Guest guest Posted April 16, 2001 Report Share Posted April 16, 2001 From: " ilena rose " <ilena@...> Sent: Wednesday, April 11, 2001 10:12 AM Subject: FDA denies Dr. Harbut's citizen petition regarding platinum > keeling.m@... wrote: > > Please post the following excerpt's from the FDA letter dated March 30, 2001 > to R. Harbut, M.D., M.P.H., at the Center for Occupational & > Environmental Medicine to your e-mail lists (INFORMATION IN ALL CAPS ADDED > BY ME FOR CLARIFICATION PURPOSES): > > " Your petition requested that FDA or another appropriate party issue a > warning statement on the safety of medical devices containing silicones that > have been prepared using hexachloroplatinate as the catalyst. Your petition > also specified information that should be part of the warning statement. " > > " For several years FDA has been interested in the safety of platinum > compounds used to prepare silicone gel and elastomer. As a result, FDA > asked the Institute of Medicine (IOM) to evaluate the safety of platinum > catalysts used in the manufacture of silicone breast implants. Their > recently published report, 'Safety of Silicone Breast Implants', includes a > comprehensive and authoritative review of platinum chemistry and toxicology. > Although the report focuses on breast implants, it also draws conclusions > pertinent to the safety of other medical devices that contain > platinum-catalyzed silicones. " > > " FDA believes the IOM report is highly relevant to your petition, since both > documents rely on much of the same information and address the same major > issues; the chemical form and potential toxicity of platinum catalysts used > to prepare silicones for breast implants and other medical devices. With > regard to other silicone-containing medical devices, the report concludes, > 'Many silicone-containing implants other than breast implants (listed in > Chapter 2) are found at high frequency in the general population and > presumably contain platinum also; the committee is not aware of any evidence > that platinum toxicity is present in these persons. " > > " Although your supporting document (PLAINTIFFS' SUPPLEMENTAL SUBMISSION ON > THE CHEMISTRY AND TOXICOLOGY OF PLATINUM) was not available to the IOM > committee, FDA has carefully reviewed it and believes the committee's > conclusions regarding the lack of toxicity of platinum catalysts used to > prepare silicone-containing medical devices remain valid. FDA, therefore, > is denying your petition. " > > " Hexachloroplatinate has been used to synthesize the organoplatinum > catalysts, but there is insufficient experimental evidence for the presence > of residual hexachloroplatinate in silicone gel or solid in either the > scientific literature or your supplemental document. " > > " The IOM committee did not have access to Dr. Lykissa's more recent studies > on the form of platinum that leaks from explanted breast implants. However, > last September, Dr. Lykissa presented these unpublished data to FDA. > Although the data are suggestive that ionic platinum in various oxidation > states may be present, neither hexachloroplatinate nor other platinum salts > were identified. FDA believes the results are preliminary; they do not > conclusively identify the molecular form of platinum, nor do they establish > that, if present, the reported ionic forms of platinum are toxic in the > amounts that may leak from breast implants. " > > " In your supplemental document, you discuss information related to effects > in persons with silicone-containing implants. The 1999 study of Harbut and > Churchill, 'Asthma is patients with silicone breast implants: report of a > case series and identification of hexachloroplatinate contaminant as a > possible etiologic agent' was reviewed by the IOM committee. Their report > states, 'The authors speculated that the respiratory signs and symptoms were > the result of exposure to hexachloroplatinate in their implants. No > evidence for this was reported. Conclusions regarding platinum toxicity in > women with breast implants should await further evaluations that positively > relate platinum to the symptomatology.' FDA concurs with this statement. > In reference to allergies and asthma in women with breast implants, the IOM > report states, 'These complaints are not prominent in lists of problems in > breast implant patients(SEE APPENDIX B OF THIS REPORT)...' (THE BIAS OF THE > IOM COMMITTEE IS EVIDENT HERE BECAUSE WHEN YOU TURN TO APPENDIX B ON PAGE > 434 TITLED SYMPTOMS REPORTED BY INDIVIDUAL WOMEN OR CONSUMER GROUPS - NOT IN > ORDER OF PREVALENCE OR SEVERITY YOU FIND BREATHING DIFFICULTIES, ALLERGIC > REACTIONS, CHEMICAL AND ENVIRONMENT SENSITIVITIES, AND ASTHMA). FDA > believes the available information does not implicate platinum in allergic > reactions or asthma in women with silicone breast implants. " > > " Your supplemental document also refers to immunological effects in patients > with silicone shunts. Adverse immunological effects of silicone have > largely been discounted (IOM report, Chapter 8) and FDA believes that > conclusions regarding adverse clinical effects of platinum in silicones are > speculative. " > > You also discuss cases of individuals who have shown allergic-type reactions > to elemental platinum (SUCH AS WITH JEWELRY MADE OF PLATINUM). > FDA believes true allergic reactions to elemental platinum are rare and not > representative of any group with silicone-containing medical implants. > Also, in reference to platinum in catalysts used to prepare silicones for > breast implants, the 1998 report of the British Independent Review Group > (IRG), 'Silicone Breast Implants,' states, '...it is a chemically stable > form not associated with the well known true immunological sensitization... " > > " FDA also believes that a relationship between reactions to chemotherapeutic > platinum-containing drugs and platinum in medical devices has not been > established. The high doses of drugs (e.g. cisplatin) used to treat cancer > patients are known to be toxic. However, these platinum-based compounds are > not present in silicone-containing medical devices. The IOM report states, > 'Cisplatin...is highly toxic to the gastrointestinal tract, kidney, bone > marrow, and peripheral nervous system. This compound does not occur in > silicone breast implants, however.' With regard to platinum catalysts, the > IRG report states, 'These...are much less toxic than platinum compounds > used as cytoxic drugs. " > > Finally, as reported by Nuttall, et al. in 1994, whereas urinary platinum > levels in women with breast implants and a negative reference group were > equivalent (<4ug/L), platinum levels in patients receiving cisplatin often > reach 100-1000 ug/L. > > NO LONG TERM TESTING FOR PLATINUM IN EXPLANTS BY ICP-MS AND ION > CHROMATOGRAPHY HAS BEEN DONE EXCEPT BY ERNEST LYKISSA, Ph.D. THIS IS > SIMILAR TO RESEARCHING FIRESTONE TIRES ON AN EXPLORER AS IT ROLLS OFF THE > ASSEMBLY LINE AND DECLARING THEM SAFE RATHER THAN RESEARCHING SHREDDING AND > DISINTEGRATING TIRES AFTER A CAR WRECK. PRELIMINARY RESEARCH PRESENTED TO > THE FDA INDICATED THAT SIGNIFICANT AMOUNTS OF PLATINUM LEAKS FROM BREAST > IMPLANTS OVER TIME, AND WHEN SPECIATED USING NEW STATE OF THE ART EQUIPMENT, > THE PLATINUM WAS FOUND TO BE IN A HIGHLY REACTIVE AND TOXIC FORM WHICH MAY > INDICATE CATALYST MOLECULAR DETERIORATION DUE TO THE AGING PROCESSES DURING > IMPLANTATION. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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