Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

FDA takes up age-old debate about breast implant safety

- By Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON — U.S. health officials are taking another look at the safety of breast implants, the latest review in a decadeslon­g debate.

At a two-day meeting that starts Monday, a panel of experts for the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion will hear from researcher­s, plastic surgeons and implant makers, as well as from women who believe their ailments were caused by the implants.

The panel will consider next steps, but the FDA isn’t proposing any new restrictio­ns or warnings. The agency’s long-standing position is that implants are essentiall­y safe as long as women understand they can have complicati­ons, including scarring, pain, swelling and implant rupture.

The FDA and other regulators worldwide have been grappling with how to manage a recently confirmed link to a rare cancer and the thousands of unconfirme­d complaints of other health problems.

In documents released before the meeting, FDA regulators said it is “impossible” for them to determine how frequently the a form of lymphoma occurs because the U.S. does not track the total number of implants on the market. Estimates of the frequency of the disease range from 1 in 3,000 women to 1 in 30,000.

Most confirmed cases of breast implant-associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma have involved a particular style of implants with a textured surface, designed to reduce scar tissue and slippage. But the FDA said it has also received reports of the disease in smooth implants — which account for most of the U.S. market — raising questions about whether the cancer is a risk with both types.

The disease is not breast cancer, but one that attacks the immune system and usually forms in the scar tissue surroundin­g implants. It grows slowly and can usually be successful­ly treated by surgically removing the implants.

Thousands of women have also blamed their implants for a host of ailments, including rheumatoid arthritis, chronic fatigue and muscle pain. In the documents, the FDA reiterated its position that “there is not sufficient evidence” linking them to breast implants. The agency also sidesteppe­d requests from patients to add a boxed warning — the agency’s most serious type — to breast implants and to require manufactur­ers to give women a checklist of potential harms and complicati­ons before surgery.

“I’m a little discourage­d,” said Jamee Cook, one of more than 20 patients set to speak at the meeting. “But I guess I’m hoping that what we have to say will prompt discussion on those action points.”

A former paramedic, Cook said she had an array of health problems after getting implants in 1998, including exhaustion, migraines and an immune system disorder. She said her symptoms either resolved or improved after the implants were removed in 2015.

Breast augmentati­on is the most popular form of cosmetic surgery in the U.S., with roughly 300,000 women undergoing the procedure each year. An additional 100,000 women receive implants for breast reconstruc­tion after cancer surgery. Most women choose silicone gel-filled implants, which are considered more natural looking than saline implants.

Implants first went on sale in the mid-1960s. But they attracted little attention until the late 1980s, when a wave of lawsuits alleged serious harms and diseases linked to the devices. The FDA banned the silicone gel type in 1992 because of fears they might cause breast cancer, lupus and other disorders. But when studies seemed to rule out most of the disease concern, regulators returned the implants to the market in 2006 with the requiremen­t that manufactur­ers track recipients to see how they fare long term.

Implant makers Allergan and Mentor — which is now part of Johnson & Johnson — enrolled nearly 100,000 women in a 10-year study. But more than half of the women dropped out within three years, leaving insufficie­nt data to draw firm safety conclusion­s.

 ?? DONNA MCWILLIAM/AP 2006 ?? The FDA says it’s “impossible” to determine how frequently a form of cancer occurs from breast implants.
DONNA MCWILLIAM/AP 2006 The FDA says it’s “impossible” to determine how frequently a form of cancer occurs from breast implants.

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