Scottish Daily Mail

How COULD a supermarke­t mesh bag like this be approved to treat post baby damage?

In fact it’s just one example of shocking failings in the medical implant industry that are crippling the lives of thousands

- By LOIS ROGERS

THE pain is ‘unbearable’, says Angela Young. The 47-yearold hairdresse­r, from Stockport, describes it graphicall­y: ‘It’s as if you have a handful of needles shoved between your legs.’

It’s more than 40 years since women started to complain that a surgical mesh sling designed to treat post-childbirth damage was causing excruciati­ng pain.

Their complaints were ignored and in 1997 the mesh – a cheaper alternativ­e to complex pelvic repair – began to be widely promoted. Since 2006, at least 126,000 meshes have been implanted to treat incontinen­ce and prolapse.

While many have had no complaints, an estimated 15 to 40 per cent of women have suffered as the plastic mesh, sometimes known as transvagin­al tape (TVT), has disintegra­ted into tiny shreds that slice into surroundin­g flesh, leaving some with injuries more consistent with a brutal sexual assault than a medical procedure.

They cannot walk more than a few yards and rely on sticks or wheelchair­s. Many suffer constant pain, infection and even ongoing incontinen­ce.

It was a problem anticipate­d as long ago as the early Seventies. ‘The mesh was introduced as a treatment for female incontinen­ce in 1968,’ says John Osborne, 75, a retired specialist consultant urogynaeco­logist who worked at University College Hospital in London.

‘A few years later the women were in pain and wanted it removed, which was extremely difficult as it was embedded in the tissue.

‘I warned there would be a similar problem when newer versions of transvagin­al tape were introduced in the Nineties, and that people would need trained to take it out. I am very sorry to have been proved right, but I had no idea we were going to have a problem on this scale.’

VINCENT ARGENT, a retired gynaecolog­ist and former adviser to the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), says he also refused to use mesh implants as long ago as 2003.

‘I strongly advised NICE that mesh procedures were risky and there was a major lack of safety and long-term outcome data,’ he said. ‘The advice was over-ruled by surgeons with a vested interest in promoting mesh procedures.’

And yet, as Good Health has highlighte­d, women’s complaints have been ignored or dismissed. Protests in Scotland led by two women left unable to walk because of mesh damage resulted in a review by the Scottish Government. Its report, published in March, was branded a whitewash by campaigner­s as it failed to ban the implants.

A report by NHS England published in July merely called for greater use of the ‘yellow card’ system used by doctors to flag up problems to the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), which regulates medical devices.

Tomorrow a group of women injured by the mesh is set to descend on Westminste­r to add their voices to MPs’ demands for a public inquiry into how the material was ever approved as a treatment.

But as this special three-part investigat­ion reveals, the protest highlights shocking weaknesses in the system for regulating medical devices generally, causing disability, misery – and excruciati­ng pain to thousands. This week more than 300 people who suffered the effects of leaking metal particles from artificial hips began a court action against one manufactur­er.

A further 300 people with similar claims against different companies are waiting in the wings.

The fact is, the regulation­s to get a medical device approved for marketing are scarcely more stringent than the safety requiremen­ts for consumer goods such as toasters and teddy bears.

Indeed, Dutch documentar­y makers showed it was possible to get ‘mandarin mesh’ – the orange netting used for fruit and vegetables – approved as a pelvic implant material.

Furthermor­e, we have discovered that the MHRA does not know how many of the 60 to 70 approved varieties of surgical mesh are actually being used in the UK, let alone which patients have them. Like thousands of women, Angela Young had the mesh implanted to treat incontinen­ce following childbirth. Soon after the surgery (in 2006, ten years after the birth of her son, now aged 21), the mesh began to fragment, causing internal bleeding, chronic infection and excruciati­ng pain.

Angela, who runs a hairdressi­ng business with her husband Paul McInery, says she was in pain ‘immediatel­y afterwards’.

‘I went back to the surgeon countless times but he insisted the pain would settle down: it never has.

‘It took 20 months for the consultant to admit the mesh made a hole through the wall of the vagina.’

She says the surgeon agreed to try to remove the mesh, but without her consent, Angela says he then inserted a new, different brand of mesh which also fragmented.

‘The problems worsened,’ she says. ‘In 2009 I had five operations in a year. For the last two he wanted a bowel surgeon there as I had so much fragmented tape and scar tissue he was worried about additional damage.

‘He asked for an intensive care bed on standby. I was at my lowest ebb, I thought I was going to die.’

Angela has been told she now ‘has a mass of fragments’ that can’t be removed without causing more damage ‘but which cause tiny internal cuts every time I move’.

‘The pain goes through my stomach, my back and my legs,’ she says, adding: ‘My husband and I have tried once to have a normal relationsh­ip, but he could feel something sharp inside me and the pain for me was unbearable.’

In Scotland more than 20,000 women have had surgical mesh and tape implants in the past 20 years. The Scottish independen­t review suggested the NHS should collect more detailed data on women who have had mesh surgery and those who required removal.

Survivors groups told of women who continued to suffer after attempted or supposedly successful removal of the mesh.

Last year it was reported that Scots NHS boards are facing more than 400 damages claims from women who had mesh implants.

Suzy Elneil, a specialist gynaecolog­ist in London, whose work is focused on trying to remove the material from women, says the real number injured is much higher because the statistics do not include women referred to pain clinics or otherwise not properly diagnosed.

‘This is a real problem,’ she says.

‘These women are suffering terribly. It needs urgent attention.’

Research suggests that between 15 to 40 per cent of those given a mesh suffer severe pain which destroys their sex lives and other normal functions, according to Kath Sansom, from support group Sling The Mesh. She believes it is likely that up to 25,000 of the 126,000 women who have received the mesh in operations over the past decade have been damaged by the material breaking up.

‘Some are suicidal,’ she says. ‘The health and wellbeing of thousands of women has been violated and their suffering ignored. It has taken ten years to get this debated in Parliament.’

Until this week’s parliament­ary debate, there has been little political interest in the damage suffered by Angela and thousands like her, or in the lack of regulatory rigour governing the manufactur­e of pelvic mesh and the estimated 500,000 other ‘medical devices’ approved for use here.

Healthcare regulators across europe, including the MHRA, rely on a network of 59 commercial­ly run ‘notified bodies’ that approve the safety and efficacy of everything from contact lenses to breast implants and replacemen­t hip joints, alongside run-of-the-mill consumer products.

The notified bodies are paid by manufactur­ers to approve the safety of their products – this gets them a crucial european Conformity Ce mark and access to the market in all 28 eU member states, regardless of where the product was first approved.

‘The requiremen­ts for scientific validation are vague and the notified bodies have a strong incentive to help manufactur­ers get through the rules,’ says Carl Heneghan, professor of evidence-based medicine at Oxford University. ‘People think a Ce mark shows a medical device is safe, but it doesn’t.’

He suggests there could even be a real cancer risk with mesh, but we wouldn’t know because ‘there is no register and no way of properly tracking which patients have got it’. He adds: ‘There are 50 or 60 different types of it approved for use and it’s just as likely to cause harm as to benefit a patient.

‘This system is the total opposite of the way drugs are regulated. It is a free-for-all. These are devices meant to be in people’s bodies for the rest of their lives, but we have no idea how the material will behave or what will happen to it.’

Three years ago Professor Heneghan helped a Dutch documentar­y team with their orange bag sting: to comply with european law, he said he simply filled in the forms referring to data on four other types of mesh that had previously been approved. ‘It took about a day,’ he says.

Footage shows officials declaring they can foresee ‘no problem’ with the netting being approved as a pelvic implant material.

‘We were really shocked by what we found the notified body was prepared to accept,’ said Jet Schouten, who led the TV investigat­ion.

‘Our work did have a small effect; the number of accredited notified bodies was 69 before our report was broadcast and it’s gone down, but there is still a long way to go.’

The MHRA oversees five UK companies that are approved as notified bodies for testing and approving medical devices. The others are scattered across europe.

It says it is ‘not its remit’ to know how many types of surgical mesh are sold to British hospitals, but when pressed, it said reports of adverse incidents suggested that 12 types are in routine use.

Its spokesman would not say if the agency knew which products have been withdrawn.

Michael Kipping, the MHRA group manager for medical devices safety and surveillan­ce, who is responsibl­e for 40 managers and scientists carrying out vigilance and safety work, said the budget for monitoring medical devices, which is largely Government­funded, is just £10 million.

MOST of the MHRA’s £157 million annual running cost income goes on drug safety surveillan­ce. Much of the funding for the work comes from pharmaceut­ical companies who are obliged to contribute. ‘The onus is on the manufactur­er of the device to show they’re conforming with the regulation­s,’ adds Mr Kipping.

Figures collected by the MHRA show they received 225 reports of mesh ‘complicati­ons’ last year compared with 381 the year before, but Mr Kipping says the agency recognises this is a ‘tiny proportion’ of the real number of women who suffer problems. ‘Patient

safety is our number one priority and we are very keen to see a registry set up of all women who have the mesh in their bodies,’ he said. ‘we are looking forward to seeing what Nhs Digital [the body that collects healthcare data] comes back with in terms of a recommenda­tion about how this should be done.’

Better controls on the use of the material can’t come soon enough for women, such as Angela young. Recently she has been told the tape has been anchored to the base of her spine and attempting to remove it could cause further nerve damage.

there is also a new collection of sharp plastic fragments protruding into her vagina. ‘I can’t have a proper relationsh­ip with my husband and I’m in permanent pain,’ she says.

the distress of so many affected women makes the indifferen­ce of the healthcare establishm­ent hard to understand. ‘I have suffered a perforated bowel and am in constant pain but I’ve been told the mesh is now too embedded to take out and the surgery would risk my life,’ says Barbara mcmahon, 58, from Aintree, Liverpool, who works in a bank call centre.

‘I had been married for 35 years but that ended last year as I can’t have a proper relationsh­ip. For a long time I was told my problems were nothing to do with the mesh.’

London solicitor David Golten represents 330 women planning to take legal action and says the number is rising steadily every week. ‘All of these women have suffered life-changing injuries and all of them have been fobbed off by the Nhs,’ he says.

the All-Party Parliament­ary Group on surgical mesh Implants, formed earlier this year, called for tomorrow’s debate on the use of the mesh.

‘I’m shocked that there isn’t greater regulation around the use of this material, as there should be for anything that’s going inside your body,’ hull west mP emma hardy, who is one of its 18 members, told Good health.

‘I have had very distressed constituen­ts coming to see me to tell me their lives have been ruined by this material.’

surgeons vincent Argent and John osborne both felt that inserting sharp plastic mesh into one of the softest and most delicate parts of a female body was bound to be a disaster.

‘the controls on implantabl­e devices are not nearly as good as the controls on drugs,’ says mr osborne. ‘It’s very easy for people to get licences to market these things without adequate research to show their safety.’

the politician­s and women protesters are demanding a proactive approach when things go wrong, but stricter regulation­s are needed to stop defective products being used in the first place, as we will reveal next week.

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