A panel of doctors and medical experts told the Food and Drug Administration Thursday that regulators should not halt sales of paclitaxel-containing medical devices for the legs in the U.S., even though there may be an increased long-term risk of death from using them.
Instead, the FDA's Circulatory System Devices Panel gave a nonbinding recommendation that regulators should push for better long-term clinical data than was seen during the two-day review in Maryland.
FDA officials didn't immediately announce Thursday night what they will do next, or when they will do it.
From the data presented, the panel did not find any dose relationship with mortality, nor any pattern of adverse events that suggested a biological mechanism of action. The panel said the products' labels should be updated to reflect potential risks, allowing doctors and patients to decide for themselves what to do.
The controversy centers on a set of five devices approved in the U.S. to treat peripheral artery disease (PAD) above the knee in the legs by mechanically opening blocked blood vessels and then leaving behind varying amounts of the anti-proliferative drug paclitaxel to prevent vessel re-closure.
Such devices account for hundreds of millions of dollars in annual sales for Medtronic, Cook Medical, Philips, BD and Boston Scientific, all of which make paclitaxel-eluting leg stents or paclitaxel-coated balloons for PAD. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said about 8.5 million Americans have PAD, including as many as 20% of people older than 60.
The product segment has grown rapidly since the first such device was approved in the U.S. in 2012 because of the devices' positive effects. Patients with extreme leg pain found that the paclitaxel devices not only prevented the need for repeat procedures, but even prevented amputations in extreme cases.
But growth in paclitaxel devices for above-the-knee PAD came to a halt shortly after a study was published in the Journal of the American Heart Association last December.