The DePuy ASR Hip — Metal Poisoning, a 2010 Recall, and $4 Billion
Summary
When DePuy Orthopaedics, the joint-replacement arm of Johnson & Johnson, recalled its Articular Surface Replacement (ASR) hip systems worldwide on 24 August 2010, the gap between the device's promise and its harm was already legible in national arthroplasty registries: the ASR had been sold as a durable, large-diameter metal-on-metal joint suited to younger, more active patients, yet by the time of recall the company itself conceded a five-year revision rate near 13 percent — roughly one in eight — against an expected figure on the order of 5 percent, and independent registry follow-up would push the early-failure rate toward 40 percent within six years. Roughly 93,000 patients across the world had received one.
The mechanism was metallurgical, not surgical. The ASR paired a cobalt-chromium ball against a cobalt-chromium cup; in motion the two surfaces shed microscopic metal debris and released cobalt and chromium ions into surrounding tissue and the bloodstream. The local result was metallosis and adverse reaction to metal debris — soft-tissue necrosis, fluid-filled pseudotumors, and bone destruction that frequently demanded a second, more difficult operation. The systemic burden of circulating cobalt was linked in the literature to cardiac, neurological, and thyroid effects. The very design choice marketed as an advantage — a large bearing for stability — increased the surface area generating that debris, particularly when the shallow cup was implanted at a steep angle.
DePuy did not act on the first signal. The Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Replacement Registry identified an elevated revision rate for the ASR resurfacing system in 2007 and for the ASR XL acetabular system the following year, and conveyed the finding to the company in a series of reports. DePuy withdrew the ASR from Australia in 2009 citing "commercial reasons," then continued selling it elsewhere until the 2010 global recall. In the United States, the ASR XL had reached market in 2008 through the FDA's 510(k) clearance route — which permits sale on the basis of similarity to existing devices rather than fresh clinical proof of safety — while the resurfacing version was never approved for U.S. use at all. Litigation, not pre-market review, fixed the bill: J&J's November 2013 U.S. settlement framework began at roughly $2.5 billion for about 8,000 revision claims and, with later expansions, grew past $4 billion as more than 11,000 plaintiffs came forward.
Timeline
A Bigger Bearing Sold as a Better Joint
The ASR's commercial logic was intuitive and wrong. Conventional hip replacements pair a metal or ceramic ball against a polyethylene cup; the plastic wears, but slowly, and its debris is biologically tolerable. Metal-on-metal promised to eliminate plastic wear and permit a larger femoral head, which resists dislocation and restores range of motion — an attractive pitch for younger, athletic patients facing decades on an implant. DePuy designed the ASR around an unusually large cobalt-chromium bearing and a shallow, monoblock cup, and marketed those features as advantages. The metallurgy undercut the premise. A larger bearing sweeps a larger contact area, and a shallow cup is unforgiving of surgical positioning: implanted at too steep an angle, the head rides the rim and concentrates contact stress, accelerating wear. The device that was supposed to outlast plastic instead generated a stream of metal particles, and the bigger ball that promised stability enlarged the surface doing it. The selling point was the defect.
The Registry That Saw It in 2007 and the Recall That Came in 2010
The harm did not hide. National joint registries — pooled, mandatory databases of every implant and every revision — exist precisely to catch a failing device before the failures accumulate, and the Australian registry did its job. By 2007 it had isolated a revision rate for the ASR resurfacing system well above comparable implants, and by 2008 the same for the ASR XL. Stephen Graves, who directed the registry, would later say the data had been conveyed to DePuy across multiple reports and that the company had reason to withdraw the device years before it did. DePuy's response was to leave the Australian market in 2009 for "commercial reasons" — a phrasing that disclosed nothing about safety — while continuing to sell the ASR elsewhere. The five-year revision figures the company ultimately conceded at recall, around 12 to 13 percent, were already several times the expected rate, and later registry cohorts were worse, with some series reporting failure approaching 40 percent at six years. The signal was external, quantified, and early. What failed was not detection but response.
Settlement as the Only Binding Verdict
No clinical trial gatekeeper ever blocked the ASR in the United States, because none was required. The ASR XL acetabular system reached American patients in 2008 through the 510(k) pathway, which clears a device by asserting "substantial equivalence" to one already on the market rather than demanding new evidence of safety — a route critics had long flagged as a gap for high-risk implants. The resurfacing version fared differently only because DePuy's premarket-approval application was rejected as inadequate in 2009, so it was never U.S.-approved. After the 2010 recall, the reckoning ran through the courts. Federal cases were consolidated before Judge David A. Katz in Ohio, and in November 2013 J&J agreed to a settlement framework opening near $2.5 billion to compensate roughly 8,000 patients who had undergone revision, with base awards reported around $250,000. As supplemental tracks opened and the claimant count climbed past 11,000, aggregate U.S. liability grew beyond $4 billion. The device had been off the market for three years before the first settlement number was fixed; the revisions and the registries, not any regulator, wrote the price.
Contributing Factors
Aftermath
The ASR's most durable consequence was the collapse of the metal-on-metal hip as a category. Surgeons and registries that had embraced large-diameter all-metal bearings abandoned them; regulators including the U.K. MHRA and the U.S. FDA tightened surveillance, mandated ion-level monitoring for patients still carrying such implants, and effectively ended routine metal-on-metal use. The financial reckoning ran through J&J's U.S. settlement framework, which opened near $2.5 billion for about 8,000 revision claims in November 2013 and expanded past $4 billion as the claimant count exceeded 11,000; comparable schemes followed in other countries, and in India the government moved to compensate roughly 4,700 affected patients. The episode also became a standing case against the 510(k) clearance route for high-risk implants and a standing argument for the value of mandatory joint registries — the very instruments that had caught the device years before its maker recalled it. Today the DePuy ASR is the orthopedic byword for a device its own market data had condemned long before withdrawal: the implant the registries flagged in 2007 and the company recalled in 2010.
Lessons
- Treat a national registry signal as a recall trigger, not a regional commercial input — when an independent dataset shows your implant failing several times above the expected rate, the obligation is global retrieval, not a quiet market exit.
- Distrust any design whose marketed advantage is inseparable from its wear mechanism; a larger bearing that improves stability by enlarging the metal contact area has built its selling point and its defect from the same surface.
- Read regulatory clearance by equivalence as the absence of proof, not the presence of safety — a 510(k) path for a permanent high-risk implant is a gap to close, not a license to skip clinical evidence.
- Name a withdrawal for what drives it: labeling a safety retreat a "commercial" decision misleads patients and surgeons in every market you keep selling to, and discovery will later read the euphemism as concealment.
- Build and heed the early-warning instrument before you need it — the value of a mandatory registry is realized only if the manufacturer acts on the year-one signal rather than the year-seven settlement.
References
- 2010 DePuy Hip Recall Wikipedia
- Five-year results of the ASR XL Acetabular System and the ASR Hip Resurfacing System: an analysis from the Australian Orthopaedic Association National Joint Replacement Registry Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery / PubMed
- The Withdrawn ASR THA and Hip Resurfacing Systems: How Have Our Patients Fared Over 1 to 6 Years? Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research / PMC
- DePuy ASR Hip Recall — System Revisions & Recall Information Drugwatch
- Johnson & Johnson Form 8-K: DePuy ASR Hip Settlement (Nov 2013) U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission