Last week's Supreme Court decision in Wyeth v. Levine protected consumers’ longstanding right to take pharmaceutical companies to court for failing to properly warn patients and their doctors about the risks posed by the drugs they market. Unfortunately, people injured by faulty medical devices don't have the same right following last year’s Riegel v. Medtronic decision.
Without the protection of the courts, patients with medical devices rely solely on the protections afforded by the FDA approval process. But last week, the Wall Street Journal's Alicia Mundy gave a glimpse at just how broken that process can be.
Mundy tracked the FDA approval of Menaflex, a small pad made of cow collagen that can be implanted in a torn meniscus to both patch the tear and promote tissue regrowth. The manufacturer, ReGen, originally submitted the device for FDA approval under normal procedures for new devices, but when the required clinical trials ran into snags (including criticism from FDA about conflicts-of-interest and data integrity), ReGen shifted course and asked FDA to approve the device under its 510(k) “fast track” process. For ReGen, that would mean they could get the device approved without having to finish the clinical trial. However, 510(k) approval is reserved for devices that are substantially similar to others already approved by the agency. FDA experts argued that Menaflex didn’t meet the criteria, and that’s when things got complicated. (Read the article for the full story of how members of New Jersey's congressional delegation, Bush’s political appointees, and ReGen reshaped the device approval process to their liking, paving the way for Menaflex to be introduced to the market last month.)
The WSJ story probably only scratches the surface of the problems in FDA’s medical device regulation. In December, a group of FDA career employees sent a letter to congressional overseers, claiming that political interference is rampant in FDA’s device safety group. And GAO released a report in January suggesting that FDA is using the 510(k) approval process when it’s not warranted. The situation is so bad that former FDA head Andrew von Eschenbach said that the fast-track approval process “has gotten out of control” and the medical device approval process in general is in need of a complete overhaul.
The patients are the ones who lose from this broken process. The Riegel decision leaves medical device patients at the whims of the FDA's politicized approval process. The only reason for eliminating tort law in Riegel was that Congress included language in the law governing medical device approvals that arguably preempted state tort law.
Some Members of Congress are attempting to rewrite that law to clarify that they do not intend for FDA approval of a medical device to displace state tort law. Representatives Frank Pallone and Henry Waxman, along with 65 co-sponsors, introduced H.R. 1346, the Medical Device Safety Act of 2009. (Disclaimer: CPR is a 501(c)(3); I’m not, and CPR isn’t, endorsing or criticizing the bill.)
Eliminating preemption is only part of the solution; we also need to improve the drug and device approval process to ensure that politics doesn’t negatively impact public health, and we need to improve FDA’s ability to take protective action after a drug or device has been approved.
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Matt Shudtz | March 13, 2009
Last week’s Supreme Court decision in Wyeth v. Levine protected consumers’ longstanding right to take pharmaceutical companies to court for failing to properly warn patients and their doctors about the risks posed by the drugs they market. Unfortunately, people injured by faulty medical devices don’t have the same right following last year’s Riegel v. Medtronic […]
Shana Campbell Jones | March 12, 2009
The truth hurts. Some of us accept the truth; some of us ignore it. All too often, industry-sponsored scientists take another approach to the truth: attack. A recent spat over a study finding that perchlorate blocks iodine in breast milk is an object lesson in what CPR Member Scholar Tom McGarity calls “attack science.” […]
Matt Shudtz | March 11, 2009
Monday was a good day for our nation’s science policy. At the same time he announced that the federal government will abandon misguided restrictions on stem cell research, President Obama unveiled an effort to promote a sea change in the way political appointees will treat the science that informs so many federal policies. In […]
William Buzbee | March 10, 2009
On March 3rd, the Supreme Court issued its much awaited decision in Summers v. Earth Island Institute. This was the latest in a series of cases dating to the early 1990s where the central question has concerned citizen standing: will the courts allow a citizen to stand before a court to argue that government or […]
Robert L. Glicksman | March 10, 2009
(CPR Member Scholar Robert L. Glicksman replies below to CPR Member Scholar William Buzbee’s post on the Summers vs. Earth Island Institute decision.) The decision in Summers represents the latest salvo in a continuing battle between those Supreme Court Justices who view the function of standing doctrine as ensuring that litigation before the federal […]
Matthew Freeman | March 9, 2009
CPR Member Scholar Thomas McGarity had op-eds over the weekend in three Texas newspapers — the Dallas Morning News, Houston Chronicle and Austin American-Statesman. His topic is Wyeth vs. Levine, last week’s blockbuster case from the Supreme Court, in which the Court rejected the Bush Administration’s multi-year effort to use the federal regulatory process as […]
Yee Huang | March 9, 2009
In the decade between 1994 and 2004, the bottled water industry enjoyed a meteoric rise as consumers flocked to their product, paying more per gallon than gasoline and neglecting a virtually free source of water – the tap. Bottled water drinkers formed fierce allegiances to their favorite brands, elevating bottled water beyond a beverage […]
Rena Steinzor | March 6, 2009
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) is the most maligned and least respected federal agency with responsibility for protecting people’s lives. Now that Hilda Solis has been confirmed as Secretary of the Department of Labor, we can only hope that a new OSHA administrator with a strong stomach, an iron will, and a “yes […]
Holly Doremus | March 5, 2009
The following is cross-posted by permission from Legal Planet. The Bush administration’s last-minute ESA (non)consultation rule is getting almost as much attention now as it did during the comment period. Then, the administration reportedly received more than 300,000 comments, the vast majority of them negative. Those objections were, of course, quickly swept under the […]