The FDA never inspected Johns Dental Laboratories during more than a decade in which it made the Anterior Growth Guidance Appliance, or 鈥淎GGA,鈥 a dental device that has allegedly harmed patients and is now the subject of a criminal investigation.
According to FDA documents obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, the agency 鈥渂ecame aware鈥 of the AGGA from a by 麻豆女优 Health News and CBS News in March 2023, then responded with its first-ever inspection of Johns Dental months later.
That inspection found that the Indiana dental device manufacturer didn鈥檛 require all customer complaints to be investigated and the company did not investigate some complaints about people being hurt by products, including the AGGA, the FDA documents state. The FDA requires device companies to to the agency. Johns Dental had 鈥渘ever鈥 alerted the FDA to any such complaints, according to the documents.
The AGGA, which its inventor testified has been used on more than 10,000 patients, was promoted by dentists nationwide, some of whom said it could 鈥済row鈥 or 鈥渆xpand鈥 an adult鈥檚 jaw without surgery and treat common ailments . But these claims were not backed by peer-reviewed research, and Johns Dental has settled lawsuits from 20 patients who alleged the AGGA caused them grievous harm. The company has not admitted liability.
Two former FDA officials said the AGGA was likely able to stay on the market 鈥 and off the FDA鈥檚 radar 鈥 for so long because of the lack of inspections and investigations at Johns Dental. Madris Kinard, a former FDA manager who founded , which analyzes FDA data, said it defies belief that Johns Dental never received a complaint worthy of relaying to the FDA.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 a red flag for me. If I don鈥檛 see a single report to the FDA, I typically think there is something going on,鈥 Kinard said. 鈥淲hen they don鈥檛 report, what you have is devices that stay on the market much longer than they should. And patients get harmed.鈥
Johns Dental Laboratories declined to comment when reached by phone and its lawyers did not respond to requests for an interview. The family-owned company, which has operated since 1939 in the western Indiana city of Terre Haute, to dentists and makes hundreds of retainers and sleep apnea appliances each month, according to its website.
Twelve of Johns Dental鈥檚 products are registered with the FDA as medical devices, meaning they carry at least a moderate risk, and some have been featured on the company website for at least two decades, according to preserved by the Internet Archive.

The AGGA, which was invented by Tennessee dentist Steve Galella in the 1990s, was not registered with the FDA like Johns Dental鈥檚 other devices. Company owner Jerry Neuenschwander has said in sworn court depositions that Johns Dental started making the AGGA in 2012 and became Galella鈥檚 exclusive manufacturer in 2015 and that at one point the AGGA was responsible for about one-sixth of Johns Dental鈥檚 total sales revenue.
In another deposition, Johns Dental CEO Lisa Bendixen said the company made about 3,000 to 4,000 AGGAs a year and paid Galella鈥檚 company a 鈥渞oyalty鈥 of $50 to $65 for every sale.
"We are not dentists. We do not know how these appliances work. All we do is manufacture to Dr. Galella's specifications,鈥 she said, according to a deposition transcript.
The FDA鈥檚 lack of knowledge about the AGGA likely contributed to its loose oversight of Johns Dental. When asked to explain the lack of inspection, the FDA said that, based on what it knew at the time, it was not required to inspect Johns Dental until 2018 when the company registered as a 鈥渃ontract manufacturer鈥 of other medical devices. Prior to 2018, the FDA was only aware of Johns Dental operating as a 鈥渄ental laboratory,鈥 which normally do not manufacture their own products and only modify devices made by other companies to fit dentists鈥 specifications. The FDA does not regularly inspect dental labs, although it can if it has concerns or gets complaints, the agency said.
Kinard said that based on her experience at the FDA she believes the agency prioritizes medical devices over dental devices, which may have contributed to the lack of inspections at Johns Dental.
鈥淭here hasn鈥檛 been much attention to dental devices in the past,鈥 Kinard said. 鈥淗opefully that鈥檚 going to change because of dental implant failures, as well as this device, which has quite obviously had serious issues.鈥
The AGGA resembles a retainer and uses springs to apply pressure to the front teeth and upper palate, according to a patent application. Last year, the 麻豆女优 Health News-CBS News investigation revealed the AGGA was not backed by any peer-reviewed research and had never been submitted to the FDA for review. At the time, at least 20 patients had alleged in lawsuits that the AGGA had caused grievous harm to their teeth, gums, and bone 鈥 and some said they鈥檇 lost teeth. Multiple dental specialists said in interviews that they had examined AGGA patients whose teeth had been shoved out of position by the device, sometimes causing tens of thousands of dollars in damage.
鈥淭he entire concept of this device, of this treatment, makes zero sense,鈥 said Kasey Li, a maxillofacial surgeon who that appeared on a National Institutes of Health website. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 grow the jaw. It doesn鈥檛 widen the jaw. It just pushes the teeth out of their original position.
Johns Dental and Galella have negotiated out-of-court settlements with the original 20 AGGA plaintiffs without publicly admitting fault. At least 13 more AGGA patients have filed similar lawsuits since the 麻豆女优 Health News-CBS News investigation. Johns Dental and Galella denied wrongdoing or have not yet responded to the allegations in the newer lawsuits.
Galella declined to be interviewed in 2023 and neither he nor his attorneys responded to recent requests for comment. One of his attorneys, Alan Fumuso, said in a 2023 statement that the AGGA 鈥渋s safe and can achieve beneficial results鈥 when used properly.

In the wake of the 麻豆女优 Health News-CBS News report, Johns Dental abruptly stopped making the AGGA, according to the newly released FDA documents. The Department of Justice soon after opened a that was ongoing as of December, according to court filings. No charges have been filed. A DOJ spokesperson declined comment.
Spurred by the March 2023 news report, the FDA inspected Johns Dental in July. The FDA鈥檚 website shows that Johns Dental was , but the substance of the agency鈥檚 findings was not known until the inspection report was obtained this year.
FDA investigator David Gasparovich wrote in that report that he arrived unannounced at Johns Dental last July and was met by five attorneys who instructed employees not to answer any questions about the AGGA or the company鈥檚 complaint policies. Neuenschwander was told by his attorney not to talk to the inspector, the report states.
鈥淗e asked if he could photograph my credentials,鈥 Gasparovich wrote in his report. 鈥淭his was the last conversation I would have with Mr. Neuenschwander at the request of his attorney.鈥
The FDA requires device companies to investigate product complaints and submit a 鈥渕edical device report鈥 to the agency within 30 days if the products may have contributed to serious injury or death. Gasparovich鈥檚 inspection report states that Johns Dental had 鈥渘ot adequately investigated customer complaints,鈥 and its complaint policies were 鈥渘ot adequately established,鈥 allowing employees to not investigate if the product was not first returned to the company.
Johns Dental received four complaints about the AGGA after the 麻豆女优 Health News-CBS News report, including one that came after the about the device, according to the inspection report.
鈥淶ero (0) out of the four (4) complaints were investigated,鈥 Gasparovich wrote in the report. 鈥淓ach complaint was closed on the same day it was received.鈥
In the months after Gasparovich鈥檚 inspection, Johns Dental sent letters to the FDA saying it revised its complaint policies to require more investigations and hired a consultant and an auditor to address other FDA concerns, according to the documents obtained through FOIA.
Former FDA analyst M. Jason Brooke, now an attorney who advises medical device companies, said the FDA uses an internal risk-based algorithm to determine when to inspect manufacturers and he advises his clients to expect inspections every three to five years.
Brooke said the AGGA is an example of how the FDA鈥檚 oversight can be hamstrung by its reliance on device manufacturers to be transparent. If device companies don鈥檛 report to the agency, it can be left unaware of patient complaints, malfunctions, or even entire products, he said.
When a company 鈥渄oesn鈥檛 follow the law,鈥 Brooke said, 鈥渢he FDA is in the dark.鈥
鈥淚f there aren't complaints coming from patients, doctors, competitors, or the company itself, then in a lot of ways, there's just a dearth of information for the FDA to consume to trigger an inspection,鈥 Brooke said.
CBS News producer Nicole Keller contributed to this article.
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