Dr. Mark W. Hungerford, director of Joint Replacement and Reconstruction at Mercy Medical Center in Baltimore, told Reuters Health by phone, “One study does not make or break anything in science. There have been issues in the field about MoM and early failure rates or not. That’s a serious issue being looked at by a lot of people. This is one more study showing a problem, but it’s not a definitive one.”
With respect to patients, “the obligation is no different than for any orthopedic device,” said Dr. Hungerford, who has not used the Pinnacle device. “All can fail, all need to be monitored for failure on a regular basis, and if problems arise, they need to be dealt with.”
The authors reported no funding. Dr. Langton, Dr. Nargol, and coauthors Dr. Thomas Joyce and Dr. Nick Cooke are retained experts for plaintiffs in ongoing MoM litigation. Dr. Langton and Dr. Nargol have worked with the U.S. Department of Justice in litigation involving DePuy.