Delaware Suit May Be First of Many Over Bone Graft Linked to Tuberculosis
A case filed in Delaware Superior Court is the first anywhere to claim Aziyo Inc. was negligent in sending out a bone marrow product thought to be contaminated with tuberculosis, but attorneys for the Delaware plaintiff say similar cases are expected to be filed soon.
June 17, 2021 at 05:04 PM
3 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Delaware Law Weekly
A Delaware man is the first to take legal action against the manufacturer of a batch of a bone graft product that's reported to have caused patients to contract tuberculosis post-surgery.
The lot of FiberCel, the product made by Delaware-based biotechnology company Aziyo Inc., included 154 units distributed across 20 states, and the company has recognized at least four patients who received FiberCel from that lot have developed tuberculosis.
Attorneys with Morris James and Saltz Mongeluzzi & Bendesky filed a complaint in Delaware Superior Court on Wednesday on behalf of Richard Williams, a 74-year-old Bear resident who was diagnosed with the illness after undergoing spinal surgery in April at Christiana Care, which the complaint states has implemented 23 of the 30 FiberCel units.
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