Urge Congress to Pass the Medical Device Safety Act

Last Spring the Supreme Court ruled in Riegel v. Medtronic, 552. U.S. 2 (2008) that a medical device manufacturer cannot be sued under state law by patients who claim to have been harmed by the device that received marketing approval from the FDA. In response The Medical Device Safety Act of 2009 was introduced in the Senate to allow those law suits to be filed. Even the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine editors wrote articles encouraging Congress to swiftly pass the proposed act. After introduction, the bill was referred to committee but has not come out of committee.

I was curious about how treating physicians felt about the ruling in Riegel and the bill. I interviewed Dr. Fred Meyer, a Professor and the Chair of the Department of Orthopedics at the University of South Alabama in Mobile, Alabama. http://www.southalabama.edu/usahs/hsjoin.pl?docID=261

Dr. Meyer has implanted thousands of medical devices over his career. Orthopedic medical devices allow his patients to return to a more normal life after a serious injury or debilitating illness. He relies heavily on the manufacturer to design and manufacture devices that fit the needs of his patients. A great majority of times those devices do exactly what they were designed to do. When they fail, the consequences to his patients can be grave. If they fail because they were not designed correctly or due to a manufacturer’s error, Dr. Meyer believes, like the editors of the New England Journal, that his patients should have access to the civil justice system to be compensated. He also told me that he has seen how the civil justice system provides a safety net to his patients from manufacturers who fail to provide devices that are manufactured to specified standards.

He reminded me of the Sulzer hip-replacement debacle. Sulzer designed a hip replacement which was presented to and after testing approved by the FDA. However, after implanting the hip replacement, several surgeons reported cases of early failure which led to an investigation. That investigation revealed the failure arose from an attempt to cut costs which resulted in leaving a residue of machining oils on the backside of the shell of the hip-replacement. This residue inhibited the bone growth necessary for bonding between the shell and pelvic bone. This in effect, caused the shell of the hip-replacement to loosen, scar tissue to form, and in some cases additional bone loss. Patients implanted with this defected product experienced pain in the groin and inner thigh, pain when rising from a seated position, and weight-bearing pain. Due to these severe symptoms, many needed revision surgery. The Sulzer hip-replacement implants were recalled and removed from the market.

Dr. Meyer cited this as a perfect example of how FDA approval does not guarantee the success of a device and how without the civil justice system his patients who suffered unnecessarily would have not been compensated due to a cost saving attempt by a manufacturer. He also told me the story of scheduling a surgery for wrist implant and being assured by the company representative that the device was exactly what he needed only to find out the device was sized wrong. Had Dr. Meyer proceeded with the surgery without recognizing the error, under the Riegel case and without the passage of the Medical Device Safety Act of 2009 or a similar act, that patient will be unable to be compensated because the FDA approved the device. Such a result cannot be the law of this country.

We should all be aware how the Riegel ruling unfairly deprives consumers of compensation for wrongs committed by device manufacturers. The FDA is not perfect. It does not have the resources to watch the manufacturing process of every medical device to ensure short cuts are not used that could result in harming patients. They cannot be in the surgical suites when manufacturer’s representatives try to push an improper device. Please contact your Congressmen and Senators urging them to revive this bill and get it out of committee. A vote for the bill is a vote for all of us.

0 replies

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *