Guest guest Posted June 12, 2001 Report Share Posted June 12, 2001 From: " ilena rose " <ilena@...> Sent: Tuesday, June 12, 2001 2:10 PM Subject: A return of silicone breast implants? ~ MSNBC News Link & Comment Forum > ~~~ thanks so much for this from nancy & her wonderful husband, hank. and > thanks to sybil and drs middleton and zuckerman for their comments. ~~~ > > there is a place to comment on the website ... please do! love to all > ... ilena ~~~ > > > http://www.msnbc.com/modules/exports/ct_email.asp?/news/584763.asp'>http://www.msnbc.com/modules/exports/ct_email.asp?/news/584763.asp > > > > By Charlene Laino > > MSNBC > > June 11 - While many American women were still reeling from the silicone > scare of the early 1990s - when gel implants were yanked off the market in > the wake of purported links to everything from arthritis to lupus - the > industry quietly began working to reintroduce silicone for breast > enhancement. Now, many predict silicone gel formulations could clear U.S. > Food and Drug Administration hurdles within two years. Will they be > embraced by women seeking a bigger bust? Plastic surgeons think so. Are > they really safe? That jury is still out. > > THE BUZZ about silicone was as palpable as the nodules of scar tissue > that can form around implants. > > The setting: The recent annual meeting of the American Society of > Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons at the Hilton Hotel in midtown New York. > > The prediction: Silicone breast implants - some of the very same > ones banned in 1992 - will be reintroduced for routine cosmetic use in the > United States within two years. And approval of a totally novel gel implant > known as Style 410 - designed to offer not only a more natural breast, but > also a safer experience - will follow soon afterward. > > The reasons: Silicone's once marred reputation has been vindicated, > ASAPS members said. > > More to the point, they added, their patients want it. When it comes > to breast implants, silicone better mimics the soft, fleshy fullness of the > real thing than saline or other fillers. > > In the exhibit hall at the meeting, a steady stream of cosmetic > surgeons waited their turn at McGhan Medical Corp.'s booth to cup in their > hands the 410 implant. Its firm Jello-like consistency makes it safer - > less likely to rupture, leak or migrate, according to its inventor. The gel > entered the large-scale clinical trial needed for FDA approval in the > United States in April, though it's been used for seven years in Europe. > > Others gathered to discuss ongoing studies of conventional silicone > gels routinely used for cosmetic surgery until the FDA's 1992 moratorium. > Manufacturers McGhan and Mentor Corp., the only two major U.S. companies > left in the once competitive implant market, are collecting safety data to > satisfy FDA requirements for approval. Enrollment in these trials is > complete, with researchers now following the women to see if any > complications develop. > > SAFETY CONCERNS > > > > Should silicone implants be approved for breast enhancement? > Yes. It should be a woman's choice. > No, They haven't been proven safe. > Unsure. > > > Vote to see results Should silicone implants be approved for breast > enhancement? > * 5565 responses > Yes. It should be a woman's choice. 59% > No, They haven't been proven safe. 31% > Unsure. 10% > Survey results tallied every 60 seconds. Live Votes reflect respondents' > views and are not scientifically valid surveys. > > In juxtaposition to the upbeat scene at the New York > hotel, concerned critics of breast implants gathered 300 miles away to > analyze the findings of three recent studies that pose questions about > their safety. Within weeks, the Washington, D.C.-based National Center for > Policy Research for Women and Families would issue a statement headlined, > " Long-awaited government studies raise new concerns about silicone and > saline breast implants. " > > One study suggested a link between gel and cancers of the brain and > lung, while another found that women with ruptured silicone implants may be > more likely to develop the painful autoimmune condition known as > fibromyalgia. " These are dramatic, upsetting results, " said the group's > head, Diane Zuckerman, that re-open the debate about the safety of silicone. > > A BIT OF HISTORY > That debate reached its pinnacle in 1992 when the FDA pulled > silicone gel implants off the market amid concerns they might cause health > problems, chiefly autoimmune diseases. But the regulatory agency soon > announced its decision to allow use of silicone implants in certain > instances, such as reconstructive surgery after breast cancer, correction > of congenital deformities or replacement of ruptured implants. > > Chat with cosmetic surgeon > > Dr. Baker at 6 pm ET on Thursday > > Throughout the '90s, barely a month went by that a study didn't find > - or refute - a link between silicone and health woes. Dow Corning Corp., > once the giant among implant makers, declared bankruptcy after ruinous > litigation by women who claimed their health had been harmed. > > Then, after reviewing dozens of studies, the Institute of Medicine > concluded in its landmark 1999 report that gel implants do not cause the > autoimmune disorders such as lupus or arthritis it was purported to. > The main safety concern, the report said, is the implants' tendency > to rupture. The gook can bleed or leak out of its shell, causing > infections. > > Another problem is so-called capsular contracture - a hardening of > tissue surrounding the implant that can cause disfiguring, even painful, > swellings on the breast. This can occur with any type of implant, all of > which are seen as foreign by the body; with silicone breast devices, it's > estimated to afflict 3 percent to 12 percent of patients. > These risks, say plastic surgeons, are acceptable to most women > seeking to enhance their figure. > > " The IOM report was the turning point, " said ASAPS spokesperson Dr. > Mark Jewell of Eugene, Ore., opening the door for the return of silicone > breast implants for cosmetic use. > > Many women, it would seem, are waiting. > > In the decade before the FDA ban, about 100,000 women a year are > estimated to have undergone implant surgery, the vast majority of whom > opted for silicone gel. > > While there was a drop in popularity in the wake of the '92 > brouhaha, women soon again began enhancing their breasts, choosing the only > option sanctioned by the FDA - saline implants. In 2000, more than 200,000 > women underwent breast enlargement, double the figure in 1997, according to > ASAPS. > > If silicone is approved, plastic surgeons have no doubt the pendulum > will swing from saline back to silicone. > > " Four in five of my patients undergoing reconstructive surgery opt > for gel, " said Dr. Baker, a clinical professor plastic surgery at the > University of South Florida. " If silicone was offered to cosmetic patients, > 80 percent of them would choose it, too, " said Baker, who also has a > private practice in Winter Park, Fla. > > WHY SILICONE? > > " Silicone's chief advantage is that it feels very natural - it has a > good viscosity, a consistency almost like real tissue, " said Dr. > Elkwood, a plastic and reconstructive surgeon in Shrewsbury, N.J. > > Its main disadvantage is a perceived risk of systemic illness that > has been disproved by the IOM report, he said. " But that said, when it > ruptures - and all implants can rupture - you can get a real mess in there, > with bleeding and leeching out over time. " > > But, added Jewell, the silicone gel implants in use at the time of > the '92 ban were fairly firm - like gelatin that is just about to set - and > thus much safer than the thin gels of the 1970s that were prone to rupture > and leakage. " They never should have been taken off the market, " he said. > > Nevertheless, the filler is not as innocuous as saline: If it > ruptures, the body simply absorbs the salt water. On the minus side, > though, saline " is real water balloon-ish, " Elkwood said, " with puckering, > rippling and scallop appearance all common. " > > " And if you get a [saline] rupture, the water will leak out, like > air in a flat tire, " Baker said. " If you're on your honeymoon or vacation, > as happened to two of my patients, you are stuck until you can get to the > doctor. " > > > Silicone is more cohesive so it will tend to stay in place even > after a rupture, agreed Baker, who has performed some 12,000 implant > procedures, including on his nurses and his daughter, McGrath. > > McGrath, who has had the same pair of silicone implants since 1983, > said they improved her appearance and increased her self-confidence. And > despite a relatively recent diagnosis of multiple sclerosis, she dismissed > the possibility of a link between silicone and her autoimmune disease. > > " Think about it, " said McGrath. " If there was any risk that silicone > was dangerous - any risk, no matter how teeny - my dad would have had me on > the table and cut the implant out in a second, " she said, recalling what he > told her back in 1992 when the silicone scare hit the media. > > Plus, the IOM report found no link, McGrath said. Nor has her > neurologist, " who is world-renowned, " ever suggested implants could be the > cause of her MS, she said. > > NOT A BIBLE > > Zuckerman said she wished that doctors and their patients would stop > viewing the IOM report as the silicone bible. > > " The analysis was based on studies done before 1999, " she said. " So > when a new study comes out, and now there are three, we need to pay > attention. " > > One study, led by the FDA's Lori Brown, found that women whose > implants ruptured and leaked silicone outside the breast scar tissue may be > more likely to develop fibromyalgia, a condition with no clear cause. > > But Brown stopped short of concluding there is a cause-and-effect > relationship and called for further studies. > > A second study conducted by the National Cancer Institute found that > women with breast implants are not at increased risk for most cancers, > although they appear more likely to die from brain and lung cancer than > other women who undergo plastic surgery. A third study also suggested a > link between cancer and breast implants. > > Together, " these articles are a wake-up call for the almost 300,000 > women and teenagers who plan to get breast implants this year, " Zuckerman > said. " These studies remind us that we still know very little about the > long-term dangers of breast implants. " > > Her group supports a bill in Congress that would provide monies to > be given to the National Institutes of Health for independent studies on > the long-term safety of implants. > > ASAPS members expressed mixed feelings about the importance of the > new studies. > > While Jewell said he has not seen any such serious complications in > his practice, he said it is prudent to inform women about findings of any > ongoing studies. > > But Baker said the new studies were flawed. " In the cancer trial, > for example, they need to go back through participants' medical records and > find out more about their family and medical histories before they can > conclude that any increased risk was due to silicone. And until that is > done, there is no reason to tell patients of the findings. " > > ENTER THE 410 > > McGhan's Style 410 implant is made of a thicker, stickier gel in a > multi-layer pouch designed to prevent the leakage and migration associated > with conventional gels, according to Terrye Tebbetts, a patient educator in > Dallas and wife of inventor Dr. B. Tebbetts. > > " Even if the outside shell breaks down, the gel will not bleed out > or migrate over time, " she said, explaining that it's made from larger > molecules that stick tightly together. > > McGhan's Style 410 implant > > " It's so cohesive that if you cut a triangle out of it and pulled it out, > you could slip it right back in, like a puzzle, " she said. > > Plus, the design is an improvement aesthetically over conventional > round gel implants, Tebbetts said. " It allows you to achieve a natural > appearance - not the Baywatch look. " > > Jewell said he and his patients like it, and his slots for the 410 > trial are filling up quickly. > > One of those enrollees, 45-year-old ,* said she was going to > get a saline implant until some of her friends told her they " feel off. " > > " The 410s are so real, it's amazing, " said the Eugene, Ore., mother > of three. " I'd always been a little small. Now I'm larger, my clothes fit a > lot better. " > > said she had no concerns about 410's safety. " I did a lot of > research, talked to women who had the procedure and Dr. Jewell gave me > information to read. For me, the plusses outweighed the negative. " > > But Baker said he sees a downside. " It's firmer than conventional > gel, " he said. " It's textured as opposed to smooth, which can cause > rippling, and shaped as opposed to round, which I don't think looks as good. > > " I don't know how patient acceptance will be, " Baker said. > > Since the 410 is thicker, there is reason to believe they would leak > less and thus be safer, Zuckerman acknowledged. But she said long-term data > are needed before it can be given a clean bill of health. > " Every time they change the formulation, there is all this > excitement - this time we got it right, " Zuckerman said. " Then a few years > later, problems only begin to surface. " > > PREDICTIONS OF A COMEBACK > > Sybil Nyden Goodrich - the whistleblower who set off the silicone > brouhaha after she found out the implants were not approved by the FDA and > published an article describing her experience in Ms. magazine - said she > is not surprised manufacturers and plastic surgeons are trying to bring gel > implants back. After a mastectomy, Goodrich had four pairs of silicone > implants from 1983-1984, all of which ruptured. > > " The FDA has dropped the ball. They approved saline implants despite > a complication rate they themselves admit is relatively high, " said > Goodrich, a plaintiff in the Dow Corning lawsuit. " So why wouldn't > companies think they can push silicone through, too? " > > Dr. Middleton, a radiologist at the University of > California, San Diego, who studies implant images, said he has no doubt > that we'll see a return to silicone - mainly due to changing public > sentiment. > > " The constant stream of bad press is over, for the most part, " he > said. " Plastic surgeons are in favor of them. > > " The patients want them and now better know the risks. > > " And just like with smoking, " Middleton said, " there is group of > people for whom those risks are acceptable. " > > *Name has been changed at the request of the patient to protect her > privacy. > > Return next Monday for Skin Deep Part 3: Growing your own breast > tissue. > > > Write a letter to the Editor > > (There's a form here) > http://www.msnbc.com/modules/exports/ct_email.asp?/news/584763.asp'>http://www.msnbc.com/modules/exports/ct_email.asp?/news/584763.asp > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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