FDA Breast Implant Guidance. Recent U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) studies tracked risks associated with breast implants, including breast implant-associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma and systemic symptoms commonly referred to as breast implant illness that some patients attribute to their implants. The FDA convened a General and Plastic Surgery Devices Advisory Panel to discuss the long-term benefits and risks of breast implants.
On September 29, 2020, the FDA issued recommendations concerning breast implant labels to help patients make an informed decision about whether to get breast implants. The guidance provides recommendations concerning the content and format for certain labeling information for saline and silicone gel-filled breast implants, including:
Informed Consent. A health care provider must obtain informed consent from a patient or the patient's representative before performing medical treatment. Informed consent is the process by which the treating health care provider discloses information to a patient or the patient's representative so the patient may make a voluntary choice to accept or refuse treatment. Informed consent generally includes a discussion of the following elements:
Uniform Disciplinary Act. The Uniform Disciplinary Act (UDA) is a standardized set of procedures for enforcing laws concerning licensure and misconduct of licensed health care professionals. The UDA includes the list of acts that constitute unprofessional conduct. All licensed health care professionals are subject to the UDA.
Beginning January 1, 2022, before a licensed physician or a licensed osteopathic physician performs a breast implant surgery, the physician must provide the patient with the following information in writing or electronic form:
The information provided to the patient must be based on the information generally available to physicians who specialize in breast implant surgery. After the physician provides the required information, the physician must obtain written informed consent for the procedure from the patient before performing breast implant surgery. A violation of any of these rules constitutes unprofessional conduct.
PRO: Women need proper informed consent before breast implant surgery. Many women did not have informed consent, were not explained the risks, and did not receive the patient manufacturer booklet before breast implant surgery and suffered serious life changing illnesses after receiving breast implants. Physicians told patients that breast implants were safe, and FDA approved, yet multiple women became very sick after surgery. Women were not aware of how sick they could get from breast implants or how the implants could increase their cancer risk. If women knew how sick breast implants could make them, either they would not get breast implants, or if they happened to get sick, then they would know a possible cause for their illness. Women get breast implants after breast cancer, but if they knew breast implants could cause cancer, they would not put something in their body that could cause cancer again. Women were told that breast implants were safe and a lifetime device, when that is not true. Women need full disclosure about all the risks associated with breast implants before they can make an informed decision about the procedure.
OTHER: Current statutory requirements for disclosure are broad enough to capture the informed consent requirements from this bill, so this statutory requirement might not be needed. Washington State uses the reasonable patient standard as defined in Chapter 7.70 RCW. The American Society of Plastic Surgeons has a checklist that physicians in Washington State will be encouraged to look at while discussing breast implants with patients. This discussion for breast implant informed consent could take place outside of the Legislature.