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| [April 06, 2012] |
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St. Jude Medical Seeks Retraction of Heart Rhythm Journal Manuscript by Dr. Robert Hauser
ST. PAUL, Minn. --(Business Wire)--
St. Jude Medical, Inc. (NYSE:STJ), a global medical device company,
today announced it is seeking a retraction of the manuscript accepted
for publication in the Heart Rhythm Journal by Dr. Robert Hauser,
et al., titled, "Deaths Caused by the Failure of Riata and Riata ST
Implantable Cardioverter-Defibrillator Leads."
The manuscript presented results from an analysis that assessed the
number of death reports associated with St. Jude Medical Riata® and
Riata ST defibrillation leads compared with Medtronic Quattro Secure
leads. This assessment was based on a search of the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) Manufacturers and User Facility Device Experience
(MAUDE) database. In the analysis, the authors classified the deaths in
one of three categories (lead related, indeterminate or not lead
related) and drew conclusions about how Riata and Riata ST leads compare
with Medtronic's Quattro Secure leads. Using the same search criteria
outlined in the manuscript, the company has identified that Dr. Hauser's
research substantially undercounted total deaths in the MAUDE database
for Quattro Secure, which therefore resulted in substantial errors
related to how Riata and Riata ST leads compared to the Quattro Secure
lead.
Inaccurate Facts and Biased Analysis St. Jude Medical's
independent search of the MAUDE database found 377 reports of deaths
involving Quattro Secure leads, not 62 as stated by Dr. Hauser in a
manuscript posted online and accepted for publication in the Heart
Rhythm Journal. St. Jude Medical's analysis of Riata and Riata ST
lead events found in the MAUDE database also indicate that Dr. Hauser
did not report an additional three deaths, which would change the number
from 71 in Dr. Hauser's manuscript to 74.
Dr. Hauser's manuscript is mistaken or misleading in a number of other
respects as well. It is important to note that Dr. Hauser has
selectively chosen to include only one Quattro Secure lead model in his
analysis versus all of the Riata and Riata ST models for St. Jude
Medical. Although we did not include those lead models in our analysis,
there are also deaths associated with those additional model numbers.
There is a range of detail available in MAUDE reports, with Medtronic
generally reporting the least amount of detail compared with other
companies in the industry. In adition, the detail and rate of reporting
has increased since Medtronic's Cardiac Rhythm Management business
received a warning letter from the Food and Drug Administration in 2009,
meaning events prior to this date in the analysis may have been
under-detected. An analysis of "lead-related" deaths is biased against
manufacturers that more transparently report on device malfunctions. A
less biased manner of comparison would combine "lead-related" and
"indeterminate" deaths, because the resulting number only excludes the
reports that are clearly not lead-related.
Finally, the entire premise of the comparison of a recalled
silicone-only insulated lead versus Quattro Secure, which is a product
insulated with a polyurethane outer insulation, is flawed. It is
acknowledged in the industry that silicone-insulated leads are more
susceptible to abrasion than leads with newer insulation materials. A
more appropriate comparison would have been to compare the Riata and
Riata ST leads to other recalled leads. For example, there are
approximately 1,200 MAUDE death reports associated with the recalled
Medtronic Sprint (News - Alert) Fidelis lead, out of approximately 268,000 leads sold
worldwide, or a rate of 447.8 per 100,000. For Sprint Fidelis leads,
note that many cases indicate "under litigation" in the MAUDE report and
no detail on the cause of failure is provided. Alternatively, Dr. Hauser
could have compared Quattro Secure to St. Jude Medical's currently
available Durata® lead, which the company is confident would have
resulted in a favorable comparison as well.
St. Jude Medical was not consulted prior to the publication, nor asked
to validate any of the data against its returns analyses. Since the
manuscript was published, the company has spent more than 300 hours
attempting to reach the same conclusions as Dr. Hauser, but can find no
way of analyzing the MAUDE database that reproduces the same numbers
reported in the manuscript. The company has identified duplicate
reports, inconsistent categorizations and failures to include all
available reports.
The method of the study itself, using MAUDE reports to compare devices,
is not appropriate. The home page of the Food and Drug Administration's
MAUDE database even states, "MAUDE data is not intended to be used
either to evaluate rates of adverse events or to compare adverse event
occurrence rates across devices."
Conclusion Given these factual errors and biased analysis,
we are requesting that the manuscript immediately be retracted by the
authors and removed from online publication by the official journal of
the Heart Rhythm Society.
About St. Jude Medical
St. Jude Medical develops medical technology and services that focus on
putting more control into the hands of those who treat cardiac,
neurological and chronic pain patients worldwide. The company is
dedicated to advancing the practice of medicine by reducing risk
wherever possible and contributing to successful outcomes for every
patient. St. Jude Medical is headquartered in St. Paul, Minn. and has
four major focus areas that include: cardiac rhythm management, atrial
fibrillation, cardiovascular and neuromodulation. For more information,
please visit sjm.com.
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clinical successes, anticipated regulatory approvals and future product
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The statements made by the Company are based upon management's current
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could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in
the forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include
market conditions and other factors beyond the Company's control and the
risk factors and other cautionary statements described in the Company's
filings with the SEC (News - Alert), including those described in the Risk Factors and
Cautionary Statements sections of the Company's Annual Report on Form
10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2011. The Company does not
intend to update these statements and undertakes no duty to any person
to provide any such update under any circumstance.

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