*1006 ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS
Before the Court is the motion of St. Jude Medical, Inc. and St. Jude Medical S.C., Inc. (collectively “Defendants”) to dismiss the class action complaint of Michael Sutton (“Plaintiff’) 1 pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6). For the following reasons, the Court grants Defendants’ motion to dismiss.
I. Background Facts 2
Mr. McGuinn is a citizen of Tennessee, and Defendants are Minnesota corporations. Plaintiff represents a class of thousands of individuals who have had an aortic connector implanted in their bodies.
This case involves use of the Symmetry Bypass Aortic Connector Device (“aortic connector”) developed, manufactured, marketed, and sold by Defendants. The aortic connector is a medical device designed for use by cardiac surgeons during cardiac bypass surgery. It is used to attach the saphenous vein graft to the aortic surface without sutures or the need for cross clamping or side biting of the aorta during cardiac bypass surgery. Over 50,000 aortic connectors have been implanted in patients.
Plaintiff alleges that implanting of the aortic connector has led to severe and disabling medical conditions resulting from collapse and scarring of the graft. These conditions have necessitated removal of the aortic connector in numerous patients, have caused severe harm to other patients, and necessitate periodic medical monitoring of other patients for signs and symptoms. Mr. McGuinn has not alleged that he personally suffered any physical injury as a result of the aortic connector’s implantation. Rather, Mr. McGuinn alleges that, as a result of having the aortic connector in his body, he suffers an increased risk of medical complications, including aortic bypass stenosis or occlusion and its resulting physical injuries.
Defendants have been informed of the adverse consequences resulting from use of the aortic connector through incident reports from cardiac surgeons who were confronted with such consequences after using the device. Defendants still market the aortic connector.
On August 5, 2003, Mr. McGuinn filed a class action complaint with this Court. Plaintiff asserts that Defendants have failed to promulgate proper warnings to physicians and the public of the potential complications caused by the device, and therefore that the aortic connector is defective or unreasonably dangerous. Plaintiff requests relief in the form of a fund paid for by Defendants to provide for a medical monitoring program, including: (1) notifying people who have had an aortic connector implanted of the potential harm from the device; (2) providing periodic medical examinations, including all necessary studies and tests, to determine the extent of graft compromise and its progression, if any; (3) gathering and forwarding to treating physicians information related to the diagnosis and treatment of scarring that may result from use of the *1007 aortic connector; and (4) providing medical treatment to remove the aortic connectors in those individuals who exhibit bypass graft compromise as a result of implantation of the device.
On August 27, 2003, Defendants filed this motion to dismiss, arguing that (1) because Mr. McGuinn himself suffered no physical injury from Defendants’ alleged conduct, Plaintiff lacked standing to litigate in federal court under Article III of the United States Constitution; (2) Plaintiff failed to state a claim for relief under Tennessee law, because a tort claim requires the plaintiff to have suffered an injury; and (3) Tennessee does not recognize the medical monitoring relief that Plaintiff requested.
II. Standing
Standing is a requirement of Article III.
See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
Standing consists of three elements: (1) the plaintiff must have suffered an injury in fact; (2) there must be a causal connection between the injury and the defendant’s conduct of which the plaintiff complains; and (3) it must be likely that the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision.
Id.
at 560,
On a motion to dismiss, the plaintiffs general factual allegations of injury resulting from the defendant’s conduct may suffice to show standing.
See Defenders of Wildlife,
Plaintiff does not allege that Mr. McGuinn suffered any physical injury or medical consequences from implantation of the aortic connector. Rather, Plaintiff alleges that Mr. McGuinn suffered an increased risk of physical complications from the device, which he alleges is defective because of insufficient warnings, while other patients actually incurred physical injuries. The Court must decide whether Mr. McGuinn’s increased risk of complications constitutes an “injury in fact” sufficient to confer standing.
Whether increased risk of harm from an implanted medical device is sufficient injury in fact to confer standing is a question of first impression here. There is a split among the federal courts on this issue. In
In re St. Jude Medical, Inc.,
No. MDL 01-1396 JRTFLN,
Conversely, in
Martin v. American Medical Systems, Inc.,
No. IP 94-2067-C-H/G,
The Court holds that Plaintiff did not demonstrate that he personally suffered an injury in fact. Plaintiff has not provided the Court with any information from which to assess his allegedly increased risk of harm from implantation of the aortic connector. While some courts have held that an increased risk of harm is an injury in fact, a plaintiff must meet the constitutional requirement that an injury be neither “conjectural” nor “hypothetical.” In those cases in which a mere increased risk was held sufficient, the courts have reviewed medical evidence and expert testimony documenting the actual increased risk posed to the plaintiffs.
See In re St. Jude Med.,
With merely a hypothetical injury, Plaintiff is unable to demonstrate standing. Absent standing in the named Plaintiff, there is also no standing in the proposed class and no subject matter jurisdiction in this Court. Having found that it is without jurisdiction to hear this case, the Court need not address Defendants’ alternative arguments for dismissal.
III. Conclusion
Plaintiffs lack of standing deprives this Court of subject matter jurisdiction to hear this case. Accordingly, the Court GRANTS Defendants’ motion to dismiss on the basis of Rule 12(b)(1).
Notes
. The named plaintiff in this case was originally Skipper P. McGuinn. The parties substituted Michael Sutton for Skipper McGuinn on November 4, 2003, with the stipulation that such substitution would not affect any of the issues raised in Defendants' motion to dismiss. (Consent Order Substituting PI.)
. The background facts are taken from Plaintiff's complaint. Given the parties’ stipulation as to plaintiff substitution, in discussing the facts of this case, the Court will refer to Mr. McGuinn's medical history as described in the complaint, rather than to Plaintiff's own history.
. Plaintiff cites to several cases where exposure to a toxic substance created an increased risk of harm held sufficient to confer standing, even when the plaintiffs in those cases had not yet manifested any physical injury as a result of their exposure.
See Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Envtl. Study Group, Inc.,
. Although the Federal Rules require only a "short and plain statement” of the grounds for jurisdiction, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 8, that statement must still sufficiently allege injury in fact.
