Hernia Mesh Litigation Update: What Patients With Complications Need to Know

Case Overview: Hernia mesh litigation continues to expand as thousands of patients report serious complications following implant surgery, including mesh migration, chronic pain, and the need for additional corrective procedures.

Consumers Affected: Patients who underwent hernia repair surgery using synthetic mesh implants and subsequently experienced complications

Court: Multiple federal and state courts; cases consolidated in several MDLs

Latest Development: Ongoing litigation activity as case counts continue to grow across multiple hernia mesh MDLs

Hernia Mesh Litigation Update

Hernia mesh litigation continues to expand as thousands of patients report serious complications following implant surgery, including mesh migration, chronic pain, and the need for additional corrective procedures.

Hernia Mesh Litigation Update: What Patients With Complications Need to Know

Hernia mesh litigation remains one of the most active areas of mass tort law in the United States, with tens of thousands of plaintiffs alleging that synthetic mesh implants caused serious, lasting injuries after hernia repair surgeries. As ongoing investigations into hernia mesh complications continue to develop, patients are increasingly seeking answers about their legal options.

What the Lawsuits Allege

According to complaints filed across multiple jurisdictions, plaintiffs allege that hernia mesh devices — used to reinforce weakened tissue during hernia repair — failed after implantation, leading to a range of serious medical complications. The lawsuits allege that these devices were defectively designed or manufactured, and that manufacturers failed to adequately warn patients and physicians about known risks.

Among the complications alleged in these lawsuits:

  • Mesh migration — the device shifting from its original placement
  • Mesh shrinkage — contraction of the implant over time
  • Adhesion and organ perforation — mesh adhering to or puncturing nearby tissue
  • Chronic pain — persistent discomfort at or near the implant site
  • Infection — serious post-surgical infections requiring hospitalization
  • Hernia recurrence — the original hernia returning despite repair

Many plaintiffs allege they required one or more revision surgeries to address these complications, some of which the lawsuits describe as difficult or impossible to fully reverse.

Background: A Long-Running Mass Tort

Hernia mesh litigation has been active for more than a decade, spanning multiple manufacturers and device models. Several major MDLs have been established in federal courts to coordinate the volume of cases. Among the most prominent defendants named in hernia mesh litigation are C.R. Bard (now part of Becton Dickinson), Ethicon (a Johnson & Johnson subsidiary), Atrium Medical, and Davol.

Some manufacturers have reached settlements in portions of this litigation, while other cases remain pending. The litigation landscape remains complex, with cases at varying stages across different courts and defendants.

What It Means for Plaintiffs

The continued growth of hernia mesh litigation signals that courts are allowing a significant number of cases to proceed on their merits. For plaintiffs, the progression of bellwether trials — test cases selected to gauge how juries respond to the evidence — has provided important signals about potential outcomes in individual cases.

Several bellwether trials have resulted in substantial jury verdicts in favor of plaintiffs in recent years, though outcomes vary case by case and defendants have challenged some of those verdicts on appeal. No specific settlement amount or outcome can be guaranteed in any individual case.

What's Next

Litigation across the various hernia mesh MDLs is expected to continue as remaining cases move through discovery and toward trial or settlement. Patients who experienced complications following hernia mesh surgery and have not yet consulted with an attorney may still have open windows to file claims, depending on the applicable statute of limitations in their state.

The statute of limitations — the legal deadline to file a claim — varies by state and typically begins running from the time an injury was discovered or reasonably should have been discovered. Missing this deadline could bar a patient from pursuing compensation entirely.


Lawsuit: Various plaintiffs v. multiple defendants including C.R. Bard, Ethicon (Johnson & Johnson), Atrium Medical, and Davol

Case Number: Multiple

Court: Multiple federal and state courts

MDL Numbers: MDL No. 2782 (Ethicon, S.D. W. Va.); MDL No. 2846 (Davol/C.R. Bard, S.D. Ohio); among others

Status: Active litigation; cases at varying stages across multiple MDLs


Did you experience complications following hernia mesh surgery? You may be eligible to explore your legal options — check eligibility below.

InjuryClaims.com reports on litigation developments for informational purposes only. Nothing in this article constitutes legal advice. Eligibility for any settlement or lawsuit is determined by attorneys and courts, not by this publication.

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