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France orders probe into failure to detect faulty breast implants

France vowed on Tuesday to investigate failures to detect problems with the French-made breast implants at the centre of a health scare, as a supplier confirmed selling non-standard silicone to the manufacturer.

Reuters/Eric Gaillard
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Between 300,000 and 400,000 women in 65 countries are believed to have implants made with sub-standard gel which PIP used to cut its costs.

"All the elements now suggest that the gel (used in PIP's implants) was truly contaminated," French Health Minister Xavier Bertrand told France 2 television.

"How was this not detected by checks?" he asked. "I want to know everything...I have asked for investigations” he said.

Bertrand also said that he would in the next few days be contacting his counterparts around Europe to discuss the scandal.

Based in the south of France, PIP was shut down and its products banned in 2010 after it was revealed to have been using industrial-grade silicone gel which caused abnormally high rupture rates.

Worries about PIP implants spread around the world last month after French health authorities advised 30,000 women to have them removed because of the increased risk of rupture.

Officials have also said that cancer, including 16 cases of breast cancer, has been detected in 20 French women with the implants but they insist there is no proven link with the disease.

Prosecutors in Marseille, near PIP's laboratory at Seyne-sur-Mer, are pursuing a criminal investigaton, after receiving more than 2,500 complaints from French women who received the implants.

Italian prosecutors have also announced a criminal probe.

The firm's 72-year-old founder, Jean-Claude Mas, has admitted using non-standard silicone gel in the implants but denied any health risks.

A French supplier of PIP on Tuesday confirmed selling silicone to the firm that was meant only for industrial uses.

Pierre Gaches, the CEO of Toulouse-based Gaches Chimie said the company had supplied PIP with industrial-grade silicone since the early 2000s but that PIP "never gave us any information on how it planned to use" the material.

Britain at the weekend ordered an urgent review into the risks to 42,000 British women given the implants, after the country's biggest cosmetic surgery chain revealed that rupture rates were seven times higher than previously thought.
Authorities in other countries have advised women to consult their doctors over the implants. Some nations, including Bolivia and Venezuela, have said that in some cases the implants will be removed for free.

France is also paying to have the implants removed among French women, at an estimated cost of up to 60 million euros and has said it will sue PIP for damages.

 

 

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