| Panel Confirms No Major Illness Tied to Breast Implants 
 [Yet, Dow Corning was driven bankrupt by politically astute plaintiffs' attorneys who argued otherwise. -- RR]
 
 By GINA KOLATA -- June 21, 1999
 
 In independent panel of 13 scientists convened by
 the Institute of Medicine at the request of
 Congress has concluded that silicone breast implants
 do not cause any major diseases.
 
 "Some women with breast implants are indeed very
 ill and the IOM committee is very sympathetic to
 their distress," the group wrote in a report to be made
 public on Tuesday. "However, it can find no
 evidence that these women are ill because of their
 implants."
 
 The report, more than 400 pages long, says that the
 "primary safety issue" with implants is their tendency
 to rupture or deflate and to lead to infections or
 hardening or scarring of the breast tissue. There is
 little argument about these localized problems,
 which can be painful and disfiguring and which often
 lead women to have additional surgery.
 
 But the report asserts in forceful terms that there is
 no reason to believe that the implants cause
 rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, or any other systemic
 disease. Women who say their implants have caused
 them to suffer these or related problems have turned
 breast implants into a leading source of liability
 litigation.
 
 The report was provided to The New York Times by
 an organization that consults in the breast implant
 matter and, a spokesman said, that "is pleased with
 the report's conclusions." The report is the latest in a
 series of evaluations that have concluded there is no
 scientific evidence to support the lawsuits.
 
 Because it comes from the Institute of Medicine, the
 medical arm of the National Academy of Sciences,
 the nation's most prestigious scientific organization,
 it is expected to be influential in setting scientific
 agendas and encouraging women to accept
 settlements from implant makers rather than take
 their cases to court.
 
 In preparing the report, panel members held public
 hearings, met in private and evaluated more than a
 thousand research reports. The Institute panel did not
 conduct any original research. Rather, the panel
 relied primarily on research reported by other
 scientists. But the report said that since lawsuits
 were first filed in the late 1980s and early 1990s,
 there have been many scientific studies upon which
 to make an evaluation.
 
 Last December, scientists appointed by the judge
 overseeing implant liability litigation, Sam C.
 Pointer Jr., of U.S. District Court in Alabama, came
 to a similar conclusion as the Institute panel and a
 report issued last July by scientists in Britain who
 had been charged by the British minister of health to
 review implant safety.
 
 Scientists appointed by Judge Robert E. Jones of
 U.S. District Court in Oregon, reached a comparable
 conclusion.
 
 Meanwhile, the Dow Corning Corp., which filed for
 bankruptcy citing the burden of its breast implant
 litigation, has agreed to pay women $3.2 billion to
 settle their claims. Other implant manufacturers,
 Baxter International, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and
 Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing, have agreed
 to a settlement estimated at $3 billion combined.
 
 In addition, thousands of women have settled their
 cases in private agreements with implant makers or
 gone to trial and won awards that reached millions of
 dollars.
 
 The Institute of Medicine committee estimated that
 about 1.5 million to 1.8 million American women
 have had silicone breast implants, about 70 percent
 for breast enlargement, the rest as reconstruction
 after mastectomy.
 
 Members of the committee, headed by Dr. Stuart
 Bondurant, a professor of medicine at the University
 of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and Dr. Virginia
 Ernster, a professor of epidemiology at the
 University of California in San Francisco, were
 prohibited from discussing the report until it is
 officially made public.
 
 Sybil Goldrich, founder of Command Trust
 Network, an information clearing house for women
 with silicone problems, said, "I find it extremely
 difficult to accept what the Institute of Medicine says
 because those studies are paid for by the
 manufacturers. They have not convinced me that
 their review is correct. It is as simple as that."
 
 Tommy Jacks, a lawyer in Austin, Tex., whose firm
 has represented 425 women with implants, said he
 doubts that the report will be the last word on the
 matter.
 
 "This report is simply a review of the literature by a
 committee that's reached some conclusion," Jacks
 said. "It is premature to conclude that reports like
 this are the last word that scientists and physicians
 will have about the safety of breast implants," he
 said.
 
 But medical experts informed of the committee's
 conclusions, applauded them.
 
 Dr. Shaun Ruddy, the chairman of the rheumatology,
 allergy, and immunology division at Virginia
 Commonwealth University's Medical College of
 Virginia in Richmond, said that the conclusions were
 "very forthright and outspoken" and that he was glad
 the group was attempting to put the disease
 hypotheses to rest. Ruddy, a past president of the
 American College of Rheumatology, said he has had
 no part in any of the litigation.
 
 The Institute of Medicine committee was set up at
 the behest of Congress. It's work began with a public
 hearing on July 24, 1997, when almost 700 people
 filled an auditorium at the National Academy of
 Sciences in Washington.
 
 Representatives of medical professional associations
 made statements, scientists spoke about their
 research, and women with implants spoke of how
 their lives had been ruined by them. Some said that
 they were so ill that they needed canes or wheelchairs
 to get around, conditions they blamed on the
 implants. Others testified that after they breast fed
 their babies, their children developed the same
 debilitating symptoms.
 
 Examining more than 1,200 references, the group
 addressed the major questions about implants: Do
 they cause established connective tissue diseases,
 like arthritis or lupus? Do they cause breast cancer,
 nerve diseases, like multiple sclerosis, or new
 diseases with symptoms like aches and pains and
 overwhelming fatigue? Are children of women with
 breast implants at risk for disease because of silicone
 transmitted across the placenta or in breast milk? Do
 breast implants produce immunological reactions
 that could cause disease?
 
 In every case, the committee concluded, there was no
 convincing evidence that implants were at fault.
 When lawsuits were filed in the late 1980s and early
 1990s there was a lack of research on the topic.
 Since then, according to the report, "a number of
 strong, well-designed epidemiological studies
 involving large numbers of women and clear results
 have been published."
 
 For example, the group wrote, the evidence is
 "insufficient or flawed." that implants cause "atypical
 disease," a term covering signs and symptoms like
 weakness, fatigue, and diffuse muscle pain. But the
 group said that evidence on the other side is strong.
 "Controlled epidemiologic studies cited" led the
 committee to conclude that "there is no novel
 syndrome."
 
 On the question of established connective tissue
 diseases, like lupus and rheumatoid arthritis, the
 group reviewed 17 epidemiological studies and
 concluded that they were "remarkable for the
 consistency of finding no elevated risk or odds for an
 association of implants with disease."
 
 After hearing a description of the report, David
 Bernstein, a law professor and adviser for the
 American Tort Reform Foundation, a
 business-sponsored group, said that, coming as it
 does in the wake of similar reports, the report "might
 have a dramatic effect in hastening the end of the
 litigation."
 
 "It is a very strong statement," Bernstein said. But he
 added that it was a shame that the legal system went
 ahead on the litigation in the absence of science, with
 companies paying billions to compensate women
 with implants. "It would have been nice to have had
 this $7 billion ago," Bernstein said.
 
 Copyright 1999 The New York Times Company
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