Thank you, Madam Chair.
And thank you to Dr. Beaudet for coming.
I want to pick up on a couple of things. There really has been follow-up missing. I gave one example; I can give many examples of where patient appointments have been cancelled and then they were told they would no longer have their specialist. There have been tests that are repeated every six months for drugs that have been cancelled, and people who have had clotting issues are being refused treatment.
I want to pick up on the expert panel that was talked about for the August 26 decision. If you're going to have an expert panel, I would like to see people who've actually been involved in the imaging and done the procedure be involved. I know there was fear of biasing the sample. Having said that, there were people on that panel who had actively spoken out against the procedure for over six months. We absolutely must have evidence-based medicine here in Canada. We have to. We do need to establish protocols around imaging, whether it's ultrasound, whether it's MRI. We need to know if we are going to be using stents. We need to establish these protocols.
As you know, I have concerns because I do think we're doing replication work, work that's been done elsewhere. If people had gone to the international conferences...Bulgaria, Canada, Italy, Kuwait, and the United States are all presenting the same data. That data is as follows: 87% to 90% of MS patients show one or more venous problems if ultrasound or MRI is used. Now the outlier to that was in Buffalo, and you have to look at those results. How was the study undertaken? Did you have someone who was trained in the operations? They also looked at first-degree relatives, and we know that venous problems may run in families. So there were issues.
Dr. Carrie brought up the Doepp and the Sundström papers. You have to look at the history of that. Those papers were published in six weeks. That's highly unusual in science. Dr. Simka's work out of Poland has done angioplasty on 381 patients, which people would describe as the gold standard; 97.1% showed one or more venous problems.
I'm going to hand that over.