THE
HAGUE - Dutch health authorities on
Thursday recommended new tests for women with breast implants manufactured by
French company Poly Implant Prothese that were done before 2001.
"Women
who had a PIP breast implant before 2001 should have themselves examined by a
doctor, and in consultation, possibly have the implants removed," the
Dutch government's health watchdog said in a statement.
The
Dutch Health Inspectorate (IGZ) call followed a probe by Dutch investigative TV
programme Zembla, which discovered that "several hundred" women
received PIP implants since 1997, public broadcaster NOS reported.
"Until
now, the IGZ believed that only Dutch women who received the implants from 2001
onwards were at risk," the IGZ added.
The
company, which shut in 2010, also said previously that only PIP implants used
after 2001 had been made with a substandard, industrial-grade silicone gel that
had caused an increased risk of rupture.
Dutch
health authorities on January 11 recommended the removal of PIP implants done
after 2001, which affects around 1,000 women in the Netherlands.
The
country's health insurance federation said the same month that women wanting to
replace the potentially defective implants would be paid back in full.
Initially,
the Dutch health authority recommended only that women with PIP implants - sold
in the Netherlands under the name "M-Implants" - should see their
doctors, but changed its stance after confusion over the issue.
PIP
implants have been banned in the Netherlands since early 2010.
More
than 400,000 women around the world are thought to have received PIP implants
which has sparked a global health scare.
Reuters
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