Guidant Recalls Cardiac Defibrillators 
By ASHLEY M. HEHER, Associated Press Writer 


INDIANAPOLIS - Guidant Corp. on Friday voluntarily recalled
nearly 50,000 of its cardiac defibrillators implanted in
patients worldwide because of potential malfunctions in the
devices. 

Indianapolis-based Guidant said it was advising physicians
about the safety of several defibrillator models, which
have failed at least 45 times and have caused at least two
deaths through May 30. The company has offered to replace
some of the devices, but has not said that replacement of
any is necessary.

The recall includes about 38,000 devices used by patients
in the United States.

"This is a voluntary recall," U.S.     Food and Drug
Administration spokeswoman Julie Zawisza said. "We're in
complete agreement that they need to do that."

Guidant came under fire this spring after reports that it
failed to alert physicians about potential problems with
the Ventak Prizm 2 DR model defibrillator.

Friday's recall includes the Prizm 2 DR, the Contak Renewal
and Contak Renewal 2, the Ventak Prizm AVT, Vitality AVT,
Renewal 3 AVT and Renewal 4 AVT ICDs. The company said
about 63,000 of the devices had been implanted, with nearly
50,000 still in use.

Guidant said patients implanted with those devices should
continue to see their doctors at three-month intervals and
any patient who recently received a defibrillator shock
should consult with their physician.

The company said a programming change can be performed for
the Prizm AVT, Vitality AVT and Renewal AVT devices at a
physician's office to reduce the risk of a short circuit,
while defective Prizm 2 DR and Contak Renewal devices will
be replaced at no charge.

"Patient safety is paramount and our highest priority,"
Guidant CEO Ronald W. Dollens said in a statement. "Guidant
takes seriously its responsibility to create the most
reliable products and services, enhance patient outcome and
limit adverse events to patients."

Implanted defibrillators shock the heart back into a normal
rhythm when it starts beating irregularly.

Earlier this month, Guidant stood by its decision to
continue selling the Prizm 2 DR for months after a
potential flaw prompted a redesign, saying the original
device was still reliable.

In April, the company told doctors that the Prizm 2 DR
defibrillator had failed in a small number of cases because
of an electrical flaw. It also said that it had fixed the
flaw in devices made after mid-2002.

No failures in the Prizm 2 DR has been reported since April
2002. The faulty Contak Renewal defibrillators were
manufactured on or before Aug. 26, 2004, Guidant said.

A Pennsylvania man sued Guidant on June 1, claiming the
company is financially liable to all patients implanted
with one of its heart defibrillators because it did not
tell them the devices could short-circuit. Lawyers for
74-year-old John Brennan said they hoped to make the legal
complaint into a class-action lawsuit.

Shares of Guidant fell 80 cents, or 1.1 percent, to $72.86
in afternoon trading on the     New York Stock Exchange,
where they have traded in a 52-week range of $49.95 to
$75.15.

Guidant shareholders in April voted overwhelmingly in favor
of a planned $25.4 billion acquisition by Johnson &
Johnson. The merger, which still must win regulatory
approval in the United States and Europe, would be the
largest business deal in the 119-year history of New
Brunswick, N.J.-based health care products giant J&J. J&J
has said it expects to complete the acquisition during the
third quarter.

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