In the wake of a KHN-CBS News investigation, the FDA on Thursday said it is âevaluating safety concernsâ over the use of a dental appliance that multiple lawsuits allege caused grievous harm to patients.
The federal agency told the public in a âsafety communicationâ posted on that it is looking not only at that product, the Anterior Growth Guidance Appliance, or AGGA, but other similar dental devices as well, including the Anterior Remodeling Appliance, or ARA, identified in a recent KHN and CBS News article.
The FDA said it is âaware of reports of serious complications with use of these devicesâ and asked that patients and health care providers report any complications experienced with them to the agency.
The agency said it is aware the devices have been used to treat conditions including sleep apnea and temporomandibular joint disorder of the jaw, also known as TMD or TMJ, but noted that âthe safety and effectiveness of these devices intended for these uses have not been established.â
The AGGA device alone has been fitted on more than 10,000 dental patients, according to court records.Ěý
The KHN-CBS News investigation of the AGGA involved interviews with 11 patients who said they were hurt by the device â plus attorneys who said they represent or have represented at least 23 other patients â and dental specialists who said theyâd examined patients who had experienced severe complications using the AGGA. The investigation found no record of the AGGA being registered with the FDA, despite the agencyâs role in regulating medical and dental devices. The FDA confirmed Thursday that the devices âare not cleared or approved by the FDA.â
The AGGAâs inventor, Tennessee dentist Dr. Steve Galella, has said in a that the AGGA was never submitted to the FDA, which he believes wouldnât have jurisdiction over it.
At least 20 AGGA patients have in the past three years filed lawsuits against Galella and other defendants claiming the AGGA did not â and cannot â work. Plaintiffs allege that instead of expanding their jawbones, the AGGA left them with damaged gums, loose teeth, and eroded bone.
Additionally, KHN and CBS News reported that the Las Vegas Institute, a company that previously taught dentists to use the AGGA, now trains dentists to use another device its CEO has described as âalmost exactly the same appliance.â That one is called the Anterior Remodeling Appliance, or ARA.
KHN and CBS News reached out Thursday to attorneys for Galella, the Las Vegas Institute, and the manufacturers of the AGGA and the ARA but received no immediate response.
Galella has declined to be interviewed by KHN and CBS News. His attorney, Alan Fumuso, previously said in a written statement that the AGGA âis safe and can achieve beneficial results.â
All the AGGA lawsuits are ongoing. Galella and the other defendants have denied liability in court filings. Cara Tenenbaum, a former senior policy adviser in the FDAâs device center, said reports of complications from these devices are of critical importance and can be .
âWhether thatâs a dentist, an orthodontist, a surgeon, a patient, family member, or caregiver,â Tenenbaum said in a recent interview, âanyone can and should submit these reports so the FDA has a better understanding of whatâs happening.â
In a court deposition, Galella said he personally used the AGGA on more than 600 patients and has for years trained other dentists how to use it. In video footage of one training session, produced in discovery in an AGGA lawsuit, Galella said the device puts pressure on a patientâs palate and causes an adultâs jaw to âremodelâ forward, making them more attractive and âcuringâ common ailments, such as sleep apnea and TMJ.
âItâs OK to make a crapload of money,â Galella told dentists in the video. âYouâre not ripping anybody off. Youâre curing them. Youâre helping them. Youâre making their life totally beautiful forever and ever.â
In its Thursday announcement, the FDA said it is aware the devices have been used âto remodel the jaw in adultsâ but pointed out that devices like these called âfixed (non-removable) palatal expandersâ are generally used on children and adolescents, âwhose upper jaw bones are not yet fused.â By contrast, the FDA said, âan adultâs upper jaw bones are fused, and when a fixed palatal expansion device applies force, the palate is resistant to expansion. If forces are applied incorrectly to the teeth, serious complications can occur including chronic pain, tooth dislocation, flared teeth, uneven bite, difficulty eating, damaged gums, exposed roots, bone erosion, and tooth loss.â
Patients interviewed by KHN and CBS News described experiencing many of those problems. One patient who has sued, former professional clarinetist Boja Kragulj, said specialists later had to pull her four front teeth. She now wears false teeth.
Reached Thursday, Kragulj said: âWhile itâs too late for me and many others, there is some comfort in knowing the FDA is investigating the AGGA/ARA/ORA product and its claims. I hope other patients are spared the injuries and lost years that many of us have now suffered.â
The FDA said it plans âto investigate potential violationsâ in connection with the use of the devices, and that it is âidentifying and contacting responsible entities to communicate [its] concerns.â
The American Dental Association, which has 159,000 dentist members, said it âwill inform dentists of the FDAâs evaluation, and will continue to monitor for FDA updates regarding these devices and issues.â
Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFFâan independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .