Court Opinion

ID: 4545510
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-07-01 16:00:35.938954+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:52:11.308074
License: Public Domain

Case: 19-1951   Document: 42     Page: 1   Filed: 07/01/2020

   United States Court of Appeals
       for the Federal Circuit
                 ______________________

        HEIDI SHARPE, AS THE LEGAL
  REPRESENTATIVE OF HER MINOR CHILD, L.M.,
              Petitioner-Appellant

                            v.

       SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN
                   SERVICES,
               Respondent-Appellee
              ______________________

                       2019-1951
                 ______________________

     Appeal from the United States Court of Federal Claims
 in No. 1:14-vv-00065-NBF, Senior Judge Nancy B. Fire-
 stone.
                  ______________________

                  Decided: July 1, 2020
                 ______________________

     CURTIS RANDAL WEBB, Twin Falls, ID, argued for peti-
 tioner-appellant.

     VORIS EDWARD JOHNSON, JR., Vaccine/Torts Branch,
 Civil Division, United States Department of Justice, Wash-
 ington, DC, argued for respondent-appellee.           Also
 represented by JOSEPH H. HUNT, C. SALVATORE D'ALESSIO,
 HEATHER LYNN PEARLMAN, CATHARINE E. REEVES.
                  ______________________
Case: 19-1951     Document: 42     Page: 2    Filed: 07/01/2020

 2                                              SHARPE   v. HHS

     Before MOORE, REYNA, and TARANTO, Circuit Judges.
 REYNA, Circuit Judge.
    Heidi Sharpe, on behalf of her minor daughter, L.M.,
 appeals from a judgment of the United States Court of Fed-
 eral Claims upholding the Special Master’s dismissal of
 L.M.’s petition for compensation under the National Child-
 hood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986. For the reasons set forth
 below, we affirm the Special Master’s denial of Petitioner’s
 on-table claim and vacate and remand the Special Master’s
 denial of Petitioner’s off-table claim for further proceed-
 ings.
                         BACKGROUND
                               I
     On July 26, 2010, L.M. was born at full-term and de-
 veloped normally for the first six months of her life. By six
 months, L.M. could roll over, push herself up, play, giggle,
 interact with others, and maintain good head control.
 L.M.’s father testified that L.M. “loved to play in [his] lap,
 grab her daddy’s hat and nose, shirt, anything she could
 get her hands on.” J.A. 173. On the afternoon of February
 10, 2011, at her six-month check-up, L.M. received several
 childhood vaccines, including the diphtheria-tetanus-acel-
 lular pertussis (“DTaP”) vaccination. By 7:00 pm that
 evening, L.M. had a fever, was lethargic, had poor muscle
 tone, and would not eat. Concerned, L.M.’s mother, Heidi
 Sharpe (“Petitioner”), called the local hospital’s emergency
 room department twice in the early morning hours of Feb-
 ruary 11, 2011, and then called her daughter’s pediatrician
 later that morning. Petitioner was instructed to adminis-
 ter ibuprofen and Tylenol to L.M. and to bring L.M. in for
 a doctor’s visit on February 14, 2011, if L.M. did not appear
 to improve.
     Petitioner testified that from February 11 to February
 14, 2011, L.M. continued to have a fever, remained lethar-
 gic, had poor head control, did not interact with her
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 SHARPE   v. HHS                                            3

 surroundings, and could not focus on her mother while
 feeding. Petitioner also testified that any disturbance
 caused L.M. to scream.
     On the morning of February 15, 2011, L.M. experienced
 a seizure. Petitioner rushed L.M. to the emergency room
 department at a local hospital. The medical records reveal
 that upon arrival, L.M. was “fairly floppy in her motor
 skills,” that she could not sit by herself, and that she had
 “fairly poor head control.” J.A. 144. The medical records
 also note that one month prior, Petitioner had observed
 L.M. having a few episodes of “spacing out,” where L.M.
 had a “strange look in her eye and was not responsive for
 several seconds.” J.A. 143.
    L.M. had a second and third seizure on February 15,
 2011, and was then transferred to a second hospital—St.
 Vincent’s. The St. Vincent’s medical records show that
 L.M. had poor head control and diminished responsiveness.
      On February 16, 2011, L.M. was diagnosed with infan-
 tile spasms. L.M. was discharged the following day. L.M.’s
 medical records indicate that, on February 21, 2011, she
 continued to have poor head control, and by March 21,
 2011, L.M. was experiencing about five to six seizures a
 day. By April 11, 2011, L.M.’s doctors reported that L.M.’s
 eyes “don’t really seem to focus on anything,” that L.M. did
 not have an “interactive smile,” and that L.M. “didn’t have
 good head control at all.” J.A. 130.
     Since April 2011, L.M. continues to experience seizures
 and has experienced profound physical and cognitive devel-
 opmental delays. At the time of the Special Master’s com-
 pensation hearing in this case, L.M. was about 7 years and
 5 months of age. At this age, L.M. could crawl and walk
 with the assistance of a walker. She had a poorly coordi-
 nated grasp, suffered cortical visual impairments, and was
 nonverbal, though she could use a few signs to express
 ideas such as “hungry,” “thirsty,” “I want,” “yes,” and “no.”
 See J.A. 8, J.A. 346–51.
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 4                                              SHARPE   v. HHS

     Over the years, L.M. has seen various doctors and has
 undergone various therapies and testing. Key here, genetic
 testing revealed that L.M. was born with a genetic muta-
 tion in the stem region of the dynein cytoplasmic 1 heavy
 chain 1 gene (“DYNC1H1 gene”).
                               II
     On January 27, 2014, Petitioner filed a petition for
 compensation under the National Vaccine Injury Compen-
 sation Program on behalf of L.M. Petitioner alleged that
 the vaccinations administered to L.M. on February 10,
 2011, significantly aggravated L.M.’s pre-existing condi-
 tion under two alternative theories. According to Peti-
 tioner’s first theory, L.M. had a pre-existing
 “encephalopathy” as defined in the Vaccine Act and that
 the DTaP vaccination significantly aggravated L.M.’s en-
 cephalopathy within 72 hours of administration, resulting
 in a compensable “on-table” injury. According to Peti-
 tioner’s second theory, L.M. had a pre-existing “seizure dis-
 order” and the February 10th vaccinations, as opposed to
 just the DTaP vaccination, significantly aggravated L.M.’s
 seizure disorder, resulting in a compensable “off-table” in-
 jury.
      The Special Master denied the petition for compensa-
 tion. The Special Master found that Petitioner’s on-table
 significant aggravation claim failed “because it relied on a
 legally untenable construction” of the Vaccine Act’s defini-
 tion of “encephalopathy.” J.A. 3. The Special Master also
 found that Petitioner’s off-table significant aggravation
 claim failed because “Petitioner did not successfully estab-
 lish that the vaccines did so (or that they could specifically
 worsen the expected course of an individual with the pre-
 cise mutation possessed by L.M.).” Id. (emphasis in origi-
 nal). Specifically, the Special Master denied Petitioner’s
 off-table significant aggravation claim because L.M.’s ge-
 netic mutation was “the most compelling explanation for
 her predisposition to develop a seizure disorder.” J.A. 56.
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 SHARPE   v. HHS                                             5

     The United States Court of Federal Claims affirmed
 the Special Master’s denial of both claims. Petitioner
 timely appeals. We have jurisdiction under 42 U.S.C.
 § 300aa–12(f).
                         DISCUSSION
     This court reviews de novo a ruling by the Court of Fed-
 eral Claims on a special master’s decision to grant or deny
 entitlement to compensation under the Vaccine Act. See
 Lampe v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs., 219 F.3d 1357,
 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2000). This court thus performs the same
 task as the Court of Federal Claims and reviews the special
 master’s legal determinations de novo, fact findings under
 an arbitrary and capricious standard, and discretionary
 rulings for an abuse of discretion. See Munn v. Sec’y of the
 Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., 970 F.2d 863, 870–73, 870
 n.10 (Fed. Cir. 1992).
     Before turning to Petitioner’s claims, we review two as-
 pects of the Vaccine Injury Program. First, a petitioner can
 allege that the vaccine caused the onset of her injuries (an
 onset claim) or that the vaccine significantly aggravated
 her pre-existing condition (a significant aggravation
 claim). See 42 U.S.C. § 300aa–11(c)(1)(C); see also White-
 cotton ex rel. Whitecotton v. Sec’y of Health & Human
 Servs., 81 F.3d 1099, 1102–03 (Fed. Cir. 1996).
      Second, the Vaccine Act includes a “Vaccine Injury Ta-
 ble” (“Vaccine Table” or “Table”), which lists various inju-
 ries associated with various vaccines, and provides a time
 period with respect to each injury associated with each vac-
 cine. 42 U.S.C. § 300aa–14(a). Included with the statutory
 table is a list of definitions for various Table injuries,
 known as the Qualifications and Aids to Interpretation
 (“QAI”). See id., § 300aa–14(b). The Vaccine Act provides
 that the Secretary of the Department of Health and Hu-
 man Services (“HHS”) may modify the Vaccine Table, as
 well as the QAIs, through duly promulgated regulations.
Id., § 300aa–14(c); see also Terran ex rel. Terran v. Sec’y of
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 6                                              SHARPE   v. HHS

 Health & Human Servs., 195 F.3d 1302, 1308 (Fed. Cir.
 1999). The Secretary of HHS has promulgated a revised
 Vaccine Table and QAI. See 42 C.F.R. § 100.3.
     If a petitioner can show that she experienced the first
 “symptom or manifestation” of a Table injury or a signifi-
 cant aggravation of a Table injury within the prescribed
 time period in the Vaccine Table, causation is presumed,
 and the petitioner has made her prima facie case of entitle-
 ment to compensation.         See 42 U.S.C. §§ 300aa–
 11(c)(1)(C)(i), 300aa–13(a)(1)(A). These claims are known
 as “on-table” claims.
      If a petitioner cannot show that she experienced a Ta-
 ble injury or that such injury occurred within the pre-
 scribed time frame in the Vaccine Table, a petitioner will
 not be afforded a presumption of causation. Instead, the
 petitioner must prove that the vaccine in fact caused her
 injuries by a preponderance of the evidence. 42 U.S.C.
 §§ 300aa–11(c)(1)(C)(ii), 300aa–13(a)(1)(A). These claims
 are known as “off-table” claims. See Whitecotton, 81 F.3d
 at 1102. Notably, the preponderance of the evidence stand-
 ard for off-table claims does not require a petitioner to
 prove causation with scientific certainty. See Knudsen ex
 rel. Knudsen v. Sec’y of Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., 35
F.3d 543, 548–49 (Fed. Cir. 1994). Rather, “[c]ausation in
 fact under the Vaccine Act is . . . based on the circum-
 stances of the particular case . . . [and] involves ascertain-
 ing whether a sequence of cause and effect is ‘logical’ and
 legally probable.” Id. With this backdrop, we now turn to
 Petitioner’s on-table claim, followed by Petitioner’s off-ta-
 ble claim.
                      I. On-Table Claim
    Petitioner argues that the Special Master legally erred
 in denying her on-table significant aggravation claim,
 which alleges that the DTaP vaccination L.M. received on
 February 10, 2011, significantly aggravated her Table-
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 SHARPE   v. HHS                                            7

 injury of “encephalopathy” within 72 hours. For the below
 reasons, we disagree with Petitioner.
      For her on-table significant aggravation claim, Peti-
 tioner had to demonstrate that: (a) pre-vaccination, L.M.
 experienced an “encephalopathy,” as defined in the QAI
 promulgated by HHS; (b) L.M. suffered a significant aggra-
 vation of that encephalopathy post-vaccination; and (c) the
 first symptom or manifestation of the significant aggrava-
 tion of L.M.’s encephalopathy occurred within 72 hours
 post-vaccination. See Whitecotton, 81 F.3d at 1107. At is-
 sue here is whether L.M. experienced a QAI-defined “en-
 cephalopathy” pre-vaccination.
      Pursuant to the QAI issued by HHS, an individual suf-
 fers an “encephalopathy” only if “such recipient manifests,
 within the applicable period,” an “acute encephalopathy”
 followed by “a chronic encephalopathy [which] persists in
 such person for more than 6 months beyond the date of vac-
 cination.” 42 C.F.R. § 100.3(b)(2)(2014). For children less
 than 18 months of age, “[a]n acute encephalopathy is indi-
 cated by a significantly decreased level of consciousness
 lasting for at least 24 hours.” Id., § 100.3(b)(2)(i)(A).
      In DeRoche v. Secretary of the Department of Health &
 Human Services, the special master recognized that under
 the QAI’s definition of an encephalopathy—an acute en-
 cephalopathy followed by a chronic encephalopathy for six
 months—petitioners face the “infeasible” task of showing a
 significant aggravation of such a serious, chronic injury.
 No. 97-643V, 2002 WL 603087, *27 (Fed. Cl. Spec. Mstr.
 Mar. 28, 2002). The special master also explained that
 given the short timetable for childhood vaccines, a child pe-
 titioner would have received an immunization before six
 months had elapsed, rendering it difficult to establish an
 aggravation of an encephalopathy. Id. Thus, the special
 master construed the QAI’s definition of encephalopathy to
 require only an acute encephalopathy when applied to on-
 table, significant aggravation claims. Id. at *29.
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 8                                              SHARPE   v. HHS

      In this case, the Special Master followed the DeRoche
 approach. Specifically, the Special Master narrowed the
 QAI’s definition of encephalopathy to an acute encephalo-
 pathy only. Here, there is no real dispute that pre-vaccina-
 tion, L.M. did not experience an acute encephalopathy. At
 most, L.M. experienced a few episodes of “spacing out” one
 month prior to her February 10, 2011 vaccinations, which
 fall short of a decreased level of consciousness for a 24-hour
 period. Accordingly, the Special Master found that L.M.
 did not experience an acute encephalopathy and denied
 L.M.’s on-table significant aggravation claim.
     We see no error in the Special Master’s determination.
 “All statutes must be construed in the light of their pur-
 pose. A literal reading of them which would lead to absurd
 results is to be avoided when they can be given a reasona-
 ble application consistent with their words and with the
 legislative purpose.” Haggar Co. v. Helvering, 308 U.S.
389, 394 (1940). This principle of statutory interpretation
 applies to the interpretation of regulations. See Trustees of
 Indiana Univ. v. United States, 618 F.2d 736, 739 (Ct. Cl.
 1980). Here, the QAI definition of encephalopathy, i.e., an
 acute encephalopathy followed by a chronic encephalopa-
 thy, would lead to an absurd result if literally applied to
 on-table significant aggravation claims. Rather, the dual
 requirement for acute and chronic encephalopathies is bet-
 ter suited for on-table onset claims. Thus, as in DeRoche,
 it was reasonable for the Special Master to construe “en-
 cephalopathy” to mean only an acute encephalopathy for
 Petitioner’s on-table significant aggravation claim. Addi-
 tionally, the record is clear that L.M. did not experience an
 acute encephalopathy pre-vaccination.
     Petitioner argues, however, that the Special Master did
 not go far enough in correcting the QAI’s definition of en-
 cephalopathy for on-table significant aggravation claims.
 Appellant’s Br. at 26. Specifically, Petitioner argues that
 even the more limited definition of encephalopathy articu-
 lated in DeRoche, i.e., an acute encephalopathy, should not
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 SHARPE   v. HHS                                             9

 apply here. Id. at 23. This is because, according to Peti-
 tioner, most encephalopathies are not acute until after vac-
 cination, and, thus, it would be nearly impossible to prove
 a significant aggravation of a pre-existing acute encepha-
 lopathy. Id. at 28. Rather, Petitioner argues, the Special
 Master should have applied the “common, ordinary, and ac-
 cepted meaning” of an encephalopathy, which is “a disease
 of the brain.” Id. at 23, 25.
     Petitioner, however, provides no support that most en-
 cephalopathies do not become acute until after vaccination.
 In the absence of such evidence, Petitioner’s conclusory ar-
 gument is not a sufficient ground for excising the acute re-
 quirement from the QAI’s definition of encephalopathy.
    For the above reasons, we affirm the Special Master’s
 denial of Petitioner’s on-table claim.
                      II. Off-Table Claim
     Petitioner also challenges the Special Master’s denial
 of her off-table claim. According to Petitioner, L.M.’s re-
 ceipt of vaccinations on February 10, 2011, significantly ag-
 gravated L.M.’s pre-existing “seizure disorder.” J.A. 18,
 J.A. 55. To prevail on an off-table significant aggravation
 claim, a petitioner must satisfy the six-prong inquiry an-
 nounced in Loving ex rel. Loving v. Secretary of Health &
 Human Services, 86 Fed. Cl. 135 (2009). Under the Loving
 framework, a petitioner must establish:
     (1) the person’s condition prior to administration of
     the vaccine, (2) the person’s current condition (or
     the condition following the vaccination if that is
     also pertinent), (3) whether the person’s current
     condition constitutes a “significant aggravation” of
     the person’s condition prior to vaccination, (4) a
     medical theory causally connecting such a signifi-
     cantly worsened condition to the vaccination, (5) a
     logical sequence of cause and effect showing that
     the vaccination was the reason for the significant
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 10                                              SHARPE   v. HHS

      aggravation, and (6) a showing of a proximate tem-
      poral relationship between the vaccination and the
      significant aggravation.
Id. at 144; see also W.C. v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs.,
 704 F.3d 1352, 1357 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (holding that “the Lov-
 ing case provides the correct framework for evaluating off-
 table significant aggravation claims”).
      If a petitioner successfully satisfies the Loving inquiry,
 the burden shifts to the government to prove by a prepon-
 derance of the evidence that a “factor unrelated” to the vac-
 cine caused the petitioner’s injuries. 42 U.S.C. § 300aa–
 13(a)(1)(A)–(B); see also Hines v. Sec’y of the Dep’t of Health
 & Human Servs., 940 F.2d 1518, 1525 (Fed. Cir. 1991). If
 the government fails to carry its burden, the petitioner is
 entitled to compensation.
     Here, the Special Master determined that Petitioner
 satisfied Loving prongs 1, 2, and 6. The Special Master,
 however, determined that Petitioner failed to satisfy Lov-
 ing prongs 3, 4, and 5 and, thus, did not make out her prima
 facie case of causation-in-fact. The Special Master also de-
 termined that even if Petitioner had proven causation-in-
 fact, she still was not entitled to compensation because the
 government sufficiently satisfied the “factor unrelated” in-
 quiry. Specifically, the Special Master determined that
 L.M.’s DYNC1H1 gene mutation, and not the vaccination,
 was the sole, substantial cause of L.M.’s significantly ag-
 gravated seizure disorder. On appeal, Petitioner chal-
 lenges the Special Master’s determinations under Loving
 prongs 3, 4, and 5, and the “factor unrelated” inquiry. We
 discuss each of these factors below.
                      A. Loving prong 3
     Petitioner argues that the Special Master legally erred
 in applying Loving prong 3. We agree with Petitioner. The
 Special Master’s Loving prong 3 analysis makes clear he
 required Petitioner to prove the expected outcome for a
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 SHARPE   v. HHS                                           11

 child with a DYNC1H1 gene mutation and to show that
 L.M.’s current, post-vaccination condition was worse than
 that expected outcome. Specifically, the Special Master ex-
 plained that “[s]ubsumed within the Loving analysis is the
 requirement to evaluate the likely natural course of an in-
 jured party’s preexisting disease, in order to determine
 whether the vaccine made the petitioner worse than he
 would have been but for the vaccination.” J.A. 36; see also
 J.A. 51 (noting that Loving prong 3 required “an evaluation
 of what is known about the preexisting mutation and its
 likely impact on an affected individual’s life” (emphasis
 added)). Loving prong 3, however, does not require a peti-
 tioner to demonstrate an expected outcome and that her
 current-post vaccination condition was worse than such ex-
 pected outcome. To understand why this is not required,
 we believe it necessary to review this court’s development
 of the significant aggravation claim framework.
      The Court of Federal Claims announced the first
 framework for analyzing on-table significant aggravation
 claims in Misasi v. Secretary of the Department of Health &
 Human Services, 23 Cl. Ct. 322 (1991). The Misasi inquiry
 required a special master to compare “the actual condition
 of the child after the vaccination with the child’s predicted
 condition had the vaccine not been administered.” White-
 cotton, 81 F.3d at 1105 (discussing the Misasi framework).
 “If the child’s current condition represent[ed] a significant
 aggravation of the child’s expected condition, then the child
 [was] entitled to the presumption” of causation for on-table
 claims. Id. The reasoning underlying the Misasi inquiry
 was to “distinguish cases in which the vaccination caused
 the significant aggravation from cases in which the vac-
 cination had no detrimental effect.” Id.
    In Whitecotton, in discussing an on-table significant ag-
 gravation claim, we squarely rejected the Misasi inquiry as
 “improperly requir[ing] a petitioner to prove, as part of her
 prima facie case, that petitioner’s significant aggravation
 was not caused by a pre-existing injury.” Id. at 1106
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 12                                             SHARPE     v. HHS

 (emphasis in original). We instead explained that the Vac-
 cine Act only requires a “comparison of the person’s pre-
 vaccination condition with the person’s current, post-vac-
 cination condition.” Id. at 1107 (citing 42 U.S.C. § 300aa–
 33(4)). This comparison is now known as prong 3 of the
 Whitecotton inquiry for on-table significant aggravation
 claims. Id. 1
     The Court of Federal Claims then announced the Lov-
 ing inquiry for off-table significant aggravation claims. We
 subsequently approved the Loving approach for such
 claims, W.C., 704 F.3d at 1357, and the government accepts
 that approach. Key here, the Loving court incorporated
 prongs 1, 2, and 3 of the Whitecotton inquiry into its anal-
 ysis. Loving, 86 Fed. Cl. at 144. The last three prongs of
 the Loving inquiry correspond to the three-part inquiry ar-
 ticulated in Althen v. Secretary of Health & Human Ser-
 vices, 418 F.3d 1274 (Fed. Cir. 2005). Id.
    Thus, Loving prong 3, like Whitecotton prong 3, only
 requires a comparison of a petitioner’s current, post-

      1  The Whitecotton inquiry for on-table significant ag-
 gravation claims requires a court to:
      (1) assess the person’s condition prior to admin-
          istration of the vaccine,
      (2) assess the person’s current condition, . . .
      (3) determine if the person’s current condition
          constitutes a “significant aggravation” of the
          person’s condition prior to vaccination within
          the meaning of the statute . . . . and[]
      (4) determine whether the first symptom or man-
          ifestation of the significant aggravation oc-
          curred within the time period prescribed by
          the Table.
 Whitecotton, 81 F.3d at 1107.
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 SHARPE   v. HHS                                            13

 vaccination condition with her pre-vaccination condition.
 To require a petitioner to prove her expected outcome and
 that her post-vaccination condition is worse than this ex-
 pected outcome, as the Special Master required here, re-
 vives the defunct Misasi test and is improper under our
 precedent.
     The impropriety of the Misasi test is readily apparent
 in gene mutation cases, in which a clinical outcome is
 nearly impossible to predict. As the government’s own ex-
 pert, Dr. Descartes, testified:
     The dream of the geneticist is to find genotype-phe-
     notype correlation, because when a parent comes to
     talk to me, the first thing they want to know, is my
     child going to be able to do this and that? How long
     my child is going to live? Do you have any answer
     to these questions? The mutation that you found,
     what do you know? And the answer, unfortunately,
     to all these questions that parents ask all the time
     is we don’t know.
 J.A. 389: 5–12 (emphasis added).
     The Special Master reasoned that a comparison of
 L.M.’s current, post-vaccination condition with the ex-
 pected course of a DYNC1H1 gene mutation is consistent
 with Stone ex rel. Stone v. Secretary of Health & Human
 Services, 676 F.3d 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2012). The Special Mas-
 ter misread Stone. In Stone, we explained that “evidence
 of other possible sources of injury can be relevant not only
 to the ‘factors unrelated’ [inquiry], but also to whether a
 prima facie showing has been made that the vaccine was a
 substantial factor in causing the injury in question.” 676
F.3d at 1379. We also explained that “no evidence should
 be embargoed from the special master’s consideration
 simply because it is also relevant to another inquiry under
 the statute.” Id. at 1380. We agree with Stone that a court
 should consider all evidence in the record, including evi-
 dence of other possible sources of injury. There is, however,
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 14                                            SHARPE   v. HHS

 a fine line between a court properly considering evidence
 in the record, Stone, 676 F.3d at 1380, and improperly plac-
 ing the burden on the petitioner to prove that her signifi-
 cantly aggravated condition was not caused by her gene
 mutation. See Whitecotton, 81 F.3d at 1106. Here, the Spe-
 cial Master unequivocally engaged in the latter. See J.A.
 36, 51.
      The government argues that the Special Master’s ap-
 plication of Loving prong 3 was in line with our decision in
 Locane v. Secretary of Health & Human Services, 685 F.3d
1375 (Fed. Cir. 2012). We disagree. In Locane, the special
 master did not require the petitioner to prove that her sig-
 nificantly aggravated condition was not caused by her pre-
 existing condition. 685 F.3d at 1381. Instead, the special
 master found that the petitioner’s condition “was not af-
 fected by the vaccination.” Id. at 1378. This proposition is
 not new. In any vaccine case, if the evidence as a whole
 ultimately shows that the vaccine was not a substantial
 factor in causing the petitioner’s injury, then compensation
 should be denied. 2
     For the above reasons, the Special Master legally erred
 in applying Loving prong 3.

      2  To the extent that Locane could be read as requir-
 ing a comparison of a petitioner’s current, post-vaccination
 condition with her expected outcome to establish a signifi-
 cant aggravation, then that portion of Locane conflicts with
 Whitecotton.      Because Whitecotton pre-dates Locane,
 Whitecotton would govern. See Newell Cos. v. Kenney Mfg.
 Co., 864 F.2d 757, 765 (Fed. Cir. 1988) (“Where there is di-
 rect conflict, the precedential decision is the first.”).
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 SHARPE   v. HHS                                              15

                       B. Loving prong 4
     Petitioner argues that the Special Master legally erred
 in applying Loving prong 4. For the below reasons, we
 agree with Petitioner.
      The Special Master’s Loving prong 4 analysis indicates
 that Petitioner had to eliminate L.M.’s pre-existing gene
 mutation as the cause of her significantly aggravated sei-
 zure disorder. Specifically, the Special Master faulted Pe-
 titioner for not sufficiently showing that L.M.’s gene
 mutation would have “more likely than not” resulted in a
 benign trajectory. J.A. 54. The Special Master also noted
 that:
     No doubt future research may . . . make it easier to
     conclude that a tail-located DYNC mutation is un-
     likely to be pathogenic [i.e., disease-causing] in the
     manner relevant herein. But such research does
     not yet exist, and on the present record I do not find
     that Petitioner’s showing established the first “can
     cause” [Loving] prong.
Id. (emphasis added). This analysis is legally flawed.
     First, a petitioner may be able to make out a prima fa-
 cie case under Loving prong 4 without eliminating a pre-
 existing condition as the cause of her significantly aggra-
 vated injury. And if the petitioner does so, the burden falls
 on the government under the “factor unrelated” inquiry to
 show that the pre-existing condition caused the signifi-
 cantly worsened condition. Walther v. Sec’y of Health &
 Human Servs., 485 F.3d 1146, 1151 (Fed. Cir. 2007) (noting
 that “the government bears the burden of establishing al-
 ternative causation . . . once the petitioner has established
 a prima facie case”). Under Loving prong 4, a petitioner
 need only provide a “medical theory causally connecting
 [petitioner’s] significantly worsened condition to the vac-
 cination.” Loving, 86 Fed. Cl. at 144. In other words, Peti-
 tioner was required to present a medically plausible theory
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 16                                                 SHARPE   v. HHS

 demonstrating that a vaccine “can” cause a significant
 worsening of L.M.’s seizure disorder. See Pafford ex rel.
 Pafford v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs., 451 F.3d 1352,
 1356–57 (Fed. Cir. 2006).
     Second, the Special Master should not have been con-
 cerned with what “future research” may show but rather
 with the research presented in the record. See Knudsen,
35 F.3d at 549.
      [A court] is . . . not to be seen as a vehicle for ascer-
      taining precisely how and why DTP and other vac-
      cines sometimes destroy the health and lives of
      certain children while safely immunizing most oth-
      ers. This research is for scientists, engineers, and
      doctors working in hospitals, laboratories, medical
      institutes, pharmaceutical companies, and govern-
      ment agencies. The special masters are not “diag-
      nosing” vaccine-related injuries. The sole issues for
      the special master are, based on the record evi-
      dence as a whole and the totality of the case,
      whether it has been shown by a preponderance of
      the evidence that a vaccine caused the child’s in-
      jury.
Id. The Vaccine Injury Program, after all, is designed to
 “allow the finding of causation in a field bereft of complete
 and direct proof of how vaccines affect the human body.”
 Althen, 418 F.3d at 1280.
      The Special Master separately determined that Peti-
 tioner failed under Loving prong 4 because the medical lit-
 erature regarding the SCN1A gene mutation, a different
 gene mutation than at issue here, “effectively rebutted” Pe-
 titioner’s medical theory. J.A. 55. The Special Master em-
 phasized that because “the environmental impact of
 vaccination was not deemed significant enough to alter the
 course” of a SCN1A gene mutation, the same must be true
 for the DYNC1H1 gene mutation. Id. (emphasis removed).
 The Special Master noted that Petitioner “perhaps could
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 SHARPE   v. HHS                                            17

 have” succeeded under Loving prong 4 if Petitioner had “re-
 butted evidence offered about SCN1A mutations.” Id.,
 n.50.
     The Special Master doubles down on his legal error.
 Petitioner only had to set forth a medical theory that L.M.’s
 February 10th vaccinations could worsen her seizure dis-
 order. Loving, 86 Fed. Cl. at 144. Yet, the Special Master
 required Petitioner either to prove an additional medical
 theory—that vaccines could alter the course of an SCN1A
 mutation—or to disprove the applicability of SCN1A re-
 search to DYNC1H1 patients. This was not Petitioner’s
 burden to carry.
      The Special Master then determined that Petitioner
 separately failed to meet Loving prong 4 because the pa-
 tient cited in the Ambry report (“Ambry patient”), a report
 cited by both parties’ experts, effectively disproved Peti-
 tioner’s medical theory. See J.A. 54. According to the Spe-
 cial Master, the Ambry patient belied Petitioner’s medical
 theory because the Ambry patient had the same genetic
 mutation and same severe outcome as L.M. See J.A. 52–
 54. This conclusion is arbitrary and capricious and must
 be set aside. See Paluck v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs.,
 786 F.3d 1373, 1380 (Fed. Cir. 2015) (noting that this court
 has “a duty to ensure that the special master has properly
 applied [the] Vaccine Act . . . and articulated a rational ba-
 sis for [his] decision” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
 Neither party established whether the Ambry patient faced
 any of the same environmental factors that arguably af-
 fected the outcome of L.M.’s mutation, including vaccina-
 tion. If the Ambry patient was also vaccinated, then the
 patient’s condition could also have been caused by her vac-
 cine. 3 Additionally, even if the Ambry patient suffered

     3   The Special Master recognized that the Ambry pa-
 tient may or may not have received any vaccines but found
 this point “only strengthens the relevance” of the Ambry
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 18                                               SHARPE   v. HHS

 from the same condition as L.M. without vaccination, a sin-
 gle example cannot establish the typical progression of a
 disease; nor is such a singular example sufficient to dis-
 prove a medical theory that a vaccine can cause aggrava-
 tion in some patients. Yet, it is clear from the record that
 the Special Master concluded that given the Ambry pa-
 tient, L.M. was destined to have a severe outcome. See
 J.A. 25, 54. This deterministic mindset does not belong in
 the Vaccine Injury Program. 4
      Lastly, the Special Master found that Petitioner’s med-
 ical theory—that vaccines could constitute a sufficient “en-
 vironmental insult” to exacerbate the effects of L.M.’s
 underlying seizure disorder—was not persuasive. See
 J.A. 55; see also J.A. 21. Specifically, the Special Master
 explained that Petitioner’s medical expert did not “offer lit-
 erature specifically addressing the propensity of any vac-
 cine to exacerbate a disease otherwise attributable to a

 patient. J.A. 54 n.49. For if the Ambry patient experienced
 the same outcome as L.M. without being vaccinated, the
 Special Master noted, “the conclusion that the vaccines had
 no impact on L.M.’s outcome is strengthened.” Id. We re-
 ject this finding because it is based on an unsubstantiated
 fact—that the Ambry patient was not vaccinated.
      4   As the government’s expert testified, geneticists
 “dream” of discovering a “genotype-phenotype correlation”
 which would allow geneticists to predict the outcome of a
 child with a gene mutation, but geneticists are not there
 yet. See J.A. 389: 5–12. Thus, until science provides us
 with better answers, it is not the place of a court to assume
 that a child with a genetic mutation is destined to have a
 severe outcome. “The role of genetic knowledge in the vac-
 cine compensation program requires deeper understanding
 than [a] ‘destiny’ pejorative . . . .” Oliver v. Sec’y of Health
 & Human Servs., 911 F.3d 1381, 1384 (Fed. Cir. 2009)
 (Newman, J., dissenting in denial of rehearing en banc).
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 SHARPE   v. HHS                                               19

 genetic mutation and this component of his overall opinion
 had a conclusory character to it.” J.A. 21. The Special Mas-
 ter’s finding is legally and factually erroneous.
      First, medical literature is not required under Loving
 prong 4. See Andreu ex rel. Andreu v. Sec’y of Health &
 Human Servs., 569 F.3d 1367, 1378–79 (Fed. Cir. 2009) (ex-
 plaining that a petitioner can satisfy her burden to prove a
 plausible medical theory without resort to medical litera-
 ture, epidemiological studies, demonstration of a specific
 mechanism, or a generally accepted medical theory). “Re-
 quiring epidemiologic studies . . . or general acceptance in
 the scientific or medical communities . . . impermissibly
 raises a claimant’s burden under the Vaccine Act and hin-
 ders the system created by Congress, in which close calls
 regarding causation are resolved in favor of injured claim-
 ants.” Id. at 1378 (internal quotation marks omitted).
 Thus, the Special Master’s rejection of Petitioner’s medical
 theory due to an absence of medical literature was legal er-
 ror.
        Second, contrary to the Special Master’s determina-
 tion, the record shows that Petitioner’s medical theory was
 not merely based on “personal supposition.” J.A. 55. Ra-
 ther, Petitioner’s medical theory was substantiated by the
 government’s medical expert, Dr. Descartes. Dr. Descartes
 explained in her expert report that “[s]eizures induce
 neuro-inflammation, which in turn fosters further sei-
 zures; pre-existing neuro-inflammation decreases the sei-
 zure threshold, worsening the consequences of seizure-
 triggering event.” J.A. 309. Additionally, Dr. Descartes
 testified that regardless of the absence of medical litera-
 ture, viral infections “could very well interact” with a
 DYNC1H1 mutation. J.A. 414. She testified that “when a
 person has an infection, even a cold or a virus or a bacteria
 . . . it’s under stress, definitely, and it could probably affect
 the system.” Id. She further testified that “[i]t’s not un-
 common that children that have genetic problems do not
 handle infections better than children that do not have
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 20                                            SHARPE   v. HHS

 genetic problems, because . . . the genetic condition they
 have puts them at extra risk of deterioration.” Id. The
 Special Master even acknowledged that the government’s
 expert “allow[ed] that a wild virus infection could consti-
 tute an environmental factor that might interact with the
 sequelae primarily stemming from a genetic variant, due
 to a reduced tolerance to infection.” J.A. 26. Given this
 record, in which both parties’ experts agree that vaccina-
 tions can adversely interact with a DYNC1H1 gene muta-
 tion, the Special Master’s rejection of Petitioner’s medical
 theory was arbitrary and capricious and must be set aside.
 See Paluck, 786 F.3d at 1380. To hold otherwise would ef-
 fectively require Petitioner to provide conclusive evidence
 linking L.M.’s February 10th vaccinations to her seizure
 disorder, which is not Petitioner’s burden to carry. See An-
 dreu, 569 F.3d at 1378 (holding that the special master
 erred in requiring conclusive evidence in the medical liter-
 ature linking the DPT vaccine to afebrile seizures).
                      C. Loving prong 5
     Loving prong 5 requires a petitioner to show “a logical
 sequence of cause and effect showing that the vaccination
 was the reason for the significant aggravation.” Loving, 86
Fed. Cl. at 144. In other words, Petitioner had to show that
 the vaccinations “did” cause a worsening of the L.M.’s sei-
 zure disorder. See id.
     Here, the Special Master acknowledged that L.M.’s
 condition changed for the worse immediately after her Feb-
 ruary 10th vaccinations. See J.A. 56. The Special Master,
 however, noted that “if L.M.’s seizure activity (like her un-
 derlying genetic DYNC mutation) predated vaccination, it
 becomes more difficult to conclude that the February 10th
 vaccinations worsened it.” Id. (emphasis added). The Spe-
 cial Master then concluded that Petitioner failed to meet
 Loving prong 5 because, in part, “it is quite likely that
 L.M.’s seizures in fact began prior to vaccination.” Id. This
 reasoning is erroneous and must be set aside. See Paluck,
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 SHARPE   v. HHS                                            21
786 F.3d at 1380. A significant aggravation claim, by defi-
 nition, requires a petitioner to have a pre-existing injury.
 Here, L.M.’s pre-existing injury was her seizure disorder.
 See J.A. 18, 55. Thus, that L.M. experienced some seizure
 episodes before receiving her vaccination should have no
 negative affect on Petitioner’s case. In light of this flawed
 reasoning, the Special Master’s finding under Loving prong
 5 must be set aside. 5
                     D. “Factor Unrelated”
      Lastly, Petitioner challenges the Special Master’s find-
 ing under the “factor unrelated” inquiry. As noted earlier,
 if a petitioner carries her initial burden to prove causation-
 in-fact, the burden shifts to the government to show by a
 preponderance of the evidence that a “factor unrelated” to
 the vaccine was the “sole substantial factor in bringing
 about the injury.” Hammit ex rel. Hammit v. Sec’y of
 Health & Human Servs., 98 Fed. Cl. 719, 726 (2011), aff’d
 sub nom. Stone ex rel. Stone v. Sec’y of Health & Human
 Servs., 676 F.3d 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2012). If the government
 fails to carry its burden, the petitioner is entitled to com-
 pensation. See 42 U.S.C. § 300aa–13(a)(1)(A)–(B).

     5   In certain cases, a petitioner can establish a logical
 sequence of cause and effect between a vaccination and the
 injury (Loving prong 5) with a medical opinion to that effect
 where the petitioner has proved that the vaccination can
 cause the injury (Loving prong 4) and that the vaccination
 and injury have a close temporal proximity (Loving prong
 6). See Moriarty ex rel. Moriarty v. Sec’y of Health & Hu-
 man Servs., 844 F.3d 1322, 1333 (Fed. Cir. 2016). While
 we believe that this is such a case, we hesitate to determine
 that in the first instance. Thus, on remand, the Special
 Master should consider whether Petitioner’s showing un-
 der Loving prongs 4 and 6 satisfies Loving prong 5.
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 22                                            SHARPE   v. HHS

     Here, the Special Master found that L.M.’s DYNC1H1
 gene mutation was the sole, substantial factor in causing
 L.M.’s seizure disorder. The record does not support this
 finding.
     L.M.’s mutation is located in the stem region of the
 DYNC1H1 gene. The record shows that mutations in this
 region of the gene generally result in non-severe, non-cog-
 nitive disorders, such as spinal muscular atrophy with
 lower extremity predominance (a disorder that causes
 weak and poorly coordinated legs). J.A. 8, 24, 53, 373–75,
 412–13, 187–88, 193, 216–17, 221–50. The record also
 shows that it was generally the exception for a stem region
 mutation to lead to a severe, cognitive disorder, such as
 L.M.’s seizure disorder. J.A. 8, 19–20, 24, 51–53, 373–75,
 412–13, 216–17. The government’s expert even testified
 that a stem mutation in the DYNC1H1 gene resulting in a
 “severe” outcome is the “exception.” J.A. 397: 13–16. Ra-
 ther, the evidence in the record indicates that severe cog-
 nitive disorders were generally associated with mutations
 in the motor region of the DYNC1H1 gene, a separate re-
 gion from the stem region. J.A. 8, 19, 24–25, 53–54, 373–
 77, 396–97, 410–13, 192–93, 216–18. The Special Master
 acknowledged that the severity of a disorder varies be-
 tween stem region and motor region mutations. J.A. 54
 (noting that the “location of the mutation affects pheno-
 type”).
     Thus, against this backdrop, there is no substantial ev-
 idence to support the conclusion that L.M.’s stem mutation
 was more likely than not the sole, substantial factor causing
 her severe seizure disorder. The science in the record uni-
 formly supports the opposite—a stem mutation in the
 DYNC1H1 gene is generally more likely than not going to
 lead to a non-severe, non-cognitive disorder. Thus, the
 Special Master’s “factor unrelated” finding must be set
 aside as arbitrary and capricious. Paluck, 786 F.3d at
 1380.
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 SHARPE   v. HHS                                            23

     To uphold the Special Master’s finding would effec-
 tively allow the government to prevail under the “factor un-
 related” inquiry with mere proof of a gene mutation. As a
 result, children with gene mutations will be shut out from
 the Vaccine Injury Program. Congress did not intend such
 a result. Congress envisioned that children with pre-exist-
 ing conditions, such as gene mutations, could potentially
 recover. In particular, Congress allowed for significant ag-
 gravation theories based on pre-existing conditions:
     in order not to exclude serious cases of illness be-
     cause of possible minor events in the person’s past
     medical history. This provision does not include
     compensation for conditions which might legiti-
     mately be described as pre-existing (e.g., a child
     with monthly seizures who, after vaccination, has
     seizures every three and a half weeks), but is
     meant to encompass serious deterioration (e.g.[,] a
     child with monthly seizures who, after vaccination,
     has seizures on a daily basis).
 H.R. Rep. 908, 99th Cong., 2d Sess. Pt. 1 (1986), reprinted
 in USCCAN 6344, 6356–57 (emphasis added).
      In sum, this off-table claim presents the difficult but
 important task of determining whether a child’s receipt of
 vaccinations significantly aggravated her seizure disorder
 in the face of an underlying genetic mutation. Our case law
 is clear that given the complexity of a significant aggrava-
 tion claim, a petitioner should not be required to disprove
 that a pre-existing genetic mutation caused her significant
 aggravation. Because the Special Master placed this extra
 burden on Petitioner and because the Special Master made
 factual findings unsupported by the record, we vacate the
 Special Master’s denial of Petitioner’s off-table claim and
 remand this claim for further proceedings.
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 24                                          SHARPE   v. HHS

                         CONCLUSION
     We have considered the parties’ remaining arguments
 but find them unpersuasive. For the above reasons, we af-
 firm the Special Master’s denial of Petitioner’s on-table
 claim and vacate and remand the Special Master’s denial
 of Petitioner’s off-table claim for further proceedings.
          AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED AND
                REMANDED IN PART
                             COSTS
      Costs to the Petitioner.