July 24, 2019

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Allergan Recalls Textured Breast Implants Linked To Rare Type Of Cancer

Allergan said Wednesday that its "Biocell saline-filled and silicone-filled textured breast implants and tissue expanders will no longer be distributed or sold in any market where they are currently available."

Courtesy of Jeff Weiner/Allergan

Allergen has announced a global recall of textured breast implants that are linked to a rare type of cancer, at the request of the Food and Drug Administration.

“Biocell saline-filled and silicone-filled textured breast implants and tissue expanders will no longer be distributed or sold in any market where they are currently available,” according to a company statement Wednesday.

The FDA said in a statement that while the overall incidence of the cancer appears to be low, it asked Allergan to initiate the Biocell implant recall “once the evidence indicated that a specific manufacturer’s product appeared to be directly linked to significant patient harm, including death.”

The agency does not recommend that people who already have the textured implants get them removed unless there are symptoms or problems, but it is providing information for patients and providers to consider.

The FDA said it requested the recall after a “significant increase” in cases of breast implant-associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma (BIA-ALCL), a type of non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Since its previous report in February, there have been 116 new cases and 24 deaths.

“Based on new data, our team concluded that action is necessary at this time to protect the public health,” said FDA Principal Deputy Commissioner Amy Abernethy.

Overall, according to the FDA, there have been 573 cases of breast implant-associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma (BIA-ALCL) and 33 patient deaths worldwide. The agency said 481 of the cases are attributed to the Allergan implants, and that among the deaths “12 of the 13 patients for which the manufacturer of the implant is known, are confirmed to have an Allergan breast implant at the time of their BIA-ALCL diagnosis.”

Based on the latest data, the FDA said, “our analysis demonstrates that the risk of BIA-ALCL with Allergan BIOCELL textured implants is approximately six times the risk of BIA-ALCL with textured implants from other manufacturers marketing in the U.S.”

The FDA first reported on a possible connection between implants and the rare cancer back in 2011, and Abernathy said the agency has continued to monitor reports in databases and patient registries and scientific studies pointing to risks.

Nearly 314,000 people received breast implants in the U.S. in 2018, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. The group’s report does not distinguish between textured implants and other kinds.

“In the United States, the use of textured implants is much less common than the use of textured implants in Europe and Asia,” said plastic surgeon Daniel Maman, who is in private practice in New York and an assistant professor at Mount Sinai.

It’s not clear whether the texturing is actually responsible for the cancer or is just associated with a higher incidence of the disease. But Maman and others say the surface can interact with the surrounding scar tissue that the body forms as an immune response to the implant.

“It’s that response that is believed to cause the formation of the lymphoma,” Maman said, noting that he only uses smooth, round implants. Given the risks linked to textured implants, he said, “taking them off the market is very prudent and the right approach.”

The FDA’s action Wednesday is a change in course from a few months ago when advisers concluded there was a lack of scientific certainty about the health risks that breast implants pose to the millions of women who have them.

At the time, as NPR’s Patti Neighmond reported, “most members of the panel said there’s not enough evidence yet to rush textured implants off the market and that larger, longer-term studies are needed.”

Allergan said Wednesday that healthcare providers should no longer implant the Biocell implants and tissue expanders and that unused products should be sent back to the company. It said it would also work with customers about how to return unused products.

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The Thistle & Shamrock: Chansons

Christ Norman plays the flute.

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Boxwood, Ltd

From the “chant de marin,” or sea shanties, of Brittany to the songs of the voyageurs of the Canadian fur trade, enjoy the French songs that extend branches of the Celtic music tree from the old world to the new, with artists Le Vent du Nord, Hilary James and Chris Norman.

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FTC: Facebook’s Zuckerberg Must Give Progress Reports To Regulators

The FTC and Facebook entered a new settlement over privacy violations. CEO Mark Zuckerberg must give quarterly progress reports directly to regulators. Facebook must also pay a $5 billion fine.



STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

Mark Zuckerberg has a stunning new responsibility. The founder of Facebook is now required personally to give regular progress reports directly to federal regulators. He needs to show Facebook’s progress in protecting the privacy of users. This is part of a newly announced settlement between Facebook and the Federal Trade Commission, a settlement that also includes a $5 billion fine for past violations. NPR’s Aarti Shahani is on this story. Hi there, Aarti.

AARTI SHAHANI, BYLINE: Hi.

INSKEEP: What does Zuckerberg himself have to do exactly?

SHAHANI: So Zuckerberg, who dropped out of Harvard, has homework to do. Under the government’s order being filed today, he’ll have to sign the dotted line on a brand-new compliance document. He’s in charge of submitting it every quarter – four times a year – to the FTC and to the Facebook board. This has been a long road, OK? Back in 2011, Facebook entered a settlement with the FTC for violating user privacy. And then it looks like they violated again and also engaged in brand-new deception.

INSKEEP: Which was what?

SHAHANI: So basically, according to regulators, Facebook lied to users in two new ways. Facebook asks for phone numbers. Give us your cell, so if we need to reset your password, we can verify it to you with a text.

INSKEEP: Sure.

SHAHANI: Millions of people trusted the company. Maybe you did, too. And then Facebook took those phone numbers and used them not just for security but for advertising purposes. OK, lie number two – Facebook wrote up some terms on facial recognition and then switched them up and tracked people who never consented. So we can expect to see about 60 million users get notices asking if they’d like Facebook to delete all the facial recognition tracking it’s been doing unlawfully.

INSKEEP: OK, 60 million people.

SHAHANI: That’s right, according to FTC.

INSKEEP: That suggests the scale of this company because that’s just a tiny fraction of their users. Weren’t they already under scrutiny for the sheer extent of their power and how they’d been using it?

SHAHANI: That’s right. The Justice Department announced it’s starting an antitrust review of a handful of Internet giants who’ve gotten very big and powerful. And I would point out, Steve, about the FTC action that’s focused on consumer privacy, it’s holding the CEO accountable. Facebook is agreeing to abide by federal privacy rules. And if Facebook fails, if its compliance reports are inaccurate, Zuckerberg himself could face civil and criminal penalty.

INSKEEP: Wow.

SHAHANI: So that’s significant.

INSKEEP: That’s quite a threat over his head. Now, the $5 billion fine – is that a lot for a company as big as Facebook?

SHAHANI: Well, it depends. Facebook’s revenue in just the first quarter of this year was 15 billion. After the company announced in its last earnings call that it expected to pay a multibillion-dollar fine, its stock price jumped. That means investors believe the future of a company is solid. That said, the FTC’s James Kohm. He really disagrees with critics who say who say the fine was not big enough.

JAMES KOHM: The idea that $5 billion is a slap on the wrist just doesn’t pass the laugh test. It is an enormous amount of profits. They didn’t give it up easily. It is way higher than any case in U.S. history other than Deepwater Horizon, where there was massive amounts of harm.

SHAHANI: So data privacy harm is less tangible than oil spill harm. But the FTC says the 5 billion is for deterrence, to send a message to other tech companies and that Facebook fought tooth and nail against it. Facebook, which is an NPR sponsor, declined to comment.

INSKEEP: OK. Aarti, thanks for the update. Really appreciate it.

SHAHANI: Thank you.

INSKEEP: NPR’s Aarti Shahani covers tech.

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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Cornhole And Other Less Traditional Sports Gather More Attention

Niche sports, such as cornhole, axe throwing and even professional arm wrestling, are beginning to attract interest and money. These less traditional sports are gaining sponsors.



STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

Basketball, football and baseball may draw big crowds and score prime-time television spots, but niche sports are attracting some interest and money – sports like cornhole and ax-throwing and even professional arm-wrestling. So get ready, elbow on the table, get a good grip – here are Stacey Vanek Smith and Sally Herships from NPR’s daily economics podcast The Indicator From Planet Money.

SALLY HERSHIPS, BYLINE: What is it about these less traditional sports that’s attractive to sponsors, like Johnsonville sausages? And, I mean, nothing against cornhole or ax-throwing – what about, you know, basketball…

STACEY VANEK SMITH, BYLINE: Right?

HERSHIPS: …Or hockey? Yeah.

VANEK SMITH: Like, sports people know about…

HERSHIPS: Yeah.

VANEK SMITH: …And that don’t – you don’t play at, like, 8-year-old birthday parties.

HERSHIPS: Or risk cutting off a limb. And finally, how do these sports get on TV – in this case, ESPN?

SCOTT ROSNER: You know, I think you have to remember that the E in ESPN stands for entertainment.

HERSHIPS: Scott Rosner is academic director of the Sports Management Program at Columbia.

ROSNER: So just because it’s on ESPN doesn’t make it a sport. To wit, poker has been a fixture of their efforts for a very long time.

VANEK SMITH: But that lack of popularity can actually represent an unusual perk for a broadcaster. Just over 3.5 billion viewers watched the World Cup in 2018. For comparison, the World Axe Throwing League says its world championship got hundreds of thousands of viewers last year on TV. That makes ax-throwing what they call an evergreen property, meaning that you can put it on the air anytime you have a gap in your scheduling. But there’s also another possibly more important reason that these sports are getting on ESPN.

ROSNER: You’re not paying them if you’re ESPN. They’re paying you.

HERSHIPS: That is true. Many new sports buy time on the airwaves because there are profits to be made. The American Cornhole Organization had been streaming its videos on Facebook, but it hit almost 2 million views, and it decided the time was ripe, and it launched its own digital streaming network last year, which brings us to another question – what is it about these sports that’s attractive to sponsors?

ROSNER: The companies that are sponsoring are looking for a really, highly targeted audience.

VANEK SMITH: This is also an opportunity for smaller companies, the kinds who can’t afford to advertise during an NBA game or during the Super Bowl. But in order for a starter sport to get big enough to cut a deal to get on TV, that sport needs financial backing to begin with. And the question – why would you want to buy a team who played cornhole or threw axes? Scott says buying a team, even a small one in a more obscure sport, can have some perks as well, including just being, you know – straight up – a really good financial investment.

ROSNER: They all have a dream. They all have the dream that they can be the next – so NBA or Major League Baseball or National Football League, Major League Soccer – that they can all be the next one.

VANEK SMITH: Stacey Vanek Smith.

HERSHIPS: Sally Herships.

VANEK SMITH: NPR News.

(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, “FOREST FAIRIES”)

INSKEEP: They report for NPR’s daily podcast about money, work and human behavior, The Indicator From Planet Money.

Copyright © 2019 NPR. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at www.npr.org for further information.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by Verb8tm, Inc., an NPR contractor, and produced using a proprietary transcription process developed with NPR. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

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