My Name is Paul H Cosentino. I started this Blog in 2011 because of what I believe to be wrongdoings in town government. This Blog is to keep the citizens of Templeton informed. It is also for the citizens of Templeton to post their comments and concerns.
A common surgical implant has generated the
largest multi-district litigation since asbestos. 60 Minutes reports on
one of the device's manufacturers, Boston Scientific, now facing 48,000
lawsuits
May 13
CorrespondentScott Pelley
There
is tremendous controversy about a surgical device implanted in more
than two million American women. It's a strip of plastic called
gynecological mesh. The manufacturers and several medical societies say
the implant is safe. But more than 100,000 women are suing. And
together, they make up the largest multi-district litigation since
asbestos. One of the largest manufacturers of gynecological mesh is
Boston Scientific, a medical device maker with $9 billion in sales.
Millions of patients benefit from its pacemakers, stents and other
devices. But Boston Scientific has attracted 48,000 lawsuits which claim
that its mesh can inflict life-altering pain and injury.
Gynecological mesh, a surgical device implanted in more than two million American women
CBS News
Surgeons
use Boston Scientific's gynecological mesh like a sling to relieve
urinary incontinence and to lift organs that shift after pregnancy. Gwyn
Madsen had a Boston Scientific implant in 2012.
Gwyn Madsen: It felt like a cheese grater inside of me.
Like
thousands of others who have filed suit, she says she suffered pain,
which in her case, left her hardly able to sit or play with her
children.
Gwyn Madsen: It felt like the material was pulling on
the muscles and I'd get shooting pains you almost felt like there was
something inside of you that was like sandpaper back and forth, every
time you'd walk.
Boston Scientific has fought allegations like
Gwyn Madsen's for years. They declined an interview for our story but
the company told us, "Nearly one million women have been successfully
treated… We have extensively tested the [plastic] resin to confirm its
composition, safety and performance." The American Urogynecological
Society has also said that plastic mesh is "safe and effective." But
that's not what many doctors are finding.
Dr. Michael Margolis: The mesh causes a chronic inflammatory reaction.
Dr. Michael Margolis is a surgeon who has removed350 mesh implants. He's been a witness in lawsuits against Boston Scientific.
Dr.
Michael Margolis: The slings I've removed are substantially altered in
their architecture. They are shrunk by at least 50% in width; they are
encased in scar tissue. The pores here, these openings here are shrunk
substantially.
Dr. Margolis recently removed this type of Boston
Scientific mesh. It had been implanted in his patient for life, but
after two years, it looked like this.
Dr. Michael Margolis: It was
folded, it was contracted, it was embedded in scar tissue, it was
choking off the urethra. It was 50% the size of its original implant. I
measured it, as I always do.
Scott Pelley: These are things that are not supposed to happen?
Dr. Michael Margolis: Of course not. This implant is not supposed to change.
Dr. Michael Margolis
CBS News
The
mesh is made of a plastic called polypropylene, a common material in
packaging. Boston Scientific had clearance from the FDA to use a brand
of polypropylene called "Marlex" made in Texas by a subsidiary of
Chevron Phillips. But in 2004, Chevron Phillips became concerned about
medical use of Marlex. It issued a warning that it must not be used for
"permanent implantation in the human body." Duane Priddy is a leading
plastics engineer and a fellow of the American Chemical Society.
Duane
Priddy: I can't, in my wildest imagination, imagine anybody that's
knowledgeable in the science of plastics ever deciding that it was
appropriate to use polypropylene in the human body. It's well known that
its oxidatively unstable.
Duane Priddy has been a witness in mesh
lawsuits, but he is not part of any litigation against Boston
Scientific. He explained to us that oxygen breaks up polypropylene. The
plastic has antioxidant additives but they dissipate over time.
Duane
Priddy: Once those antioxidants are consumed, they're no longer there
to do their job, polypropylene will rapidly disintegrate and fall apart.
Scott Pelley: In layman's terms, oxygen eats plastic.
Duane Priddy: That's correct.
In
2005, Chevron Phillips cut off Boston Scientific's supply of Marlex.
Later, when Boston Scientific appealed, Chevron Phillips replied, "We
are simply not interested in this business at any price." Boston
Scientific estimated that it would run out of Marlex by 2012. George
Vialle, director of Global Supply Chain wrote, this plastic resin
"supports a $120 million in annual revenue… I can not [sic] overstate
the importance of getting more." Boston Scientific had to have Chevron
Phillips Marlex because that plastic was already accepted by the FDA.
Chris
DeArmitt: They looked everywhere. They looked at least 20 different
companies all around the world. They were looking for stocks of
material.
Chris DeArmitt is a plastics engineer who researched Boston Scientific for one of the women suing the company.
Chris
DeArmitt: they really struggled. There was a big panic on because they
had a big stockpile. They ran out. And they realized they were gonna
have to source more.
That struggle is revealed in company
documents that we found in court records. This report shows, in 2010, a
second supplier refused to sell polypropylene "for use in medical
device." Boston Scientific's global sourcing division decided to use a
middleman with "no direct link to BSC" so the plastic makers wouldn't
know the true buyer. But that plan failed.
Chris DeArmitt: They're
looking for material and they're desperate. They can't find it locally
so they find it in China. And they literally say, "We have to be careful
here. Some of these look more credible than other ones." They are not
convinced that it's real material.
A broker in China, called Emai,
said it had tons of Marlex imported from Chevron Phillips in Texas.
Boston Scientific's man in China wrote his superiors, "do we need to ask
[Emai] if this material is supposed to be used in medical implantable?"
Boston Scientific's director of materials management replied, "please
don't tell them where we will use it. It could scare them away."
That
same month, the FDA issued a damning report. Over five years, the FDA
found that mesh supporting organs after pregnancy, had resulted in
nearly 4,000 "reports of injury, death, and malfunction" and
complications including "pain, infection, urinary problems, bleeding and
organ perforation." "Serious adverse events," the FDA said, "are not
rare." Now, Boston Scientific had even more reason to believe that if it
switched plastics the FDA would require years of tests which might
fail. The company's best hope appeared to be the plastic in China but
then came the red flags.
Boston
Scientific's own procedures required documents and import records that
proved that the plastic was Marlex from Texas. But Chinese broker, Emai,
didn't have any documents to verify authenticity. Boston Scientific
checked the lot numbers on the bags and confirmed through Chevron
Phillips, three times, that the numbers were fraudulent. Even the bags
were fake.
Chevron Phillips says the printing on the counterfeit bag, on
the right, is full of errors from the color to the name of the Texas
city where Marlex was made. Evidence was mounting that the plastic in
China was counterfeit, so Boston Scientific ordered tests to compare it
with original Marlex.
Chris DeArmitt: They analyzed 11 different
parameters, looking at the two plastics side by side, done, the same
tests. Nine of those were different. Two were the same, nine were
different. And of those nine that were different, four of those
parameters were very different. And somehow, from that, they concluded
that it was the same material.
Scott Pelley: How did they come to that conclusion?
Chris
DeArmitt: Well, I'm wondering that too. I mean, how can you look at two
things side by side and say, "Yes, it's the same stuff."
In an
email from the address of Ann Charest, manager for plastics in Boston
Scientific's global sourcing division, there's speculation about the
Chinese plastic's lack of documents. "It may not have been imported
through proper channels" or it may have been "redistributed enough
times, the original paperwork has been lost/forgotten…" Facing a
deadline, with those test results, no documents and having learned the
lot numbers were fake, Charest concludes, "I believe this is the right
material." Boston Scientific bought enough of the Chinese plastic to
last 30 years. We hired plastics engineer Duane Priddy as an independent
consultant to analyze Boston Scientific's own tests of the Chinese
plastic. We found the test results in court documents.
Duane
Priddy: I would predict a significant difference in the antioxidant
stability, or I should say the oxidation resistance of those products in
the human body.
Scott Pelley: The Chinese product is inferior?
Duane Priddy: Absolutely. Yes.
Scott Pelley: Is the Chinese product something that you would imagine being placed inside the human body for 20, 30, 40 years.
Duane Priddy: Absolutely not.
Scott Pelley: How long would it likely last?
Duane Priddy: A few months.
Duane Priddy
CBS News
Teresa
Stevens: I started to have problems right away. I told the doctor while
I was in the hospital, I couldn't feel my bladder, I couldn't feel when
I had to go.
Teresa Stevens had a Boston Scientific mesh implant in 2014 after the company began using the Chinese plastic.
Teresa
Stevens: Sometimes when I went to the doctor, I would have an
infection, sometimes when I went I didn't. So, but I was having pain
every time I would void. So, a lot of times I would have some blood. So,
I knew something was wrong.
In 2016, she had her mesh implant
removed by Dr. Michael Margolis who told us the Chinese plastic's lack
of documents is a concern.
Dr. Michael Margolis: This is an
experimental material. Implantation of this into anyone is human
experimentation but without consent. Because this is novel material. We
don't know how this affects humans, it's never been tested before.
Chris
DeArmitt: I would say the material they're buying maybe is fine for
making a park bench. Maybe it's fine for making a disposable cup. But
that's a totally different situation when you're looking at something
that will be in the body for 40 or 50 or 60 years. There's a whole
different level of analysis and confidence that you need. And I don't
see that here.
Scott Pelley: The FDA requires Boston Scientific
and companies like it to understand every step in the supply chain. In
other words, who made the material, who packaged it, who shipped it, et
cetera. How much did Boston Scientific understand about that supply
chain?
Chris DeArmitt: They don't seem to know where the material
is coming from. Nobody knows who the original manufacturer is. Nobody
knows and that's a big deal, right? You have to take a record of every
lot, was it contaminated? Has it been tested? And they don't know any of
those, any of those answers.
Boston Scientific also faced hurdles
in getting the 16 tons of plastic out of China. The counterfeit bags
were labeled "Texas." But, with no import records, Boston Scientific's
man in China wrote, "If we don't get rid of the original bags… if it is
caught by customs we will be in trouble." A plan to hide the bags in
plain wrappers was approved in an email sent from the address of Charles
Smith, a director in Boston Scientific's urology and women's health
division.
"We can over bag." The email reads. Pictures of the
overbagging operation were then distributed to many company executives
for their approval. On its declarations, Boston Scientific told the
Chinese the plastic was made in China. It told U.S. Customs the plastic
was made in the U.S. Because
of lawsuits by Teresa Stevens, Gwyn Madsen, and thousands of others,
the FDA looked into Boston Scientific's experience with the Chinese
plastic. The FDA declined an interview but wrote, "We… did not find any
indication that the change in [plastic] resin led to an increase in
adverse events. We have confidence in our… findings."
Scott
Pelley: The FDA recently reviewed these same test results and they said
that the Chinese mesh, quote, "does not raise new safety or
effectiveness concerns." What do you make of that?
Duane Priddy:
That's shocking. It's hard for me to imagine somebody looking at that
data and generating an opinion that it is acceptable for use in the
human body.
Scott Pelley: Is your analysis something that any other expert in plastics would see immediately?
Duane Priddy: Yes.
Scott Pelley: This is not a close call?
Duane Priddy: No.
As
we said, Boston Scientific declined an interview but it wrote, "Any
allegations continuing to question the integrity or legitimacy of our
[plastic] resin are false and irresponsible." We wondered whether Boston
Scientific mesh products still contain the Chinese polypropylene
smuggled into the United States, so we purchased 15 Boston Scientific
mesh kits and sent them to a leading plastics lab. All of them matched
the Chinese plastic.
Produced by Oriana Zill de Granados and Michael Rey
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