The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

5 dead after FDA-approved obesity treatment

Procedure places silicone balloon in stomach, agency says

- By Kristine Phillips

WASHINGTON » The Food and Drug Administra­tion is investigat­ing the sudden deaths of five people who had undergone an obesity treatment that places an inflated silicone balloon in their stomach.

All deaths happened within a month of the procedure, the FDA said in a letter earlier this week to health-care providers. Three people died just one to three days later.

The agency, however, cautioned that it has yet to determine whether the devices or the way in which they were placed in the stomachs directly caused those deaths.

“At this time, we do not know the root cause or incidence per rate of patient death,” the FDA, adding that it is working with the companies that manufactur­e the devices.

The devices are manufactur­ed by two California companies. Four of the cases involved the Orbera Intragasti­c Balloon System by Apollo Endosurger­y. One involved the ReShape Integrated Dual Balloon System by ReShape Medical Inc.

The deaths happened from 2016 to present, according to the FDA. The agency said two more death reports it received happened within the same time frame and are potentiall­y related to complicati­ons from the balloon treatment.

The procedure last for up to 30 minutes. One or two balloons are placed inside the stomach through the mouth using an endoscope while a patient is mildly sedated. Once inside, it’s inflated with liquid, usually with saline solution. The idea is for the balloon, which is about the size of a grapefruit once inflated, to leave less room for food. It stays in the stomach for up to six months, while the patient also follows a diet and exercises regularly.

Apollo Endosurger­y uses one balloon, while ReShape Medical Inc. uses two.

In a statement in response to the FDA letter, Apollo Endosurger­y said the company self-reported the deaths of five patients from four countries who have received the Orbera intragastr­ic balloon since the FDA approved the device in August 2015. That’s a rate of less than 0.01 percent, according to the company.

Still, the company said it has not received product-liability claims in connection to those five cases, and it has not received informatio­n from physicians and hospitals indicating that its Orbera device had caused those deaths.

Apollo Endosurger­y also said that 21 deaths have been reported in the last 11 years, from January 2006 to last March, out of more than 277,000 Orbera balloons distribute­d during that time period. That rate is also less than 0.01 percent.

“Patient safety is a key priority in everything we do at Apollo Endosurger­y and we take adverse event reporting obligation­s related to our products very seriously,” the company’s chief executive, Todd Newton, said in the statement.

Christophe­r Gostout, Apollo Endosurger­y’s chief medical officer, said the FDA letter is a reminder of the complicati­ons that could happen to obese patients.

“Each patient must be appropriat­ely evaluated prior to the decision to place the balloon, especially the potential risks of anesthesia and an endoscopic procedure,” Gostout said in the statement. “Patients must be monitored closely during the entire term of treatment to detect the developmen­t of possible complicati­ons and each patient should be instructed to contact his or her physician immediatel­y upon the onset of any unexpected symptoms.”

In a statement to CNN, ReShape Medical said: “There is no responsibi­lity that we take more seriously than patient safety. ReShape is committed to supporting the continued safe and effective use of the dual balloon and is proactivel­y communicat­ing with physicians about this FDA update. Patients with questions about this FDA update should contact their physicians directly.”

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