STAT News (June 23): 18 Bioethics Experts, Obesity Clinicians, and Current and Former Government Health Officials Tell STAT Retatrutide Compassionate-Use Application 'Struck Them as Unusual'; Bioethics-Community Pushback Runs Parallel to Political Theater Around 79-Year-Old Patient
In addition to the political escalation (Senator Hassan's June 25 letter to RFK Jr.; Rep. Ted Lieu's June 24 terminal-illness press conference; White House counterattacks against STAT reporter Lizzy Lawrence and Lieu), STAT News reported that 18 bioethics experts, obesity-medicine clinicians, and current and former US government health officials told the outlet that Eli Lilly's decision to grant compassionate-use access to retatrutide for a single 79-year-old patient with refractory obesity, obstructive sleep apnea, and pulmonary hypertension 'struck them as unusual.' The core question raised by the bioethics community: why Lilly would offer compassionate use for a single patient when obesity is a population-scale condition affecting more than 100 million Americans, when expanded-access programs are typically structured around treatment INDs or intermediate-size protocols for broader access, and when the standard pathway for obesity-drug access is trial enrollment (TRIUMPH-2 obesity+T2D and TRIUMPH-3 obesity+CVD remain open). Jamy Ard (chief science officer, Advocate Health) said compassionate use is typically reserved for terminal illness. The bioethics critique is separate from the Trump-recipient speculation and is likely the more durable framing of the case as it moves through congressional oversight.