Published: Apr 29, 2014
FiDA
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WASHINGTON -- The FDA has proposed reclassification
of surgical mesh for transvaginal repair of pelvic organ prolapse
(POP) as a "high-risk
device," a designation that mandates an FDA review of safety and
effectiveness prior to considering approval.
The agency also wants to reclassify
certain instruments used to perform POP repair as
"intermediate-risk devices," as opposed to the current low-risk
designation.
"The FDA has identified clear risks associated
with surgical mesh for the transvaginal repair of pelvic organ prolapse and is
now proposing to address those risks for more safe and effective
products," William Maisel, MD, of the FDA's Center for Devices and
Radiological Health, said in a statement. "If these proposals are
finalized, we will require manufacturers to provide premarket clinical data to
demonstrate a reasonable assurance of safety and effectiveness for surgical
mesh used to treat transvaginal POP repair."
The
proposal does not affect surgical mesh used to treat stress urinary
incontinence (SUI), abdominal POP repair, hernia repair, and other
nonurogynecologic indications. The proposal is subject to a 90-day
public-comment period prior to a final decision.
The proposed reclassification follows
other FDA actions and statements related to transvaginal POP repair materials
going back 6 years:
October
2008 -- Released a Public Health Notification about serious complications
associated with transvaginal placement of surgical mesh for POP and SUI
July
2011 -- Released an updated safety
communication about serious complications associated with
transvaginal POP repair with surgical mesh
July
2011 -- Released a review of urogynecologic
surgical mesh adverse events and scientific literature, identifying
serious safety and effectiveness concerns
September
2011 -- FDA's Obstetrics and
Gynecology Devices Panel recommended reclassification of surgical
mesh for transvaginal POP repair from class II to class III and require
premarket approval
January
2012 -- FDA ordered manufacturers to conduct postmarket
surveillance studies to address specific safety and effectiveness
concerns about surgical mesh used for transvaginal POP repair
Some materials to repair POP come as
kits that include the mesh and instruments used to place, attach, and secure
the mesh. Instruments also are sold separately from the mesh, and the FDA
proposal to reclassify instruments pertains to the instruments that are not included
in kits.
The
FDA action represents a case of "too little, too late," according to
Michael Carome, director of Public Citizen's Health Research Group, a
Washington-based public health advocacy group. Public Citizen has petitioned
the FDA to recall all surgical mesh products from the market.
"Today's
action comes nearly 3 years after our petition and after an FDA advisory
committee recommended such action," Carome said in a statement.
"Moreover, the proposed timeline for full implementation of the FDA's
order, if finalized, will take several more years.
"As a result
of the FDA's reckless delays and inadequate action regarding surgical mesh for
transvaginal POP repair, thousands of women will continue to be unnecessarily
exposed to a wide array of serious risks, many of which can permanently alter
women's quality of life."
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