FILED
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
October 27, 2009
PUBLISH Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
TENTH CIRCUIT
TMJ IMPLANTS, INC.; ROBERT W.
CHRISTENSEN,
Petitioners,
v. No. 08-9539
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT
OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES,
Respondent.
PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE DEPARTMENTAL
APPEALS BOARD OF THE DEPARTMENT
OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
App. Div. Docket No. A-08-10
Decision No. 2163
Lynn M. Watwood, Jr., Counsel, TMJ Implants, Inc., Golden, Colorado,
appearing for Petitioners.
Peter R. Maier, Attorney, Appellate Staff, Civil Division, United States
Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. (Gregory G. Katsas, Assistant Attorney
General, and Douglas N. Letter, Attorney, Appellate Staff, Civil Division, United
States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.; Thomas R. Barker, Acting
General Counsel, Gerald F. Masoudi, Chief Counsel, Food and Drug Division,
Eric M. Blumberg, Deputy Chief Counsel, and Michele Svonkin, Attorney, Food
and Drug Administration, Rockville, Maryland, with him on the brief), appearing
for Respondent.
Before TACHA, EBEL, and HARTZ, Circuit Judges.
TACHA, Circuit Judge.
TMJ Implants, Inc. (“TMJI”) manufactures and distributes
temporomandibular joint (“TMJ”) implants. Dr. Robert W. Christensen is TMJI’s
founder and president. In July 2005, the Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”)
filed a complaint for money penalties (“CMP”) against TMJI and Dr. Christensen
(collectively, “petitioners”) after concluding that they had knowingly failed to
submit seventeen medical device reports (“MDRs”) relating to TMJI’s implants.
That action culminated administratively in a Final Decision by the Departmental
Appeals Board (“DAB”) within FDA’s parent agency, the Department of Health
and Human Services. The Final Decision affirmed determinations by an
administrative law judge (“ALJ”) that petitioners had knowingly failed to submit
each of the seventeen MDRs and that petitioners were each liable for penalties of
$170,000 ($10,000 per violation).
TMJI and Dr. Christensen now petition this court for judicial review of the
DAB’s Final Decision. See 21 U.S.C. § 333(f)(6) (allowing appeals of the
assessment of civil penalties directly to circuit courts). They contend that: (1) the
CMP was premature; (2) they were not required to submit MDRs because Dr.
Christensen reasonably concluded that the devices did not cause or contribute to a
serious injury; (3) if petitioners were required to submit any MDRs, their failure
to do so was not knowing; (4) monetary penalties cannot be assessed against Dr.
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Christensen because he is an individual, not the manufacturer of the implants; and
(5) the amount of the monetary penalties is unwarranted. We AFFIRM.
I. BACKGROUND
The TMJs are located slightly in front of the ears and form the interface
between the lower jaw and the bottom of the skull. They are critical to several
functions of daily life, such as speaking, eating, swallowing, and breathing.
When the TMJs do not function properly, a variety of conditions or symptoms
may develop. Common symptoms of TMJ disfunction include reduced ability or
inability to open or close the jaw, pain, swelling, ankylosis (fusion of the joint
bones), infections, chronic sinus pain, hearing loss, and chronic ear pain. When
necessary, a medical provider may surgically remove one or both of the TMJs and
replace them with prosthetic joint implants such as those manufactured and
marketed by TMJI.
A. The Statutory and Regulatory System for Medical Device Reporting
TMJ implants are medical devices within the meaning of 21 U.S.C.
§ 321(h). Through the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, Congress
empowered FDA to require every manufacturer of a medical device to “establish
and maintain such records, make such reports, and provide such information as
the Secretary may by regulation reasonably require to assure that such device is
not adulterated or misbranded and to otherwise assure its safety and
effectiveness.” 21 U.S.C. § 360i(a). Pursuant to this broad delegation of
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authority, Congress created an expansive reporting system under which FDA must
require that every “device manufacturer. . . [file an MDR] whenever the
manufacturer . . . receives or otherwise becomes aware of information that
reasonably suggests that one of its marketed devices may have caused or
contributed to a death or serious injury.” Id. § 360i(a)(1)(A). Congress clarified
what types of events must be reported to FDA by defining a “serious injury” as
one that “is life threatening, results in permanent impairment of a body function
or permanent damage to a body structure, or necessitates medical or surgical
intervention to preclude permanent impairment of a body function or permanent
damage to a body structure.” Id. § 360i(a)(2)(A)–(C).
FDA has explained the purpose of the reporting requirement and its broad
scope:
To carry out its responsibilities, the agency needs to be informed
whenever a manufacturer or importer receives or otherwise becomes
aware of information about device problems. Only if FDA is
provided with such information will it be able to evaluate the risk, if
any, associated with a device and take whatever action is necessary
to reduce or eliminate the public’s exposure to this risk.
49 Fed. Reg. 36,326, 36,326 (Aug. 27, 1984). In response to public comments
expressing concern that broad reporting requirements may impose unduly onerous
burdens on medical device manufacturers, FDA reiterated the need for an
expansive reporting system and adopted regulations that require manufacturers to
file an MDR if they become aware of information suggesting that a device may
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have caused or contributed to a death or serious injury rather than the more
limited language proposed that would have required manufacturers to file an
MDR only in cases where they receive information suggesting that a device has
caused or contributed to a death or serious injury. Id. at 36,331. FDA explained
that the broader language was necessary “because the agency needs to learn of
instances in which there may be an association, as well as a causal connection,
between the use of a device and a death or serious injury.” Id.
The implementing regulations to § 360i adopt the statutory definition of
“serious injury” and define its crucial term “permanent” as “irreversible
impairment or damage to a body structure or function, excluding trivial
impairment or damage.” 21 C.F.R. § 803.3. The implementing regulations also
define the phrase “caused or contributed”:
Caused or contributed means that a . . . serious injury was or may
have been attributed to a medical device, or that a medical device
was or may have been a factor in a . . . serious injury, including
events occurring as a result of:
(1) Failure;
(2) Malfunction;
(3) Improper or inadequate design;
(4) Manufacture;
(5) Labeling; or
(6) User error.
[User] means a hospital, ambulatory surgical facility, nursing home,
outpatient diagnostic facility, or outpatient treatment facility . . . .
Id.
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Thus, focusing on the terms most relevant to this case, FDA mandates the
filing of an MDR whenever the manufacturer of a medical device is aware of
information that reasonably suggests its device (or an error on the part of the
practitioner who or facility that implants or services the device) may have been a
factor in the need to medically or surgically intervene in a particular individual’s
case, so long as the intervention is necessary to prevent irreversible, nontrivial
impairment of a body function or irreversible, nontrivial damage to a body
structure.
The implementing regulations also describe when a manufacturer is not
obligated to submit an MDR: when the manufacturer “ha[s] information that
would lead a person who is qualified to make a medical judgment reasonably to
conclude that a device did not cause or contribute to a . . . serious injury.” 21
C.F.R. § 803.20(c)(2). Put another way, if a qualified person rules out the device
(or an error on the part of the practitioner who implants the device) as a factor in
the need for medical or surgical intervention to prevent permanent harm to the
body, and this conclusion is reasonable, then the manufacturer need not file an
MDR. Particularly relevant to this case, however, is FDA’s explanation that
“[n]owhere in . . . the act or its legislative history is FDA’s authority limited to
requiring only information about reportable events that have been confirmed by
the manufacturer or importer of the device.” 49 Fed. Reg. at 36,338.
The submission of an MDR is not an admission that the device caused or
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contributed to the serious injury and a manufacturer may deny that its device
caused the injury in their MDR. 21 C.F.R. § 803.16. Indeed, the standard form
for the submission of an MDR includes a disclaimer to that effect.
As part of this expansive reporting system, device manufacturers commonly
receive information about their devices through FDA’s MedWatch program.
Under that program, any person may voluntarily report to FDA an adverse event
or problem with a medical device. The voluntary MedWatch report form asks for
the patient’s name, a description of the event or problem, the name and
manufacturer of the suspect device, and the name of the reporter. After FDA
receives the report, the agency forwards it to the manufacturer identified on the
report. If the reporter requests anonymity, however, regulations require FDA to
redact any identifying information of the reporter before forwarding the report to
the manufacturer. See id. § 20.63(f) (prohibiting FDA from disclosing any
identifying information of a voluntary reporter).
A manufacturer is responsible for investigating events described in
MedWatch forms to evaluate the cause of the event and whether to submit an
MDR for it. Id. § 803.50(b)(3). A manufacturer is not absolved of this duty
when a MedWatch report contains incomplete or redacted information; in those
circumstances, the manufacturer is required to file an incomplete report
explaining why the report is incomplete and what steps the manufacturer has
taken to obtain the relevant information. Id. Ultimately, the manufacturer is
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responsible for obtaining the relevant information to aid in its investigation and is
required to supplement its report once it obtains such information. Id.
§ 803.50(b)(2), (3). Manufacturers must also maintain MDR event files that
contain information regarding adverse events purportedly associated with their
devices, including all documentation of the manufacturer’s decisionmaking
process used to determine whether the particular event is reportable. Id.
§ 803.18(b)(1)(i). Finally, manufacturers must permit FDA to access, copy, and
verify its MDR files. Id. § 803.18(b)(2).
Under 21 U.S.C. § 333(f)(1)(A), “any person who violates [the MDR
reporting requirements] shall be liable to the United States for a civil penalty.”
The penalty may not exceed $16,500 for each violation. 21 C.F.R. § 17.2.
Liability for civil penalties requires proof that the violation was either a
significant or knowing departure from the law, or that the violation posed a risk to
public health. 21 U.S.C. § 333(f)(1)(B)(i).
B. The Events Giving Rise to the Imposition of Money Penalties Against
Petitioners
FDA employees conducted an inspection of TMJI’s facility and MDR files
from July 29, 2003 to August 11, 2003. As a result of that inspection, FDA
determined that TMJI should have submitted MDRs for twenty-two events, each
of which involved either a device explant (the device was surgically removed) or
antibiotic treatment. According to information received by petitioners, these
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surgical and medical interventions were performed due to, among other things,
apparent infections, loose screws, swelling, pain, bone growth, decreased mobility
of the jaw, headaches, seizures, inflamed tissue, vertigo, and foreign body
reaction occurring after a TMJ had been implanted in the patient. FDA informed
petitioners in a February 24, 2004 Warning Letter to Dr. Christensen that written
MDRs must be submitted for the twenty-two events within fifteen days. The
Warning Letter further notified petitioners that “[y]ou should take prompt action
to correct these deviations. Failure to promptly correct these deviations may
result in regulatory action without further notice. These actions include, but are
not limited to seizure, injunction, and/or civil penalties.”
Petitioners did not submit MDRs for these events. Instead, on March 4, Dr.
Christensen wrote to FDA to express petitioners’ “substantial disagreement with
the FDA’s position.” Christensen requested a meeting with FDA personnel “to
arrive at a proper decision with respect to what, if any, actions are required of the
company in this matter.” Dr. Christensen further expressed his view that FDA
may be using Warning Letters to retaliate against TMJI.
Dr. Christensen and three colleagues met with FDA representatives at
FDA’s District Office in Lakewood, Colorado on March 10, 2004. The meeting
can be summarized as follows: Dr. Christensen contended that in each of the
disputed events TMJI’s devices were not explanted because of any inherent
problem with the device itself; rather, natural progression of the TMJ disease
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necessitated removal of the device. For example, Dr. Christensen explained that
bone growth may occur after a TMJI device is implanted, but that in such a case,
“[t]he device didn’t go bad[,] it just meant that the disease continued despite what
we did and now we’ve got to go in and maybe build a bigger one or take out more
bone or get rid of adhesions or something else.” Petitioners’ position was that
pain, swelling, and loose screws are not serious injuries because they are
temporary and are not unexpected following placement of the device; infections
did not need to be reported because the devices are sterile when they leave the
manufacturer’s facility and therefore could not have caused any infection. Dr.
Christensen explained that his thirty years of experience with the devices made it
reasonable to conclude that the devices themselves did not cause the symptoms
that necessitated the explant. Dr. Christensen and his colleagues also expressed
concern that filing MDRs would expose TMJI to civil lawsuits and provide their
competitors with an unfair advantage. They further contended that they could not
conclusively determine that their devices were even associated with certain
events, since the only information they had about those events came from
voluntary MedWatch forms that did not contain sufficient information to conduct
an investigation of the events.
FDA personnel disagreed with petitioners’ position. The agency explained
that the definition of serious injury is one that requires medical intervention to
prevent a permanent impairment. Thus, while pain and loose screws may not be
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serious injuries in and of themselves, the failure to medically intervene to treat
those conditions could lead to permanent impairment of the TMJ or jaw function.
According to FDA, the relevant regulations require TMJI to report all explants
and medical interventions when TMJI’s devices may have been a contributing
factor in the need for such interventions, and that if TMJI did not have sufficient
information to rule out its device as a potential cause of the interventions then it
must report them. FDA made clear that submitting an MDR did not constitute an
admission from TMJI that its devices contributed to any injury, and the agency
suggested that TMJI articulate a response to the warning letter that addressed
each one of the events and why petitioners did not consider them to be reportable.
Thereafter, petitioners initiated a series of phone calls and letters to FDA.
The communications, which included petitioners’ written position on each of the
twenty-two events, continued to express petitioners’ views that filing MDRs
would subject them to liability; disease progression was the reason for each
device explant or medical treatment; FDA’s interpretation of § 360i was overly
broad; petitioners could not determine whether TMJI’s devices were involved in
many events; and FDA was not as experienced as Dr. Christensen and thus
incorrectly determined that TMJI devices may have caused or contributed to the
reported events. Petitioners sought another face-to-face meeting with FDA.
In its letters in response, FDA adhered to its position as articulated during
the March meeting. On July 14, the agency emphasized the statutory and
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regulatory language requiring MDRs whenever a manufacturer has information
reasonably suggesting that its device “may have caused or contributed [to]” a
serious injury. FDA concluded: “For the reasons discussed in this letter, the
events identified in the Warning Letter are reportable under the MDR regulation.
Because these reports are already past due under the MDR regulation, we expect
these reports within thirty days of the date of your receipt of this letter.”
Petitioners did not submit the twenty-two MDRs. Instead, they continued
to send letters to FDA, pressing for a more comprehensive definition of “serious
injury” and noting that petitioners were undertaking another review of the twenty-
two events identified in the Warning Letter. Petitioners also continued to request
another meeting with FDA to further discuss their concerns. On August 12,
petitioners determined that user error was involved in five of the twenty-two
events and filed MDRs for those five events.
In a September 7 letter, the director of FDA’s Center for Devices and
Radiological Health (“CDRH”) reiterated FDA’s position that petitioners’
construction of the MDR reporting requirements was too constrained. The letter
explained that “[b]ecause of their unique knowledge about their devices,
manufacturers often look for a direct causal link between the device and the
adverse event, overlooking the possibility that the device ‘may have contributed’
to a reportable event [as articulated in 21 U.S.C. § 360i(a)(1)(A)].” FDA
reminded petitioners that the “remaining . . . serious injury reports should have
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been submitted to FDA by 30 days from the date of your receipt of our July 14,
2004 letter. . . . Please submit all outstanding MDR reports within the next 15
working days.” The letter concluded:
FDA’s regulations provide avenues for individuals to appeal
decisions within the agency. In particular, individuals may appeal
the decision of an FDA employee to the employee’s supervisor under
21 CFR Part 10.75, Internal agency review of decisions. Under this
regulation, the proper avenue of appeal of the Center for Devices and
Radiological Health’s decision that you are required to submit the
. . . additional MDR reports identified in the February 24, 2004,
Warning Letter, as well as any other additional reports concerning
other adverse events that meet the requirements of 21 CFR Part 803 –
MDR regulation, is to the Commissioner of the Food and Drug
Administration.
After petitioners again refused to submit additional MDRs and instead
reiterated their explanations as to why each event was not reportable, CDRH
responded on November 10 with an offer to treat the explanations as MDRs in full
satisfaction of petitioners’ statutory and regulatory obligations. CDRH further
explained that the agency had expended significant resources responding to
petitioners’ correspondence and that they had exhausted their appellate rights at
that level of the agency. Finally, CDRH again explained petitioners’ appellate
rights:
As stated in [the] letter of September 7, 2004, FDA’s regulations
provide avenues for individuals to appeal decisions within the
agency. In particular, individuals may appeal the decision of an FDA
employee to the employee’s supervisor under 21 Code of Federal
Regulations (CFDR) part 10.75, internal agency review of decisions.
Under this regulation, the proper avenue of appeal of CDRH’s
decision that you are required to submit the . . . additional MDR
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reports identified in the February 24, 2004, Warning Letter as well as
any other reports concerning adverse events that meet the
requirements of 21 CFR Part 803 – MDR regulation, is to the
Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration. Accordingly,
any further correspondence from TMJ Implants, Inc. to CDRH
contesting the reportability of the MDR events listed in our February
24, 2004, Warning Letter will be considered an appeal and forwarded
to the Commissioner. You should be aware that pendency of such an
appeal does not preclude the Agency from taking action to enforce
the requirements of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. See 21
C.F.R. § 10.35(d).
(Emphasis added.)
On November 16, petitioners refused FDA’s offer to consider their
explanations as MDRs and requested internal agency review under 21 C.F.R.
§ 10.75. On July 14, 2005, CDRH filed a CMP against petitioners based on their
failure to submit MDRs for the remaining seventeen events identified in the
February 2004 Warning Letter. 1 One week later, FDA denied petitioners’ request
for agency review under 21 C.F.R. § 10.75. The agency reasoned that because the
issues were now the subject of a CMP and would be fully developed and
determined by a neutral ALJ, it would be inefficient and duplicative for FDA
simultaneously to review the matter at that point.
Petitioners and FDA conducted extensive discovery and submitted
comprehensive briefs in the CMP action. The ALJ held an evidentiary hearing
and ultimately issued an Initial Decision against petitioners on July 6, 2007. In
1
The CMP also named another TMJI employee. She was ultimately
dismissed from the administrative enforcement action, and her role at TMJI is not
relevant to the issues in this appeal.
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its Final Order of September 25, 2007, the ALJ imposed sanctions in the amount
of $170,000 on both TMJI and Dr. Christensen individually. Petitioners appealed
to the DAB, see 21 C.F.R. § 17.47, which affirmed the ALJ’s decision and order
against them. Petitioners now petition for judicial review in this court.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
“The final decision of the Commissioner of Food and Drugs or other entity
deciding the appeal (currently the DAB) constitutes final agency action from
which a respondent may petition for judicial review under the statutes governing
the matter involved.” 21 C.F.R. § 17.51. Under 21 U.S.C. § 333(f)(6),
petitioners may petition for judicial review directly in this court.
“Under the APA, we may set aside agency action only if it is ‘arbitrary,
capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with the law.’”
St. Mark’s Charities Liquidating Trust v. Shalala, 141 F.3d 978, 980 (10th Cir.
1998) (quoting 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A)). An agency’s factual findings must be
“supported by ‘substantial evidence’ in the administrative record.” Pennaco
Energy, Inc. v. U.S. Dep’t of the Interior, 377 F.3d 1147, 1156 (10th Cir. 2004);
see also Newton v. F.A.A., 457 F.3d 1133, 1136 (10th Cir. 2006). In this context,
“substantial evidence” is “something more than a mere scintilla but something
less than the weight of the evidence.” Pennaco Energy, Inc., 377 F.3d at 1156
(quotations and citations omitted). It is “such relevant evidence as a reasonable
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mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” Id. (quotations and
citations omitted). Finally, to the extent the agency action hinges on the agency’s
interpretation of its own regulations, such interpretation is generally given
deference. See Newton, 457 F.3d at 1137 (10th Cir. 2006) (discussing Chevron
U.S.A., Inc. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984)).
B. The DAB’s Determination that the CMP Was Not Premature Was
Reasonable
Petitioners first argue that the law did not permit FDA to initiate CMP
proceedings before the agency had ruled on their request for internal agency
review under 21 C.F.R. § 10.75(c). Petitioners contend that serving them with the
CMP in these circumstances deprived them of due process and constituted a
breach of contract. In the alternative, they maintain that FDA should have been
estopped from filing the CMP.
The DAB’s contrary interpretation of the applicable law was not erroneous.
21 C.F.R. § 10.35(d) states:
no[] action taken by an interested person in accordance with any
other administrative procedure in this part [i.e., part 10] or in any
other section of this chapter, e.g., the filing of a citizen petition
under § 10.30 or a petition for reconsideration under § 10.33 or a
request for an advisory opinion under § 10.85, will stay or otherwise
delay any administrative action by the Commissioner, including
enforcement action of any kind . . . .
As noted, petitioners sought administrative review pursuant to part 10 of
title 21 of the Code of Federal Regulations. See 21 C.F.R. § 10.75(c). Therefore,
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petitioners argument that the CMP was premature is belied by the language of 21
C.F.R. § 10.35(d). That language, when applied to the facts of this case, provides
that the commencement of petitioners’ review proceedings did not preclude FDA
from filing a CMP to enforce the provisions of 21 U.S.C. § 360i(a)(1)(A), even
though those proceedings had not yet culminated in a decision from the
Commissioner. 2 Simply put, whether or not the Commissioner had made a final
decision regarding petitioners’ review request at the time the CMP was filed was
irrelevant to FDA’s authority to file the CMP at that time. Therefore, the DAB’s
similar interpretation of FDA’s authority under 21 C.F.R. § 10.35(d) was
reasonable.
Furthermore, as the DAB recognized, petitioners participated in a hearing
before the ALJ in which they were afforded the opportunity to present their
positions regarding whether they were required to file the MDRs at issue and
whether monetary penalties were appropriate. That hearing certainly provided the
due process to which petitioners are entitled. See Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S.
319, 334 (1976) (finding “[t]he fundamental requirement of due process is the
opportunity to be heard ‘at a meaningful time and in a meaningful manner’”)
2
21 C.F.R. § 10.35(d) contains three exceptions to the general rule that an
administrative appeal will not stay or delay enforcement action. None apply in
this case, and petitioners do not contend otherwise. See 21 C.F.R. §
10.35(d)(1)–(3) (enforcement action will be stayed or delayed if the
Commissioner determines that it is in the public interest and orders the stay, a
statute requires a stay, or a court orders a stay).
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(quotations omitted). Therefore, petitioners’ argument that they were denied due
process is without merit.
Petitioners’ additional contentions also lack merit. Petitioners point to
CDRH’s statement in its November 10 letter that the proper avenue of appeal was
to the Commissioner, and that any further correspondence from petitioners to
CDRH would be considered an appeal and forwarded to the Commissioner.
According to petitioners, this constituted an agreement not to initiate CMP
proceedings until the Commissioner had decided petitioners’ review request. The
same letter, however, cited § 10.35(d) and explicitly informed petitioners that
“[y]ou should be aware that pendency of such an appeal [under 21 C.F.R. §
10.75] does not preclude the Agency from taking action to enforce the
requirements of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.” Contrary to petitioners’
position, the agency never represented otherwise. Accordingly, this
communication did not bind FDA in contract or equity to stay any enforcement
action until the Commissioner made a final decision regarding petitioners’ review
request.
C. The DAB Did Not Err in Determining that TMJI Must Submit MDRs for
the Seventeen Events Identified in the CMP.
Petitioners contend that the events at issue do not represent serious injuries
under 21 U.S.C. § 360i(a)(1)(A). They argue that the physical conditions
preceding the device explant or medical treatment—such as pain, swelling, bone
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growth, and infection—are relatively trivial and are to be expected following the
surgical implant of any medical device.
Again, the DAB’s contrary interpretation of the applicable law was
reasonable. Indeed, petitioners misread the applicable regulation, which does not
define “serious injury” in terms of physical significance. Instead, a “serious
injury” is a condition that “necessitates medical or surgical intervention to
preclude permanent impairment of a body function or permanent damage to a
body structure.” 21 C.F.R. § 803.3. In each of the seventeen events at issue, a
physician surgically explanted the device or otherwise medically treated the
patient as a result of the aforementioned physical conditions—conditions which,
if left untreated, could permanently impair the TMJ function. Accordingly, the
DAB’s decision in accordance with FDA’s position that “[a]lthough some of these
consequences may be deemed clinically insignificant, they are considered to be
serious injuries when coupled with the interventions, e.g., administration of
antibiotics or other medications, explant, reconstruction, debridement, or revision
surgery” was reasonable.
The DAB’s expansive construction of the causation element is also
reasonable. 21 C.F.R. § 803.3 states: “Caused or contributed means that a death
or serious injury was or may have been attributed to a medical device, or that a
medical device was or may have been a factor in a death or serious injury.” As
the DAB explained: “FDA set out a reasonable explanation . . . for reading the
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statute as justifying broad collection of information about adverse events
associated with medical devices in order to discern patterns and surface possible
concerns not only with design and manufacture of devices but also with their use
and performance in practice and under various circumstances.”
Moreover, the DAB’s determination that MDRs were required for the
seventeen events at issue is supported by the evidence in the record. This
evidence includes: (1) MedWatch reports describing the device and the patients’
symptoms following the implantation of the device; (2) information received from
petitioners’ investigations; and (3) testimony from two FDA expert witnesses
stating that the physical conditions constitute serious injuries to which TMJI
devices may have caused or contributed. The same evidence amply supports the
DAB’s rejection of petitioners’ claim that Dr. Christensen reasonably concluded
that TMJI’s devices did not cause or contribute to serious injuries.
Finally, the DAB properly rejected petitioners’ claim that they should not
be required to submit MDRs for events reported on voluntary MedWatch forms
because they could not conclusively determine whether their devices were
involved in those events. Petitioners contend that redacting the name of the
patient, the name of the reporter, the date of the implant, and the date of the event
makes it impossible to conduct an investigation about the event. As noted,
neither the statute nor its implementing regulations limit FDA’s authority to
require MDRs to events that are confirmed by the manufacturer. To the contrary,
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FDA regulations require a manufacturer to file an MDR when it has information
“from any source[] that reasonably suggests” its device caused or contributed to a
serious injury. 21 C.F.R. § 803.50(a)(1). The voluntary MedWatch reports at
issue identify TMJI as the device manufacturer. Thus, TMJI had information
reasonably suggesting its devices caused or contributed to a serious injury and
should have filed MDRs for those events. To the extent petitioners did not
subjectively believe that their devices were actually involved and sought to
insulate themselves from civil liability based in part on the MDRs, they are
permitted to “deny that the report or information submitted under this part
constitutes an admission that the device [or petitioners] caused or contributed to a
reportable event.” 21 C.F.R. § 803.16. They are not permitted, however, to
ignore the broad reporting requirements of the statute and its implementing
regulations simply because they do not feel that they have all of the information
they need to confirm that their device caused a serious injury.
D. The DAB Did Not Err in Concluding that Petitioners’ Violations Were
Knowing
Liability for a money penalty lies only when the violation constitutes a
knowing or significant departure from the § 360i requirements or when the
violation poses a risk to public health. 21 U.S.C. § 333(f)(1)(B)(i). The
regulations define a “knowing departure” as “a departure from a requirement
taken: (a) With actual knowledge that the action is such a departure, or (b) in
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deliberate ignorance of a requirement, or (c) in reckless disregard of a
requirement.” 21 C.F.R. § 17.3(a)(2).
The DAB properly determined that petitioners’ violations were knowing.
From February to November 2004, FDA repeatedly and consistently informed
petitioners of FDA’s position that they needed to submit MDRs for the events at
issue. This position, as explained above, is entirely reasonable given the clear
and broad language of § 360i. Petitioners’ failure to file those MDRs was thus
done either in deliberate ignorance of the § 360i requirements or in reckless
disregard of them.
Petitioners contend that they could not have knowingly violated § 360i at
the time the CMP was served because the Commissioner had not yet responded to
their appeal request. In their view, a knowing violation could have occurred in
this case only if petitioners had refused to comply with the Commissioner’s
ultimate determination that MDRs were required. This argument is belied by the
applicable regulation, which requires only deliberate indifference to or reckless
disregard of the reporting requirements. Those requirements are clearly and
broadly articulated in the statute and its implementing regulations, and petitioners
did not require the FDA Commissioner’s final decision regarding their review
request to be fairly apprised of them. Therefore, the DAB did not err in
concluding that petitioners’ violations were knowing.
E. The DAB Reasonably Affirmed the Money Penalties Assessed Against Dr.
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Christensen
Dr. Christensen argues that only the manufacturer of the devices, not an
individual, may be subject to money penalties under 21 U.S.C. § 333(f). This
contention is not supported by the clear language of the governing statutes.
Section 333(f) states that “any person who violates a requirement of this chapter
which relates to devices shall be liable to the United States for a civil penalty.”
Section 321(e) defines “person” to include an “individual, partnership,
corporation, and association.” Moreover, in analogous circumstances, the
Supreme Court has explicitly held that corporate officers may be liable for
violations of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. See United States v. Park, 421
U.S. 658 (1975); United States v. Dotterweich, 320 U.S. 277 (1943). While Dr.
Christensen attempts to distinguish these cases because they involved criminal
prosecutions rather than civil money penalties, “the rationale for holding
corporate officers criminally responsible for acts of the corporation, which could
lead to incarceration, is even more persuasive where only civil liability is
involved, which at most would result in a monetary penalty.” United States v.
Hodges X-Ray, Inc., 759 F.2d 557, 561 (6th Cir. 1985). Accordingly, “[t]he fact
that a corporate officer could be subjected to criminal punishment upon a showing
of a responsible relationship to the acts of a corporation that violate health and
safety statutes renders civil liability appropriate as well.” Id. Therefore, the
DAB’s similar conclusion was reasonable.
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We also reject Dr. Christensen’s argument that § 333(f) should be
interpreted to exclude individuals with extensive medical backgrounds who act as
a manufacturer’s expert under 21 C.F.R. § 803.20(c)(2). Such an interpretation is
not founded in the letter or purpose of § 333(f). Therefore, the DAB reasonably
affirmed the assessment of monetary penalties against Dr. Christensen.
F. The DAB Reasonably Affirmed the Amount of the Money Penalties
Under § 333(f)(1)(A) and the implementing regulations, a civil penalty may
not exceed $16,500 for each violation. 21 U.S.C. § 333(f)(1)(A); 21 C.F.R.
§ 17.2. The appropriate amount of a money penalty is determined by considering
mitigating and aggravating factors. 21 C.F.R. § 17.45(b)(3).
FDA sought penalties of $10,000 for each violation from each petitioner,
which the ALJ imposed and which the DAB ultimately affirmed. In their petition
before this Court, petitioners contend their financial condition was “ignored” in
assessing the penalty amount and that several mitigating factors justify a lower
penalty. Petitioners’ first argument is unfounded. The DAB meticulously
explained why petitioners’ financial disclosures were inadequate to give a reliable
picture of petitioners’ ability to pay a $170,000 penalty. TMJI, for example,
refused to submit complete tax returns. Dr. Christensen refused to disclose
money or property transfers. Neither petitioner explained a significant drop in
profitability from 2004 to 2005 ($624,690 in ordinary business income on
approximately $2.7 million in net sales in 2004 versus $203,108 in ordinary
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business income on the same amount of net sales in 2005) combined with a 52%
increase in salaries during the same time period. Far from “ignoring” petitioners’
financial condition, the DAB justifiably concluded that “the ALJ’s findings that
TMJI and Dr. Christensen failed to make full financial disclosures are supported
by substantial evidence in the record [as] a whole. His inference that a full
disclosure would not have supported their assertions of an inability to pay is
reasonable.”
The DAB also properly evaluated all factors petitioners characterize as
mitigating. First, petitioners contend that they never refused to file the seventeen
MDRs but only sought a dialogue with FDA to discuss their disagreement
regarding whether MDRs were required before they filed them. As the DAB
explained, however, the law does not require an explicit “refusal” to file; rather,
the failure to file an MDR when the statute and regulations require it constitutes a
violation of § 360i. Furthermore, petitioners do not have the authority to make
the ultimate determinations of whether and when an MDR must be filed. That
authority lies with Congress and FDA, which have clearly articulated their
determinations in the statutes and implementing regulations. Accordingly,
petitioners’ failure to file MDRs and their recalcitrant responses to the repeated
FDA warnings can reasonably be interpreted as explicit refusals to file.
Second, the DAB reasonably rejected petitioners’ contention that their
failure to file MDRs after being informed that they were required to do so was in
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good faith. This finding is supported by substantial evidence in the
administrative record, and petitioners’ statement that TMJI’s devices are not a
threat to the public health is simply petitioners’ own opinion. The DAB did not
err in failing to accord significant weight to this self-serving assertion.
Third, petitioners’ offer to file the required MDRs if FDA promised to drop
the CMP is also not a mitigating factor, and FDA’s rejection of that offer does not
violate the Small Business and Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act. Indeed,
petitioners only made the offer to file MDRs after the ALJ had held them liable
and after the DAB had affirmed that decision. Offering to abide by the law only
after being punished for not doing so does not mitigate the culpability of the
initial unlawful conduct and the DAB’s similar conclusion was not error.
Finally, to the extent petitioners contend that other mitigating factors exist,
we have carefully reviewed the extensive record in this case and conclude that the
DAB’s decision is legally tenable and supported by substantial evidence.
IV. CONCLUSION
The DAB’s Final Decision is AFFIRMED.
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