Joint replacements are the #1 expenditure of Medicare. The process of approving these medical devices is flawed according to the Institute of Medicine. It is time for patients' voices to be heard as stakeholders and for public support for increased medical device industry accountability and heightened protections for patients. Post-market registry. Product warranty. Patient/consumer stakeholder equity. Rescind industry pre-emptions/entitlements. All clinical trials must report all data.
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Showing posts with label Essure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Essure. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 24, 2018

'The Bleeding Edge' Netflix documentary July 27, 2018 (Friday)

"I don't know how anyone could let this happen."
JUL 23, 2018


Years after the first reports of hazardous effects of birth control device Essure—and days before a Netflix documentary about it drops—manufacturer Bayer announced it will stop selling the controversial implant. The company framed its decision as based on poor sales, but the timing is hard to ignore: The Bleeding Edge, a documentary about medical devices gone awry that uses Essure as a prime example, drops on July 27. Essure was pulled July 20.
"We continue to stand behind the product's safety and efficacy," Bayer said in a statement. The company has maintained for years that Essure, a kind of metal coil that is implanted in the Fallopian tubes to block sperm, is safe, despite facing roughly 16,000 lawsuits from women who say they suffered ill effects after using it, including organ perforation, chronic and excessive pain, and unintended pregnancies. Yet Essure was discontinued due to a "business decision," the company said, citing "a decline in sales."
Meanwhile, Friday marks the launch of The Bleeding Edge, a Netflix documentary from the creators of The Hunting Ground. The Hollywood Reporter describes it as "a terrifying eye-opener," and Indiewire writes that it "stands a good chance at enlightening more people who have been (or might be) hoodwinked." The documentary isn't just about Essure—it focuses on a handful of medical devices that have caused major complications, including "vaginal mesh" and hip replacements—but Essure is framed as a banner example of good intentions gone haywire.
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When it comes to Essure, Bayer has suffered a particularly nasty year. Essure has been pulled or withdrawn from every country where it had been offered outside of the United States—Canada, the U.K., the Netherlands, you name it—and in April, the FDA announced it would be restricting sales of Essure to ensure that all women who consider it are fully aware of the risks. (Restricting sales, in this case, means only selling the device to facilities that agreed to review a set checklist with doctors and patients.) That said: "The FDA continues to believe that the benefits of the device outweigh its risks," the statement noted.

Once billed as the only permanent contraceptive device on the market, Essure has since become a buzzword for unexpected complications. On Facebook and other social media sites, there exists a growing community of Essure-affected women who congregate to share their experiences. Between 2002 and 2017, close to 30,000 women filed formal reports of "adverse effects" with the FDA after using Essure.

You can stream The Bleeding Edge on Netflix from July 27.
https://www.marieclaire.com/health-fitness/a22518890/netflix-the-bleeding-edge-essure/

BAYER Essure sterilization device: FAILED globally.

Bayer to phase out Essure birth control device in U.S.



NEW YORK (Reuters) - Life sciences company Bayer AG said on Friday it would discontinue the sale of its birth control product Essure in the United States, citing a decline in sales of the implantable device that made the business no longer sustainable.

The decision followed an announcement by the company in September 2017 that it would discontinue the sale of the contentious sterilization device in all countries outside the United States.
Bayer said in a statement that the decision was not related to safety concerns. The company, based in Leverkusen, Germany, is facing some 16,000 U.S. lawsuits over Essure, and it said it was expecting more.
“The benefit-risk profile of Essure has not changed, and we continue to stand behind the product’s safety and efficacy, which are demonstrated by an extensive body of research,” Bayer said.
It said it had informed the U.S. Food and Drug Administration of its decision and would update healthcare providers.

Essure will be gradually phased out and U.S. sales halted by the end of this year. Doctors will be able to perform Essure procedures until the end of next year when they will be asked to return unused devices.
FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said in a statement that the agency would continue to monitor Essure’s safety, and added, “We expect Bayer to meet its postmarket obligations concerning this device.”
Early in 2016, the FDA put its strongest safety warning label on the device after thousands of complaints and asked the drugmaker to conduct a post-market study.
The agency said it received nearly 12,000 reports in 2017 related to Essure.
Bayer said extensive research by the company and independent medical researchers showed Essure was safe.
Women have claimed in lawsuits that Essure, which is implanted in a woman’s fallopian tubes to permanently block the passage of eggs to the uterus, could pierce the tubes, and that metal parts of the device could become dislodged and migrate to other parts of the body, causing pain, injuries and severe bleeding.

They also claimed that the device failed to prevent unwanted pregnancies and led to nickel allergies and depression.
Bayer has been accused in lawsuits of knowing the risks associated with Essure and failing to warn sellers, doctors and regulators.
Marcus Susen, a Florida-based lawyer representing a number of women who have sued the company, called its decision long overdue, and said it would be up to a jury to decide if Bayer stopped the sale of Essure for commercial or safety reasons.
Bayer spokesman Steven Immergut said the company had sold roughly one million Essure devices worldwide since the product came on the market in 2002.
The majority of those sales were in the United States, he said, where the company has seen an average 40 percent annual sales decline in the device since its introduction.
In April, the FDA said some women were not being properly informed of the risks associated with Essure before getting implanted and it limited its sale to healthcare facilities providing full information about its risks and benefits.

Bayer said in a statement that the decline in sales was due to an overall decrease of permanent contraception in the United States, a growing reliance on other birth control methods and “inaccurate and misleading publicity about the device.”

Reporting by Tina Bellon; Editing by Clive McKeef, Toni Reinhold

Thursday, December 21, 2017

Spain Bans Bayer Essure Sterilization Coils




After civil proceedings were opened against pharmaceutical company Bayer all over the world because of the higher risks of serious adverse reactions associated with its contraceptives (see HERE), now, under the authority of the Ministry of Health of Spain, has called for pharmaceutical giant Bayer to stop marketing the contraceptive Essure and to withdraw it from the market, ” as it does not have a valid CE marking certificate”. Thus, as a precautionary measure to avoid birth control implant risks, the Spanish Agency for Medicines and Medical Devices (AEMPS) has ordered health centers and professionals who have Essure to stop using it.

The AEMPS note explains that “Essure® is a permanent contraceptive system, designed to be used as a micro-insert to block the Fallopian tubes and that acts mechanically by causing a foreign body reaction that causes blockage of the tube”. It adds that “it is not advisable to remove the device or modify the follow-up guidelines of users.” Suspension of the certificate was effective from 3 August 2017 for a period of 90 days until 2 November 2017. On 4 August, the European Union took the decision to suspend the marketing of these sterilization implants for three months, after the body responsible for renewing the certification required additional elements before reaching a decision (see further information HERE)

Wednesday, September 27, 2017

Get an Unsafe, Ineffective Medical Implant & Lose Your Civil Rights!



September 26, 2017 Press Release
WASHINGTON, DC (September 26, 2017) Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro (CT-03) released the following statement urging Congress to pass the Medical Device Safety Act, which would enhance legal protection for victims of unsafe medical devices. Currently, high risk device manufacturers are protected from being held liable at the state and local levels if their device has received premarket approval from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
”One of our government’s most important duties is to keep our people safe from harm, whether it is the food we eat, the medications we take, or the medical devices we use,” said DeLauro. “Too often, that basic mission is going unfulfilled at the FDA. Failure at the FDA has awful consequences, as faulty medical devices have tragically injured, or even killed, thousands of Americans across the country.

“Instead of serving as a steward for public safety, the FDA has put its stamp of approval on these potentially unsafe devices, with manufacturers’ bearing no legal risk when things go wrong,” continued DeLauro. “Even after the FDA knows that these devices put people at risk, it simply will not take them off the market. That is why Congress must immediately pass the Medical Device Safety Act, to arm American families with the necessary tools to hold these companies accountable once and for all. I will not let up in the fight—alongside my colleagues and consumer advocates—to get this life-saving legislation signed into law.”
“The health of thousands of women has been negatively affected by FDA’s lack of proper oversight, specifically with Essure,” said Amanda Rusmisell, Legislative Liaison for the Essure Problems Group. “This product not only impacts women’s quality of life, it also puts an enormous financial strain on them and their families. Despite FDA’s Black Box Warning on Essure and our pleas to take this product off the market, women are still in the dark about its potential dangers— such as hysterectomies, autoimmune diseases, additional surgeries, and life-threatening health effects. That is why the Medical Device Safety Act is so crucial. Women deserve to know about the dangers of this product, and if they are impacted by Essure, they must be able to take action.”

DeLauro is a senior member on the subcommittee responsible for funding the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
###


2413 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
Phone: (202) 225-3661
Fax: (202) 225-4890

59 Elm Street
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Phone: (203) 562-3718

Fax: (203) 772-2260

Thursday, June 8, 2017

FDA Fails to Protect Patients from PREVENTABLE Bayer Essure Harm.

Updated: JUNE 6, 2017 — 7:38 PM EDT


by Marie McCullough, Staff Writer mmccullough@phillynews.com
The ranks of women harmed by Essure sterilization coils continue to grow, while the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s efforts to inform them of the risks are not working, a 37,000-member advocacy group declared Tuesday.


Administrators of the six-year-old Facebook group Essure Problems said that in the first quarter of this year, the FDA received about 2,000 reports of women who underwent operations — usually hysterectomies — to remove coils that were causing complications such as pain and bleeding.
More than 9,000 removals have been reported since 2009, in addition to miscarriages, fetal deaths, and other problems, according to an analysis of the FDA’s “adverse events” reporting system. It was conducted by Madris Tomes, a former FDA manager who is the founding CEO of Device Events, based in York, Pa.


Angie Marie Firmalino, 44, a co-founder of the Essure Problem group on Facebook
“More than 15,500 adverse-event reports have been filed,” said Essure Problems cofounder Angie Marie Firmalino, 44, of Tannersville, N.Y., who needed a hysterectomy to get rid of fragments of broken coils. “We feel like the FDA needs to step in and take action. How much harm is acceptable for a non-lifesaving device?
Asked for comment, the FDA said it “continues to review the available information about Essure, including reports of problems submitted to the FDA.”

The manufacturer, Bayer Healthcare, emailed: “We take all adverse events seriously. … We have reached out to many women who have reported complications … and provided any guidance we can. There are risks with all medical procedures.”

Surgeries to Remove Essure
This analysis of data from the FDA’s voluntary adverse events reporting system shows how many women needed surgery — either hysterectomy or fallopian tube removal — to remove the Essure sterilization coils because of severe problems such as pain and bleeding. Reports have been steadily increasing with growing awareness of the dangers.




Essure Problems has been among those pushing the FDA since 2013 to take Essure off the market. The coils, approved 15 years ago, are implanted in the fallopian tubes to scar them shut. The device is marketed as a simple, nonsurgical alternative to conventional tubal surgery.
Last year, the FDA ordered Bayer to add label warnings that Essure can cause chronic pain, organ perforation, and allergic reactions, and to create a “patient decision checklist.”
But about 200 women have contacted Essure Problems over the last six months to say that doctors did not tell them about the label warnings or use the three-page checklist.
“Unfortunately for many women, they are being implanted without informed consent,” administrators of the Facebook group emailed the FDA on Monday, demanding tougher action.
The FDA’s response, shared by the group: “We understand your frustration. We assure you, Essure is a high-priority issue for the Agency and we continue to take feedback like yours into consideration.”
Bayer, which acquired Essure in 2013, has been hit by thousands of lawsuits over the coils. Last year, the German-based company’s annual report said it incurred losses of $413 million in connection with the devices.

Bayer has said it does not know how many women have implants, just that about a million Essure “kits” had been sold worldwide, most in the U.S. The company recently announced it would discontinue sales in two small markets, Finland and the Netherlands.

Tuesday, May 9, 2017

No Objective Patient Outcome Data: Sacrificial Lambs




Updated: May 07, 2017 9:51 AM CDT

By Kent Luetzen

MISSOULA -
Women from around the country who have been harmed by medical devices such as Essure --  a type of birth control -- used their voices to rally on Saturday. One rally was held in Missoula in hopes of raising awareness about what they call "hidden dangers" of some FDA-approved products. 




The group says women deserve better communication from doctors on the side effects of products and for manufacturers to not hide behind the FDA's pre-market approval certification.
For some of these women, products which were said to be safe have caused serious health issues including autoimmune diseases such as eczema, lupus and celiac disease.
Ray Curtis, who’s wife died from hysterectomy complications, is hoping Montana legislators will continue their work to protect women.
"They're (treated) almost like human guinea pigs. These devices are being used for purposes they weren't intended to be used for," Curtis said.  "Legislation can bring about awareness to begin with, but also get government to protect woman who are unsuspected like my wife and me... we didn't know.."

Missoula's rally was just one of over 20 throughout the United States.

Thursday, October 22, 2015

Ad hoc: FDA 'Surveillance' of Implanted Medical Devices


How Safety Concerns About Essure Reveal A Path To Better Device Tracking

October 15, 2015
On September 24, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) convened a public advisory committee meeting to discuss safety concerns about the Essure — a permanent birth control device that is implanted in the Fallopian tubes in order to create a tissue barrier and prevent pregnancy. The meeting of the Obstetrics and Gynecology Devices Panel was prompted by complaints submitted to the manufacturer (Bayer) and the FDA about unusual side effects—including patient deaths—and other health concerns that were not reflected in the labeling.
The ad hoc nature of such meetings, as a reaction to over 5,000 complaints, is a product of the U.S.’s current device surveillance system which itself is ad hoc in nature. Once a device is approved for market, the FDA relies heavily on these voluntarily submitted complaints in order to flag any potential adverse effects not identified during initial testing — a system that, the agency acknowledges, may be “incomplete, inaccurate, untimely, unverified, or biased.” In recent years, the FDA has renewed its efforts to actively strengthen or revamp this system.
At the September 24 Essure meeting, medical device experts reviewed the complaints alongside scientific data from two post-market studies conducted by the manufacturer. Conspicuously absent from the discussion at this meeting, however, were the volumes of real-world objective data that should theoretically be collected—systematically, quickly, and cheaply—from health systems and health plans like ours.
Unfortunately, the main reason we at Geisinger Health System in Pennsylvania and other similar systems cannot quickly and routinely access that data today is that most clinical information systems (e.g., claims databases, billing systems, and electronic health records) reliably track surgical procedures but not the specific brand and model of the implantable device a patient receives. Essure, however, is a unique case which provides us with a preview of what a truly robust device tracking system would allow through the use of device-specific information integrated into these databases.
Essure As A Unique Test Case For Unique Device Identification
Electronic health records, billing, and claims records are not currently focused on tracking individual devices; instead, they depend upon standardized procedure codes (e.g., Current Procedural Terminology [CPT] or the Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System [HCPCS]) to track a patient’s health care encounters. For most procedures, knowing what surgery a patient had doesn’t help you know what particular device they received. The procedure code for a hip replacement surgery could mean the patient received any one of dozens of brands and models of prosthesis currently on the market.
Essure is a serendipitous exception to that typical scenario. Since its approval by FDA in 2002, there has been only one competing device on the market for the same indications, and thus only one other product associated with the same procedure codes as Essure (e.g., CPT 58565). That competing device, the Adiana system manufactured by Hologic Inc., was approved in 2009 and withdrawn in May 2012, meaning that for the majority of its lifespan, the Essure has been the only medical implant on the market using a particular subset of procedure codes.
With unique procedure codes, it is possible to track the patients who received Essure (and their medical care post-surgery) in a way that is currently prohibitively difficult for the vast majority of other medical implants. Because claims and medical records lack specific device information, they are typically not a very useful resource for device researchers or policymakers. But in this rare instance of Essure, it may have been possible to utilize those data sources to analyze this product’s safety profile.
What Claims And Electronic Records Can Tell Us
At Geisinger Health System, we have easy access, via a centralized data warehouse, to data from both the managed care company (Geisinger Health Plan) and a provider/facility network (Geisinger Clinic) that have used electronic health records since 1996 via a centralized data warehouse. We examined these records to answer a few key questions about the history of Essure use among our patients and members.
Searching the health plan’s records from January 2006 until June 2015, we found 67 health plan members who unambiguously must have received the Essure because of their procedure code. (This excludes 20 patients who had the procedure during 2009-2012 when the Adiana device was competing with Essure, although those patients may have received the Essure, too.) When searching the provider/facility network, there were an additional 118 patients who had an Essure procedure at a Geisinger hospital during that timeframe using a different type of insurance, bringing the total number of Essure patients to 185.
So what do we know about these 185 patients?
  • All 185 are still alive.
  • None of the 185 women have had the device subsequently explanted.
  • We did not obtain contact information (e.g., phone, address) for these 185 patients for the purpose of this article, but we could have if needed, and in central Pennsylvania where the out-migration rate is traditionally very low, that contact information is very likely (though not guaranteed) to be current.
  • Taking an ever-so-slightly deeper dive into the data, we can see that between their initial surgery and today, there were a total of 38 women (20 percent) with some evidence of unwanted events: 20 (11 percent) were newly diagnosed with abdominal or pelvic pain, 16 (9 percent) with heavier menstrual bleeding, 1 with device complications such as migration or breakage, 2 with postoperative infection, 2 with uterine perforation, and 2 became pregnant after receiving the device.
We realize this broad analysis is overly simplistic, and we do not imply causation between the new diagnoses and the Essure device itself, particularly the pain and bleeding which can be more common symptoms of other conditions.
Note, however, that we completed all of the above analysis—from raw data extract to final counts—in a matter of hours, not days or weeks, highlighting the minimal time and effort needed to answer basic questions about this device’s utilization history. The answers to those basic questions could be a first step toward determining whether more rigorous investigation is justified. We believe that our ability to quantify these “real-world” outcomes so easily shows what is possible when standard codes in claims, billing, and electronic health data can link individual patients to a specific device.
Why Can’t We Get The Same Level Of Detail On Other Devices?
In the digital age, many patients likely assume their medical implants (particularly the life-saving ones) are meticulously logged by their health care providers for easy future reference. The reality is much more complex.
To illustrate this complexity, we examined two other commonly-used implants in our health system: hip replacements and knee replacements. Over the past eight years (since 2007), 6,535 members of our health plan received a primary hip or primary knee replacement, 4,191 of which were implanted at non-Geisinger hospitals. An additional 4,544 patients had one of these procedures done at a Geisinger hospital, paid for by a non-Geisinger insurance plan, for a total affected population of 11,079 patients. This is a substantial number of “our” members or patients who could potentially be affected should a safety issue arise with one of these implants. Unlike with the Essure, however, for the 4,191 insurance members who had joint surgery elsewhere, we have absolutely no ability to identify within our existing records which model (or even manufacturer) of implant they received.
For the remaining patients who did have surgery at a Geisinger hospital, discrete implant information theoretically should have been captured in the operating room suite software, but the reality falls short. We were unable to find discrete documentation (i.e., not counting scanned images or text notes) of the manufacturer and model for the devices used in 995 (14 percent) of these surgeries. We attribute this sizable shortfall to the many challenges encountered in the operating room, including non-standardized labeling, sometimes-confusing packaging with multiple identification numbers, manual keyboard entry of information, and the pressure on operating room staff to develop workarounds when necessary to expedite the surgery. In any case, the consequences are that that for roughly half of “our” affected patients with joint replacements, we cannot easily determine what implants they have.
What Can Be Done?
The FDA has taken preliminary steps towards a strengthened medical device surveillance system with the phased introduction of Unique Device Identification (UDI) numbers for all medical products. The UDI will replace the current practice whereby manufacturers choose their own model or serial numbers (which could be duplicative across different manufacturers): a 2013 FDA final rule required labels to bear a UDI that conforms to a standard format and uniquely distinguishes that device from any other on the market.
The implementation of this rule will be phased in over seven years; September 24, 2015 (coincidentally the same day as the Essure meeting) was the date after which labels of all implantable, life-supporting, and life-sustaining devices must bear a UDI. Lower risk devices will follow suit in the coming years. The disconnect, however, from the perspective of health care providers and payors, is that the mere presence of a UDI number on a label may not mean that it actually enters the patient’s medical record or insurance claims.
Adding the UDI number to product packaging is not enough to improve our knowledge about devices, unless:
  • Hospitals and health systems are committed to capturing and tracking that information;
  • Health care software vendors work with those hospitals to help store and retrieve the information; and,
  • Data standards organizations, such as Health Level Seven (HL7) and the Accredited Standards Committee (ASC) X12, help to develop tools for communicating that information between systems.
Integrating UDI all the way along the information pipeline including claims would allow us—and other researchers that utilize health plan data—to evaluate devices much in the same way that we utilize claims information for other purposes, such as examining prescription drug use and subsequent outcomes . Many organizations working to incorporate UDI into claims—including Aetna, the Society of Thoracic Surgeons, the American College of Cardiology, the National Association of ACOs, the Pew Charitable Trusts, and many others—argue that including UDI numbers in claims will provide better real-world data to evaluate long-terms outcomes associated with specific products.
Some have suggested that claims data are imperfect because patients may switch health plans or lack insurance, but as our demonstration highlights, claims data are already used for analysis and can provide earlier warning signs of product failures. Upgrading claims to accommodate UDI requires updates to the standard form used by all hospitals and health plans, a form that is updated by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), based on standards proposed by ASC X12. The form is updated infrequently with the next update expected in 2019 or 2020. Missing that window would delay the inclusion of this information—and analyses similar to our Essure demonstration—for at least a decade.
The main outcome of the September 24 FDA meeting—where testimony was heard from the Agency, the manufacturer, and a parade of witnesses and where a formal panel vote was not taken—was the recommendation that further study was needed. Even as the FDA considers the safety of a device that has allegedly harmed thousands of women, we should also consider how to identify problems with products more proactively.
Health care data such as claims and electronic medical records can provide that capability in a fraction of the time required to conduct a traditional surveillance study, but only efficiently and robustly once UDI data are added. Due to its 100 percent market share and an anomaly in its medical coding, Essure gives us a glimpse of how simple it could be if all device types could be discretely and uniquely linked to the experience of the patients who use them.

http://bit.ly/1MVv8KR

COMMENTS
Response to “How Safety Concerns About Essure Reveal A Path To Better Device Tracking”

  1. Laura Henze Russell says: 
  2. This is an excellent article. I testified at the FDA Essure Panel hearing. I did not have Essure, but have experience with another device illness due to biocompatibility issues, as have friends and associates. Even with Univeral Device Indicators, FDA regulations are still in the dark ages when it comes to patient safety. Patients need written information on materials composition and health risks, the right of written informed consent, pre-screening for biocompatbility to ensure it is “right for you” before a device is installed, and recourse and responsibility to fix things when they go wrong, instead of federal preemption that blocks responsibility to replace a device that is “wrong for you” through no fault of your own.

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Perverse Incentives: 10 Times More Likely To Need 'Revision' Surgery: Bayer Essure Study

Higher risk of surgery seen with Bayer Essure contraceptive -study


Oct 13, 2015 
Women implanted with Bayer AG's Essure permanent contraception device were more than 10 times more likely to require post-procedure surgery than those who underwent laparoscopic sterilization, a study published on Tuesday found.
The findings could cast additional doubt on the safety of the Bayer device, which was approved in 2002 as an alternative to surgical sterilization and acquired by Bayer in 2013. It has faced recent scrutiny from U.S. health regulators following numerous patient complaints and calls for its withdrawal from the market.
By one year after the initial procedure, 2.4 percent of Essure patients had required follow-up surgery compared with 0.2 percent of those who underwent the minimally-invasive tube tying procedure, laparoscopic sterilization, researchers found. That translates to about 21 additional surgeries per 1,000 patients receiving Essure, they said.
"Small risk in large numbers of patients translates into large numbers," said study leader Dr. Art Sedrakyan, professor of healthcare policy and research at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York.
"In some instances, these re-operations are quite major surgeries" including hysterectomies, he added.
The study, which analyzed coding data on medical records of some 52,000 women from outpatient ambulatory surgical centers in New York state between 2005 and 2013, was published in the British Medical Journal.
If the New York data were to be extrapolated to Essure use throughout the United States, you come up with about 150,000 patients getting this type of additional surgery, Sedrakyan said.
Both methods of contraception were equally effective, with about a 1 percent risk of unintended pregnancies.
Bayer, in a statement, defended the safety and efficacy of its device and cited limitations of the study, including that it was "based on a single database of one U.S. state" and unclear if it included patients who had Essure implantation in doctors' offices.
Bayer estimates there are about 750,000 women using Essure worldwide, about 70 percent of them in the United States.
Essure consists of two small nickel-titanium coils inserted into the fallopian tubes. Scar tissue forming around the device prevents pregnancy.
Personal injury lawsuits filed against Bayer have claimed the implant led to allergic reactions to nickel, severe pelvic pain, and surgeries to stabilize or remove the device after it shifted. More than 5,000 adverse events have been reported to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, though it is not always clear what role Essure played in any event.
The FDA last month convened an advisory panel to mull the benefits and risks of Essure, and discuss whether it should face restrictions or label changes. The agency, calling it a high priority issue, said it will review the study findings, its panel's recommendations and public comments "to determine what future actions may be appropriate" regarding Essure. (Reporting by Bill Berkrot; Editing by Andrew Hay)

http://reut.rs/1La54Jv

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

FDA, Medical Device Industry Profit and Harmed Women Collide With Pope Francis in DC on September 24

Essure complaints spike nearly 1,400% in 3 years

SEPTEMBER 22, 2015 BY BRAD PERRIELLO 

The FDA logged a nearly 1,400% spike in complaints filed over the Essure permanent female sterilization treatment made by Bayer (ETR:BAYN), according to a review released yesterday ahead of an FDA advisory panel meeting this week.
Essure, the only approved permanent birth control device in the U.S., is a small metal coil that is placed in the fallopian tubes via catheter. The FDA approved the device in November 2002.
In the near 13 years since then, the health regulator said it had received 5,093 complaints, including those of pain or menstrual irregularities after using the device, as well as complaints of the device breaking. Those adverse event reports include 5 fetal deaths in women who became pregnant after using Essure and 4 adult deaths for reasons such as infection and uterine perforation, the FDA said.
There were 152 complaints filed in the FDA’s Manufacturer & User Facility Device Experience database in 2012; last year there were 2,259 complaints filed in the MAUDE database, a 1,386% increase. So far this year there have been 1,363 MAUDE complaints filed with the FDA, the agency said. The FDA cautioned that the complaints it received had limitations such as incomplete or inaccurate data and did not necessarily directly indicate a faulty or defective device.



The FDA’s Obstetrics and Gynecology Devices advisory panel is set to meet Sept. 24 to discuss the risks and benefits of Essure and has invited feedback from presenters, panel members and the public. Some 17,000 women who had the device implanted and claim it has hurt them are members of the Facebook group “Essure Problems,” run by Angela Lynch, who herself experienced problems with Essure. Complaints voiced by the women include chronic pain, heavy bleeding, fatigue and skin allergies.
Lynch, who was 28 when she was implanted with the device, had 3 children and did not want any more.
“Because I had just had a kid I wrote off all my symptoms as hormonal, my body trying to adjust,” she said. “After 2 years I started losing hair. Then I started losing teeth, and over time it got to where my whole body was hurting.”
In 2012 she had the device removed and underwent a hysterectomy.
“After 3 days it was like I woke up from a 5-year flu,” she said.
In May, Bayer cited a 364-patient 5-year study of the device published in the Journal of Minimally Invasive Gynecology that indicated no pregnancies after 5 years and that the Essure inserts were “generally well tolerated.” Pelvic pain was reported in no more than 7% of patients, but no study participants reported persistent pelvic pain of any kind at the 3-, 4-, and 5-year follow-up visits, according to Bayer.
The study reported 3 serious adverse events “possibly related” to Essure in the trial, including irregular menstrual bleeding, lower abdominal pain and heavy periods and continuous bleeding. The latter 2 patients ended up having hysterectomies.
Dr. Patricia Carney, the company’s medical director for Essure, said Bayer welcomes the discussion. “We want to understand as a company what is going on,” she said. “We want to know whether there is a link to the product.”
In February a citizens petition lodged with the FDA asked the safety regulator to take Essure off the U.S. market, alleging that the clinical data the FDA used to approve the device was fudged and that the company concealed adverse events associated with Essure.
In July, the FDA approved using transvaginal ultrasound as an alternate test to confirm if the Essure implant has been placed properly. A month later Bayer cut the ribbon on a new plant in Costa Rica where it plans to make Essure.
Material from Reuters was used in this report.

http://www.massdevice.com/essure-complaints-spike-nearly-1400-in-3-years/

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Bayer Essure 'birth control' device had a WARRANTY!

 

Conceptus(R) Introduces the Only Patient Reliance Warranty for Permanent Birth Control

Essurance Promise (TM) Program Confidently Demonstrates the Essure(R) Procedure's Unprecedented Performance

  0   0   0   209Print
Source:  Conceptus, Inc.
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., May 2, 2011 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Conceptus, Inc. (Nasdaq:CPTS), developer of the Essure® procedure, the most effective permanent birth control method available, today introduced the Essurance Promise Program, the industry's first-ever patient reliance warranty program, at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists 59th Annual Clinical Meeting.
The Essurance Promise Program is an exclusive "out-of-pocket" payment assistance program for the Essure Confirmation Test. After a patient has had the Essure procedure and both inserts are successfully placed, she returns for her Essure Confirmation Test three months later. If she is told by her physician that the Essure procedure requires more time to be effective or she cannot rely on Essure for permanent birth for any reason at that time, the Company will pay her uncovered costs for the Essure Confirmation Test, up to a maximum of $150 per test, and in accordance with certain conditions. 
Conceptus is uniquely able to offer such a warranty program because the Essure procedure's clinical and real-world commercial performance is unsurpassed among all other permanent birth control options, including tubal ligation, vasectomy and the only other competing hysteroscopic sterilization product. For nearly a decade of clinical trial follow-up, there have been zero reported pregnancies with the Essure inserts when properly placed. Results in the commercial setting over this same time period are equally compelling and continue to reflect the Essure procedure's superb clinical performance. 
No other method of permanent birth control works better than the Essure procedure and no company other than Conceptus backs up their procedure with a reliance warranty, which gives women full confidence in this birth control choice.
"The Essurance Promise™ Program is an innovative solution demonstrating our conviction that patients can rely upon Essure for permanent birth control. The warranty supports both physicians and patients by giving them peace of mind when they choose the Essure procedure, while emphasizing the importance of the Essure Confirmation Test," said Mark Sieczkarek, president and chief executive officer of Conceptus. "This program further advances our leadership role in the hysteroscopic permanent birth control market that we pioneered more than a decade ago."
The Essure procedure is the market leader between two competing hysteroscopic sterilization procedures and has been trusted by more than half a million women since 2002.  Following the introduction of the competitor's product last year, the market may have experienced confusion and lack of clarity regarding the differences between the two products. The Essurance Promise Program underscores Essure's unparalleled performance, including the fact that the competitor product's failure rate is 10 times higher than Essure's failure rate, based on three-year clinical data. In addition, Essure clinical trial patients have experienced zero reported pregnancies, while the competitor's product has resulted in 12 pregnancies in patients followed for five years. The Essure procedure has a proven clinical and commercial track record, but the competitor's product has yet to establish and report its long-term clinical and real-world, commercial safety and effectiveness.
A key competitive advantage of the Essure insert is its stainless steel/Nitinol inner/outer coil design, which is radiopaque and allows for visual confirmation of each insert's proper placement both during the procedure and during the Essure Confirmation Test. The competitor's insert is neither visible during the procedure nor during the confirmation test.  
"The Essurance Promise Program is unprecedented for a permanent birth control procedure. Essure is backed by a growing body of scientific data validating the optimal design characteristics and clinical performance of Essure's Nitinol coil insert, both in the FDA trials and the clinical evidence reported in the literature over the past decade," said Barbara Levy, M.D., Medical Director for Conceptus.  "I highly recommend that OBGYNs talk to their patients about the Essure procedure and the Essurance Promise Program."
Additional information on the Essurance Promise Program
Federal Law prohibits any company from offering this kind of program to Medicaid or Medicare patients and is also restricted where prohibited by law. Complete program details can be found on the Conceptus physician website www.essuremd.com.
About the Essure® Procedure
The Essure procedure, FDA approved since 2002, is the first permanent birth control method that can be performed in the comfort of a physician's office in less than 10 minutes (average hysteroscopic time) without hormones, cutting, burning or the risks associated with general anesthesia or tubal ligation. Soft, flexible inserts are placed in a woman's fallopian tubes through the cervix without incisions. Over the next three months, the body forms a natural barrier around and through the inserts to prevent sperm from reaching the egg. Three months after the Essure procedure, a doctor is able to perform an Essure Confirmation Test to confirm that the inserts are properly placed and the fallopian tubes are fully blocked, giving the patient reliance on Essure for permanent birth control.
The Essure procedure is 99.95% effective based on one year of follow up with zero pregnancies reported in clinical trials, making it the most effective form of permanent birth control on the market. The procedure is covered by most insurance plans, and when it is performed in a doctor's office the cost to the patient may be as low as a simple co-pay. Essure has been proven and trusted by physicians since 2002, with more than 500,000 women worldwide having undergone the Essure procedure.
About Conceptus, Inc.
Conceptus, Inc. is a leader in the design, development, and marketing of innovative solutions in women's healthcare. The Company manufactures and markets the Essure procedure. The Essure procedure is available in the United States, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Mexico, Central and South America and the Middle East. The Company also promotes the GYNECARE THERMACHOICE® Uterine Balloon Therapy System by ETHICON Women's Health & Urology, a division of Ethicon, Inc., in U.S. OB/GYN physician offices.
The Conceptus, Inc. logo is available at http://www.globenewswire.com/newsroom/prs/?pkgid=7961
Please visit www.essure.com for more information on the Essure procedure. Patients may call the Essure Information Center at 1-877-ESSURE-1 with questions or to find a physician in their area.
© 2011 Conceptus, Inc-- All rights reserved. Conceptus, Essure, Essurance Promise and Your Family is Complete. Your Choice is Clear are registered trademarks and service marks of Conceptus, Inc.                                                                                                                    
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Investor Relations and Public Relations Contact:
Cindy Klimstra
(650) 962-4032
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