Guest guest Posted September 5, 2002 Report Share Posted September 5, 2002 Hi everyone Well I'm back up even though I have some major damage due to the lightening from last Saturday. Anyway, as many of you know I am an SBI survivor (silicone breast implant). Another of my causes is to try and continue to spread the word about the danagers of silicone and saline implants. There are not only many young women who may be exposing themself to years of sickness like myself and so many others, but also the double whammy that breast cancer survivors are now faced with. So many lies have been purchased by big manufactures and spread that the public has the idea that saline implants are " safe " . We as SBI women have been scorned and told that our health problems are all in our head. This is something that I'm sure many of us here with RP have been told. Anyway, I do hope you don't mind the article I am going to post below because I do feel spreading the word, like we are tring to do about RP, is as important when it comes to silicone and saline breast implants. We all have had enought chemical exposure to our bodies...and big manufactures are making milliions off of us as they kill us. Thank you for allowing me to post this... Sharyn article below ******************************************************************* July 2002 Update On Saline Breast Implants: New 5-Year Studies Available By Zuckerman, Ph. D. Saline breast implants were approved by the FDA in May 2000, even though members of their Advisory Panel expressed shock about the high rate of hardness, pain, additional surgery, and other local complications. The FDA required the manufacturers to keep studying their implants, and the latest results were made public at an FDA meeting on July 9, 2002. After seeing the studies, the FDA's Advisory Panel again expressed dismay because so many women experienced serious complications, and because safety data are still lacking. The meeting was requested by the FDA Advisory panel that had recommended FDA approval of saline implants in 2000, under the condition that the companies, Mentor and Inamed (formerly McGhan), conduct long-term safety studies. Both companies provided at least three years of data on complications in 2000 and five years of data on complications at the July 2002 meeting. However, of the more than 1200 women in the Mentor study of breast augmentation patients, only 60 (5 percent!) were analyzed at the five-year follow-up. Physicians, researchers, and the ethicist and consumer representative on the Advisory Panel said an informed choice was impossible for Mentor patients because of the low response rate. Study Problems A study of 60 augmentation patients is not large enough to provide useful safety data on breast implants, but the greater problem is that when 95% of the women in a study drop out, nobody knows if those who remain in the study are different than those who don't. The concern is that women who dropped out of the study may have very different medical problems than those who participated -- whether they are healthier or more ill. Although Mentor subsequently obtained some data for about half of the augmentation patients who were supposed to be in their study, one member of the Advisory panel criticized Mentor for its " mind boggling poor results. " I think that was very kind. As a former faculty member, I can honestly say that if an undergraduate student presented these data to me, I would have flunked them. Approximately half the breast cancer reconstruction patients in the Mentor study were analyzed after five years. Although better than the breast augmentation study, this is still considered a very poor response rate. Health Problems, Cosmetic Problems, More Surgery, and Other Complications The study by Inamed (formerly called McGhan) was better designed, but many of the women in the study had serious complications or needed additional surgery. For example, during the first five years of having implants, 45 percent of breast cancer reconstruction patients required additional unplanned surgery, 28 percent had their implants removed, 39 percent had breasts that did not match in appearance, 36 percent had capsular contracture (hardness), 27 percent had implants that were visible or could be felt, and 25 percent had implants that created a wrinkling appearance, 18 percent had implants that had moved to the wrong location, 18 percent had breast pain, and 8 percent had implants that leaked or deflated. The rates of 10 other complications such as infections, skin necrosis (skin death) and implants extruding through the skin ranged from 3 percent to 7 percent each. There are other reasons to be concerned about the safety of breast implants. Four members of Congress recently asked the FDA about a criminal investigation of Mentor. The FDA says they cannot discuss any ongoing criminal investigations publicly. Two of the Congressmen also asked the FDA to provide the Advisory Board with recent studies conducted by the National Cancer Institute. One of these studies showed an increased risk of cancer for women with saline or silicone implants compared to other women, and the other showed an increase risk of death from brain cancer or lung diseases among women with saline or silicone implants, compared to other plastic surgery patients. (DANIELLE - PLEASE provide link here TO OUR PRESS RELEASE ON THIS TOPIC FROM LAST YEAR). Why didn't the FDA provide the data to their own Advisory Panel, or at least mention the studies, since one of their own scientists helped conduct the research? What Next? The bottom line: more than 250,000 women underwent implant surgery last year, more than 200,000 of them to increase the size of their healthy breasts. At the same time, 60,000 women had their implants removed. The Mentor study is too poorly done to be published in a medical journal, but the Inamed study should be published and made widely available so that plastic surgeons and their patients will know that serious complications are very common. Patient advocates hope that the FDA will develop a booklet for plastic surgeons and revise their consumer publications on breast implants to include the Inamed study and the cancer studies. What happens to women who have had breast augmentation or breast reconstruction for 15 or 20 years? Almost 40 years after silicone breast implants were invented, we still know very little about their long-term safety. Zuckerman, Ph.D., is president of the National Center for Policy Research (CPR) for Women & Families, a nonprofit research center that provides health information about women, children, and families. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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