Not to disagree with Dr. Nicolaidis, but according to the numbers I'm aware of, which are the current ones in the literature, Health Canada has reported three deaths. It's a bit unclear. As I said, the Canadian Society of Plastic Surgeons and CSAPS have also parallel-tracked data from our surgeons, and our data is really robust. I know exactly all of their scans, their outcomes and things like that.
Health Canada's data is a bit less clear, so I don't know how robust their data is.
There have been 36 deaths globally. The profile registry in the States, as Dr. Nicolaidis has mentioned, is a bit of an outlier. Their estimate is still one in 30,000, which is the least common in the world. The implant manufacturers provided numbers, in terms of the denominator, to us in Canada and also to Australia and New Zealand—not to us directly, but to statisticians, so independent statisticians have those numerators, and the original estimate, based on the Canadian data and the Australia-New Zealand data, was around one in 3,000.
Health Canada's current estimate is one in 1,600. Peter Cordeiro's personal one is one in 385, as Dr. Nicolaidis said. I actually met with Peter recently, and he hasn't had one in 100 yet, in terms of his numbers or anything he's published. That's certainly the highest risk—one in 385.
The current estimate globally for low-textured implants is still about one in 100,000.
I'm sorry to interrupt, but those are the numbers in the literature that I'm aware of.