Vera Byers
Vera Steinberger Byers is an American immunologist who currently practices as a consultant in
Incline Village, Nevada and was formerly a professor at the University of California San Francisco, before changing affiliations to
University of Nottingham, where she helped conduct research on
tumor immunology, later moving on to
immunodermatology. While at UCSF, she helped develop a
monoclonal antibody for use as an anticancer treatment, specifically against
osteogenic sarcoma, though it was originally used against
graft-versus-host disease. While at the University of Nottingham, she published some papers on the regulation of the immune response to
urushiol in
poison ivy/
poison oak, also using a monoclonal antibody. Her work as a medical toxicologist pertaining to
trichloroethylene features in the book
A Civil Action. According to her testimony in the
autism omnibus trial, she spent three years working at
Immunex, where she worked on the anti-arthritis drug
Enbrel. However, the
special master in these proceedings wrote, "...there was no record at the FDA of Dr. Byers playing in any role in the Enbrel licensing application," to which Byers responded that "the information did not make a difference." The special master also wrote, "[Byers'] insistence that it was acceptable to use adult norms to measure the immune function of infants and young children was, frankly, incredible. Her testimony in this trial pertained to the alleged mechanism by which the
measles virus from the
MMR vaccine, in combination with
thimerosal, caused
Michelle Cedillo to suffer from a "dysregulated immune system." Dr. Byers formerly served on the editorial board of the journal
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy, and has published some research in this journal.
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