- Susan Mayor
- London
It was just an ordinary day in the intensive care unit of a busy London teaching hospital last March when a phone call from a nearby privately owned clinical trials unit catapulted the staff—and the six young men who became their patients—into the international spotlight.

Dr Ganesh Suntharalingam's unit put plans into action that had been developed after the 11 September 2001 attacks in the US
Credit: MICHAEL STEPHENS/EMPICS
Suddenly Ganesh Suntharalingam, director of intensive care at Northwick Park and St Mark's Hospital, London, and his team had to mount a rescue operation for six patients who simultaneously became seriously ill with a previously unknown reaction after taking a new type of drug. Neither he nor his two intensive care consultant colleagues, Andrew Castello-Cortes and Michael Brunner, were to get any sleep for the next 36 hours.
The healthy volunteers had each been given the new agent TGN1412, a superagonist anti-CD28 monoclonal antibody, which was designed to stimulate T cells, in the trial at a privately owned clinical trials …
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