[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT FILED
________________________ U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
No. 08-13693 MARCH 30, 2009
________________________ THOMAS K. KAHN
CLERK
D. C. Docket No. 06-01281-CV-ORL-18KRS
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Counter
Defendant-Appellant-
Cross-Appellee,
versus
ENDOTEC, INC.,
a corporation,
MICHAEL J. PAPPAS,
FREDERICK F. BUECHEL,
an individual,
Defendants-Counter
Claimants-Appellees
Cross-Appellant.
________________________
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Middle District of Florida
_________________________
(March 30, 2009)
Before HULL, WILSON and HILL, Circuit Judges.
WILSON, Circuit Judge:
Pursuant to the Medical Device Amendments (“MDA”), 21 U.S.C. § 360c,
et seq., to the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (“FDCA”), 21 U.S.C. § 301, et seq.,
the Food & Drug Administration (“FDA”) regulates the introduction of medical
devices into interstate commerce by requiring that a device meets certain rigorous
standards. The United States of America (“Government”) filed a civil action
seeking a permanent injunction against Endotec, Inc. and its two owners, Michael
Pappas and Frederick F. Buechel1 (collectively, “Appellees”), alleging that they
(1) manufactured and distributed adulterated ankle, knee, and jaw devices and (2)
exceeded the scope of an approved clinical study of an ankle device, all in
violation of the FDCA. In response, the Appellees assert that the ankle, knee, and
jaw devices fall under the custom device exemption to the FDCA requirements and
that they took certain remedial measures to cure any violations of the clinical
study. After a three-day bench trial, the district court enjoined the Appellees from
manufacturing and distributing the knee devices but rejected the Government’s
1
On appeal, both parties spell his name “Buechel.” While the district court did the same
in its caption, it spelled his name “Beuchel” throughout the text of its Order. See United States
v. Endotec, Inc., No. 6:06-cv-1281-Orl-18KRS, 2008 WL 1909164, at *1 (M.D. Fla. Apr. 30,
2008). We will refer to him as “Buechel.”
2
requests to enjoin the manufacture and distribution of the ankle and jaw devices.
See Endotec, Inc., 2008 WL 1909164, at *14-15. The district court also found that
the Appellees had not violated the investigational study of the ankle device. See id.
The Government appealed as to the ankle and jaw devices and the Appellees
cross-appealed as to the knee device.
For the reasons that follow, we affirm the district court’s order as to the knee
and jaw devices but reverse as to the ankle device and remand with instructions to
the district court to enter a permanent injunction in favor of the Government.
I.
A. Statutory scheme
In 1976, Congress passed the MDA, which amended the FDCA and imposed
a regime of detailed federal oversight for medical devices. The MDA divided
medical devices into three classes “based on the risk that they pose to the public.”
Medtronic, Inc. v. Lohr, 518 U.S. 470, 476 (1996). Class I devices, such as tongue
depressors and examination gloves, are subject to “general controls” including
labeling requirements. 21 U.S.C. § 360c(a)(1)(A). Class II devices, such as
oxygen masks and powered wheelchairs, are subject to “special controls” including
performance standards and postmarket surveillance measures. Id. § 360c(a)(1)(B).
Class III devices, such as pacemakers and replacement heart valves, are subject to
3
“premarket approval to provide reasonable assurance of its safety and
effectiveness.” Id. § 360c(a)(1)(C).
Medical devices in interstate commerce at the time of the passage of the
MDA were grandfathered and allowed to remain on the market unless and until the
FDA promulgated a regulation requiring premarket approval. See id. §
360e(b)(1)(A). Generally, any medical device introduced into interstate commerce
for commercial distribution after the passage of the MDA is classified in Class III
unless (1) the FDA promulgates a regulation classifying the device in Class I or
Class II, or (2) the device is “substantially equivalent” to another pre-existing
device on the market.2 Id. § 360c(f)(1). Because all the medical devices at issue
here were introduced into interstate commerce for commercial distribution after
May 28, 1976, and because neither party asserts that the medical devices at issue
have been reclassified or deemed substantially equivalent to a Class I or II device,
they constitute Class III devices. See Tr. of R., Volume 6, at 10:23-24 (Testimony
of Robert Gatling, Jr., Director of the Program Operations Staff, Office of Device
Evaluation, Center for Devices and Radiological Health) (testifying that the
2
The FDA’s review for substantial equivalence is known as the “510(k)” process, named
after the section of the MDA in which it can be found. “Most new Class III devices enter the
market through § 510(k). In 2005, for example, the FDA authorized the marketing of 3,148
devices under § 510(k) and granted premarket approval to just 32 devices.” Riegel v. Medtronic,
Inc., 128 S. Ct. 999, 1004 (2008) (citing P. Hutt, R. Merrill, & L. Grossman, Food and Drug Law
992 (3d ed. 2007)).
4
medical devices “at issue in this case are all Class III devices”).
The FDCA prohibits the introduction into interstate commerce of any
adulterated or misbranded device. See 21 U.S.C. § 331(a), (k). To show a
violation of § 331(a) and (k), the Government must prove: (1) Appellees’ products
are “devices” within the meaning of the FDCA; (2) the devices are adulterated or
misbranded; and (3) the devices move in interstate commerce. A device is
“adulterated” under the FDCA if it is required to receive premarket approval from
the FDA but moves in commerce even though it did not receive premarket
approval. See id. § 351(f)(1)(B). In other words, a Class III device moving in
interstate commerce that has not received premarket approval constitutes an
adulterated device.
The FDCA and MDA contain several exemptions, two of which arise in this
case. First, the investigational device exemption (“IDE”) allows an adulterated
device to be distributed as part of a clinical investigation if certain conditions are
met. See id. § 360j(g). Second, the custom device exemption exempts from
performance standards and premarket approval requirements a device that meets
the definition specified in the statute. See id. § 360j(b).
Lastly, section 332 of the FDCA provides that “[t]he district courts of the
United States and the United States courts of the Territories shall have jurisdiction,
5
for cause shown to restrain violations of section 331 of this title, except paragraphs
(h), (i), and (j).” Id. § 332(a) (emphasis added).
B. Factual background
Endotec is a Florida corporation engaged in the business of manufacturing
and distributing medical devices. Pappas is Endotec’s President and co-owner, and
Buechel is Endotec’s Vice-President, medical director, and co-owner. The devices
at issue include (1) ankle replacement implants with mobile bearings; (2) two types
of mobile bearings used with knee replacement implants; and (3) a
temporomandibular joint (“TMJ”) implant, or a jaw device.
1. Ankle device
The Buechel-Pappas Total Ankle Replacement System (“B-P Ankle”) is a
generic mobile bearing device that consists of three components: (1) a tibial
component; (2) a talar component; and (3) a mobile bearing between them.3 Since
1991, Endotec has filed six “510(k)” applications with the FDA, asserting that the
B-P Ankle is substantially equivalent to a Class II device. The FDA has rejected
each submission. In October of 1997, Endotec received conditional approval for
an IDE clinical study of the B-P ankle limited to two hospitals and ten patients. In
May of 1999, the FDA granted full approval to Endotec’s IDE clinical study of the
3
The tibia is the shin bone and the talus is the bone at the top of the foot.
6
B-P Ankle, limited to 109 patients. The IDE reached full enrollment in September
of 2001.
The ankle devices at issue here include (1) all ankle devices distributed by
Endotec for use in patients beyond the scope of the IDE clinical study for the B-P
Ankle, and (2) all ankle devices distributed by Endotec as “custom” or “surgeon
specials.” See Endotec, 2008 WL 1909164, at *3 (“The specific ankle devices at
issue are all the ankle devices that are distributed for use in patients beyond the 109
patients enrolled in an approved IDE clinical study and all ankle devices [the
Appellees] describe as ‘customs’ or ‘surgeon specials.’”). In other words, after the
IDE clinical study became full in 2001, the Appellees continued to manufacture
and distribute modified versions of the B-P Ankle, which, they contend, constitute
custom devices exempt from the requirements of the FDCA. See id. at *5 (“Dr.
Pappas testified that while the ankle devices at issue were similar to the
standardized B-P Ankle that was being studied under the IDE, each had differences
because each was designed for an individual patient, according to that patient’s
physiology and pathology.”).
In 2001, Barbara Maulfair, an FDA investigator, inspected Endotec’s New
Jersey facility to collect information with respect to the IDE clinical study of the B-
P Ankle. At trial, she testified that “Endotec’s level of accountability was the
7
worst she had ever seen and violated FDA’s regulations governing clinical trials.”
Id. at *3. As a result, the FDA issued a Form 483 to Endotec listing “seventeen
observations which were significant deviations from the regulations.” Id.
Endotec’s database identified 4,000 ankle units, but the IDE only included 109
patients. Her inspection revealed that Dr. Feldman (a clinical investigator under
the approved IDE clinical study) had implanted 17 ankle devices into 17 new
patients but failed to notify Endotec of these patients. In addition, Dr. Feldman
had implanted 10 additional ankle devices as “surgeon specials” and Dr. Buechel
(not a clinical investigator under the approved IDE clinical study) had implanted
218 ankle devices as “surgeon specials.”
The 2001 inspection by Maulfair led the FDA to impose an Application
Integrity Policy (“AIP”) to Endotec on or about February 14, 2002 as a result of
“system-wide failure by Endotec to ensure the integrity of data and that data
submitted to FDA regarding this study [was] unreliable.” Id. The AIP letter
announced to Endotec that the FDA deferred action or review on any pending
submissions or further submissions by Endotec “until questions regarding data
integrity are resolved.” On March 15, 2002, the FDA also issued a warning letter,
informing Endotec that its shipment of B-P Ankles to Drs. Feldman and Buechel
were not covered under the approved IDE clinical study and did not constitute
8
“custom devices.”
Maulfair conducted two additional inspections of Endotec’s New Jersey
facility in 2002 and 2004. As a result of her second inspection, Maulfair
determined that Endotec continued to ship ankle devices as custom devices. She
observed that some of the ankle devices shipped to Dr. Buechel were marked with
serial numbers “05,” which referred to B-P Ankle components, and “95,” which
referred to custom device components. However, considering that the IDE had
reached full enrollment, no B-P Ankle devices could be shipped under the IDE
clinical study. As a result of her third inspection, Maulfair determined that
Endotec continued to ship purported custom and standard B-P Ankle components.
Richard K. Vogel, an FDA investigator and a medical device specialist for
the FDA, conducted two inspections of Endotec’s Orlando facility. First, in
August of 2004, Vogel sought “to collect documents regarding Endotec’s shipment
of ankle devies to two specific patients.” Id. at *4. When he returned to finish the
inspection in January of 2005, however, his investigation “changed to the
collection of documentation of the manufacturing and shipment in interstate
commerce of ankle devices manufactured between September 2004 and January
2005.” Id. at *4. At the end of his investigation, Vogel explained to Pappas that
the continued distribution of the B-P Ankle violated the law insofar as the IDE
9
clinical study had reached full enrollment and that the ankle devices were not
custom devices. Second, in November of 2005, Vogel returned to the Orlando
facility for a second inspection to investigate the distribution of unapproved
devices and investigational devices outside the scope of the IDE for the B-P Ankle.
Vogel observed that one shipment of a purported custom ankle device had been
returned by the patient, sent back to Endotec’s Orlando facility, repackaged and
relabeled, and sent to another patient.
Dr. Pappas testified that, after Endotec received the 2002 warning letter, it
limited the manufacture and distribution of ankle devices to custom designs. Dr.
Buechel testified that while he was not a clinical investigator under the IDE
clinical study for the B-P Ankle, he implanted B-P ankle devices as “surgeon
specials before the 2002 warning letter from the FDA.4 Dr. Buechel testified that
he implanted only custom ankle devices after the letter. In April of 2007, however,
he implanted a B-P Ankle device, but explained that it “must have been an
emergency situation.” Id. at *6.
2. Knee device
Endotec manufactures artificial knee devices with two types of designs: (1)
the FlexGuide Knee Bearing with Anterior Stop, and (2) the Fenning Modular
4
The phrase “surgeon specials” is one used by Endotec and, as far as we know, has no
meaning under the FDCA or case law.
10
Bearing. Both devices were distributed to one surgeon, Dr. John Fenning.
3. Jaw device
The Hemi temporomandibular joint (“Hemi TMJ”) is a partial jaw implant
that Endotec distributed to one doctor for use in one particular patient not covered
by an IDE clinical study as to a similar jaw device.5 The patient who received the
Hemi TMJ device was missing a large piece of bone in his jaw as a result of a
tumor.
C. Procedural background
On August 23, 2007, the Government filed its “Amended Complaint for
Permanent Injunction” against Endotec, Pappas, and Buechel in the United States
District Court for the Middle District of Florida, seeking to enjoin the distribution
of alleged adulterated and misbranded ankle, knee, and jaw implants in violation of
21 U.S.C. § 331(a), (k).6 Specifically, the Government alleged that the specific
5
Endotec has an FDA-approved IDE for a replacement TMJ device known as the
Hoffman-Pappas temporomandibular joint (“H-P TMJ”). In 1997, the FDA approved an IDE
clinical study for the H-P TMJ. The Government’s case included the distribution of two H-P
TMJ devices used for revision surgeries in patients enrolled in the IDE clinical study. The
Government requested injunctive relief as to the two H-P TMJ devices, arguing that the revision
surgeries went beyond the scope of the IDE protocol. The district court disagreed and found that
the “two H-P TMJ devices used for revision surgeries did not constitute deviations from the
study protocol, did not require prior approval from the FDA, and were exempt from [premarket
approval] requirements.” Endotec, 2008 WL 1909164, at *13. The H-P TMJ devices are not at
issue here.
6
The Government filed its original complaint approximately one year before its amended
complaint, on or about August 28, 2006.
11
devices distributed by Endotec (1) constituted class III devices that did not qualify
for any exemption from premarket approval, and, (2) as to the ankle device only,
were subject to an IDE approved by the FDA but failed to comply with its
requirements. As relief, the Government sought a permanent injunction and the
disgorgement of profits. On September 4, 2007, the Appellees filed their
“Amended Counter-Claim for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief and Damges,” in
which they sought (1) declaratory judgment of their rights; (2) a permanent
injunction against the Government “from interfering with their manufacture of
medical devices ordered by physicians or surgeons for use in their practice for their
patients;” and (3) an order requiring the FDA to submit the B-P Ankle to a panel of
independent experts for proper classification.7 The Government moved for
summary judgment, which the district court denied except with regard to the
Appellees’ request for referral of the B-P Ankle to an expert panel.
Beginning on March 18, 2008, the district court held a three-day bench trial.
After the conclusion of the trial, the parties submitted written briefs and, on April
30, 2008, the district court issued its Order. See Endotec, 2008 WL 1909164, at
*1. The district court enjoined the Appellees from manufacturing and distributing
the knee device, but rejected the remainder of the Government’s claims. First, as
7
The Appellees filed their original counterclaim on or about May 7, 2007.
12
to the ankle devices, noting that the Government had not presented any evidence
that the ankle devices were “potentially dangerous,” the district court found that
ankle devices met all of the requirements of a custom device exemption. Id. at
*11-12. As to the IDE clinical study of the B-P Ankle, the district court also found
that while “Endotec had faulty record-keeping, the Government has neither alleged
that the B-P Ankle is unsafe or dangerous nor that [Endotec’s] actions ha[s] caused
harm to any patient.” Id. at *12. Second, as to the knee devices, the district court
found that Endotec had failed to identify any “special need” of Dr. Fenning as to
each knee device. The Flex Guide Knee Bearing with Anterior Stop, moreover,
“was implanted repeatedly in different patients.” Id. Likewise, as to the Fenning
Modular Bearing, Endotec presented no evidence that it manufactured said device
to a particular patient’s needs and Endotec had advertised said device for
commercial distribution. As such, neither knee device qualified as a custom
device. Third, as to the jaw device, the district court found that the Hemi TMJ met
all of the requirements of a custom device. The district court also denied the
Government’s request for a disgorgement of profits and ordered each party to bear
its own costs and attorney’s fees.
On May 1, 2008, the district court entered judgment in favor of the
Appellees. On June 26, 2008, the Government filed a Notice of Appeal as to the
13
district court’s conclusions related to the ankle and jaw devices. On July 10, 2008,
the Appellees filed a Notice of Appeal as to the district court’s conclusions related
to the knee device.
II.
“We review the ultimate decision of whether to grant a preliminary
injunction for abuse of discretion, but we review de novo determinations of law
made by the district court en route.” Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Ass’n,
Inc. v. Landstar System, Inc., 541 F.3d 1278, 1293 (11th Cir. 2008) (citing Teper v.
Miller, 82 F.3d 989, 993 (11th Cir. 1996)). Questions of law subject to de novo
review include questions of statutory and regulatory construction. See Lippert v.
Community Bank, Inc., 438 F.3d 1275, 1278 (11th Cir. 2006) (reviewing questions
of statutory construction de novo); United States v. Pistone, 177 F.3d 957, 958
(11th Cir. 1999) (per curiam) (“The interpretation of a statute is a question of law
subject to de novo review.”). However, we review “findings of fact upon which
the decision to grant equitable relief was made under the clearly erroneous
standard.” Atlanta Journal and Constitution v. City of Atlanta Dept. of Aviation,
442 F.3d 1283, 1287 (11th Cir. 2006).
In considering the Government’s request for a permanent injunction under
the FDCA, the district court did not consider the traditional equitable criteria for
14
injunctive relief.8 See Siegel v. LePore, 234 F.3d 1163, 1176 (11th Cir. 2000) (en
banc) (per curiam) (“A district court may grant injunctive relief only if the moving
party shows that: (1) it has a substantial likelihood of success on the merits; (2)
irreparable injury will be suffered unless the injunction issues; (3) the threatened
injury to the movant outweighs whatever damage the proposed injunction may
cause the opposing party; and (4) if issued, the injunction would not be adverse to
the public interest.”); KH Outdoor, LLC v. City of Trussville, 458 F.3d 1261, 1268
(11th Cir. 2006) (“For a permanent injunction, the standard is essentially the same
[as that for a preliminary injunction], except that the movant must establish actual
success on the merits, as opposed to a likelihood of success.” (citing Amoco Prod.
Co. v. Vill. of Gambell, 480 U.S. 531, 546 n.12 (1987))). On appeal, neither party
argues that the district court erred in doing so.
Rather, the Government argues that the district court erred in finding that (1)
ankle and jaw devices constitute a custom device and (2) that the Appellees did not
violate the IDE clinical study of the B-P Ankle. Likewise, the Appellees argue in
their cross-appeal that the district court erred in finding that the knee device did not
constitute a custom device. In doing so, both parties challenge the district court’s
findings as to the applicability of an exemption to a statutory scheme.
8
The district court did not specifically indicate the standard of review that it applied for a
permanent injunction under the FDCA.
15
Significantly, the Appellees in their cross-appeal do not argue that the Government
failed to meet its burden of proof to demonstrate the propriety of a permanent
injunction as to the knee device, or the ankle and jaw devices. As such, we need
not speculate as to the proper standard of review for injunctive relief pursuant to
section 332 of the FDCA and we decline to consider whether the Government met
its burden.9 Rather, as to both the Government’s appeal and the Appellees’ cross-
9
We have not yet had the occasion to address explicitly the proper standard of review for
injunctive relief under the FDCA. Fifth Circuit precedent, however, suggests that a moving
party need prove only a violation of the statute at issue. In United States v. Hoxsey Cancer
Clinic, 198 F.2d 273 (5th Cir. 1952), the Fifth Circuit considered a claim for injunctive relief
sought by the Government under section 332 of the FDCA “to prevent the Hoxsey Cancer
Clinic, and Harry M. Hoxsey, from introducing or delivering for introduction into interstate
commerce bottles of brownish-black, and pink, colored liquids intended for use in the treatment
and cure of cancer in man.” Id. at 274. That case concerned a booklet that accompanied cancer
drugs and contained general and specific statements regarding the treatment, mitigation, and cure
of cancer. The Fifth Circuit reversed the district court’s denial of injunctive relief. In doing so,
it did not apply the traditional equitable criteria. Rather, considering an injunction as to the
Government’s claims of false and misleading statements, the Fifth Circuit limited its analysis to
the language of the statute: “The statute seeks to prevent labeling which is false or misleading in
any particular. Proof that such representation in the case of at least nine of the persons
represented as cured was false establishes the falsity of such representation in a most significant
particular.” Id. at 281. As such, the Fifth Circuit found an injunction appropriate pursuant to
section 332 of the FDCA where the Government demonstrated a violation of the statutory
provisions at issue without any mention of the traditional equitable criteria. See also United
States v. Vital Health Products, Ltd., 786 F. Supp. 761, 770 (E.D. Wis. 1992) (providing that, to
obtain injunctive relief under the FDCA, “[t]he government need only show that the defendant
has violated the Act and that there is a reasonable chance of recurring violations”); United States
v. 22 Rectangular or Cylindrical Finished Devices, More or Less, * * * the Ster-O-Lizer
MD-200 * * *, Halogenic Products Co., 714 F. Supp. 1159, 1167 (D. Utah 1989) (“Provisions
such as section 332(a), which restrain persons from violating laws of the United States, are
satisfied where the statutory conditions for relief are met; no additional showing must be made
for an injunction to issue.”). But see Klay v. United Healthgroup, Inc., 376 F.3d 1092, 1099
(11th Cir. 2004) (providing that, as a general matter with respect to the proper standard of review
for a statutorily-authorized injunction, “no overarching general principles are readily apparent”).
In the same way, the Second and Ninth Circuits have applied modified standards to a
request for injunctive relief pursuant to the FDCA. In United States v. Diapulse Corp. of
16
appeal, the dispute concerns whether the medical devices fall under an exception to
premarket approval, specifically the custom device exemption as to the ankle,
knee, and jaw devices and the IDE exemption as to the ankle device. As such, in
line with the district court’s analysis as well as the parties’ briefs, we limit our
discussion to whether the respective medical devices meet the statutory criteria of
the exemptions only. The Appellees bear that burden.10 See United States v. First
City Nat. Bank of Houston, 386 U.S. 361, 366 (1967) (providing that the “general
rule” places the burden “where one claims the benefits of an exception to the
prohibition of a statute”); Fed. Trade Comm’n v. Morton Salt Co., 334 U.S. 37,
44-45 (1948) (providing that “the general rule of statutory construction that the
burden of proving justification or exemption under a special exception to the
prohibitions of a statute generally rests on one who claims its benefits”); United
States v. An Article of Drug . . . “Bentex Ulcerine,” 469 F.2d 875, 878 (5th Cir.
America, 457 F.2d 25 (2d Cir. 1972), a pre-MDA case, the Second Circuit explained that “[t]he
passage of the [FDCA] is, in a sense, an implied finding that violations will harm the public and
ought, if necessary, be restrained.” Id. at 28. Hence, “[n]o specific or immediate showing of the
precise way in which violation of the law will result in public harm is required.” Id. The Second
Circuit did consider “the likelihood of continuing violation or recommencement of the offensive
behavior, if it has ceased during the pendency of the litigation.” Id. at 28-29. Likewise, in
United States v. Odessa Union Warehouse Co-op, 833 F.2d 172 (9th Cir. 1987), the Ninth
Circuit applied a watered-down version of the traditional equitable criteria, presuming “that the
government would suffer irreparable injury from a denial of its motion” and requiring only
“some chance of probable success on the merits.” Id. at 175-76. The Ninth Circuit, however,
still considered the public interest as well as the likelihood of recurring violations. Id. at 176.
10
The Appellees do not argue to the contrary.
17
1972) (per curiam), cert. denied, 412 U.S. 938 (1973) (providing that the party
claiming the protection of the “Grandfather Clause” exemption to the FDCA’s
premarket approval requirement as to a “new drug” “must prove every essential
fact necessary for invocation of the exemption”); United States v. Kanasco, Ltd.,
123 F.3d 209, 211 (4th Cir. 1997) (providing that “[t]he burden of pleading and
proving the applicability of [the export exemption to the FDCA’s requirement of
“current good manufacturing practice”] is on . . . the party that seeks the benefit of
the exemption”); United States v. An Article of Device, 731 F.2d 1253, 1262 (7th
Cir. 1984) (providing that, in an action brought by the government for a declaration
that a device was “misbranded” under the FDCA, the party claiming the exemption
who “appear[s] to be in the better position to come forward with evidence that the
[device] works safely and effectively” bears the burden of proving its application).
We construe statutory exemptions strictly against the party who invokes its benefit.
See An Article of Drug . . . “Bentex Ulcerine,” 469 F.2d at 878 (providing that the
“Grandfather Clause” exemption to the FDCA’s requirement of premarket
approval of a “new drug” “is to be strictly construed against the one who invokes
its protection”). Strict construction of an exemption to a statutory scheme is all-
the-more necessary where the statute at issue addresses public health and safety,
such as the MDA and FDCA. See United States v. Articles of Drug Consisting of
18
Following: 5,906 Boxes, 745 F.2d 105, 113 (1st Cir. 1984) (providing that “as an
exemption to a comprehensive regulatory statute concerned with public safety [i.e.,
the FDCA], the grandfather clause is to be strictly construed”); USV Pharm. Corp.
v. Richardson, 461 F.2d 223, 227-28 (4th Cir. 1972) (addressing the “grandfather
clause” exemption to the FDCA and providing “that statutory exemptions,
particularly as applied to statutes concerned with public health and safety, are to be
strictly and narrowly construed”). With the proper standard of review in mind, and
the scope of our review defined, we turn to the medical devices at issue.
III.
The Government challenges the district court’s order as to the ankle and jaw
devices insofar as it found both devices fall under the custom device exemption.
The Government also challenges the district court’s finding that the Appellees did
not exceed the scope of the IDE clinical study of the B-P Ankle. The Appellees
challenge the district court’s order as to the knee device insofar as it found that said
device did not fall under the custom device exemption. We will address each
medical device in turn.
A. Ankle device
The Government asserted two distinct yet related claims as to the
manufacture and distribution of the ankle device. First, the Government contended
19
that the Appellees violated 21 U.S.C. § 331(a), which prohibits the introduction
into interstate commerce of any adulterated device, and 21 U.S.C. § 331(k), which
prohibits causing a device to become adulterated while being held for sale after
shipment in interstate commerce. The Appellees defended that claim by asserting
protection under the custom device exemption. Second, the Government
contended that the Appellees failed to comply with the FDA’s IDE regulations in
their clinical study of the B-P Ankle device in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 351(i) and
331(q)(1). The Appellees asserted that they implemented remedial measures to
cure any past problems. We will address first the custom device exemption and
then the IDE exemption.
1. Custom device exemption
The MDA exempts “custom devices” from premarket approval. A custom
device is one that
necessarily deviates from an otherwise applicable
performance standard or requirement prescribed by or
under section 360e of this title if (1) the device is not
generally available in finished form for purchase or for
dispensing upon prescription and is not offered through
labeling or advertising by the manufacturer, importer, or
distributor thereof for commercial distribution, and (2)
such device--
(A)(i) is intended for use by an individual patient named
in such order of such physician or dentist (or other
specially qualified person so designated) and is to be
made in a specific form for such patient, or
20
(ii) is intended to meet the special needs of such
physician or dentist (or other specially qualified person
so designated) in the course of the professional practice
of such physician or dentist (or other specially qualified
person so designated), and
(B) is not generally available to or generally used by
other physicians or dentists (or other specially qualified
persons so designated).
21 U.S.C. § 360j(b). Stated differently, 21 C.F.R. § 812.3 tracks the statutory
language for the most part but breaks down the custom device requirements into a
list format:
Custom device means a device that:
(1) Necessarily deviates from devices generally available
or from an applicable performance standard or premarket
approval requirement in order to comply with the order
of an individual physician or dentist;
(2) Is not generally available to, or generally used by,
other physicians or dentists;
(3) Is not generally available in finished form for
purchase or for dispensing upon prescription;
(4) Is not offered for commercial distribution through
labeling or advertising; and
(5) Is intended for use by an individual patient named in
the order of a physician or dentist, and is to be made in a
specific form for that patient, or is intended to meet the
special needs of the physician or dentist in the course of
professional practice.
21 C.F.R. § 812.3(b) (emphasis added).
As a threshold matter, we note that the district court considered issues
outside the scope of the definition of a custom device. In particular, the district
21
court noted that “the Government did not present any evidence to indicate that the
ankle devices were potentially dangerous.” Endotec, 2008 WL 1909164, at *11;
see id. (addressing all the medical devices in general and providing that “[i]t is
noteworthy that throughout the duration of these proceedings, the FDA has not
alleged that Defendants have harmed any individual by manufacturing or
distributing medical devices and has not alleged that any of Defendants’ devices
are dangerous or that their use poses any risk”). In support, the district court relied
upon Contact Lens Manufacturers Association v. Food & Drug Administration,
766 F.2d 592 (D.C. Cir. 1985), in which the Contact Lens Manufacturers
Association (“CLMA”) filed suit to challenge the FDA’s withdrawal of its own
proposal to transfer certain contact lenses from Class III to Class I. See id. at 594.
The district court’s reliance on Contact Lens for the proposition that the party
seeking injunctive relief under the FDCA must demonstrate dangerousness or
actual harm with respect to a medical device is misplaced for two reasons. First,
by requiring the Government to show dangerousness or actual harm, the district
court effectively shifted the burden of persuasion as to the custom device
exemption from the Appellees to the Government. And second, notwithstanding
the former, the custom device definition does not require any showing of
dangerousness or actual harm from the Government. In noting that the
22
Government “did not present any evidence to indicate that the ankle devices were
potentially dangerous,” Endotec, 2008 WL 1909164, at *11, the district court cited
a passage in Contact Lenses, in which the FDA expressed concern with regard to
the “safety and effectiveness” of soft contact lenses. See Contact Lenses, 766 F.2d
at 595. That passage, however, related to the D.C. Circuit’s discussion of the
reclassification of the contact lenses. See id. The D.C. Circuit did not discuss or
even make any mention of dangerousness or actual harm with respect to the
custom device exemption but instead limited its analysis thereto to the five prongs
of the custom device definition. See id. at 598-99. Contact Lenses, therefore, does
not lend support to any requirement that the party not claiming protection of the
custom device exemption must demonstrate potential dangerousness or actual harm
caused by the disputed medical device.
The district court concluded that the ankle devices distributed by Endotec
beyond the scope of the IDE clinical study constituted custom devices and hence
were exempt from premarket approval. The Government argues that the district
court abused its discretion in concluding that the ankle devices qualified as custom
devices. Specifically, the Government asserts that the ankle devices fail each
prong of the definition of a custom device. We conclude that the district court
erred with respect to one prong of the custom device definition and, because a
23
device must meet all five prongs of the custom device definition, we decline to
address the remainder.
A custom device is a device that “[i]s not offered for commercial
distribution through labeling or advertising.” 21 C.F.R. § 812.3(b)(4); 21 U.S.C. §
360j(b) (providing that a custom device “is not offered through labeling or
advertising by the manufacturer, importer, or distributor thereof for commercial
distribution”). The district court found that “[the Appellees] did not offer the
custom ankle devices for commercial distribution through advertising or
labeling.”11 Endotec, 2008 WL 1909164, at *12. In doing so, the district court
addressed only the advertisements on Endotec’s website and Dr. Buechel’s private
practice website. See id. (“Any references to ankle devices on Endotec’s website
or on Dr. Buechel’s private practice website refer to the B-P Ankle, and not the
unique ankle devices at issue in this case.”). The district court, however, failed to
11
While the district court found that Endotec did not offer the custom ankle devices for
commercial distribution through advertising or labeling, it included language that appeared to
contradict its own conclusion. After finding that Endotec advertised only the B-P Ankle, the
district court warned Endotec regarding its future advertising and marketing, seemingly
conceding that it had unlawfully advertised or marketed the custom ankle devices: “The Court
cautions . . . that Defendants must scrutinize their website and other marketing materials
carefully to avoid the unlawful advertising or marketing these devices.” Endotec, 2008 WL
1909164, at *12. The district court then went a step further, enjoining Endotec “from
advertising the B-P Ankle or any custom ankle devices through websites, in professional
journals, at professional conferences, or through any other means and the ankle devices may be
used by prescription only.” Id. at *14. Therefore, the district court warned the Appellees as to
future advertisements and even enjoined them from advertising the B-P Ankle or any custom
ankle device yet it found no violation of that prong.
24
address another advertisement raised by the Government. Based on our review of
that advertisement as well as the advertisement on Dr. Buechel’s website, we
conclude that the Appellees advertised the purported custom ankle devices for
commercial distribution in violation of the custom device definition.
First, the Appellees advertised the custom devices through a July/August
2006 edition of Orthopaedic News, containing an advertisement for “Endotec
customs.”12 The subsequent text refers to, inter alia, custom ankle devices as
Endotec’s “speciality.” On its face, the advertisement offers custom ankle devices
by Endotec for commercial distribution. By its own language, this advertisement
cannot be attributed to the B-P Ankle device as it explicitly refers to “Endotec
customs,” which we read as a reference to custom ankle devices, not the B-P
Ankle. Such a reference constitutes an impermissible advertisement of a custom
device. Endotec offers no explanation to the contrary, except to assert that the
Federal Register allows them to advertise custom devices of a “generic type.”
However, even if we were to endorse a “generic type” exception to the prohibition
against advertisement for commercial distribution, this advertisement is anything
but generic. On the contrary, the advertisement specifically refers to Endotec
custom ankle devices.
12
The district court made no mention of this advertisement.
25
Second, the district court found that any advertisement on Dr. Buechel’s
medical practice website (South Mountain Orthopaedic Associates)
referred to the B-P Ankle, not the custom ankle devices. See Endotec, 2008 WL
1909164, at *12. We do not quarrel with the district court’s factual finding that the
website literally “refer[red]” to the B-P Ankle. The face of the advertisement on
the website speaks for itself. See R., Ex. 11.13 The Government agrees. See Br.
For Appellant at 36. However, we disagree with the district court’s conclusion
that, because the website referred to the B-P Ankle by name only, the Appellees
did not violate the commercial distribution prong of the custom device definition
because, as the district court also found, Dr. Buechel’s reference to the B-P Ankle
on his website necessarily included the purported custom ankle devices
manufactured and distributed by Endotec.
The district court found that “Dr. Buechel implanted B-P Ankles as surgeon
specials until 2002 when [the] FDA issued its warning letter to Endotec.” Endotec,
2008 WL 1909164, at *6 (emphasis added). Specifically, the district court found
that “Dr. Buechel . . . had implanted 218 ankle devices as ‘surgeon specials.’” Id. at
*3. According to the Appellees, “surgeon specials” is a term used by Endotec to
refer to “a device made to a surgeons [sic] specifications, to be used only in that
13
The advertisement is dated February 26, 2007.
26
surgeons [sic] practice and not for general distribution.” Appellees’ Resp. Br. And
Principal Br. at 12 (quotation marks and citation omitted). The district court found
that “surgeon specials,” as that phrase is used by the Appellees, and the purported
custom ankle devices manufactured and distributed by the Appellees, are one and
the same. See Endotec, 2008 WL 1909164, at *3 (“The specific ankle devices at
issue are all the ankle devices that are distributed for use in patients beyond the 109
patients enrolled in an approved IDE clinical study and all ankle devices [the
Appellees] describe as ‘customs’ or ‘surgeon specials.”) (emphasis added).
Therefore, according to the district court’s finding that Dr. Buechel implanted B-P
Ankles as “surgeon specials,” the advertisement of the B-P Ankle on Dr. Buechel’s
website encompassed the advertisement of surgeon specials, or the purported
custom ankle devices.14 Our conclusion is further bolstered by the fact that Dr.
Buechel was not an approved investigator under the IDE clinical study of the B-P
Ankle and, as such, he could not even implant the B-P Ankle. See id. at *6 (“Dr.
Buechel admitted that he is not a clinical investigator for the B-P Ankle and that
means he cannot implant B-P Ankles pursuant to the approved IDE.”). Such an
advertisement of a purported custom ankle device violates the commercial
14
Ms. Maulfair testified that Endotec’s “surgeon specials” and the purported custom
ankle devices manufactured and distributed by Endotec contain “the same three components,”
specifically the tibial, the talar, and the mobile bearing. See Tr. of R., V. 7, 15:3-7 (Deposition
of Barbara J. Maulfair).
27
distribution prong of the custom device definition.
In defense of the advertisement, the Appellees do not echo the district
court’s finding that the advertisement referred only to the B-P Ankle. Rather, they
provide another explanation: a disclaimer on the website advising that the B-P
Ankle is only available through the “compassionate use” program cures any
violation of the prohibition against the commercial distribution of custom ankle
devices.15 We disagree. The Appellees fail to direct us to any statute, rule, or case
that allows for a disclaimer exception to the commercial distribution prong and
they bear the burden to demonstrate that their device constitutes a custom device.
Moreover, we refuse to allow a disclaimer to shield the Appellees from what
otherwise constitutes blatant advertisement of their purported custom ankle
devices. Such a rule would render the commercial distribution prong of the custom
device definition ineffective and meaningless.
Given the nature of the custom device definition, either of the
advertisements of the custom ankle devices, standing alone, removes the ankle
device from the protection of the custom device exemption. Accordingly, we find
15
The compassionate use exception allows a drug company to distribute an unapproved
drug if: (1) the drug is for a serious or life-threatening disease, (2) there is no good alternative,
(3) the drug is currently under investigation in a clinical trial, and (4) the sponsor is actively
pursuing marketing approval. 21 C.F.R. § 312.34. However, even if the drug meets these
criteria, the FDA may still deny the compassionate use if there is insufficient evidence of the
drug’s safety. Id.
28
that the Appellees have failed to carry their burden as to the commercial
distribution prong.
2. IDE
The Government contends that the district court erred in refusing to enjoin
the Appellees from manufacturing and distributing the B-P Ankle until they fully
complied with the IDE regulations. Specifically, according to the Government, the
evidence demonstrates that the Appellees’ repeatedly violated the requirements of
the IDE clinical study, including Dr. Feldman’s implantation of 10 ankle devices
beyond the scope of the IDE clinical study and Dr. Buechel’s implantation of 217
ankle devices, even though he was not an investigator under the IDE clinical study.
The Appellees respond that, after receipt of the AIP and March 2002 warning
letter, it took remedial measures to obtain compliance with the IDE clinical study
on the B-P Ankle and the FDA lifted the AIP.
The FDCA provides for an “investigational device exemption” in 21 U.S.C.
§ 360j(g) to remove what would otherwise be a “catch-22:” a Class III device may
not be shipped in interstate commerce until it has been approved by the FDA, but,
to obtain the test data needed for approval, a device has to be shipped in interstate
commerce to physicians who will test the device in patients under controlled
circumstances. Accordingly, the IDE exemption lifts the prohibition on shipment
29
in interstate commerce of an unapproved Class III device and permits the
investigational use of unapproved devices by experts qualified by scientific
training and experience to investigate the safety and effectiveness of such devices
pursuant to protocol imposed by the FDA. 21 U.S.C. § 360j(g). To obtain an IDE
exemption, a manufacturer must satisfy the requirements of 21 U.S.C. § 360j(g) as
well as 21 C.F.R. § 812.20.
The district court’s own findings of fact intimate that the Appellees
manufactured and distributed the B-P Ankle device in violation of the IDE clinical
study:
Dr. Buechel admitted that he is not a clinical investigator
for the B-P Ankle and that means he cannot implant B-P
Ankles pursuant to the approved IDE. However, Dr.
Buechel implanted B-P Ankles as surgeon specials until
2002 when FDA issued its warning letter to Endotec.
Since 2002, Dr. Buechel has only implanted what he
describes as custom ankle devices. Dr. Buechel admitted
that in April 2007, he implanted an ankle device in which
all the component numbers began with ‘05,’ indicating
that it was the standard B-P Ankle. Dr. Buechel offered
that the particular situation must have been an emergency
situation. In other situations, Dr. Buechel used
components that had been originally manufactured for
another patient because it offered the patient the best fit.
Endotec, 2008 WL 1909164, at *6. In other words, Dr. Buechel admitted that he
implanted the B-P Ankle device on an undetermined number of occasions before
the March 2002 warning letter. This admission demonstrates a violation of the
30
IDE clinical study requirements in that Dr. Buechel was not an approved
investigator under the B-P Ankle IDE clinical study. The Appellees nevertheless
argue that they have implemented “remedial measures” since the March 2002
warning letter. This argument fails to convince us for two reasons. First, the
Appellees do not identify specifically what “remedial measures.”16 And second,
even if they had enacted “remedial measures,” such subsequent action does not
somehow ameliorate their past violations of the B-P Ankle IDE clinical study. In
addition, Dr. Buechel’s admission that he implanted a B-P Ankle device on one
occasion after the March 2002 warning letter belies their “remedial measures”
argument insofar as such measures proved ineffective on at least that one occasion.
The district court’s decision not to enjoin the Appellees’ manufacture and
distribution of the B-P Ankle relied upon findings irrelevant to whether they
complied with the IDE clinical study of the B-P Ankle. The district court
determined that Endotec had not violated 21 U.S.C. §§ 351(i) and 331(q)(1),17
finding that, “since the March 2002 warning letter, [Endotec] ha[s] been in
16
In all likelihood, “remedial measures” refer to the Appellees’ contention that, after the
March 2002 warning letter, they manufactured and distributed only custom ankle devices, or
“surgeon specials.” We have already rejected that argument.
17
Section 331, entitled “Prohibited acts,” prohibits the failure or refusal to comply with
the IDE requirements under section 360j(g), see 21 U.S.C. § 331(q)(1), and section 351, entitled
“Adulterated drugs and devices,” provides that failure to comply with requirements under which
a device was exempted for investigational use renders the device adulterated, see 21 U.S.C. §
351(I).
31
substantial compliance regarding the B-P Ankle.” Endotec, 2008 WL 1909164, at
*11. Despite the Appellees’ “faulty record-keeping,” the district court appeared to
base its conclusion on two points: (1) the Government had alleged neither that the
B-P Ankle was unsafe or dangerous nor that the Appellees’ actions caused any
harm to any patient; and (2) the “FDA’s stringent regulations strict interpretation
of procedural requirements are resulting in technological innovation being stymied,
rather than advanced.” Id. at 12. Neither consideration, however, represents a
valid reason in support of its finding that the Appellees did not violate the
requirements of the IDE clinical study of the B-P Ankle.
First, similarly to the custom device exemption, neither the statute providing
for the IDE exemption nor the applicable regulations require the Government to
allege, much less to prove, that a device (alleged to exceed the scope of an IDE) is
“unsafe” or “dangerous.” The district court cited no authority for the new
“dangerous” requirement and the Appellees fail to cite to any binding or persuasive
case law in support thereof.18 We find the Sixth Circuit instructive here:
It is not the government’s burden to prove that a product
is not safe and effective. FDCA regulations exist to
allow the public to assume that marketed devices have
received the imprimatur of FDA approval. To
circumvent the law by marketing illegally without
18
At oral argument, counsel for the Appellees even agreed that dangerousness was not a
proper consideration.
32
approval is to deceive the public both as purchasers and
users of the device.
United States v. Universal Mgmt. Services, Inc., Corp., 191 F.3d 750, 763 (6th Cir.
1999). We decline to impose a dangerousness requirement as to the IDE
exemption. By punishing the Government for failing to prove the dangerousness
of the ankle device, the district court held the Government to a standard that it need
not meet.
Second, the district court’s commentary that the FDA’s interpretation of the
MDA stymies, rather than advances, innovation fails to justify its ruling. See
Endotec, 2008 WL 1909164, at *12. Congress crafted the IDE exemption to
advance innovation: “The purpose of [the IDE exemption] is to encourage, to the
extent consistent with the protection of the public health and safety and with
ethical standards, the discovery and development of useful devices intended for
human use and to that end to maintain optimum freedom for scientific investigators
in their pursuit of this purpose.” 21 U.S.C. § 360j(g)(1); 21 C.F.R. § 812.1(a).
“However, fostering innovation does not require the elimination of all burdens on
medical device manufacturers. . . .” Webster v. Pacesetter, Inc., 171 F. Supp. 2d 1,
14 (D.D.C. 2001). The district court noted that “the evidence presented at trial
showed that the B-P Ankle provided greater benefits to patients than the
alternatives available in the United States.” Endotec, 2008 WL 1909164, at *12.
33
In this statement, the district court exceeded the proper scope of its inquiry by
addressing the medical benefits of the B-P Ankle device versus other alternative
ankle devices as opposed to confining its inquiry to the alleged violations of
sections 351(i) and 331(q)(1) by the manufacture and distribution of the B-P Ankle
beyond the scope of the IDE clinical study. It is not within the province of the
district court (or, this Court, for that matter) to weigh the medical pros and cons of
a certain medical device – that is best left to the FDA.
Accordingly, we conclude that the district court employed faulty reasoning
in finding that the Appellees had not violated sections 351(i) and 331(q)(1).
Considering that the district court is better acquainted with the evidence and the
parties, we remand to give the district court another opportunity: (1) to consider
whether the Appellees violated sections 351(i) and 331(q)(1) through the
manufacture and distribution of the B-P Ankle outside the IDE clinical study based
on the record evidence; (2) to consider, in the first instance, whether this issue as to
the IDE clinical study is now moot in light of the fact that the FDA has lifted the
AIP; and (3) to resolve any other issues related to the IDE clinical study that the
district court deems appropriate.
B. Knee device
On cross-appeal, the Appellees argue that the district court abused its
34
discretion in determining that the knee device did not constitute a custom device,
specifically as to the “special needs” clause of the custom device exemption that
falls under the last prong of the definition. The Government responds arguing that
the district court committed no error.
The district court concluded that the two knee devices did not qualify as
custom devices. As to the Flex Guide Knee Bearing with Anterior Stop, the
district court found that the Appellees did not identify any “special need” of Dr.
Fenning and “the same bearing was implanted repeatedly in different patients.”
Endotec, 2008 WL 1909164, at *12. As to the Fenning Modular Bearing, the
district court found that the Appellees again did not identify any “special need” of
Dr. Fenning that required the use of the device, and “Dr. Pappas admitted that
Endotec advertised the Fenning Modular Bearing on a flyer which was posted on
Endotec’s website.” Id. at *13.
In support of its argument that the knee devices constitute custom devices,
the Appellees invoked the “special needs” clause of the custom device exemption.
See 21 U.S.C. § 360j(b)(A)(ii) (providing that a custom device “is intended to meet
the special needs of such physician or dentist (or other specially qualified person so
designated) in the course of the professional practice of such physician or dentist
(or other specially qualified person so designated)”); 21 C.F.R. § 812.3(b)(5)
35
(providing that a custom device “is intended to meet the special needs of the
physician or dentist in the course of professional practice”). On appeal, the
Appellees fail to demonstrate that the district court abused its discretion. As to
either knee device, the Appellees fail to identify a “special need” of Dr. Fenning;
rather, the Appellees merely argue that the special needs provision “permits a
physician to use the same medical [sic] to treat more than one patient in the course
of his professional practice.” Even if taken as true, the Appellees’ argument still
fails to address the “special need” requirement. As to the Fenning Modular
Bearing, moreover, the district court concluded that Endotec advertised it in a flyer
posted on Endotec’s website in violation of the commercial distribution prong.
Endotec attempts to explain the flyer advertisement as “test[ing] the waters” and,
when the device garnered no interest, it pulled the flyer. This argument lacks merit
because there is no “test[ing] the waters” exception to the commercial distribution
prong of the custom device definition.19 The Government nonetheless contends
19
In support of their “test[ing] the waters” theory, the Appellees rely upon 21 C.F.R. §
812.2(c), which lists exemptions from the IDE regulations including the custom device
exemption. In particular, the Appellees point to the “consumer preference testing” provision,
which exempts “[a] device undergoing consumer preference testing, testing of a modification, or
testing of a combination of two or more devices in commercial distribution, if the testing is not
for the purpose of determining safety or effectiveness and does not put subjects at risk.” 21
C.F.R. § 812.2(c)(4). The Appellees’ argument is misguided, however, insofar as they attempt
to use the “consumer preference testing” exemption to define the scope of one of the prongs of
the custom device exemption. Further, the Appellees fail to show that any “consumer preference
testing” did not “put subjects at risk.” Id.
36
that the flyer advertisement remains posted on Endotec’s website.
Accordingly, Endotec has failed to show that the district court abused its
discretion as to the knee device.
C. Jaw device
The Government argues that the district court abused its discretion in
determining that the Hemi TMJ device constituted a custom device because the
Appellees failed to show that it was “not generally available to, or generally used
by, other physicians or dentists.”20 In support, the Government points to an FDA
regulation addressing this type of implant.21 The Appellees respond that Dr.
Pappas testified that the device available did not meet the patient’s specific needs
because he had lost a bone in his jaw.
The district court found that the Hemi TMJ device used for that particular
patient “was not generally available to or used by other physicians.” Endotec,
2008 WL 1909164, at *14. The district court explained that the Appellees
specifically designed the Hemi TMJ to account for a particular patient’s bone loss
as a result of a tumor. Here, the Government essentially asserts that the Appellees
20
The Government does not address any other prong under the custom device definition
as to the Hemi TMJ and, therefore, neither do we.
21
Section 872.3950 identifies a “glenoid fossa prosthesis” as a Class III device “that is
intended to be implanted in the temporomandibular joint to augment a glenoid fossa or to
provide an articulation surface for the head of a mandibular condyle.” 21 C.F.R. § 872.3950(a)-
(b).
37
needed to present more evidence before the district court to demonstrate why the
available jaw implant (under 21 C.F.R. § 872.3950) did not fit that patient: “But
Dr. Pappas did not address the features of the commercially available product and
demonstrate that it was unsuitable for this patient.”
The Government’s argument amounts to one of degree. While Dr. Pappas
testified that the commercially available device did not meet the patient’s needs
because of his tumor-related bone loss and the Government concedes that the Hemi
TMJ included special features designed for the particular patient, the Government
merely demands more evidence. The custom device definition requires that the
device at issue – the Hemi TMJ device – “[i]s not generally available to, or
generally used by, other physicians or dentists.” The district court concluded that
the Appellees met their burden and the Government has failed to show that it
abused its discretion as to the Hemi TMJ.
IV.
In summary, we find no reversible error as to the knee and jaw device and
we affirm the district court’s entry of a permanent injunction as to the same. As to
the ankle device, however, we find that the district court abused its discretion in
denying the Government’s request for a permanent injunction. Because Endotec
has not carried its burden to demonstrate that the ankle device falls under the
38
custom device exemption, we reverse the district court’s ruling as to the ankle
device and remand with instructions for the district court to enter a permanent
injunction as to the ankle device in favor of the Government.22 As to the regulatory
IDE violation, we remand to the district court for consideration in light of this
Opinion.
AFFIRMED in part as to the permanent injunction for the knee and jaw
devices, and REVERSED in part as to the ankle device with instructions to enter a
permanent injunction, and REMANDED to the district court for further
proceedings consistent with this Opinion.
22
We leave it to the district court to craft the proper permanent injunction.
39