News Release

NIH Conference to assess state of medical implants: Research information on implant performance lacking in US

Meeting Announcement

NIH/National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) will hold a Technology Assessment Conference (TAC) to look at barriers and opportunities to developing systems for implant retrieval analysis and data banking. The TAC will be conducted January 10-12, 2000 in the Natcher Conference Center on the NIH campus in Bethesda, Maryland.

It is estimated that 8 to 10 percent of the American population currently has a permanent medical implant. Retrieving and evaluating medical implants provides the only true long-term data on how a patient's body responds to hosting an implant, as well as the final condition of the implant. Even so, there has not been any systematic effort developed in the United States for implant retrieval analysis or data banking. The objective of the conference is to assess the opportunities and challenges to developing a framework for independent research of medical implants retrieved after surgery or at autopsy.

Titled, "Improving Medical Implant Performance Through Retrieval Information: Challenges and Opportunities," the conference will bring together specialists in surgery, pathology, engineering, biomaterials, information systems, and other related disciplines, as well as representatives from the public, legal, ethical, and industrial communities.

The conference will address the following key questions:

  • What are the patient, health care provider, and societal expectations of the lifetime costs, risks, and benefits of medical implants?
  • What can the role of information data systems be in educating the public, medical community, and policymakers about medical implants and retrieval?
  • What are the legal, ethical, religious, cultural, public policy, and economic barriers to implant retrieval and reporting, and how can they be overcome?
  • What information is necessary to evaluate and improve implant and material performance and device design?
  • What future research and institutional support is necessary to ensure continuing advances in implantable devices?

The lead NIH agencies sponsoring the conference are the Office of Medical Applications of Research (OMAR) and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI).

After all presentations and audience discussions, an independent, non-Federal technology assessment panel co-chaired by Edward N. Brandt, Jr., M.D., Ph.D., Regents Professor and Director, Center for Health Policy, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, and Julia Weertman, D.Sc., Walter P. Murphy Professor Emerita, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Northwestern University, will weigh the scientific evidence and write a draft statement that it will present to conference attendees.

Following discussion of the draft statement by conference attendees on January 12, the panel will meet in executive session to finalize their statement. A press conference from 1:00-2:00 PM on January 12 will conclude the Technology Assessment Conference.

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The Technology Assessment Conference will be broadcast live, on the Internet via the NIH Videocast Web site at http://videocast.nih.gov. A minimum 150kpbs is required.

For a list of presenters and panelists, to see the agenda, and to register online for the January 12 press conference, go to the TAC Web site at http://consensus.nih.gov. Indicate that you are registering for the press conference.

Members of the press who are unable to attend in person may participate in the press conference via the Internet at the NIH Videocast Web site listed above. Reporters may submit questions by phone (301-480-5961), fax (301-480-5962) or email jbowersox@nih.gov. However, we cannot guarantee that all such questions will be answered during the conference. If you plan to participate via the Internet, please call the NHLBI Communications Office at 301-496-4236.

Please call 301-592-3320 if you plan to attend the press conference in person.


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