Wednesday, March 21, 2012

J&J Sold Vaginal Mesh Implant Without U.S. Regulatory Approval - Bloomberg

Johnson & Johnson sold a vaginal mesh implant for three years before U.S. regulators approved the device, now the subject of more than 550 lawsuits by women who claim it injured them.

J&J introduced the Gynecare Prolift device in March 2005, touting it in an annual report as an “innovative and effective surgical option” for weakened pelvic muscles. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said it learned of the Prolift in 2007, when J&J sought approval for a related product. The FDA cleared both devices in May 2008.

The company, the world’s second-biggest health-care products maker, said it could market the Prolift without approval because it was so similar to an approved device, the Gynecare Gynemesh, said Morgan Liscinsky, an FDA spokeswoman, in a March 16 e-mail. “FDA disagreed with this assertion,” concluding distribution began “without appropriate” clearance, she said.

J&J’s unauthorized sales might cost it more to resolve lawsuits over the product. J&J already has endured recalls of artificial hip implants and over-the-counter drugs. Three J&J units have pleaded guilty in the past two years to bribery or illegal marketing of drugs. A fourth agreed to plead guilty in a marketing case.

“They were initially able to put the Prolift on the market without even telling the FDA,” said attorney Adam Slater, who is suing J&J on behalf of more than 100 women. “Even though Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) supposedly lives by a credo to put the patient first, this is an example of fast-tracking a product to market quickly rather than going to the FDA first.”

New Questions

The conduct by J&J’s Ethicon unit also raises anew questions about the FDA’s fast-track approval process, which lets companies introduce products without human testing if the agency decides they’re similar to devices already for sale -- so-called predicate devices. Congress has been pushing for an overhaul of the system in response to high-profile recalls, including J&J’s decision in 2010 to withdraw 93,000 hip prosthetics with higher-than-expected failure rates.

In 2007, the FDA required J&J to submit a so-called 510(k) application to fast-track the Prolift, Liscinsky said. The FDA learned of the Prolift after J&J cited it in July 2007 as a predicate for a follow-on device, the Prolift+M, she said.

J&J introduced the original Prolift in March 2005 after “applying the relevant FDA guidance and based on the safety and effectiveness” of Gynemesh, Matthew Johnson, a spokesman for the New Brunswick, New Jersey-based company, said in an e-mail.

Actions ‘Responsible’

“Throughout this process, our actions were responsible, appropriate and consistent with FDA regulations,” he said. “Numerous clinical studies suggest that when combined with proper surgical technique, surgical mesh can improve patient outcomes, and Ethicon’s devices are among the most studied devices on the market for this condition.”

Andrew Sokol, an associate professor of obstetrics/ gynecology and urology at the Georgetown University School of Medicine, said he was “absolutely concerned” after hearing that J&J marketed the Prolift without FDA approval.

“That information would have been important for most surgeons,” Sokol said. “Most surgeons probably would have not used a completely new product if there was no oversight.”

Surgeons use mesh products to treat incontinence or help women with pelvic organ prolapse, a condition in which weakened muscles fail to support internal organs. Several mesh products, like the Gynemesh and the Prolift, are threaded in place through an incision in the vagina.

Fivefold Jump

An FDA report in July found a fivefold jump in deaths, injuries or malfunctions tied to vaginal mesh for prolapsed organs. In September, an advisory panel urged the FDA to reclassify such mesh as “high-risk” devices needing human testing. In January, the FDA said J&J, Murray Hill, New Jersey- based C.R. Bard Inc. (BCR) and other makers must study organ damage and complications related to the products.

The dispute between the FDA and J&J centers on how the company should have acted in light of differences between the Gynemesh Prolene Soft Mesh, the Prolift and the Prolift+M. The FDA cleared the Gynemesh on Jan. 8, 2002, for the repair of hernia and other defects with connective tissue.

The Gynemesh and Prolift are made of the same nonabsorbable polymer, while the Prolift kit included pre-cut mesh and instruments to help surgeons implant the device.

J&J applied in 2007 for the Prolift+M, which also included an absorbable type of mesh and cited the Prolift as a predicate, Liscinsky said. That application said the Prolift was an “insignificant change” to the previously approved Gynemesh under the 510(k) process, Liscinsky said.

Conclusion Questioned

When an FDA reviewer contacted Ethicon in July 2007 about that conclusion, the company cited the agency’s guidance document, “Deciding When to Submit a 510(k) for a Change to an Existing Device,” according to Liscinsky and Johnson.

“The lead reviewer determined that Ethicon should have submitted a separate 510(k) for Prolift,” she said.

The reviewer asked Ethicon for “information to support the safety and effectiveness” of the Prolift, Liscinsky said. The data was reviewed during the Prolift+M application, she said.

A review of an FDA database of reported malfunctions, deaths or serious injuries shows that the agency got 123 complaints about Prolift from 2005 to May 15, 2008, when the device won clearance.

The last came the day of that clearance and involved a patient who was experiencing “discomfort” and “a scalloping and ridging erosion” of a pelvic muscle, according to the database. The entry also noted the patient’s “tissue was poor prior to the procedure.” A surgeon removed the implant.

70 Witnesses

The mesh lawsuits blaming J&J for injuries are pending in state court in Atlantic City, New Jersey. J&J has produced more than 2.3 million pages of documents through the pre-trial exchange of evidence known as discovery.

Patients’ lawyers are seeking to interview more than 70 company witnesses, including Gary Pruden and Sheri S. McCoy, the leader of J&J’s pharmaceutical and consumer products unit. Both Pruden and McCoy previously served as company group chairman and worldwide franchise chairman of Ethicon.

McCoy was one of two executives in the running to succeed outgoing Chief Executive Officer William Weldon. J&J announced Feb. 22 that the post will go to Alex Gorsky, who oversees medical devices and the company’s supply chain.

Lawyer’s Questions

Plaintiffs’ lawyers should be allowed to ask McCoy about Prolift, given that the device was put on the market in early 2005, “yet 510K clearance was not obtained to legally market the Prolift until May 15, 2008,” said Slater, of Mazie Slater Katz & Freeman LLC in Roseland, New Jersey, in a March 8 filing.

“Ms. McCoy’s knowledge or lack thereof as to this and other issues is directly relevant to establishing the defendants’ liability in this litigation,” Slater said.

J&J opposes the request to interview McCoy and Pruden, saying neither possesses “specific or unique knowledge or information that cannot be obtained from less obtrusive and burdensome methods,” according to a Feb. 23 court filing.

Pfizer Inc. (PFE), based in New York, is the biggest maker of medical products based on annual sales.

To contact the reporters on this story: David Voreacos in Newark, New Jersey at dvoreacos@bloomberg.net; Alex Nussbaum in New York at Anussbaum1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Michael Hytha at mhytha@bloomberg.net; Reg Gale at rgale5@bloomberg.net

Posted via email from Jack's posterous

1 comment:

John said...

We all witnessed the weakness in the 510(k) approval process and how these loopholes can be exploited by manufacturers to rush an untested product to the market. The surgical mesh kits used for POP and SUI are one of these products that with stricter regulation, with more clinical trials and with more conclusive data, would have saved many patients from horrible experiences.
These meshes always seems to be in negative light and only concerning news appear around them. Just to mention a few:
-In June 2010 FDA alerts about counterfeit Polypropylene meshes marketed under the brand name "Bard";
-May 2011 FDA alerts about high risk of infection for Boston Scinetific mesh slings,along with other medical devices, that were stolen before sterilization;
And now this news also comes as a shock.

I appreciate for sharing with us.