Frustration as textured breast implants keep being sold despite cancer risk - Action News
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Montreal

Frustration as textured breast implants keep being sold despite cancer risk

The Quebec Health Ministry is asking hospitals to contact the estimated 15,000 women in the province who have received textured breast implants since 1995, warning them of the symptoms of anaplastic large cell lymphoma.

Health Ministry estimates that 15,000 Quebec women have received textured implants

Karen Lazarovitz removed her breasts because she inherited a BRCA gene mutations which put her at an elevated risk of developing breast cancer. (Matt D'Amours/CBC)

Karen Lazarovitzsaid she's "angry" after havinga double mastectomy to avoid developing breast cancer, only to find herself with implants that carry a cancer risk.

"I removed my healthy breasts to not get cancer, and now I'm in a completely different situation, but almost the same situation," she said.

The Quebec Health Ministry said Monday that itwants all the thousands of women in the province who have received textured breast implants since 1995 to be warned of a potential cancer risk.

The government has asked the province's hospitals and clinics to contact all patients who received that specific type of implant in the last 24 years to inform them of the symptoms ofanaplasticlarge cell lymphoma, a form of cancer.

Lazarovitz said that doesn't go far enough and wants textured implants taken off the market.

She had an 87 per cent chance of developingbreast cancer because of an inheritedBRCA genemutation. She got smooth implants in 2008, then removed them because of complications.

In 2011, she got textured implants and is still debating if she's going to have another surgery to have them removed.

"Every plastic surgeon, or everyoneinvolved in this says the same thing: 'If you have any signs or symptoms go to your doctorand they can catch it.'But that's not a good solution! 'Go and catch your cancer early, don't worry about it,'"Lazarovitzsaid.

A gloved hand holds a silicone breast implant  a translucent, oblong structure about the same size as the hand.
The Quebec government wants women to be informed about the chance of developing anaplastic large cell lymphoma, a form of cancer, from textured breast implants. (Benoit Tessier/Reuters)

A ministryspokesperson,Marie-Claude Lacasse, says the chance of developing the cancer is very low only about one in 30,000 but the government still wants women to be informed.

Class-action lawsuit

The Quebec government's decision follows an update by Health Canada published in mid-February that noted an increase in the number of cases of anaplastic large cell lymphoma associated with texturedbreastimplants in Canadian women.

As of Jan. 1, Health Canada had been informed of 22 confirmed and 22 suspected cases.

Lawyer Joey Zukran has filed a class-action lawsuit against the implant manufacturers.

"I think there's more to be done. I think they should halt the implementation of these implants halt the surgeries for textured implants,"Zukran said.

The federal department says this isn't abreastcancer but a rare form of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma a cancer affecting the immune system that can appear several months or even years after implant surgery.

The province estimates that 15,000 Quebec women have received textured implants, which are chosen by about 10 per cent of patients receiving implants.

A mastectomyis an invasive procedure that removes the entire breast, with significant recovery time and a risk of complications.

Some women choose to havethe surgery as a preventive measure due to an inheritedrisk of breast cancer that is higher than the general population. Actress Angelina Joliesought to raise awareness about the procedurein 2013 when she published an op-ed in the New York Timesabout her decision to remove her breasts.

"The majority of women considering their breast cancer risk should focus on things like a healthy lifestyle, eating a balanced diet, keeping a healthy weight and not drinking too much alcohol," Dr. Peter Johnson, chief clinician at Cancer Research U.K., told CBC News at the time.

With files from CBC's Matt D'Amours and Canadian Press