U.S. Sen. Al Franken says Medtronic's handling of a study of its Infuse Bone Graft product may have "potentially skewed the risk profile" for thousands of patients and exposed "insufficient vigilance" by the Food and Drug Administration.
Franken raised both concerns in letters delivered Tuesday to Medtronic CEO Omar Ishrak and FDA Commissioner Robert Califf. Franken said he was "writing out of concern" about a Star Tribune story that appeared Sunday about the study's handling.
Medtronic ran a retrospective study of 3,647 Infuse patients from 2006-2008 but shut it down without reporting more than 1,000 "adverse events" to the government within 30 days, as the law required.
Medtronic, which acknowledges it should have reported the information promptly, says employees misfiled it. The company eventually reported the adverse events to the FDA more than five years later.
"This lack of information potentially skewed the risk profile of the device, which may have affected the treatment of thousands of additional patients," Franken wrote to Ishrak and Califf.
Medtronic and the FDA have told the Star Tribune that the adverse events in the retrospective study did not reveal new types of problems with Infuse, so no one was hurt by the reporting delay. Neither the company nor the agency has made specifics of the patient complications public.
Franken pressed Ishrak on why Medtronic's staff did not know that the adverse events in the study should be reported as soon as the company learned of them. Franken asked what training had been put in place to resolve future oversights. He also asked the CEO: "What assurances can you provide to rule out any intentional lack of reporting adverse event data by Medtronic?"
Franken's questions for Califf were equally pointed.