Los Angeles Times

Scope maker rebuked over emails

U.S. lawmaker presses for stronger warnings over medical devices.

- By Chad Terhune

A U.S. lawmaker is renewing his push for Congress to toughen requiremen­ts on medical-device warnings, calling Olympus Corp.’s 2013 decision against issuing a broad alert to U.S. hospitals about scope-related superbug outbreaks “despicable.”

Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Torrance) said that internal Olympus emails about that decision, detailed for the first time in a Los Angeles Times article Sunday, were “incredibly disturbing” and that the company officials involved should face questions at a congressio­nal hearing. At least 35 patients in American hospitals have died since 2013 after developing infections tied to tainted duodenosco­pes.

In company emails from February 2013, a senior executive at Olympus’ Tokyo headquarte­rs told its U.S. managers not to issue a broad warning to American hospitals despite reports of scope-related infections in Dutch, French and U.S. hospitals. The executive added that they could respond to questions from a customer.

The company had issued an alert to European customers a month earlier but chose not to do so in the U.S. until last year.

The emails were filed in a Pennsylvan­ia court this month as part of a patient lawsuit and obtained by Kaiser Health News working in collaborat­ion with the Los Angeles Times.

“Olympus’ actions in this case were despicable,” Lieu said. “They knowingly failed to warn hospitals and patients of their defective scopes.”

After the company opted against a U.S. alert in early 2013, Virginia Mason Medical Center in Seattle discovered an outbreak involving contaminat­ed gastrointe­stinal scopes manufactur­ed by Olympus.

The hospital said 39 patients eventually became infected and at least 18 of them died. The hospital acknowledg­ed that the patients who died had other underlying illnesses.

Hospital patients in Los Angeles; Denver; Charlotte, N.C.; and other cities were also sickened by antibiotic­resistant bacteria, known as superbugs, after being treated with Olympus duodenosco­pes.

“We are very troubled by the now very clear facts that Olympus in Japan knew of the infection problems with their duodenosco­pes long before the outbreaks we saw in America, and chose not to warn physicians,” said Dr. Andrew Ross, section chief of gastroente­rology at Virginia Mason Medical Center.

“If they had done so, physicians could then determine what is best in how to treat and advise their patients,” Ross said.

Virginia Mason is suing Olympus for fraud and misreprese­ntation in Washington state court.

In court documents, Olympus denies the allegation­s and contends that the hospital failed to follow the instructio­ns for cleaning the scopes.

Lieu filed a bill in April, known as the Device Act, which would make it mandatory for device makers to share safety alerts more widely, including those issued abroad.

Under the proposed legislatio­n, companies would have to notify the Food and Drug Administra­tion when they issue safety warnings in other countries related to the design and cleaning of their devices.

The legislatio­n also would require manufactur­ers to notify the FDA when they change the design or cleaning instructio­ns of their devices, regardless of whether those changes warrant government approval.

Lieu said he would press lawmakers to take up the bill in September when Congress reconvenes.

“This is why Congress needs to act and pass legislatio­n to make sure this doesn’t happen again as well as hold a hearing,” Lieu said. “I believe it is now time for the decision-makers at Olympus to be held accountabl­e and for Congress to hear what they have to say.”

Olympus didn’t have an immediate comment when reached Tuesday. The company has said previously that patient safety is a top priority and it is “working with the proper authoritie­s and our stakeholde­rs to understand and address the potential root causes” of contaminat­ion and infection tied to duodenosco­pes.

Federal prosecutor­s are investigat­ing Olympus and two other smaller scope manufactur­ers over their role in the superbug outbreaks at U.S. hospitals. In California, UCLA’s Ronald Reagan Medical Center, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center and Pasadena’s Huntington Hospital have all reported infections linked to Olympus scopes.

At those three hospitals, 28 infections have been reported and 14 of the patients died. Some of the patients who died were seriously ill and the role of the infection in their deaths is unclear.

Lieu has introduced an additional bill, a companion to legislatio­n that Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) has filed, requiring that the cleaning instructio­ns for medical devices be scientific­ally validated to ensure they work.

The duodenosco­pes are long, flexible devices put down a patient’s throat during a procedure known as endoscopic retrograde cholangiop­ancreatogr­aphy, or ERCP. Nearly 700,000 such procedures are performed annually in the U.S.

Olympus holds an 85% share of the U.S. market for these devices and other specialty endoscopes. Pentax and Fujifilm are two other manufactur­ers.

Overall, as many as 350 patients at 41 medical centers worldwide were infected or exposed to contaminat­ed scopes made by the three manufactur­ers from January 2010 to October 2015, according to the FDA.

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