Want details on Elon Musk's brain implant trial? You'll have to ask him
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[February 02, 2024]
By Marisa Taylor
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Elon Musk's announcement this week that his
startup Neuralink had implanted the first human patient with its
experimental brain device generated immediate buzz.
But Musk's statements on his social media platform X raised more
questions than they answered about the trial for a risky device that the
tech billionaire says could one day help the paralyzed walk, four
experts in the brain implant field told Reuters.
Neuralink does not have to divulge even basic details about its trial,
including the facility where patients are being implanted with the
device and monitored, as well as the number of participants and expected
completion date.
That is because the study was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration as a "first in human" or "early feasibility" trial, the
four experts said, based on Neuralink's characterizations.
Unlike a standard clinical trial, such studies allow companies to
develop a product concept, but are not designed to prove safety or
efficacy, the experts said. Early feasibility studies like Neuralink's
are exempt from a requirement to post trial details on the U.S. National
Institutes of Health's website, ClinicalTrials.gov.
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That gives Musk more control over what is known about Neuralink's
progress. The experts contacted by Reuters said that is concerning,
given Musk's track record of public hyperbole regarding his businesses,
from electric vehicle maker Tesla to rocket-builder SpaceX.
"Elon Musk is not about transparency," said Kip Ludwig, former program
director for neural engineering at NIH. "He's about doling out pieces of
information, often in a misleading fashion."
Neuralink did not respond to Reuters' questions. An FDA spokesperson
said any clinical trial participants must be provided with information
on the risks, potential benefits and alternatives to a specific study
and give informed consent to the testing.
"The FDA will continue to monitor the safety of those enrolled in the
study for Neuralink's implant device through required, regular reports,"
the spokesperson said.
In 2022, the FDA reported approving around 40 early feasibility studies.
The FDA is prohibited from disclosing details about such studies and
generally has to rely on the company to disclose any problems
voluntarily, the experts said. If an adverse event is deemed to pose a
"reasonable" risk to patients, the FDA can halt a trial if the sponsor
refuses to.
PATIENT SAFEGUARDS
Given the sensitivity of implanting devices in the brain, some companies
opt for transparency even if it is not required.
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Neuralink logo and Elon Musk photo are seen in this illustration
taken, December 19, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
 "They could give the public more
confidence about their safeguards and protections for trial
participants if they registered on the (NIH) site," said Victor
Krauthamer, a former FDA official whose work included reviewing
human-trial requests for brain implants.
Synchron, which is further ahead than Neuralink in testing its brain
device, listed its "early feasibility" study of six patients on the
NIH website, where an estimated 4.5 million visitors seek
information on hundreds of thousands of clinical research studies
each month.
Major medical journals often require that a trial be registered on
ClinicalTrials.gov to publish data from the research, experts said.
"We have published over 25 publications over 10 years," Synchron's
CEO Tom Oxley told Reuters in an email. "We want to be a part of the
clinical and scientific community." Oxley confirmed that all six
patients had been implanted with the company's device.
Neuralink was launched in 2016 and received FDA approval for the
human study in May 2023, several years after Musk initially
predicted it would receive a green light.
Musk's bullish remarks have helped propel his company's valuation to
about $5 billion, Reuters reported in June.
So far, Neuralink has said its trial is focused on a small number of
patients with limited or no ability to use both hands due to
cervical spinal cord injury or the degenerative disease known as
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).
The study will use a robot to surgically place its implant in a
region of the brain that controls the intention to move, with an
initial goal of enabling people to control a computer cursor or
keyboard using only their thoughts.
Musk posted this week on X that Neuralink's first patient was
"recovering well" a day after the device was implanted. He also
described what appeared to be a positive sign that the device was
detecting neural activity as it should.
The activity is not necessarily evidence the device will work long
term, the experts interviewed by Reuters said. Such signals can go
quiet for weeks before returning due to the normal healing response
to the implant.
"The question is what will their device be doing after six months or
three years?" said Ludwig.
(Reporting by Marisa Taylor; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Daniel
Wallis)
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