December 10, 2013
Caroline Glicksman, MD
Peter B. Fodor, MD, FACS
with Carolynn Grimes
ThePlasticSurgeryChannel.com
Jean-Claude Goes to Jail
Jean-Claude Mas, founder and long-time chief executive of Poly Implant Prothese (PIP), has been prosecuted and sentenced to four years in prison. Mas hid the fact that the PIP implant was made with a sub-standard silicone that was used in about 400,000 women around the world. A police investigation revealed that PIP had committed fraud when they managed to conceal the implants’ ingredients from regulators.
German Company Failed in its Obligations
Dr. Caroline Glicksman, a board certified plastic surgeon and an expert in U.S. breast implants says the German quality control company, TUeV Rheinland, that provided the implants EU (European Union) certification may have “rubber-stamped” the faulty PIP implants and failed to inspect the facilities where the implants were manufactured. TUeV Rheinland was recently ordered to compensate hundreds of women who received the implants.
“It is very unfortunate that some manufacturers do not follow all safety measures to protect patients who end up being exposed to their products,” says Dr. Peter Fodor, a board certified and an internationally recognized aesthetic plastic surgeon. “While we often have a tendency to criticize the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) as being too stringent with their standards, when we become aware of violations such as this, we need to remember that the FDA goes a long way in protecting U.S. consumers when compared to the scrutiny that organizations fulfilling the role of the FDA in other countries exercise.”
PIP Implants Never Sold in U.S.
Worried about the effect the implants could have on their body, it’s been reported that 13,500 Frenchwomen have undergone surgery to remove the implants.