Philips Respironics agrees to $479 million CPAP settlement

One of the nation’s largest makers of machines for sleep apnea sufferers has agreed to pay $479 million to compensate customers who bought the devices and suffered injuries due to foam spewing into their mouths.

Philips Respironics and Koninklijke Philips N.V., its Netherlands-based parent company, will also set aside $15 million for customers seeking to replace their continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machines, court documents posted Thursday show. The settlement comes more than two years after Philips recalled millions of its CPAP devices because of the foam issue. 

Koninklijke Philips didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment Friday. The company admitted no wrongdoing in a recent blog post, adding that it already set aside $615 million earlier this year anticipating a settlement.  

“The final cost of the settlement may vary based on, among other things, how many patients participate in the settlement and what the court awards for the professional fees relating to the resolutions,” the company said in its post. 

Philips recalled its CPAP machines in 2021 and, since then, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said it has received 105,000 complaints, including 385 reported deaths, reportedly linked to the leaking foam. The foam is purposely placed in Philips CPAP machines to help reduce noise. 

Some of the complaints to the FDA included reports linking the devices to cancer, respiratory problems, pneumonia, chest pain, dizziness and infections. FDA officials warned Americans about using Philips CPAP machines earlier this year, saying the products “may cause serious injuries or death.” Inhaling the foam can cause “serious injury which can be life-threatening,” Philips wrote in its recall. 


Sleep apnea sufferers still hurt by 2021 CPAP machine recall

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Philips tried to fix some of the machines, but the repaired ones were also recalled, the FDA said. The 2021 recall was for 20 different Philips devices, including its A-Series BiPAP ventilators and the DreamStation CPAP machines. 

Dozens of sleep apnea patients have filed lawsuits in recent years against Philips related to the CPAP machines, but those lawsuits were consolidated in October 2022 as one class-action case in Pennsylvania. In many of those lawsuits, Philips customers accused the company of knowing the CPAP machines were defective but selling them anyway. 

Lawyers representing the CPAP users said Thursday the settlement covers only the economic losses that customers faced and they will seek damages for people with personal injury claims. 

About 30 million people in the U.S. suffer from sleep apnea, a disorder in which someone’s airways become blocked during rest and interrupts breathing, according to 2022 data from the American Medical Association. 

Although it’s not possible yet to make a claim, eligible Philips customers seeking compensation from the settlement will eventually be able to do so here. In the meantime, consumers can sign up for emails to get alerts about updates.

Anyone with questions about the settlement can email Info@RespironicsCPAP-ELSettlement.com.

Philips said it expects to start paying the settlement funds in the first quarter of 2024 at the earliest. 

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