Guest guest Posted May 22, 2005 Report Share Posted May 22, 2005 Note: forwarded message attached. Subj: Sunday's NY TIMES: Implant Maker Hid Defects, Workers Said Date: 5/22/2005 9:52:21 AM Eastern Standard Time From: dz@... Dear Friends, Here is the latest installment of the breast implant saga, in Sunday's New York Times. I will need to send a correction explaining that our Center does not oppose all silicone implants, we only oppose FDA approval for implants that are not proven safe. Otherwise, I think it is an important article and hope that it is useful in the debate on FDA and implants. The bottom line is: if an implant maker has a history of lying about the risks of their product, how can FDA or consumers have confidence that their new data are accurate. Best wishes, Zuckerman, Ph.D. President National Research Center for Women & Families 1901 Pennsylvania Ave, NW, Suite 901 Washington, DC 20006 (202) 223-4000 www.center4research.org http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/22/national/22implant.html?oref=login & pagewan ted=print May 22, 2005 Implant Maker Hid Defects, Workers Said By GARDINER HARRIS Two former employees of a major manufacturer of silicone breast implants said in sworn depositions in 2003 that the company for years made defective implants that were prone to rupture and hid this information from customers and federal regulators. One employee, C. Karjanis, who from 1996 until 1998 was manager of product evaluation for the company, the Mentor Corporation, said some top executives instructed him to destroy reports detailing the high rupture rates and poor quality of some types of implants because the products "are in the customers." He also said the implants were sometimes contaminated with fleas. The former employees were deposed as part of a lawsuit in Greene County, Mo., brought by a woman who claimed that Mentor implants had made her ill. The suit was dismissed. The depositions were provided to The New York Times last week by Kim Hoffman, the plaintiff. Josh Levine, Mentor's president and chief executive, would not comment on the employees' specific accusations. In a written statement, Mr. Levine said the company believed that a criminal investigation of Mentor by the Food and Drug Administration that began in 1998 "included allegations from these two former employees." He added, "Mentor cooperated fully with the F.D.A., and the investigation was closed in 2002 without any further action." The F.D.A.'s investigation looked into accusations that Mentor falsified records, hid defective implants and knowingly used contaminated silicone. No charges were filed. In 1998, Mentor also entered into a judicial consent agreement with the F.D.A., a serious regulatory step, to correct deficiencies in manufacturing "that could potentially affect the safety and quality of the breast implants," the agency said at the time. The agency, which in 1992 limited the use of silicone implants to reconstructive surgery, usually after cancer, is now using data provided by Mentor to help it decide whether to allow their use in cosmetic surgery. Citing a very low rupture rate reported by Mentor, a federal advisory panel voted 7 to 2 in April to approve Mentor's application. The panel rejected an application from Inamed, Mentor's rival, in part because Inamed reported a higher rupture rate among its implants than Mentor did. The companies, both based in Santa Barbara, Calif., have roughly equal shares of the United States market for silicone breast implants. Dr. Zuckerman, president of the National Research Center for Women and Families, a nonprofit group in Washington that opposes silicone implants, said the depositions suggested that the low rupture rate that Mentor has reported to the F.D.A. might not be accurate. "Mentor employees said under oath that their company significantly underreported implant problems," Dr. Zuckerman said. "Mentor's new statistics also seem questionable. Are Mentor implants so much better than their competitors' in terms of rupture rates, or are they providing misleading or false information?" The safety of silicone implants has been vigorously debated for years. A number of women's groups say they are prone to rupture - usually without the woman's knowledge - and cause long-lasting health problems. In 1999, the Institute of Medicine, an arm of the National Academy of Sciences and the nation's most prestigious medical advisory group, said there was no evidence that silicone implants caused major diseases. Plastic surgeons say that silicone implants are safe and should be more widely available to women undergoing cosmetic breast augmentation. Most of the 250,000 breast augmentations done in the United States each year use saline implants - plastic bags filled with water that can slosh during activity. Patients and doctors say silicone implants feel more natural and look better. Dr. D'Amico, a co-chairman of the breast implant task force of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, called the depositions by the former employees "old news," and said, "Our confidence in the data presented remains absolutely high." F.D.A. officials refused to comment, saying only that the application is under review. Mr. Karjanis, the former product evaluation manager, worked for Mentor from July 1996 to September 1998 and left voluntarily. The other employee, Fain, supervised the company's complaint unit. She worked for Mentor for more than three years and was fired in 1996 or 1997, she said. Both were deposed under oath as a result of subpoenas. In his deposition, Mr. Karjanis said that Mentor never met basic quality standards for implant manufacturing while he was there and that its supplier might have sent contaminated silicone. He also said the implants' packaging was sometimes infested with fleas, which came in contact with the surface of the implants. He added that workers on the factory floor would sometimes store defective implant parts above ceiling tiles so managers and inspectors would not realize how often the plant failed to make the parts properly. Mr. Karjanis said that while he was at Mentor, some manufacturing executives made efforts "to get an acceptable disposition of materials through fraudulent means." In one example, an operations manager tried to get him to approve implant parts that had been poorly made. "In reviewing the documentation, I found that the documents had been falsified," Mr. Karjanis said. "And in confronting him and asking him to come back to my office, I remember his literal statement was, 'I almost got it past you.' " Ms. Fain said Mentor greatly underreported rupture rates to the federal authorities. Like Mr. Karjanis, she said Mentor suppressed a report finding that some implant models had a high failure rate. Ms. Fain said Mentor received about 6,000 complaints of ruptured implants in each of her three years there. In its recent filing with the F.D.A., Mentor said that it received a total of 8,060 rupture complaints from 1985 to September 2003. One reason for the discrepancy, Ms. Fain said, was that Mentor disregarded rupture complaints if patients had failed to sign a form allowing the company to inspect their extracted implants. Mr. Karjanis and Ms. Fain said in the depositions that they had signed nondisclosure agreements. Neither could be reached for this article. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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