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The Washington Times Online Edition

FDA rejects bid to sell implants

The Food and Drug Administration has rejected Inamed Corp.’s application to sell silicone breast implants.

The agency yesterday issued guidelines seeking more information and a longer study before it will consider lifting a ban it placed on silicone implants in 1992 amid fears they cause health problems when they leak.

The guidelines follow a “not-approvable” letter the agency on Wednesday sent to Santa Barbara, Calif., breast-implant manufacturer Inamed Corp. for its bid to sell a silicone gel-filled model.

The FDA wanted more information regarding:

• How long breast implants will last before rupturing.

• The rates and kinds of possible ruptures.

• The causes of an implant leak and the health consequences to women.

• Available treatments to remove a burst implant.

“We think a lot of information has been developed over the past 10 years that has increased our assurance of certain aspects of safety, but additional information is necessary before the product passes the threshold we consider ‘open marketing,’” Daniel Schultz, director for the FDA’s Office of Device Evaluation, said in a conference call yesterday.

Inamed President and Chief Executive Nick Teti said in a different conference call that the company plans to “work aggressively and cooperatively” to get the product approved.

“We see this as a setback, not the end of the road,” he said. Mr. Teti said it was too early to give a definite plan and would not disclose the FDA’s specific requests.

Shares of Inamed fell 12 percent yesterday to close at $44 on the Nasdaq Stock Market, down $5.80 from Wednesday’s price of $49.80.

Several industry analysts said they were disappointed the government proposed more intensive studies after an FDA advisory panel in October approved the implants. Currently, silicone implants can be used by women only in clinical studies or with certain conditions like breast cancer.

“What I want to know is why this information wasn’t detailed earlier to the company,” said Daniel Owczarski, an analyst at Belmont Harbor Capital, a Chicago research firm.

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