thinking thatWaitress: How are you? Iced water ok to start?
PP: Im well thank you. Iced water fabulous.
Waitress: You need an iced tea or anything?
PP: No, thank you. Do you still have the wine list?
Buyer: They took it. The other folder? They took it.
PP: Good weve finally been able to connect, I know its been difficult.
Buyer: Was it a good time for you?
PP: Yes, Ive been in LA for almost two weeks. Im leaving again for two weeks
on Monday.
Buyer: So, I want to pick your brain and make your time as productive as
possible. How much time do you have? I want to make sure were notPP: I have a meeting at 4.
Buyer: At 4. Ok, how long would it take you to get there?
PP: Im going over Beverly Glen. As long as were done by three I should be fine.
I mean, I dont what you guys have planned, but I think we should have time.
Buyer: Picking your brain. Picking your brain, and having a glass of wine.
PP: What are you guys having?
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Buyer: For food? I like the look of the salmon, with the cherry tomato and the
basil.
PP: Oh then it has to be white. It has to be.
Buyer: It does not have to be.
PP: It does. We can do a ros as well. Ill let them pick, I like to do it based on
what were eating.
Buyer: I am not picky. But, I like you idea about red. You can justify it right?
PP: Of course. It has health benefits.
Buyer: If its a good red wine, the cheap ones, its mostly coloring, from what I
hear.
PP: Yes, if its done well and made well, it has health benefits. Thats my uh,
thats my line.
Buyer: So, the main thing, well, not the main thing that I would like to discuss is,
Id really like to connect with people who feel they dont know were out there.
They dont know theres this opportunity. And that could be a little touchy, for
them more for us, and I want to be delicate to any reservations.
PP: Yeah, you know, I dont think its a reservations issue so much as a
perception issue, because I think every provider has had patients who want
to donate their tissue, and they absolutely want to accommodate them.
They just want to do it in a way that is not perceived as, This clinic is
selling tissue, this clinic is making money off of this. I know in the Planned
Parenthood world theyre very very sensitive to that. And before an affiliate
is gonna do that, they need to, obviously, theyre notsome might do it for
freebut they want to come to a number that doesnt look like theyre
making money. They want to come to a number that looks like it is a
reasonable number for the effort that is allotted on their part. I think with
private providers, private clinics, theyll have much less of a problem with
that.
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Buyer: Okay, so, when you are, or the affiliate is determining what that
monetaryso that it doesnt create, raising a question of this is what its
about, this is the mainwhat price range, would you?
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PP: Absolutely. Of course I want to help. Id rather this actually get used for
something, so I think, as much as the patients, the providers absolutely want to
help.
Buyer: And so, if its something as simple as converting to breech that doesnt
require a separate consent? Does that make the procedure take longer? Is that
another step for the provider?
PP: No, its just what you grab versus what comes out. It doesnt make anything
any different. The other consideration I think you guys need to make, is who does
the training. Because when they do the training, you're basically guaranteed to
not get anything.
Buyer: Oh, you mean when its a provider whos been training.
PP: One whos training, whos basically doing the procedure, it comes out in a
thousand- youre not going to get anything intact, so. What we did for a while,
and I think it worked pretty well if theres a trainee, Id say, any research case,
Ill do. And as you get better, Ill let you do more, but we really need to do this,
intact.
Buyer: So, you probably did all the procurement cases yesterday.
PP: I didnt have a trainee yesterday so, its a lot, theyre just starting.
Buyer: When you said training, I thought you meant tissue training, for clinicians.
Because thats something that we should talk about, that impacts the contractual
relationship with the facility. Is it, does it tend to be more one way, than the
other? Are there many affiliates with staff that have tissue training? they know
how to handle it, they know what to do with it, they prefer to have their own
people doing it. Or because weve been imagining that we would do it, sending
techs of our own in. Similar to the Novogenix situation that you have.
PP: I would say, baring some bizarre space issue, because some places have
very limited space. Some people would be happy to do as little for you as
possible. The more you can do for them, the easier it is. That includes consenting
the patientsBuyer: Right, because I was imagining would be doing consent a well.
PP: Thats probably the biggest inconvenience, ugh thats one more thing my
staff has to talk about. They only have so many minutes to talk to the patient.
If you said youre going to do all the consenting, youre going to collect the tissue,
I dont know who would really say no. I really dont.
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Buyer: In Arizona? Do you know the medical director, or their patient services
person? How many surgical locations do they have?
PP: They have two. They used to be two separate affiliates, Northern Arizona
and Southern Arizona and they partnered. I think its Phoenix and Tucson.
Buyer: Those are big cities though, I imagine, if those are the only two clinics
they probably have pretty good volume then.
PP: You know, I cant tell you. Off the top of my head, I dont know but they seem
to have pretty good volume. But yeah, I think Arizonas good, and they definitely
have the gestationthey go as far as the state will allow them to go.
Buyer: Do they have any previous experience with providing, procurement or?
PP: No and they have a fairly new medical director also, but their CEO is very
business savvy and like I said, I cant imagine he wouldnt be interested.
Buyer: You have to talk directly to the CEO as opposed toPP: Ill reach out to the CEO, and they have two medical directors, one who
handles primary care, and one who handles surgical services. Ill reach out to
both of them and ask them whos the best person to connect you with.
Buyer: I did see online that the Gulf Coast affiliate as well already does donation
servicesPP: They do a ton of research, so I wouldnt be surprised ifBuyer: So, I dont know if thats in conjunction with a tissue procurement
organization or if they work directly with researchers or if theyve already got it
covered and there is no need for us butPP: I can ask. Of all the affiliates they have the largest research program, they
have a multi-million dollar budget. I think they are very well connected. Ill ask.
Buyer: Yea, the research client community in Texas is kind of a hub. Not so
much as California or Wisconsin for example. But in terms of the regions of client
base were looking at is basically California, Wisconsin, North Carolina, and
Texas are kind ofPP: North Carolina, they dont have your gestational ageBuyer: Is there- apart from New York, is there any where else on the east coastif we could open up the research triangle area in North Carolina, the Raleigh to
Chapel Hill area. Thats a huge, huge market.
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PP: We have an affiliate in Orlando that goes to 20 weeks right now. Im pretty
sure. We have several affiliates not just in New York city that go to at least 18. I
think, I have to see, the southern New England affiliate, Connecticut and Rhode
Island and then theres Massachusetts, which is huge, but they also have a very
developed research program. Im sure whatever they are doing, theyre doing
locally. Its worth reaching out.
Buyer: Washington DC? I met Dr.PP: I think they only go to 14 weeks. Genola Perry is their medical director.
Buyer: I didnt meet her, I met the guy who is also the medical director for NAF.
Matt Reeves.
PP: Matt Reeves, hes a provider there. Yea, Im pretty sure they only do 1st tris
there. Not positive.
Buyer: I know that- He and I spoke about second trimester and he indicated he
had good volume. It was an interesting conversation because hes friends with
someone, I think it was in Pennsylvania, who was actually a researcher and so
hes like: Oh yea, in the 90s we used to collaborate all the time, it was great.
PP: Im trying to think of the meeting that I had with pretty much all the later 2nd
trimester providers.
Buyer: Did people talk about this kind of stuff there, was there a good response
to it? What was your impression?
PP: Just causally, the meeting was for several other purposes. Im just trying to
think of who was there. Like I said, the Southern New England affiliate was there
along with Connecticut and Rhode Island. Gulf Coast was there, Minnesota,
North Dakota and South Dakota go up to 20 weeks. Middle of the countryBuyer: Theyre within courier distance though.
PP: Yes they are.
Buyer: Yea, that might be a good one. Thats what I mean by sourcing tissue, as
locally as possible to a client. Because if we can get it to a point where its not a
matter of FedExing it over night or delivery or something like that, its just a
matter or somebody couriering it a three or four hour drive. Thats kind of the
critical that makes a huge difference between us and another organization.
PP: Now, is StemExpress just located in Northern California? I dont even know.
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Buyer: Because it seemed like kind of a trade off to me, whether to try to focus
on affiliates who have experience with doing this, either currently or in the past.
PP: Yea.
Buyer: But then, if its somebody who is already involved, then it becomes an
issue of competition. Whereas if its someone whos never done this before,
maybe theyre interested but how long its going to take to get started up.
PP: Yea, you know, I almost feel like I have to say, California is almost done in
this regardBuyer: Saturated?
PP: And it is, the reason that its saturated too is, Normally, lets say an affiliate,
for example, was looking for a lab to work with, to do their pap-smears or their
STD tests. Theyre going to look for someone who gives the best service for the
lowest price. This is a little bit different, because they want to do this, but they
want to do it in a way thats not going to impact them, and its much much less
about money. You could call them up and say, Ill pay you double the money,
and theyre almost more inclined to say no, because its going to look bad.
Buyer: Right.
PP: To them, this is not a service they should be making money from, its
something they should be able to offer this to their patients, in a way that doesnt
impact them.
Buyer: Offsetting their costs.
PP: Right. No ones going to see this as a money making thing. The other reason
affiliates think this is a good thing is, its less tissue that they need to worry about,
its taken care of. They have to do something with that tissue, its hard to find
somebody that wants to do something with that tissue, so the fact that theres
somebody thats looking for that tissue isBuyer: And that was a point we were looking into, what if, just taking that from
them.
PP: That is such a huge service to them, and I just have to say000000
PP: -time this came up on a national level, is there are issues with disposal of
fetal tissue. Probably, the biggest company in the world that does this, is
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Buyer: Yeah. More so than being able to say well so $60 or $75 per specimen.
PP: Yea. For sure. Im telling you, Family Planning Associates, they may go for
their money. Private providers, they are definitely private clinics, and thats why
exhibiting at NAF is great. I dont know how their- it depends on the market. In
most markets their volumes not going to compare to Planned Parenthoods
volume. We have 40 percent of the market in the whole country.
Buyer: 40 percent?
PP: 40 percent.
Buyer: Wow.
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PP: Yea. Not that were trying to, we just do. Were looking now- moving forward
as access is getting harder, and laws are changing- to figure out how we can
partner so that everybody has access, but the way it turns out, if you look at it
today, we have 40 percent because were the largest provider and were the
targetWaitress: A little more wine, do we split it between the two of you?
PP: We should just pour out whats in the bottle. And if we drink it we drink it, and
if we dont we dont.
Waitress: Yeah.
PP: Not gonna throw it away. Itll evaporate. Im very practical.
Waitress: Thats good, its a good way to live.
PP: But, because of that, were the target. And because were the target, were
not looking to make money from this. Our goal is to keep access available. And if
we do something that makes a target, that just removes access for everybody.
Buyer: To be sustainable, essentially. Yea, and thats kind of intuitively, I think
weve been feeling about the providers we want to partner with, is you know, as
far as the Independents, and not to, you know- I think that everyone is doing
good work in a really hard situation, not to cast aspersions on that, but a lot of
independents dont really seem to have it together, as much as you know, a large
center. AndPP: And a lot of them arent under the scrutiny that we are under.
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Buyer: So, that's why its so important to talk directly with he affiliates because
you cant necessarily tell usPP: I cant tell you how theyre doing it. I can tell you what it says in the
standards. I can tell you the protocol as, these are all the things you must do, and
it allows for incredible variability. Like I said, you dont have to use digoxin, you
dont have to use misoprostol. Some people use laminaria, some people use
Dilapan, so really all over the map.
Buyer: Would you- because I heard for example from one of the Planned
Parenthood providers, in Northern California, who works with StemExpress. She
was saying that she uses misoprostol for all her dilations, and that, she thought
made a huge difference, in terms of getting out intact specimens. So can we
make a request like that- or maybe more realistically. Digoxin. If we were working
with somebody who digs at twenty weeks, and somebody really needs twenty
two week thymus, can we hold the dig for two weeks.
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PP: So let me tell you an interesting story. So theres not a lot of clear data
on digoxin. Providers who use digoxin use if for one of two reasons.
Theres a group of people who use it so they have no risk of violating the
Federal Abortion Ban. Because if you induce a demise before the
procedure, nobodys going to say you did a livewhatever the federal
government calls it. Partial-birth abortion. Its not a medical term, it doesnt
exist in reality. So some people use it to avoid providing a partial-birth
abortion. Others use it because they actually think it makes the tissue
softer and it makes it safer and easier to do the procedure. Is there data for
either of these? No. Because number 1, the Federal Abortion Ban is a law,
and laws are up to interpretation. So there are some people who interpret it
as intent. So if I say on Day 1 I do not intend to do this, what ultimately
happens doesnt matter. Because I didnt intend to do this on Day 1 so Im
complying with the law. There are other people that say well if you induce
demise it doesnt matter, youre never gonna do it so you dont have to
worry about intent. So thats one side of it. The other side is there are
providers who actually feel it makes the procedure easier. I am one of
those providers. And so a few years ago, we actually tried to get affiliates
to agree together to do a randomized control trialBuyer: Oh wow.
PP: -where patients go digoxin and some didnt, but at the end of the day,
the affiliates who liked using digoxin, did not want to give that up. And the
affiliates who didnt give digoxin didnt want to do it. We couldnt get
anyone to agree to randomize, so the likelihood that youre going to go to
an affiliate who uses dig and ask them not to do it, and they say yes? Not
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Buyer: Oh yea, so you know a little about a certain number of passages, and
after a certain number its no good anymore. You have to source it again.
PP: Well yea, people need to develop cell line, and there was this really
interesting story in the news. You must have heard- There was a cell line and
they traced it back to the patient and the family is suing.
Buyer: Yea, Henrietta Lacks. The HeLa cells.
PP: Yea, and so Im reading that and Im like wow. Take it and do whatever you
want with it.
Buyer: Ha ha yea, sometimes there is a specific project that, you know, has to
do with Down Syndrome or Sickle Cell Anemia or something very specific and
the do want something like that, but thats definitely a rarity, especially when it
comes to cell based therapies. Really, the fetal cells are getting the most action
right now when it comes to translational research, which is actually taking things
from the lab into the clinic, finding therapeutic applications that could go to
market. Theres some really cool stuff going on with neural progenitor cells going
on right now. Human clinical trials going on, stage two and three FDA clinical
trials right now.
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PP: So, you know there are providers who go beyond 24 weeks. Are you working
with any of them?
Buyer: So, you know for example, Susan RobinsonPP: And Shelley Sella.
Buyer: Over in Albuquerque, they start doing dig at 18 weeks. I had a great
conversations with Susan at NAFF, I recognized her from After Tiller which I
saw about a year ago. And so we had a great conversation and she was saying
she had experience working with Planned Parenthood in Fresno maybe?
PP: She works in the Santa Barbara-Ventura, San Luis Obispo clinic and
probably Mar Monte and some of those up north.
Buyer: She said a couple years ago, she had been working in the Central Valley
clinics. They had been working with StemExpress at the time, and she thought it
was so fascinating to watch the tech work, and all the parts. She said its
wonderful, weve done it before, would love to do it but, we start doing dig at 18
weeks in New Mexico, and I think they already working with somebody too,
maybe with the university there or something. The really extreme or later cases,
thats the- theres a standard that researchers are looking at right now, I would
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PP: There is always hope, thats why we all do what we do. Yea, so how did you
get involved inBuyer: I was a bio major in school and Ive done graduate research with- my
main interest is SCID mouse modeling, which is where you have the humanized
mouse model, I dont know how familiar you are with it. So, thats why I say liver
and thymus and bone marrow so much, because thats kind of the classic
humanized mouse model when you have certain strains of mice that are
mutated, they lack a murine immune system.
PP: So, I used to bike, I went to school at the University of Wisconsin, in Madison
and I used to bike right past this facility where all these poor mutant mice come
from.
Buyer: No, so they're not ugly orPP: No, no. Theyre lacking this gene or theyre lacking that gene. What ever
mutation they have, theyre all have the sameBuyer: So, if theyre lacking a mouse immune system, then you can graft
whatever you want into them and they wont reject it. So you can graft human
fetal tissue into them, and if its fresh and the cells still viable, then the thymus
will still grow and produce thymus cells and the liver will do its thing, still have
hematopoiesis going on. You can construct a human immune system inside a
mouse, and then test different diseases, drugsPP: Vaccines.
Buyer: All kinds of stuff on a human immune system, except its a mouse. Its
because of that kind of model that we are on the brink of a cure for HIV. I mean
its right- theyre are functional cell based cures, based on bone marrow and
things like that. Thats when I was talking about the CCR delta-32 mutation, I
dont know if that means anything you, its a mutation that affects the way the
actually binds to a cell, and so people- individuals who have the CCR delta-32
mutation in their cells, the virus cant enter the cells.
PP: I know. I know someone who has that.
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Buyer: You know the Berlin patient?
PP: I do, I know the patient. Its funny that you mention it, its very interesting.
Buyer: I mean so it figuring out- how can we use viral vectors or genetic therapy
to tale regular stem cell, alter them and put them back in, and producing an
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