FDA receives new reports
of issues with Essure birth control device
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[March 08, 2018] (Reuters)
- The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is
investigating new reports of Bayer's implanted birth control device
Essure causing problems during removal, the agency said on Wednesday,
two years after it slapped a warning label on the product.
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The FDA received nearly 12,000 reports in 2017 related to Essure, a
majority of which were in the final three months of the year, FDA
Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said in a statement.
Essure, approved by U.S. regulators in 2002, is a non-surgical and
non-hormonal permanent birth control device for women.
In early 2016, the FDA slapped the strongest safety warning label
onto the device following thousands of complaints, and asked the
German drugmaker to conduct a post-market study. Concerns around the
device included abdominal pain, abnormal uterine bleeding and device
migration.
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The FDA said almost 90 percent of the new reports mentioned issues
involving potential removal of Essure
"While the FDA continues to believe that Essure may be appropriate
for some women based on our current information, the agency also
recognizes that serious problems have been associated with its use,"
Gottlieb said.
Bayer estimates that more than 750,000 women worldwide have received
the device implant since it was first approved by global regulators.
(Reporting by Anuron Kumar Mitra and Tamara Mathias; Editing by Sai
Sachin Ravikumar)
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