Massachusetts court: Merck can be sued
over generic drug injury
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[March 17, 2018]
By Nate Raymond
BOSTON (Reuters) - Massachusetts' top court
on Friday opened the door for consumers to sue Merck & Co Inc and other
makers of brand-name drugs over injuries blamed not on their own
medications but on generic versions of their treatments made by other
companies.
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court ruled that brand-name
drugmakers can be sued for recklessness if they intentionally fail to
update warning labels for their drugs that makers of cheaper, generic
versions must adopt as well.
The case was closely watched within the industry, and Merck drew support
from industry groups including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Merck in a
statement said it was disappointed and stands by the drug at issue,
Proscar.
The decision came in a lawsuit by Massachusetts resident Brian Rafferty,
who said he suffered from side effects, including sexual dysfunction,
after taking the generic version of Merck's Proscar to treat an enlarged
prostate beginning in 2010.
Under a 2011 ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court, generic drug companies
cannot be sued for failing to provide adequate label warnings about
potential side effects because federal law requires them to use the
brand-name versions' labels.
As a result, Rafferty instead sued Merck, saying its Provacar label
failed to warn that such side effects could continue after discontinuing
use of the drug. A lower-court judge dismissed his negligence claims.
The top court reversed, allowing Rafferty to sue Merck for recklessness
rather than negligence. This requires a higher standard of proof showing
a drugmaker intentionally failed to update its warning label despite
knowing the risks.
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"Where a brand-name drug manufacturer provides an inadequate warning
for its own product, it knows or should know that it puts at risk
not only the users of its own product, but also the users of the
generic product," Chief Justice Ralph Gants wrote.
Shielding brand-name manufacturers from liability entirely would
leave consumers with no chance to sue generic drug companies, whose
products command about 90 percent of the market, Gants wrote for the
4-0 court.
The decision was the latest by a top state court to weigh whether
brand-name drugmakers can be sued over injuries blamed on generic
drugs. The California Supreme Court in December ruled brand-name
manufacturers could be sued by generic drug users.
Emily Lee-Smith, Rafferty's lawyer, said while she did not believe
the heightened recklessness standard in Massachusetts was needed,
"we think it's a step in the right direction."
The case is Rafferty v. Merck & Co Inc, Massachusetts Supreme
Judicial Court, No. SJC-12347.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by David Gregorio)
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