Tag Archives: lawsuit

Kickback Update: The “Scary” Power J&J Yields

18 Jan

As a follow-up to last week’s breaking news about the Johnson & Johnson / Omnicare kickback scandal, some details are emerging (see below).  It seems that J&J was making illegal payments to pharmacies to promote their drugs, which were being reimbursed by Medicare and the good ol’ taxpayer.  So not only did you suffer that achilles tendon rupture, but you and your taxes paid for the marketing efforts behind it, too.

Some of the emails released include the following gems:

  • In 2002, J&J’sLevaquin antibiotic saw a 19 percent share gain in five months. The reaction of one executive, informed of the news in an email was that it was “scary” that the company had such power.
  • When Omnicare demanded money from J&J, the J&J exec wrote in an email to a colleague: “I wasn’t going to go to jail for Dan, Omnicare, or for that matter J&J”.

Here’s the statement J&J gave after the complaint was filed:  “We are reviewing the complaint filed today and will address the government’s lawsuit in court.  We believe airing the facts will confirm that our conduct, including rebating programs like those the government now challenges, was lawful and appropriate.  We look forward to the opportunity to present our evidence in court.”

Read the full story here: http://industry.bnet.com/

Who thinks you should take Levaquin? Johnson & Johnson does!

15 Jan

That is whether you need it or not. Today the US Government filed a lawsuit against Levaquin’s maker, J&J, for paying kickbacks to one of the country’s largest pharmacy chains, Omnicare. It says Omnicare was given illegal payments in the 10s of millions to promote its drugs over competitors.

The government cited a company statement from September 2001 describing Levaquin’s market share at Omnicare’s pharmacies increasing to 66.4 percent from 19.2 percent at the end of 1998. Meanwhile, the market share of a competing antibiotic, Cipro, plunged to around 28 percent, from 80 percent. Apparently, this wasn’t by accident. 

I’m sure there’s more than a few limping and suffering Americans who’d like to show their gratitude to the folks at Omnicare and J&J for their business acumen.

Read more about the booming successes of J&J and Levaquin here or here.

More Levaquin Lawsuits Filed

19 Dec

Three West Virginians are suing Johnson & Johnson for damages from the serious tendon-related injuries they suffered after taking Levaquin.

Pheoba Bostic, Keith Morgan and Rebecca Cook filed three separate lawsuits on Nov. 10 in U.S. District Court for West Virginia against Johnson and Johnson, Ortho-McNeil Pharmaceutical and Johnson and Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development.

Bostic says she began taking Levaquin to treat a persistent cough and asthma, not knowing the antibiotic would cause her to suffer severe tendinitis. Morgan says he developed bilateral Achilles tendon ruptures after taking the antibiotic to prevent a potential infection. And Cook says she took Levaquin to treat an infection, but developed severe tendinitis soon after.

When they took the antibiotic, the plaintiffs say they did not know that it causes a higher incidence of tendon injuries, including tendon rupture, especially in people older than 60 and those who take corticosteroids.

Levaquin, the antibiotic the plaintiffs say they took, belongs to a group of antibiotics known as fluoroquinolones that studies have revealed cause tendon injuries.

“Studies have suggested that fluoroquinolones can degrade tendon cells by causing apoptosis, or a programmable cell death, and therefore lose their integrity, and easily tear and/or rupture,” the suit states.

Normally, patients use Levaquin to treat a wide array of bacterial infections, such as upper respiratory infections, urinary tract infections and prostatitis. Many of the people who take the antibiotic belong to the 60 and older age group, who are more at risk for tendon injuries, according to the complaint.

And if a person over the age of 60 does develop an Achilles tendon rupture, the injury usually remains with the person for the remainder of his life, the plaintiffs claim.

“Treatment may include a corticosteroid to decrease inflammation — the very drug that, when combined with a fluoroquinolones, can dramatically increase the risk of a tendon rupture,” the suit states. “In the event of a tendon rupture, the leg is often immobilized with a boot or other casting for anywhere between six weeks and six months, and physical therapy is ordered thereafter. Surgery is frequently not recommended in the elderly population due to poor recovery rates.”

But the plaintiffs say they remained unaware of Levaquin’s dangers when they took the antibiotic because the defendants did not highlight the possibility of tendon ruptures when marketing the drug. Instead, a warning about the ruptures remained buried inside a long list of possible side effects, according to the complaint.

And in the promotion of Levaquin, the defendants boasted about its safety record, saying only diarrhea and nausea had shown up as adverse effects, the complaint says.

“Clearly, the promotional literature only reported on adverse events in U.S. clinical trials where only a very small sampling of patients took their drug, and where many adverse events do not necessarily reveal themselves,” the complaint says. “So, Defendants claimed ‘proven performance’ on the 63,000,000 people that had used Levaquin outside the United States, but chose not to disclose the adverse events that were being reported in this same population.”

In fact, Levaquin more frequently caused tendon injuries than any of its fellow fluoroquinolones on the market, the plaintiffs claim.

Regulatory authorities in countries other than the United States were so concerned about the dangers of Levaquin that they issued “Dear Doctor” letters, advising physicians of the frequent tendon ruptures people experienced when taking the antiobiotic, according to the complaint.

And in 2001, countries such as France, Belgium, Italy and the United Kingdom convened before the European Agency for the Evaluation of Medicinal Products to discuss a heightened warning for Levaquin, proposing that the antibiotic would be singled out as being the most tendon toxic of flurooquinolones.

Aventis, the largest manufacturer of levofloxacin in Europe, agreed to two epidemiological studies in Europe regarding the antibiotic’s tenotoxic effects. But before releasing the results of the studies, Aventis contacted Johnson and Johnson Pharmaceutical Research, promising to fund and co-author a study in the United States on tendon rupture and fluoroquinolones, the plaintiffs say.

“Advocating that the U.S. study would be the largest epidemiological study to date and therefore provide the most definitive evidence of the relative risk of levofloxacin and tendon injury, and that the European studies to date were too small from which to base a label change, Aventis convinced the European regulatory authorities to forestall the proposed warning change until the preliminary data from the U.S. study was released,” the suit states.

Still, in April 2002 – about six months before the scheduled completion of the U.S. study — Aventis released its European studies, finding a significantly increased chance of tendon rupture in levofloxacin as compared to other fluoroquinolones.

But the U.S. study revealed different findings — people taking Levaquin faced no increased risk of tendon rupture, the study found.

“Unlike the healthcare databases in Europe, which contain computerized medical records, Johnson and Johnson PRD used data from the Ingenix Research database which consisted of U.S. health insurance claims from 1997 to 2001,” the complaint says. “The study analyzed only Achilles tendon ruptures and sought to examine whether fluoroquinolone exposure was a risk factor for this injury. It did not assess the risk of Levaquin tendon toxicity, as had been requested by the United Kingdom.

“Under the guise of data validation, Defendant Johnson and Johnson PRD created an algorithm that conveniently excluded nearly 70 percent of health claims for elderly persons who suffered Achilles tendon rupture. The algorithm used CPT procedure codes that only related to surgical repair which thereby excluded all those Achilles tendon rupture cases where the patient was casted or booted, as is the case in the elderly population.”

Because of the U.S. study, the defendants and the MHRA decided not to revise levofloxacin warning labels, the plaintiffs claim.

But Levaquin-related injuries were on the rise, the complaint says.
“Corresponding with Levaquin’s increased popularity, the number of adverse events reported to the FDA reported soared,” the suit states. “143 tendon related injuries were reported in 2006, and in just the first quarter of 2007, 107 tendon-related injuries were reported where Levaquin was the primary suspect.”

In 2002, the defendants decided to revise their label on Levaquin products to say, “Post-marketing surveillance reports indicate that this risk may be increased in patients receiving concomitant corticosteroids, especially in the elderly.”

And the defendants made another label change in April 2007, stating that the elderly face an increased risk of tendon injury.

By Feb. 8, 2008, the FDA mandated that the defendants provide a black box warning that indicates the risk of tendonitis and tendon rupture is increased in patients who are older than 60, the suit states.

Still, the labels aren’t enough for the plaintiffs.

“It does not warn healthcare providers that Levaquin is much more tenotoxic than other fluoroquinolones and therefore physicians will interpret the relative risk of a Levaquin-induced tendon injury inappropriately,” the suit states. “Defendants continue to market Levaquin as a first line therapy for the common bronchitis and sinusitis infections, and for which many other, safer, antibiotics are available.”

Source: http://www.wvrecord.com/

Levaquin Side Effects and your Legal Rights

6 Nov

Here is a brief summary of the warning signs of tendonitis and tendon ruptures after taking Levaquin. If you or someone you know has taken Levaquin and would like to learn more about the possibility of joining a lawsuit against the manufacturers (Ortho-MacNeil and Johnson & Johnson), visit Legaltube or call our sponsor firm, Slater Rosenberger & Schulman, at 1-800-251-6990.

LAWSUIT FILED AGAINST JOHNSON AND JOHNSON FOR LEVAQUIN RELATED TENDON INJURY

12 Oct

Five Illinois residents have filed suit against Johnson and Johnson, Ortho-McNeil Pharmaceutical, Johnson and Johnson Pharmaceutical Research and Development and Walgreens after they say an antibiotic caused them severe tendon problems.

Plaintiffs Susan Price, Jerry Mahlandt, Johnna Woosley, David Force and Rachel Speiser say they took the antibiotic Levaquin, which is normally prescribed for upper respiratory infection, urinary tract infections, prostatitis and other bacterial infections.

What the plaintiffs claim they did not know at the time they took Levaquin is that it causes a higher incidence of tendon injuries, including tendon rupture, in people who are older than 60 or who are on corticosteroid therapy, according to the complaint filed Sept. 2 in St. Clair County Circuit Court.

“Levaquin-induced tendon injury involves the degradation of the tendon tissue, leading to severe and permanent injuries,” the suit states.

As a result of their taking the antibiotic, all the plaintiffs say they suffered severe and permanent tendon injuries.

Levaquin is part of a class of antibiotics known as fluoroquinolones and was originally introduced into the U.S. in 1997, the complaint says.

When Levaquin entered the market, warnings about tendon side effects were required on all fluoroquinolone labels, but were buried in a long list of potential adverse reactions, the plaintiffs claim. In addition, the warnings did not advise that tendon injury was tripled with fluoroquinolone use in people older than 60 and in those who are on corticosteroid therapy, according to the complaint.

In fact, Levaquin manufacturers marketed the drug toward the elderly, especially those with upper respiratory infections who were likely to be chronic corticosteroid users, the suit states.

“More disturbingly, Defendants’ promotional campaign was themed on Levaquin’s excellent safety profile and failed to disclose the risks of tendon injury,” the complaint says.

After world-wide studies revealed the tendon risks to Levaquin users, the defendants updated their label for the antibiotic, the plaintiffs claim. However, the new warning only included information about the risks to people who were on corticosteroid therapy and contained no warnings about risks to the elderly, according to the complaint.

“Accordingly, despite the 2002 label change, Levaquin prescriptions only increased and tendon injuries mounted,” the suit states.

Other European countries began discussing the requirement of heightened label change as early as 2001, and collaborated with Johnson and Johnson PRD to perform a study on the antibiotic’s effects, the complaint says.

The plaintiffs claim that Johnson and Johnson PRD, however, only analyzed achilles tendon ruptures in its study and did not assess the risk of Levaquin tendon toxicity. In addition, Johnson and Johnson PRD created an algorithm that excluded nearly 70 percent of health claims for the elderly who suffered Achilles tendon rupture, according to the complaint.

“The algorithm used CPT procedure codes that only related to surgical repair,” the suit states. “This algorithm thereby excluded all those Achilles tendon rupture cases where the patient was casted or booted, as is the case in the elderly population. By manipulating the data, Defendant Johnson and Johnson PRD was able to exclude the very group that was prone to tendon rupture.”

As a result, the Johnson and Johnson PRD study found no increased risk of achilles tendon rupture and found neither age nor corticosteroid use altered the findings, the complaint says.

As a result, the Levaquin label was not changed as had been recommended.

Because the defendants issued no warnings to doctors, physicians continued to prescribe the antibiotic, the plaintiffs claim.

However, Levaquin was responsible for 1,044 reports of tendon injuries and 282 reports of tendon ruptures from 1997 through 2005, according to the complaint.

Injuries continued to soar as Levaquin’s popularity increased, the suit states.

Even the Illinois attorney general took notice and in 2005 submitted a petition to the FDA requesting that a black box warning be placed on the antibiotic’s label, the complaint says.

Although the black box warning was not been placed on Levaquin’s packaging, a revised label was placed on the antibiotic in April 2007. However, the plaintiffs say the label continued to bury warning about tendon risks and did not contain a warning about Levaquin’s greater association with tendon toxicity as compared to other fluoroquinlones.

Finally, in July 2008, a revised Levaquin label contained a black box warning, but still fails to warn about its higher risk of tendon toxicity compared to other similar antibiotics, according to the complaint.

In the 10-count suit, the plaintiffs allege strict liability, negligence, breach of implied warranties, breach of express warranty, common law fraud, violation of the Illinois Consumer Fraud Act, unjust enrichment, breach of warranty and failure to warn.

Johnson and Johnson and its subsidiary, Ortho-McNeil, are named as defendants because they test and manufacture Levaquin. Walgreens sold the plaintiffs the drug, the suit states.

The plaintiffs are seeking actual and compensatory damages, plus costs, pre- and post-judgment interest and other relief the court deems just.

By: Kelly Holleran

Source: www.madisonrecord.vom