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California, DePuy, Food & Drug Administration, Hip Replacement, Johnson, Los Angeles, New York TImes, UNited States
Maker Aware of 40% Failure in Hip Implant – NYTimes.com.
Maker Aware of 40% Failure in Hip Implant
By BARRY MEIER
Published: January 22, 2013
An internal analysis conducted by Johnson & Johnson in 2011 not long after it recalled a troubled hip implant estimated that the all-metal device would fail within five years in nearly 40 percent of patients who received it, newly disclosed court records show.
Johnson & Johnson never released those projections for the device, the Articular Surface Replacement, or A.S.R., which the company recalled in mid-2010. But at the same time that the medical products giant was performing that analysis, it was publicly playing down similar findings from a British implant registry about the device’s early failure rate.
The company’s analysis also suggests that the implant is likely to fail prematurely over the next few years in thousands more patients in addition to those who have already had painful and costly procedures to replace it.
The internal Johnson & Johnson analysis is among hundreds of internal company documents expected to become public as the first of over 10,000 lawsuits by patients who got an A.S.R. prepares to go to trial this week. The episode represents one of the biggest medical device failures in recent decades and the forthcoming trial is expected to shed light on what officials of Johnson & Johnson’s DePuy Orthopaedics division knew about the device’s problem before its recall and the actions they took or did not take.
The trial, which is expected to begin Friday in California Superior Court in Los Angeles, may also provide a guide to the consequences of the A.S.R. episode to Johnson & Johnson, both for the company’s finances and its reputation. Last year, the company took a $3 billion special charge, much of it related to medical and legal costs associated with the device. DePuy has offered to pay patient costs for replacement procedures.
The A.S.R. belonged to a once-popular class of hip implants in which a device’s cup and ball component were both made of metal. While the A.S.R. was the most failure-prone of those implants, surgeons have largely abandoned using such devices in standard hip replacement because their components can grind together, releasing metallic debris that damages a patient’s tissue and bone.
On Friday, Judge J. Stephen Czuleger, who is presiding over the Los Angeles case, unsealed a number of motions that contained portions of pretrial depositions of DePuy officials as well as related company records. Those disclosures, like the company’s estimate of the A.S.R.’s failure rate, represent only a tiny fraction of the information that will become public if the trial proceeds. Over the last two years, plaintiffs’ lawyers working on A.S.R.-related lawsuits have reviewed tens of thousands of internal DePuy documents and taken depositions from dozens of company executives.
Executives of DePuy have long insisted that their handling of the A.S.R. was forthright and appropriate. In mid-2010, when DePuy recalled the implant, officials said they were doing so because data that year from the National Joint Registry of England and Wales showed for the first time that it was failing prematurely at a higher rate than competing implants. In 2011, the British implant registry updated its projected failure rates for A.S.R. patients who had had it the longest, saying it was failing in one-third of them. It was that estimate that was challenged by DePuy.
About 7,000 of the A.S.R. lawsuits have been consolidated in a federal court in Ohio. An additional 2,000 cases have been consolidated in a California state court. The California case chosen to go to trial this week was selected because the plaintiff, a man named Loren Kransky, has cancer and may not live much longer, lawyers involved in the case said. DePuy has already settled a few A.S.R. cases before trial and it may choose to do so in Mr. Kransky’s case as well.
About 93,000 patients worldwide received an A.S.R., about one-third of them in the United States.
There are two versions of the A.S.R., one used in standard hip implants and the other used in an alternative replacement procedure known as resurfacing. Only the standard implant was sold in the United States. Both versions of the A.S.R., however, used the same metal hip cup as part of their design.
Asked for comment about the company’s internal analysis, a spokeswoman for DePuy, Mindy Tinsley, said in a statement that it “was based on a small, limited set of data that could not be used to generalize” the overall failure rate for the A.S.R.
In 2011, when DePuy challenged the British joint registry’s findings, the company made similar comments. Other medical organizations, however, have also projected very high failure rates for the A.S.R.
Hip implants, which are generally made from metal and plastic, often last for 15 years before they wear out and need to be replaced. Such devices can fail prematurely for a variety of reasons, but the early replacement rate is typically 1 percent after a year, or 5 percent at five years.
In pretrial testimony, Paul Voorhorst, DePuy’s director of biostatistics and data management, said that the company performed several reviews of A.S.R. failures in patients in fall 2011, a year after it recalled the model.
Based on the number of patients who had already undergone device replacement at the time, DePuy estimated that about 37 percent of patients who got an A.S.R. might need to have it replaced within five years of receiving it.
Last year, The New York Times reported that DePuy executives decided in 2009 to phase out the A.S.R. and sell off its inventories weeks after the Food and Drug Administration asked the company in a letter for additional safety data about the implant.
The F.D.A. also told the company at that time that it was rejecting its efforts to sell the resurfacing version of the device in the United States because of concerns about “high concentration of metal ions” in the blood of patients who received it.
In other pretrial testimony released Friday, a DePuy engineer stated that company officials were aware in 2008 of reports by an English surgeon that the resurfacing version of the A.S.R. was releasing high levels of metallic ions, particularly in women. As a result of the reports, company officials felt they had to move quickly to redesign the implant.
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Thank you Barry for your many articles on metal on metal hips.
The FDA keeps saying they are requesting more data from the device manufacturers on the metal particle issue, adverse events issues and I ASK MYSELF WHY IS THE FDA REQUESTING THE SAME THINGS OVER AND OVER ???
THE INFORMATION THEY ARE REQUESTING IS AVAILABLE WITHOUT THE DEVICE MANUFACTURERS, IT’S RIGHT IN FRONT OF THE FDA’S NOSE:
WAKE-UP AND HELP PEOPLE NOW, IF YOU DON’T THEIR MAYBE MORE UNNECCESSARY HARM AND SUFFERING TO PATIENTS THAT HAVE THESE METAL ON METAL IMPLANTS.
I READ SMITH AND NEPHEW TOUTS ABOUT THEIR 10 YEAR RESULTS ON 400 OF THEIR OWN CHERRY PICKED PATIENTS AND NOW THE FDA IS ASKING FOR DATA TO DEMONSTRATE THE SAFETY OF THE BIRMINGHAM HIP RESURFACING DEVICE. DO YOU THINK SMITH AND NEPHEW IS ACTUALLY GOING SAY ANYTHING BAD ABOUT THEIR HIP IMPLANT??
Read their post approval reports that were to be provided to the FDA as part of the pma approval of the bhr. They are pathetic, the patient group they used are 18-21 years of age, then there is no other information that would indicate any type of
adversities, actually there is basically no information.
Smith and Nephew had knowledge there was a problem with 2 of their hip devices during the same time frame they were seeking pma approval of the bhr in the USA.
Smith and Nephew claims their metal on metal hip is not like their competitions.
It is made out of the same basic metal on metal materials, so how do they think their bhr is not like others. It still creates friction when the patient functions by moving thus over time this friction causes metal [particles to separate from the device, then these metal particles enter the human body and cause damage, harm, pain, suffering etc. etc.
I repeat anyone involved with knowledge of these metal hips having adverse affects and did nothing about it, should be charged as a criminal and if found guilty put in jail.
What these people have done is the same as if an individual hurt some defenseless innocent person causing that person bodily harm to the degree of not walking again in some cases. Charge some of these people and they will start singing the blues and this may very well be the beginning of eliminating the CORRUPTION IN THE MEDICAL DEVICE WORLD.
RESPECTFULLY
Howard Sadwin
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