Shortages of medical devices were not particularly topical before the COVID-19 pandemic, but they have dotted the landscape in the past three years despite the U.S. FDA’s best efforts to manage such issues. The agency recently announced that tracheostomy tubes are now among the device types that are in a state of shortage, a problem created by a paucity of the raw materials used to manufacture these items.
Just days after taking the helm of Royal Philips NV, CEO Roy Jakobs told shareholders that the company plans to “immediately reduce our workforce by around 4,000 roles globally” as a result of multiple challenges that contributed to poorer than expected third quarter results. The company posted a net loss for the quarter, missing consensus, which it attributed to continuing supply chain issues and the deteriorating economic environment.
The U.S. FDA has advised the public that it is in possession of 10 reports of squamous cell carcinoma and 12 reports of various lymphomas in connection with breast implants, a series of findings that are separate from known incidents of lymphoma.
For a company that dominates the market for devices designed to improve breathing during sleep, Royal Philips NV has had the devil of time catching its own breath over the last 15 months as it has issued wave after wave of recalls.
Integra Lifesciences Holdings Corp., of Plainsboro, N.J., said in its latest 8K filing that it has decided to voluntarily remove all the company’s Cerelink systems – which are indicated for intracranial pressure monitoring – due to customer reports that these monitors were returning inaccurate pressure readings.
The U.S. FDA has identified a recall of Medtronic cardiac electrophysiology devices as a class I event due to the risk of an inadequate delivery of energy to restore normal rhythm, a recall that affects more than 87,700 units in total. Dublin-based Medtronic plc., said, however, that it is developing a software patch that will remedy the issue, a fix the company said will emerge in late 2022.
The U.S. FDA posted notice of a class I recall for two hemodialysis catheters made by Covidien Inc., the Palindrome and Mahurkar catheters, due to a catheter hub defect that could lead to mixing of venous and arterial blood. No deaths and only one injury have been reported in connection with the defect, but the recall affects more than 1 million devices that went into distribution starting in June 2017, one of the numerically larger recalls in recent years.
Smiths Medical Inc., of Minneapolis, has undertaken a recall of its Medfusion 3500 and 4000 series of syringe infusion pumps because of software issues that could lead to over- or under-infusion of the drug. The U.S. FDA said the devices swept up in this class I recall are associated with seven serious injuries and one fatality, although the manufacturer indicated that a software update is in the works.
The U.S. FDA has applied a class I designation to the recall of Flow-c and Flow-e anesthesia systems manufactured by Getinge AB of Gothenburg, Sweden, due to reports of faulty on-off switches, which could lead to a failure to provide the needed suction. While no injuries or fatalities have been reported in connection with the problem, the FDA said one possible consequence of device failure is pulmonary obstruction that could ultimately lead to death.
The U.S. FDA reported a class I recall for a single lot of the Safestar 55 breathing filter system by Draeger Inc., due to partial obstruction of the filter, which can lead to hypoxia. The affected units were part of a lot that was to be destroyed, but were instead inadvertently distributed even though they were identified as unusable after a manual inspection process at Draeger.