WASHINGTON, DC, USA: The US Food and Drug Administration said silver-coloured dental fillings that contain mercury are safe for patients, reversing an earlier caution against their use in certain patients, including pregnant women and children. While elemental mercury has been associated with adverse health effects at high exposures, the levels released by dental amalgam fillings are not high enough to cause harm in patients, the FDA said, citing an agency review of roughly 200 scientific studies.
Still, in final regulations issued on Tuesday as part of an earlier legal settlement, it said the fillings were now considered "moderate risk" devices and will include details about the risks and benefits of the products. They will also carry warnings against their use in patients with mercury allergies or in poorly ventilated areas.
Millions of Americans have such fillings to patch cavities in their teeth and the FDA said it does not recommend patients have them removed. The fillings, also known as amalgams, are a combination of other metals and mercury, which at certain levels has been linked to brain and kidney damage.
In 2006, Moms Against Mercury and three other groups sued the FDA to have mercury fillings removed from the US market. Later that year, an FDA panel of outside experts said most people would not be harmed but that more information was needed.
Mercury — whether in dental, vaccines, fish or other products — has generated much controversy. Some consumer groups contend the fillings can trigger a range of health problems such as multiple sclerosis and Alzheimer's disease. Part of the problem is that while much is known about high exposures to heavy metals, questions remain about "what is happening at chronic low-level exposure over a lifetime," said Urvashi Rangan, the director of technical policy for Consumer Reports, whose group was not part of the initial lawsuit.
But Susan Runner, acting director for the FDA division that oversees dental devices, said there was no "causal link" between amalgam fillings and health problems. "The best available scientific evidence supports the conclusion that patients with dental amalgam fillings are not at risk," she told reporters on a conference call. Over the past 20 years, the agency has received just 141 reports of problems in patients with the fillings, she added.
That conclusion counters a statement the agency made last June that the fillings may cause health problems in pregnant women, children and fetuses.
The FDA's decision could impact makers of metal fillings, which include Dentsply International Inc and Danaher Corp's unit Kerr, as well as distributors such as Henry Schein Inc and Patterson Cos Inc . Shares of Dentsply closed up than 21 cents at US$30.80 on the Nasdaq while shares of Danaher closed down US$1.18 at a US$60.66 on the New York Stock Exchange. Shares of Henry Schein closed down 18 cents at US$50.24 and Patterson closed up 4 cents at US$24.41.
According to the American Dental Association (ADA), about 30 percent of fillings given to patients are mercury-filled, with a growing number of patients instead opting for lighter, tooth-colored options such as resin composites. Alternative products include glass cement and porcelain as well as other metals such as gold, but they are more expensive. and considered less durable.
The ADA, which represents the dental industry, backed the FDA's decision not to restrict mercury fillings, saying alternatives are also considered "moderate risk" by the FDA. "The FDA has left the decision about dental treatment right where it needs to be — between the dentist and the patient," ADA President Dr. John Findley said in a statement.
But Charlie Brown, a lawyer for Consumers for Dental Choice, said poorer people or those who receive their health care through large institutions such as the US military are more likely to receive the cheaper, silver-colored fillings and are at greater risk for harm.
"Most consumers, and most dentists, have already switched to the main alternative, resin composite," said Brown, whose group was part of the lawsuit settlement last June that called on the agency to issue more specific rules. His group is now weighing its legal options, he said.
Moms Against Mercury President Amy Carson said she was disappointed in the FDA's reversal. Her group, along with several others, filed a new petition with the FDA on Tuesday, again calling for a ban on mercury fillings, she added.
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