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Vioxx Litigation - The Perspective
of Pharmaceutical Product Liability Lawyers, Allis and Henke, On The Currently Most Probable Viable Legal Bases
on Which Merck Will be Held Liable For Heart Attack,
Stroke and Other Injuries Caused by Vioxx. The Possible
Merits of Vioxx Class Action and Necessary Limitations
on Vioxx Class Action. A Recomendation on the Advisability of Obtaining Independent Vioxx Lawyer
Advice Whether Class Action or the Separate Prosecution
of Your Individual Litigation Will Best Serve You.
Pharmaceutical product liability lawyers may approach the Vioxx litigation
on a number of legal theories provided by
the laws of the states in which the injuries occurred,
or by state or national class actions. There are advantages and disadvantages
to each approach an attorney may chose in the
representation of his client. It is the authors' strong opinion that each Vioxx case should be evaluated individually to determine in particular whether class action may serve the particular client or if he or she would be better served by the separate prosecution of his or her individual claim..
The evidence will determine the theories of action upon which the Vioxx litigation will be prosecuted. Already good evidence exists in the Vioxx clinical studies demonstrating the drug's association with an increased incidence of heart attack, stroke, bloot clots and other cardiovascular events.
Additional evidence will be developed in "discovery," including in-house Merck documents and from the depositions
of the Merck company hierarchy and depositions of the persons most knowledgeable
within the company. Of interest will be what Merck knew and when. Of particular interest will be what decisions Merck's officers and directors made and the reasoning of its managing agents which led to the decisions.
Merck tipped its "defense" or at least its "public relations defense" in its press release announcing the Vioxx "voluntary withdrawal." There it attempted to suggest that the increased incidence of heart attack and other adverse reaction associated with Vioxx use was a complete surprise. It asserted that its decision to withdraw Vioxx from the market was the result of the findings of a new Vioxx efficacy study which had to be discontinued because of the increased rate of heart attack and other adverse reactions in the Vioxx group as compared with the plecebo control group.
The press release was misleading. The fact is that previous Vioxx studies demonstrated the same increased incidence of heart attack, stroke, and other adverse cardiovascular events long before September 2004. Indeed, the association was well known since March 2000 (VIGOR Study) replicated in the August 2001 Cleveland Study, published in the peer review Journal of the American Medical Association.
The Merck press release is indeed absurd given that in 2001 the FDA had warned Merck in no uncertain terms that its Vioxx advertising was misleading specifically for its failure to warn of its drug's association with an increased incidence of heart attack as demonstrated in the VIGOR study.
Merck's public relations positioning is untenable, and it will not withstand scrutiny in a courtroom. The likely course of the litigation will be dictated in part by the evidence developed of the full scope of Merck's culpability, and then by the tools traditionally available to pharmaceutical product liability lawyers, the substantive legal theories, possibly punitive damage claims, and then, voluntary class action, which may or may not be advisible for any particular plaintiff.
Based upon the studies demonstrating the association
of Vioxx with cardiovascular events and in particular,
heart attack and stroke, as well as the September
2001 FDA warning letter asserting that the Merck advertising
was false or misleading, perhaps the most obvious
legal basis for Merck potential liability arising
out of its continued marketing of Vioxx may be "failure
to warn" theory. The legal cause of action is
composed of legal elements which must be established,
however, "failure to warn" theory is essentially
what it implies, that the defendant had an obligation
to warn, based on the information the adverse reactions
found to be associated with use of its drug, and failed
to warn its consumers. There are legal nuances between
failure to warn theory in negligence and strict liability
across the laws of the states and Vioxx lawyers will
frame their causes of action accordingly, however,
from a lay informational perspective, this Vioxx attorney
would suggest first that "failure to warn" theory generically is perhaps the most obvious theory
based on the information currently available.
As the evidence develops, in addition to the substantive
causes of action, it is likely also that claims will be made
for punitive damages. Punitive damages are not an
element of damages to compensate you for your injuries;
rather they are damages in addition to your compensatory
damages which may be awarded to punish the defendant
pharmaceutical company or to set an example of the
pharmaceutical company, generally speaking, for its
fraud, malice or oppression. There are variations
in the laws of the states, however, one can think
of "malice" as approximating a willful and/or
conscious disregard of the lives or health of the
drug's consumers. One indication to these Vioxx lawyesr
that the evidence to be developed may well demonstrate
Merck's liability for punitive damages is that its Vioxx advertising failed to
acknowledge the clinical study findings of incresed incident of adverse
reactions, in particular cardiovascular incidents,
heart attack, blood clots and stroke. Merck only changed its advertising
to warn of heart attack following
the FDA's warning letter. Indeed, supportive of these
Vioxx attorneys proposition that Merck may be held
liable for punitive damages in many Vioxx cases is
the FDA's September 2001 warning letter, inter alia,
that Merck's Vioxx advertising was false or misleading.
In the FDA warning letter sent to Merck President
and CEO Raymond V. Gilmartin, the FDA stated:
"You have engaged in a promotional campaign for
Vioxx that minimizes the potentially serious cardiovascular
findings that were observed in the Vioxx Gastrointestinal
Outcomes Research (VIGOR) study, and thus, misrepresents
the safety profile for Vioxx. Specifically, your promotional
campaign discounts the fact that in the VIGOR study,
patients on Vioxx were observed to have a four to
five fold increase in myocardial infarctions (MIs)
compared to patients on the comparator nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), Naprosyn (naproxen)."
While Merck added "heart attack" to its
warnings, it did not add stroke or any
of the other adverse reactions found to be linked
to Vioxx use by the VIGOR and Cleveland studies. The FDA warning letter
does not undercut Merck's obligation to the consumer
to warn of all adverse side effects of its drug in
addition to heart attack. Merck owed is obligation
to warn to the consumer. Indeed, these authors would suggest that given the substantial increased incidence of these very serious, life threatening adverse reactions, Merck should have withdrawn the drug from the market by Marck 2000.
The fact that the FDA found
that the Merck advertising "misrepresented" the safety profile on Vioxx is, however, very good initial
evidence of Merck's fraud on the Vioxx consumer, to
be buttressed by evidence to be developed in discovery
in the cases.
To just touch also on the subject of class action, this
form of attempting to resolve "mass disaster" litigation, as it is sometimes referred to generically
by the courts, can have substantial potential benefits and substantial potential
detriments for the individual pharmaceutical product
liability claimant's case. It is the humble but yet strong opinion of the authors, as experienced phramaceutical product liability attorneys that those injured by Vioxx, and those who have lost a family member to Vioxx, should obtain independent legal advice before electing to join a Vioxx class action.
Every Vioxx case should be analyzed on its facts to determine if the client will best be served by joining a class action or prosecuting his or her case separately. In part, for all Vioxx plaintiffs the issue of joining a class action will depend upon the character
of the class action as it evolves, the definition
of the class, the categories of class claimants, the
mechanisms by which the litigation will be processed
and the quality of the class action attorneys and
their prosecution of the litigation. Generally speaking,
class action litigation can often the very best avenue for claimants
who have suffered minimal damages and whose actions
would be impossible to prosecute economically on an
individual basis, e.g., actions for the economic damage associated
with the medical monitoring which may be determined to
be necessary or indicated for patients who have used
Vioxx. On the other hand, for Vioxx users who have
suffered substantial physical injury, e.g., stroke
or heart attack, it is this Vioxx attorney's opinion
that class action might not be suitable or in the
best interest of the individual client, depending
on the facts of each case.
In previous pharmaceutical litigation it was attempted
by the plaintiff's lead counsel committee, in combinations
with the pharmaceutical manufacturer to fashion a national "mandatory
class action" and settle the cases of many thousands
of very seriously injured children alleged to have
suffered birth defects as the result of the drug for
an total settlement which would have left each individual
child with but a few thousand dollars as his or her
recovery. The Federal District Court "certified
the mandatory class" and approved the settlement.
Because the class was certified as a "mandatory
class action" the individual plaintiffs across the country were
not permitted the opportunity to "opt out"
of the class action.
Mr. Henke, for
one individual client, filed a "writ of mandamus"
a type of appeal, to the Federal Circuit Court, arguing
that the mandatory class certification and settlement
denied his client his right to the attorney of his
choice and control over his individual litigation.
Many lawyers from around the country joined in Mr.
Henke's petition, and the Court of Appeals accepted
the argument set forth in Mr. Henke's petition, voiding
the class certification and overturning the class
settlement, holding that mandatory class action, as
opposed to voluntary class action (where the individual
plaintiff may "opt in" or "opt out")
can be used only in the very unusual and very restricted
circumstance where it can be demonstrated that the
defendant has a "limited fund" available
to pay the claimants. The lengthy and reasoned opinion
of the Court of Appeals upon Mr. Henke's petition
for writ of mandamus was published and constitutes
a landmark federal judicial opinion defining the legitimate
use of class action through this day. In re Bendectin,
749 F.2d 300 (6th Cir. 1985). See, also: R. L. Henke,
"Mandatory Class Action," Trial Magazine" the legal journal of the Association of Trial Lawyers
of America, May, 1985.
Given the rule of In re. Bendectin, supra, Mr. Henke and Mr. Allis do not believe that Vioxx class counsel will again attempt to bind those who do not want to participate in class litigation. So you should weigh your choice carefully, and obtain independent legal advice before making your election.
If you have (1) a substantial injury case (2) where good evidence exists of causation, such as in the heart attack and stroke cases and cases involving the other adverse reactions shown statistically to be more than doubled in incidence in associating with Vioxx use, and particularly, if there appears to be a reasonable likelyhood of obtaining punitive damages, you should very seriously consider the advantages of separately prosecuting your Vioxx case outside class litigation.
The forgoing discussion of
the possible legal theories is not intended as complete
by any means but rather a lay explanation of potential
directions in which the Vioxx litigation may proceed as further
evidence is developed in discovery. The discussion
above is provided for informational purposes only.
It is not legal advice, let alone advice that should
be relied upon by a lay person in analyzing whether
he may have a viable Vioxx case. Please keep in mind that consulting this web site
does not create an attorney client relationship with
regard to your potential Vioxx case, nor would contacting
Mr. Henke or Mr. Allis by telephone or submission
of the Vioxx attorney informational questionnaire.
Consultations with this Vioxx lawyer are free of charge.
An attorney-client relationship with Mr. Henke or
Mr. Allis or their respective firms can only be established by
a written contract signed both by you and Mr. Allis or Mr. Henke. |
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