Transvaginal Mesh — 100,000 Lawsuits, $8 Billion, and a 2019 U.S. Ban
Summary
When the U.S. Food and Drug Administration ordered Boston Scientific and Coloplast on April 16, 2019 to stop selling all surgical mesh intended for transvaginal repair of pelvic organ prolapse, the gap between the promise and the harm was already a settled scientific finding: the agency stated the manufacturers had "not demonstrated a reasonable assurance of safety and effectiveness," having "failed to demonstrate an acceptable long-term benefit of these devices compared to transvaginal surgical tissue repair without the use of mesh." The mesh had been sold for nearly two decades as a stronger, more durable fix for sagging pelvic organs. The controlled evidence showed it was no better than stitching native tissue — and considerably more dangerous.
The product was a knitted sheet of non-absorbable polypropylene, placed through the vagina to act as a hammock under a prolapsed bladder, uterus or rectum. Its central failure mode was that the implant did not stay inert. Over months and years the mesh contracted, hardened and eroded through the vaginal wall and into adjacent organs, producing a signature cluster of harms: chronic pelvic pain, dyspareunia (painful intercourse), bleeding, infection, urinary problems, organ perforation, and erosion that frequently could not be fully reversed because the mesh integrated into tissue and fragmented on removal. The FDA's own reviews put serious complications well above the "rare" reassurance physicians had been given.
The devices reached the market not through clinical proof but through the 510(k) clearance pathway, which lets a manufacturer skip pre-market testing by claiming "substantial equivalence" to an existing product — in this case an older abdominal hernia mesh and the first transvaginal kits, each in turn cleared by pointing back to a predecessor. No randomized trial of safety and effectiveness was ever required to put these implants into women. The reckoning came in two channels at once. Litigation consolidated into one of the largest mass-tort proceedings in U.S. history — more than 100,000 lawsuits against Ethicon (Johnson & Johnson), Boston Scientific, American Medical Systems, C.R. Bard, Coloplast and others, resolved for upward of $8 billion. Regulation moved more slowly: a 2008 public-health notification, a blunt 2011 reversal ("not rare"), reclassification to Class III in January 2016, and finally the 2019 stop-sale order when no maker could produce the safety data the new class demanded. Transvaginal POP mesh became the textbook case of a permanent implant cleared without proof and withdrawn only after the evidence — and the bodies — caught up.
Timeline
Cleared by Resemblance, Not by Proof
The transvaginal mesh implant entered the body of medicine through a door built for spare parts. The 510(k) pathway, created by the 1976 Medical Device Amendments, allows a device to reach market without clinical trials if its maker can show it is "substantially equivalent" to a product already on sale. Polypropylene surgical mesh had long been used in abdominal hernia repair; transvaginal kits for stress incontinence were cleared by pointing to that predicate; and POP kits, from roughly 2002, were cleared by pointing to the incontinence slings. Each clearance leaned on the one before it, so that no link in the chain ever had to demonstrate that a permanent plastic mesh, knitted through the vaginal wall to suspend a prolapsed organ, was safe and effective for that purpose. The marketing claim was durability: native-tissue repair, which simply reinforces the patient's own weakened structures with sutures, has a meaningful recurrence rate, and mesh was sold as the stronger, longer-lasting answer. The substantial-equivalence finding asserted that the new use was no riskier than the old. It was a regulatory inference, not an experimental result.
The Implant That Would Not Stay Inert
The premise that a synthetic mesh would sit quietly as a passive scaffold proved wrong in a specific and damaging way. Polypropylene mesh in the pelvic floor provokes a chronic foreign-body response; the implant contracts and stiffens as scar tissue forms around it, and in a substantial fraction of women it erodes — working its way through the thin vaginal wall (exposure) or into the bladder, urethra or bowel (extrusion). The resulting harm cluster is distinctive: chronic pelvic and groin pain, dyspareunia severe enough to end sexual function, recurrent infection, abnormal bleeding, fistula, and urinary dysfunction. The FDA's 2011 communication put exposure rates on the order of 10 percent within twelve months and judged serious complications "not rare," directly contradicting the 2008 "rare" framing. The cruelest feature was irreversibility: because the mesh integrates into tissue and fragments when pulled, complete removal is technically difficult and often impossible, so a single outpatient implant could commit a woman to multiple revision surgeries and permanent pain. The signal accumulated in MAUDE adverse-event reports — over a thousand by 2008, nearly three thousand more by 2010 — years before any device left the market.
Two Reckonings, One Slow and One Fast
The accounting arrived through litigation long before regulation closed the question. From 2012 the federal courts consolidated pelvic-mesh claims into multidistrict litigation before Judge Joseph R. Goodwin in the Southern District of West Virginia — eventually more than 100,000 cases against Ethicon (Johnson & Johnson), Boston Scientific, American Medical Systems, C.R. Bard, Coloplast and others. Juries returned multi-million-dollar verdicts; American Medical Systems alone reserved more than $2.6 billion; Boston Scientific paid roughly $189 million to 47 states and the District of Columbia over deceptive marketing; total settlements and verdicts across manufacturers exceeded $8 billion. The regulatory channel moved at a different pace: the 2011 "not rare" finding, the 2012 study orders most makers declined to fund, the January 2016 reclassification to high-risk Class III, and finally the April 16, 2019 order pulling Boston Scientific's and Coloplast's remaining POP devices when their pre-market data failed the new standard. Abroad, the reckoning was sharper and more institutional: Scotland suspended mesh in 2018 and England imposed a pause, and in July 2020 Baroness Cumberlege's First Do No Harm review found the harm avoidable and the system defensive. The device was condemned by its own evidence — the trials that were never required, run in retrospect by the courts.
Contributing Factors
Aftermath
The material consequence was a market erased and a bill exceeding $8 billion: transvaginal POP mesh is no longer sold in the United States, Boston Scientific and Coloplast were ordered to withdraw it in 2019, and the manufacturers paid more than 100,000 claimants through settlements and verdicts, with American Medical Systems reserving over $2.6 billion alone. The durable ripple was regulatory and international. In the U.S., the case became Exhibit A in the long argument that the 510(k) pathway is unfit for high-risk permanent implants, feeding pressure for stricter device oversight. In the United Kingdom, it produced an institutional reckoning U.S. regulation never matched: Scotland's 2018 suspension, England's pause, and the July 2020 First Do No Harm review, which condemned a healthcare system that was "disjointed, siloed, unresponsive and defensive" toward women reporting harm and recommended a patient-safety commissioner and a register of implants. What remains is the distinction the FDA itself drew but the public rarely hears — that mesh slings for stress urinary incontinence stayed on the market while transvaginal mesh for prolapse was withdrawn — and a generation of women living with non-removable implants. Transvaginal mesh became the byword for a device cleared by resemblance and recalled by reclassification: proof deferred until the courtroom, with the patients as the trial.
Lessons
- Treat "substantially equivalent" as a regulatory convenience, not a safety finding — for any permanent implant, demand the trial that clearance by resemblance skips, and never read FDA clearance as proof of effectiveness.
- When a device is irreversible, weight the worst-case complication, not the average outcome: a 10-percent erosion rate on an implant that cannot be fully removed is a different risk than a 10-percent rate on a procedure you can redo.
- Distrust the word "rare" until adverse-event counts are denominated against implant volume and tracked over years; a "rare" label that has to be retracted is a signal the surveillance was too weak from the start.
- Compare a new device against the existing standard of care, not against nothing — the finding that mesh offered no benefit over native-tissue repair should have been a pre-market requirement, not a post-market discovery.
- Build the patient-report channel before the harm scales: the UK review's core lesson is that a system which is defensive toward people reporting injury converts a fixable signal into a decade-long catastrophe.
References
- FDA takes action to protect women's health, orders manufacturers of surgical mesh for transvaginal repair of pelvic organ prolapse to stop selling all devices U.S. FDA / PR Newswire
- Urogynecologic Surgical Mesh Implants U.S. Food and Drug Administration
- Transvaginal mesh Wikipedia
- Unravelling the vaginal mesh scandal International Comparative Legal Guides (ICLG)
- Independent Medicines and Medical Devices Safety Review — First Do No Harm (8 July 2020) IMMDS Review (Baroness Cumberlege)