Philips Says Tests on Recalled Products Show Limited Health Risks

Philips Says Tests on Recalled Products Show Limited Health Risks
Logo of Dutch technology company Philips at its company headquarters in Amsterdam on Jan. 29, 2019. Eva Plevier/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

AMSTERDAM—Dutch health technology company Philips said on Wednesday independent tests on its respiratory devices involved in a major global recall had shown limited health risks.

The company rocked investors last year by recalling millions of breathing devices and ventilators used to treat sleep apnea, because foam used to dampen noise from the devices might degrade and become toxic, carrying potential cancer risks.

Fears of large litigation bills have since wiped 70 percent off the company’s market value. Philips shares were up 3.5 percent on Wednesday morning.

“We can state that the whole product complies with safety norms. That is very encouraging news,” Chief Executive Roy Jakobs told Reuters.

Philips said the latest tests indicated that exposure to particulate matter emissions from degraded foam in DreamStation devices was “unlikely to result in an appreciable harm to health in patients”, provided the machines had not been treated with ozone-based cleansing products.

The company said results also showed that exposure to volatile organic compound emissions was not expected to result in long-term health consequences for patients.

Philips had already said earlier this year that tests indicated foam degradation was very rare and was linked to the use of unauthorized ozone-based cleaning products.

Dutch technology company Philips' logo at company headquarters in Amsterdam on Jan. 29, 2019. (Eva Plevier/Reuters)
Dutch technology company Philips' logo at company headquarters in Amsterdam on Jan. 29, 2019. Eva Plevier/Reuters

It said further tests now showed machines cleaned with those products were 14 times more likely to have significant visible foam degradation than those treated with authorized products.

Last year, SoClean Inc., an independent supplier of ozone-based sanitizing systems, filed a lawsuit against Philips, which it blamed for plummeting sales due to allegations that ozone-based products had caused the problems with the sleep apnea devices.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is still considering the results and “may reach different conclusions,” Philips said.

The company said it expected to finish the recall and replacement of all affected products in the first half of 2023, as it has now produced 90 percent of all needed replacement devices.

The test and research program has been conducted with five independent, certified testing laboratories and the results have been reviewed and assessed by third-party qualified experts and Philips Respironics, as well as an external medical panel, the company said.

By Bart H. Meijer