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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Twitter: @JjrkCh
Showing posts with label product safety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label product safety. Show all posts

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.
###


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Friday, July 21, 2017

Pelvic Surgical Mesh: "Living in Hell"


Joanne McCarthy

21 Jul 2017, 1 p.m. FiDA highlight

  • Women call on WA Health Minister to order investigation into mesh surgery research
Women allege they were used as guinea pigs in pelvic mesh trials in WA public and private hospitals

SUE Turner and Jeanette McKinnon are the Western Australian women implanted with pelvic mesh devices in public hospitals who refuse to be regarded as unfortunate statistics.
They have made submissions to a Federal Parliament Senate inquiry into pelvic mesh – with a public hearing in Perth on August 25 – listing serious, permanent and life-altering consequences of their surgeries more than a decade ago.
They want answers from WA Health Minister Roger Cook about mesh research allegedly conducted in public hospitals, and whether they are included in mesh trials for which they say they did not consent.
They are scathing of Mr Cook’s commitment to “make some enquiries” about the alleged mesh research trials, in response to questions from Fairfax Media, and have called for a full investigation into whether women were used as “mesh guinea pigs” in public health facilities.  
“Something awful happened to me in 2004 and 2005 after I had mesh put into me. My world’s just so small now,” said Mrs McKinnon, who was 46 in 2004 when she was implanted with an Australian-developed pelvic mesh device at Bentley Hospital.
“It’s like living in hell. I’m dying a very slow and agonising death.”
Victorian Senator Derryn Hinch in February successfully argued for a Senate inquiry into how some pelvic mesh devices for women’s incontinence and prolapse problems after childbirth were cleared for use in Australia over the past two decades. He compared pelvic mesh products to Thalidomide, the drug that led to birth defects in babies in the 1960s.
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(Video on link.) Senator Derryn Hinch calls for a Senate inquiry into pelvic mesh.
The aggressive marketing of many mesh devices in Australia from 2003, without sufficient evidence of their safety and efficacy, led to “one of the greatest medical scandals and abuses of mothers in Australia's history,” Senator Hinch said in a speech to Parliament.
Nearly 200 Western Australian women have responded to a survey conducted by Victorian consumer health advocacy group, Health Issues Centre, for a submission to the inquiry representing the experiences of more than 2200 Australian women implanted with pelvic mesh devices.
More than 700 women are part of a current class action against major pelvic mesh manufacturer, Johnson & Johnson, in the Federal Court in Sydney.
Sue Turner, of Perth, has sought legal advice about a class action against an Australian manufacturing company, after she was implanted with an Australian-developed pelvic mesh device at Armadale Hospital in 2007.
I was never told the device was high risk. I was never told about trials. I would never have consented to being part of a trial.
- Sue Turner, who had pelvic mesh surgery in 2007.
“I had a prolapse. I just trusted the doctor and our health system when he told me it would be a pretty easy fix,” Mrs Turner said.
“I was never told the device was high risk. I was never told about trials. I would never have consented to being part of a trial. If I was told there was a risk that if things went wrong I would never have a sex life again, or live a life of sometimes unendurable pain, or be left with mesh and anchors in my body that have moved and embedded into tissue very close to major blood vessels and nerves, I would never have consented. But I wasn’t told.”
In a statement to Fairfax Media Mr Cook said he would ask the Department of Health to “make some enquiries into the research undertaken, and the cases where the implants have been used”, after two senior Western Australian doctors released a series of papers from 2005 about trials in Western Australian public and private hospitals, including Armadale Hospital, using the Australian-developed pelvic mesh device.
In a statement by a WA Health Department unit, Fairfax Media was advised there are no records of research approvals for trials involving surgery on women at public hospitals using the Australian-developed pelvic mesh device.
Mrs Turner and Perth-based Australian Pelvic Mesh Support Group founder Caz Chisholm were angered by Mr Cook’s statements that the “WA Government understands the concern this has caused for some patients”, but “there have been very few complaints received by WA Health and the Health and Disability Complaints Office”.
“What are we? Guinea pigs?” Mrs Turner said.
“I want this stuff out of my body but my doctor’s told me the surgery could be life-threatening. This isn’t about numbers. It’s about how our health system allowed these devices onto the market, and how these doctors were allowed to do this surgery in public hospitals without telling us of the risks.”
Ms Chisholm said the lack of complaints was a consequence of women being told for years that their chronic problems, including often debilitating pain, repeated serious infections, and erosion of mesh into organs including the bladder and bowel, were not linked to mesh surgery, or not being told they were implanted with mesh.
Many women who have presented to their doctors with pain and complications have been told it is not the mesh that is the cause.
- Australian Pelvic Mesh Support Group founder Caz Chisholm
“Many women who have presented to their doctors with pain and complications have been told it is not the mesh that is the cause. It is only because of recent media attention about stories of women's pain and complications that women are realising their own complications are identical to the media stories,” Ms Chisholm said.
“The minister says there have been very few complaints by women, but what about the doctors treating the women? Obviously doctors aren’t reporting complications either, and are they supposed to?”
Mrs McKinnon has spent more than a decade on antibiotics.
“I came out of hospital not very well in 2004 and had my first urinary tract infection shortly after that. Then it was one urinary tract infection after another. If I come off the antibiotics I get a urinary tract infection,” she said.
She had another four major surgeries over the following year to relieve the pain and address mesh erosion into organs
In 2009 Mrs McKinnon was diagnosed with the auto immune condition lupus, requiring steroid treatment.
“I was normal, healthy and fit before I had that surgery. I’m only 59 and I feel like a 100-year-old. I thought all these years it was just me. It’s just the nightmare that you live.”
In a statement in June the Royal Australian College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists said the majority of women treated with mesh for incontinence or prolapse had “a good long-term result” but “in a small number of cases the complications have been very serious”.
In a submission to the Senate inquiry Victoria’s Health Issues Centre chief executive Danny Vadasz has criticised mesh debate “framed in terms of the good outcomes of the many outweighing the unfortunate experiences of a few”.
“Our health system is built on values such as equity and a universal duty of care, not on a cost/benefit analysis that accepts the unavoidability of collateral damage,” he said, in a Health Issues Centre submission arguing Australian regulators have been “asleep at the wheel” on pelvic mesh.

Do you know more? Email jmccarthy@fairfaxmedia.com.au
http://www.theherald.com.au/story/4804268/its-like-living-in-hell/



Friday, July 7, 2017

Gasp!: Surgeon/Designer Calls His Own Pelvic Mesh Device Garbage

Joanne McCarthy

4 Jul 2017, 12:04 p.m  FiDA highlight


LANDMARK CASE: Gai Thompson, lawyer Rebecca Jancauskas and Jo Manion outside the federal court on Tuesday. Picture: Joanne McCarthy

A FRENCH doctor who invented a Johnson & Johnson pelvic mesh device told another doctor in 2005 that "I would not want my wife to undergo this procedure", the federal court in Sydney was told today.
Dr Bernard Jacquetin made the comment in an email to another doctor in the same year his Johnson & Johnson Prolift device was cleared for use in Australia.
The comment, revealed in a Johnson & Johnson internal document on the first day of a landmark class action by more than 700 Australian women, drew gasps from some of the women sitting in the public gallery at the federal court.
Tony Bannon SC, for the women, told Justice Anna Katzmann that Dr Jacquetin, who was part of a Johnson & Johnson transvaginal mesh evaulation team, concluded his comment about not wanting to have his wife to have a mesh procedure by saying "and I don't think I'm alone in that".
Mr Bannon told the court the comments' message was "those of us who were in the know".
"Once one understands what is really involved with this you wouldn't want your wife, your sister, your mother to undergo this, except in extreme circumstances," Mr Bannon said.
The landmark case, which has attracted international media attention, is expected to take six months.
Mr Bannon told the court each of the 700 women had suffered continuous, frequent and often unbearable pain.
"Their enjoyment of life has been seriously compromised,” he said.
"Their lives have been dramatically altered for the worse.”
Up to 100,000 Johnson & Johnson pelvic mesh devices for incontinence or pelvic organ prolapse were implanted in Australian women.
The three lead complainants in the case were seeking substantial damages in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, Mr Bannon told the court.
The court heard evidence from another internal Johnson & Johnson document from May 2010 which described the kind of doctor the mesh devices were aimed at.
They were doctors who could "do" a Johnson & Johnson TVT mesh device in eight minutes.
Johnson & Johnson envisaged these doctor-clients as the kind who would see the devices helping enhance their reputations and revenues.
They were more likely "mid-career doctors" who saw their practices as businesses.
The court heard the internal Johnson & Johnson document pictured doctors who would use the product as the type who would also enjoy holidays in St Moritz and Lamborghinis.
The document quoted one of the imagined doctor-clients as saying "that makes four (mesh surgeries) before lunch, that works for me".
Mr Bannon told the court the document exhibited the internal approach of Johnson & Johnson to the mesh devices.
He said there was a valuable market to be gained out there by emphasising the speed of the mesh surgery.
The court will also hear of the lack of evidence supporting the safety and efficacy of pelvic mesh devices.
One of the women implanted with a pelvic mesh device, Jo Manion, left the courtroom after Mr Bannon read the internal Johnson & Johnson documents.
Ms Manion was visibly upset through some of the evidence.

The hearing continues.
http://www.theherald.com.au/story/4769832/i-would-not-want-my-wife-to-undergo-this-procedure-pelvic-mesh-inventor/?cs=305

Thursday, May 25, 2017

Dr. Amy Reed Dies at Age 44, Mother of 6 Children and Advocate for Safe Medical Devices





By DENISE GRADY
MAY 24, 2017  (FiDA highlight)
Dr. Amy J. Reed, a physician and cancer patient who turned a personal calamity into a crusade to spare other women from the medical procedure that harmed her, died on Wednesday night at home in Yardley, Pa. She was 44.



Dr. Amy J. Reed and her husband, Dr. Hooman Noorchashm, in 2014. (MATTHEW CAVANAUGH FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES)

Her husband, Dr. Hooman Noorchashm, said the cause was leiomyosarcoma of the uterus, a type of cancer.
Dr. Reed and her husband fought for years to ban the use of a surgical tool called a power morcellator, which has a spinning blade that slices up tissue so it can be extracted through small incisions. Though the device is regarded as a great boon to minimally invasive surgery, if a patient has cancer, as Dr. Reed did, morcellation can spread the disease.
Dr. Reed and Dr. Noorchashm (pronounced NOOR-chasm) won some notable victories. Because of their efforts, the Food and Drug Administration studied morcellation and in 2014 recommended that it not be used in the “the vast majority” of women having surgery for uterine fibroids, a common tumor that is usually benign but that can hide a dangerous type of cancer.

Some insurers began declining coverage for morcellation, and one major manufacturer took its morcellators off the market. Use of the technique dropped.

Dr. Reed, an anesthesiologist and the mother of six children, underwent surgery involving morcellation in 2013, when, at 40, she had her uterus removed because of fibroids. The operation was performed at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, which is affiliated with Harvard Medical School, where both Dr. Reed and Dr. Noorchashm had teaching positions. A biopsy after the operation found that Dr. Reed had a hidden leiomyosarcoma, an aggressive type of cancer.
Only then were Dr. Reed and her husband told that her surgeon had used a power morcellator to slice up her uterus. The device allows doctors to work through small slits rather than big, open incisions, so that patients can heal faster and run less risk of bleeding and infection.
At that time, morcellation was performed on 50,000 women a year in the United States to help remove fibroids, or to remove the entire uterus.
The device had sprayed malignant cells around inside Dr. Reed’s abdomen, leaving her with an advanced, Stage 4 cancer.
As physicians, Dr. Reed and Dr. Noorchashm knew at the time that her morcellation procedure could be a death sentence. As a surgeon himself, Dr. 
Dr. Reed quickly embarked on a series of aggressive treatments, but she still suffered one recurrence after another, in her abdomen, lungs and spine. She had several major operations and received arduous courses of chemotherapy, radiation, immunotherapy and experimental treatment.

The couple fought the medical establishment as fiercely as they did the cancer, seeking to ban morcellation. They sent thousands of emails to the F.D.A., device makers, hospitals, legislators, professional societies and individual doctors, and they reached out to news organizations to publicize their cause.
Dr. Noorchashm also collected the names and histories of women whose cancer had spread after morcellation, enlisting them, or their survivors, in the crusade.

































Dr. Amy Reed with her husband, Dr. Hooman Noorchashm, and their children in their backyard in Yardley, Pa., in the summer of 2015.
JENNIFER CAPOZZOLA
Their activism, alienating some colleagues and aggravating administrators, came at a price. Dr. Noorchashm had been a rising star in cardiothoracic surgery at Brigham and Women’s, where his wife had the operation, but as he continued to criticize its gynecology department, his career there began to stall.
He and Dr. Reed were both hired by the University of Pennsylvania, and moved there in 2014. Both had extended family in and around Philadelphia.
They had apparently burned their bridges at Harvard. At one point, when Dr. Reed needed to return to Brigham and Women’s for a medical procedure, she and Dr. Noorchashm were stunned to find that the hospital had assigned a guard to inspect their bags and escort them at all times, for security reasons. Dr. Noorchashm called a lawyer. A judge put a stop to the escort, issuing a restraining order against the hospital.
The gynecology profession also fought back against Dr. Noorchashm and Dr. Reed, insisting that leiomyosarcoma was so rare that the benefit of morcellation — the ability to have minimally invasive surgery — far outweighed any risk.

Before 2013, the F.D.A. had received no reports of uterine cancers being spread by morcellators. But after Dr. Reed and her husband went public — interviewed by newspapers, magazines and TV news shows — reports began to pour in. Dr. Reed, with her hair gone and her youngest child sometimes climbing onto her lap during interviews, was a sympathetic figure.

The couple’s efforts gained traction. The F.D.A. responded by studying published and unpublished medical data on morcellation. Before then, estimates of how many women with fibroids would have undiagnosed leiomyosarcomas or other uterine sarcomas were based on studies of varying reliability, and ranged from 1 in 10,000 to in 1 in 500. But the F.D.A. concluded in April 2014 that hidden sarcomas were more common than earlier estimates had stated — and probably occurred in about one in 350 women with fibroids. The tumors are extremely difficult to detect without surgery.
Soon after the F.D.A. issued its findings, one maker of morcellators, Johnson & Johnson, pulled its devices off the market. But others remained.
In November 2014, the F.D.A. went further, recommending that power morcellators not be used in the vast majority of women having fibroid surgery. Using the device in women with undetected sarcomas, it said, “may spread cancer and decrease the long-term survival of patients.” The F.D.A. portrayed the statement as a “safety communication,” not as an announcement of a new regulation.
Morcellator use dropped significantly, but many gynecologists still favored it, and the devices remained available. Dr. Noorchashm and Dr. Reed would not settle for less than a complete ban, and continued to agitate. They prodded legislators to ask the Government Accountability Office to investigate morcellation.
In a report issued in February, the G.A.O. criticized the F.D.A.’s method of collecting data on problems stemming from morcellation, noting that the system was dependent on voluntary reports from doctors, who frequently fail to report bad outcomes.

The F.D.A. said it agreed that it needed a better system to detect harm to patients. By September 2016, the agency had received 285 reports of uterine cancer being spread by morcellation.

Amy Josephine Reed was born on March 22, 1973, in Bristol, Pa. Her mother, the former Joann Tunis, was a pharmacist and executive at the drug company Pfizer. Her father, William Reed, was a health insurance consultant.
Dr. Reed graduated from Pennsylvania State University in 1995 and went on to the University of Pennsylvania, where she earned a Ph.D. in immunology and a degree in medicine. She specialized in anesthesia and critical-care medicine.
She and Dr. Noorchashm met as graduate students and married in 2001. In 2011, both were offered teaching posts at the Harvard Medical School and clinical positions at its affiliated hospitals — Dr. Noorchashm at Brigham and Women’s and Dr. Reed at Beth Israel Deaconess. She treated victims of the Boston Marathon bombing in 2013, as well as the surviving bomber.

Besides Dr. Noorchashm, Dr. Reed is survived by her parents; her daughters, Nadia and Ava; her sons, Joseph, Joshua, Luke and Ryan; and seven siblings: Alison Perate, Andrea Kealy, Amber Trainer, Matthew Reed, Justin Reed, Daniel Trainer and Sarah Trainer.
https://mobile.nytimes.com/2017/05/24/us/amy-reed-died-cancer-patient-who-fought-morcellation-procedure.html?_r=0&referer=http%3A%2F%2Fm.facebook.com

Thursday, March 16, 2017

By Lucy Adams FiDA highlight
Political correspondent, BBC Scotland
  • March 15, 2017

An expert at the centre of the independent review group looking at the safety of mesh implants in Scotland has resigned.
The consultant, who does not wish to be named, stepped down following the revelation that an entire chapter of the final report had been removed.
It follows the resignation of two patient representatives who claimed the report had been watered down.
Health Secretary Shona Robison said no evidence would be hidden.
Transvaginal mesh implants are medical devices used by surgeons to treat pelvic organ prolapse and incontinence in women, conditions that can commonly occur after childbirth.
Over the past 20 years, more than 20,000 women in Scotland have had mesh or tape implants but some have suffered painful and debilitating complications.
There are more than 400 women currently taking legal action against Scottish health boards and manufacturers as a result of mesh implant surgery.
In 2014 former health secretary Alex Neil called for the suspension of such procedures, and an independent review group was set up to look at safety issues.


Patients representatives Olive McIlroy and Elaine Holmes have already resigned from the review group
An interim report published in October 2015 did not advocate a blanket ban on mesh implants but noted that some women do experience serious complications and it made suggestions for reducing the risks. The final report is expected shortly.
Earlier this month, the BBC revealed that an expert member of the review group had written to its chairwoman, raising concerns about the final draft.
The letter states that an entire chapter, which highlighted concerns about the use of mesh in some procedures and contained tables displaying the risks of treatment, had been taken out.
Patients representatives Olive McIlroy and Elaine Holmes, who have both suffered complications as a result of such surgery, resigned from the review earlier this month, claiming that the final report now lacked integrity and independence.


Responding to the latest resignation, Health Secretary Shona Robison said clinical experts sometimes disagreed on complex medical matters.
She said: "I want to reassure the Scottish Mesh Survivors Group their views have been heard, and I want them to remain at the centre of the crucial work.
"I have been clear that all evidence must be made publicly available alongside the report once published. The chair of the Review Group has stressed to me the evidence has been fully considered by the review and none has been hidden.
"This is a complex, technical area and on occasions professionals will disagree. I am aware of the resignation of a clinical member from the group and, while this is unfortunate, their views and contribution to the review is much-appreciated and have proven valuable."
Ms Robision is due to meet Olive McIlroy and Elaine Holmes later this week to discuss their concerns.
In December, the BBC revealed that hundreds of mesh implant operations had been performed in Scotland despite ministers recommending their suspension.
Figures obtained by the BBC revealed that 404 women had received mesh and tape implants since the health secretary called for the suspension in June 2014.

http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-39279028?SThisFB

Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Pelvic Surgical Mesh Scandal: FDA Wrongly Cleared Predicate Device



Dr Peter Petros said he warned women about the 'very frightening' symptoms of his procedure 

Joanne McCarthy  FiDA highlight

15 Mar 2017, 5 a.m.
A DOCTOR whose invention is at the centre of a global medical scandal told a court in 2004 that women could experience “very frightening” symptoms after a pelvic surgical procedure he developed, but that was “how the operation works”.

“Even though it’s not harmful to the patient it can be quite frightening, that suddenly they get this thick yellow discharge that can be very smelly and it can be very frightening to a patient. So I make sure that I tell them about it,” Dr Peter Petros told a Western Australian court after a woman took civil action against him following mesh surgery using nylon tape.

Judge Roger Macknay awarded the woman more than $136,000 after finding Dr Petros “undoubtedly” failed to warn her of risks associated with Dr Petros’s intravaginal slingplasty (IVS) procedure, based on his “integral theory” to treat urinary incontinence.

The woman, 45 when she had the surgery in 1997, suffered “significant” injury which had a “substantial” effect on her life, with symptoms continuing over the long term, Judge Macknay found.

Dr Petros’s mesh delivery device through a woman’s vagina, the IVS tunneller, which was later developed by a subsidiary of Tyco Healthcare and incorrectly cleared for use in America in 2001 for both urinary incontinence and prolapse in women after childbirth, became the “predicate case” which major medical device companies used to “clear” and market multiple other pelvic mesh devices for prolapse.


Investigation: Dr Peter Petros

Global legal cases brought by women alleging serious injuries after pelvic mesh surgery are estimated to cost $20 billion.

In a paper in 2012 Dr Petros distanced himself from the global mesh scandal, saying his “early experimental studies” had been “wrongly” used as “an intellectual cornerstone to justify the use of mesh in prolapse surgery”.

During the 2004 Western Australian court case Dr Petros denied being “somewhat blinded” to possible risks associated with his (IVS) surgical procedure.

“Can you accept as a possibility that because of your personal and financial stake in this procedure that you may perhaps be somewhat blinded as to the adverse elements associated with it? You see it as your baby and you can’t see any bad elements?” the woman’s barrister, Geoffrey Hancy, put to Dr Petros.

Dr Petros replied: “Absolutely not. The role of the scientist is to seek the truth, whether it’s good or bad. That’s the way it is.”


The court was told Dr Petros received a royalty of about $15 per instrument for the IVS tunneller and he performed about 400 operations a year. 

Judge Macknay found Dr Petros had “a proprietary attitude towards the IVS procedure, as well as great pride in events associated with its development”.

In his dealings with the woman Dr Petros “was concerned to extol what he perceived to be the many advantages of the IVS procedure rather than to point out, in a balanced and neutral manner, both possible beneficial and adverse outcomes and the risks”.

“The defendant did not, it would seem, and apparently still does not, believe there was or is any real detriment associated with ‘his’ procedure,” Judge Macknay said.

Dr Petros “lacked to some extent a complete understanding of the obligation owed by a medical practitioner to a patient who was contemplating surgery”, and was “at times argumentative, anxious to debate, unwilling to answer questions as put, anxious to display his knowledge”, the judge found.

Specialists who gave evidence said the IVS procedure had no independent studies to support it in 1997 and the majority of specialists who performed surgery to treat incontinence did not use the procedure.

By 2003 Newcastle obstetrician/gynaecologist Dr Alan Hewson and his Brisbane colleague Dr Chris Maher said the IVS procedure “cannot be recommended” after treating women dealing with complications after its use, and because of the lack of independent evidence of its safety and efficacy.    

Dr Petros’s name no longer appears on the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency register. He did not respond to questions from the Newcastle Herald about whether he had retired in November. 

The NSW Health Care Complaints Commission advised the Herald it has finalised an investigation of complaints against him and has referred the case to “the Director of Proceedings for the consideration of appropriate disciplinary action”.

http://www.theherald.com.au/story/4524242/doctor-denies-being-blind-to-mesh-risk/?cs=305






Tuesday, June 21, 2016

J&J relies on European registries for recall data: FDA fails to protect US citizens.



J&J’s Ethicon recalls Physiomesh flexible composite hernia mesh

JUNE 20, 2016 BY BRAD PERRIELLO   FiDA highlight
Johnson & Johnson (NYSE:JNJ) subsidiary Ethicon last month recalled 1 of its surgical mesh products after studies showed higher revision rates after a type of minimally invasive hernia repair using its Physiomesh flexible composite mesh.
In a May 25 letter to healthcare providers, Ethicon said it’s pulling the mesh after a review of unpublished data from a pair of European registries revealed the discrepancy between Physiomesh flexible composite and the other meshes in the registries after laparoscopic ventral hernia repair.
West Somerville, N.J.-based Ethicon said it believes the higher revision rates are due to a “multifactorial issue,” possibly including “product characteristics, operative and patient factors,” but hasn’t been able to pin down a cause.
“Consequently, Ethicon [has] not been able at this time to issue further instructions to surgeons that might lead to a reduction in the recurrence rate and [has] decided to recall Ethicon Physiomesh composite mesh from the global market,” according to the letter. “Ethicon will not return theEthicon Physiomesh composite mesh product to the market worldwide.”
Patients already implanted with the product should be followed as usual, the company said. The recall does not involve any other Ethicon meshes, including the Physiomesh Open flexible composite mesh, it said.

“Ethicon recognizes the voluntary product recall of the Ethicon Physiomesh composite mesh may be disruptive to your facility and apologizes for any inconvenience this may cause,” the company wrote. A list of the affected product codes can be found here.

http://www.massdevice.com/jjs-ethicon-recalls-physiomesh-flexible-composite-hernia-mesh/

Friday, April 8, 2016

FDA Violations and Highest Risk FDA Bayer Essure


Original Essure Manufacturer Had Long History Of FDA Violations

By Michael Monheit    March 10th, 2016
In 2013, German pharmaceutical manufacturer Bayer acquired a small California-based company named Conceptus Inc. As the name suggested, Conceptus’ work in medical devices focused on reproduction, but the company made few waves with its first product line, a system of miniature catheters used to access Fallopian tubes.
It was what Conceptus eventually attached to those micro-catheters that would garner Bayer’s interest, and ultimately convince the multinational conglomerate that Conceptus was worth around $1.1 billion.
“Unanimous Approval” & Growing Profits
Conceptus had developed Essure, a metal coil implant that could be guided through the uterus and inserted into a Fallopian tube. After implantation, the body naturally reacts to the device, or more accurately, the polyethylene terephthalate (PET) fibers wound around the device’s nickel titanium coils. In textile manufacturing, PET is referred to by its more familiar name, polyester. But inside the body, according to Conceptus, PET has a different effect: triggering the growth of scar tissue.* Once the Essure implant has been inserted, the Fallopian tube coats the device in a thick layer of scar tissue, the company says, blocking both the tube itself and any eggs traveling to the uterus.
Essure’s innovative design certainly seemed promising, and Conceptus spent the years between 1998 and 2002 developing and testing the device. After “receiv[ing the] FDA’s most stringent review prior to marketing,” the agency’s so-called Pre-Market Approval process, Essure was approved for sale on November 4, 2002.  Essure was, and continues to be, a Class III medical device, among “the highest risk devices,” according to the FDA.
Few people are aware that the FDA uses two very different processes to regulate medical devices and pharmaceutical drugs. More often than not, medical devices are sent through a fast-track approval process, in which manufacturers need only show that their own device is substantially similar to one already on the market. In practice, though, that “substantial” similarity appears to be loosely interpreted. Many devices make it on the market, and thus into operating rooms and patients’ bodies, without any new safety or effectiveness testing.
But Essure was different, with a radically novel design, one the FDA guessed could cause patient’s significant harm. So the agency required clinical trials involving human subjects. By the time Essure was approved, in 2002, “the FDA had one to two years of safety and effectiveness outcomes data for Essure,” according to Jennifer Rodriguez, an FDA spokesperson who spoke to ABC News in October 2014. A “unanimous approval” followed, with the caveat that Conceptus would continue studying the device’s safety in several required studies.
Essure Soon Marred By Manufacturing & Side Effect Reporting Problems
In the meantime, obstetricians and gynecologists were beginning to adopt Essure as an alternative to tubal ligation, the industry standard for permanent female sterilization. Essure was easier, requiring only a 10-minute outpatient procedure to implant, Conceptus claimed. Citing the results of its clinical trials, which have now been widely critiqued, the coils were “safe and effective.”
Essure was on the ascendant, and Conceptus representatives were busy training doctors around the nation on how best to use the implants. By the end of 2003, according to a company shareholder report available here, “more than 14,000 patients” had been implanted with Essure, and no “pregnancies related to device failure” had been reported. Even more encouraging, Conceptus was turning a profit, reporting $442,000 in gross profits for the 4th quarter of 2003.
But for all the early signs of success, and Conceptus’ growing national reach, problems were beginning to crop up back at home, in Mountain View, California.
Spotty Record-Keeping & Rejected Raw Materials
During a series of routine inspections in June and July of 2003, FDA investigator Mark Chan noticed a discrepancy between Conceptus’ Lot History Records and the information included on Quality Assurance Forms, which track to show that a device is being made in the way its manufacturer said it would be.
Specifically, Chan found “hand-written” notes on the company’s records, which revealed that “raw materials and sub-assemblies (i.e., Inner/Outer Coil Sub-assemblies) were being rejected during” the manufacturing process. But that information wasn’t making its way onto the company’s Quality Assurance Forms, which would have notified Conceptus’ Quality Assurance department of the problem.

In a formal report, known as a Form 483, issued by the FDA when inspectors think they’ve discovered violations of federal law, Chan observed: “not all data […] are analyzed to identify existing and potential causes of nonconforming product and other quality problems.” The inspector also discovered that no “Material Review Reports,” which would have notified an entirely different board within Conceptus of the problem, were being generated either.
Why the materials were rejected in the first place is uncertain, but in Chan’s mind, Conceptus wasn’t checking up on potentially-defective raw materials, and it seemed to be a problem of communication between the company’s departments. In a recent lawsuit, one former Essure patient raised an even more troubling question: where did the rejected raw materials end up? In a trash bin or in an implant?
Conceptus Used Unlicensed Facility For 3 Years, California Health Department Finds
Whatever the answer, observers could not deny the severity of Conceptus’ next run-in with regulatory officials, this time inspectors at the California Department of Health. In 2008, the company was cited for manufacturing Essure implants out of an unlicensed facility.
Conceptus had been using the facility, state Health Department investigators said, for three years. By June 11, 2008, according to a narrative report completed by Health Department Investigator Christine Rodriguez, Conceptus’ licensing violations had been “corrected.” Finally, Conceptus was licensed to manufacture medical devices in California, but the company was far from out of the woods.
FDA Inspector Discovers Unreported Adverse Events
Between December 2010 and January 2011, FDA investigator Timothy Grome reviewed company documents and found evidence that Conceptus had failed to report multiple adverse events to the FDA.
Grome discovered two reports, sent to Conceptus by health professionals between July 12, 2010 and December 10, 2010, of women in whom the Essure implants had perforated their bowels, a complication that could “have caused or contributed to a death or serious injury.” But rather than pass these reports on to the FDA, as the company had with 41 other reports that did not involve bowel perforation during the same period, Conceptus appeared to have kept them internal.
A different report, in which a CT scan had revealed that a patient’s implant “was in 2 pieces […] with one of the pieces outside of the tube between the uterus and bowel,” had also been kept from the FDA, Gromes wrote in a Form 483 that would follow his inspection.
Conceptus’ apparent reporting violations between December 8, 2010 and January 6, 2011 were even more egregious. Gomes found no less than five reports of “perforation,” in which the coil implant had moved into a patient’s abdominal cavity or peritoneal cavity. But none had been submitted to the FDA as required, within 30 days of their receipt.
Gomes hit Conceptus with a related violation, since the coil’s obvious ability to move into the peritoneal cavity had never been included in the company’s official analysis of potential device failures.
Conceptus Denies Device Failure
After Gomes’ visit, the California Department of Health returned to Conceptus’ manufacturing facility for a routine inspection required by state law. While no new violations would be issued at this time, the Health Department’s subsequent report sheds light on the company’s response to the FDA’s findings.
In a letter sent to the federal agency on January 20, 2011, state health investigator Lana Widman wrote, Conceptus “disput[ed] the validity of [Gomes’] observations, regarding the reporting of complaints for peritoneal perforation.” According to Conceptus, the perforations were “a result of the physician’s misuse of the device or an error during insertion and not a failure of the device to perform as intended.”
Today, the FDA is busy drafting a new “black box” warning for Essure. While the final wording of this warning has not yet been published, it is likely to include “fallopian tube or uterine perforation,” alongside side effects like “persistent pain, irregular vaginal bleeding,” and the complication Conceptus failed to report nearly 6 years, “intra-peritoneal device migration.”


*This account of Essure’s mechanism of action has been called into question. In fact, according to several women who have filed Essure lawsuits, Conceptus’ own account of how the device works has changed. During a pre-approval meeting, plaintiffs claim, the company told FDA officials that “the trauma caused by [an] expanding coil striking the Fallopian tubes is what cause[s] the inflammatory response of the tissue,” not the PET fibers themselves.

http://birthcontrolproblems.com/conceptus-fda-violations/