Rhode
Island takes Teva to trial in multibillion-dollar opioid case
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[March 14, 2022]
By Dietrich Knauth
(Reuters) - Rhode Island is set to square
off on Monday against Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd, as a
multibillion-dollar trial begins over whether the Israeli company
contributed to an opioid crisis that has caused more than 500,000 deaths
over the past two decades.
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Rhode Island says Teva created a "public nuisance" by downplaying
the risks of opioid addiction and promoting the off-label use of
powerful fentanyl-based opioids that were approved only for certain
types of cancer pain.
Rhode Island is seeking $5.9 billion from the companies, according
to a Teva court filing. Rhode Island officials declined to comment
on the specific amount.
Teva subsidiaries Actavis Pharma and Cephalon Inc are also
defendants in the case in Rhode Island Superior Court in Providence.
The companies have denied the allegations, saying they sold drugs
that were legal and approved for pain treatment.
In court filings by Teva, it calls Rhode Island's lawsuit an
improper attempt to blame a wide-ranging public health crisis on "a
small subset of opioid manufacturers" that make "niche" medicines
like Actiq and Fentora. According to Teva's filings, those cancer
drugs account for just 0.02% percent of all opioid prescriptions in
the state since 1998.
The company also sells generic opioids such as oxycodone.
The Rhode Island lawsuit is one of more than 3,300 filed by state,
local and Native American tribal governments across the country
accusing drugmakers of minimizing the addictiveness of opioid pain
medications. The lawsuits also accuse distributors and pharmacies of
ignoring red flags that the drugs were being diverted into illegal
channels.
The trial will begin as Teva attempts to negotiate a nationwide
settlement of its opioid liability. After a recent $225 million
settlement with the state of Texas, Teva Chief Executive Kåre
Schultz told Reuters the company will likely end up paying $2.7
billion to $3.6 billion to resolve opioid claims.
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Other defendants in the Rhode Island case
settled before trial, including drug
distributors McKesson Corp, AmerisourceBergen
Corp and Cardinal Health Inc, which joined a
nationwide $21 billion settlement.
Purdue Pharma LP, which was also a defendant,
won initial approval last week for a $6 billion
settlement funded by its Sackler family owners
that would resolve litigation over its role in
the opioid crisis.
The public nuisance theory has been used with
mixed results in cases against other opioid
distributors, manufacturers and pharmacies.
The Rhode Island trial comes more than two
months after a New York jury found Teva liable
for creating a public nuisance in the state. And
a federal jury in November found that pharmacy
chain operators CVS Health Corp, Walgreens Boots
Alliance Inc and Walmart Inc created a public
nuisance in two Ohio counties, in the first
trial against those companies over the opioid
epidemic.
Damages have not yet been decided in either the
New York or Ohio cases.
Courts in California and Oklahoma have ruled the
other way, finding in favor of opioid
defendants, including Teva and Johnson &
Johnson, in public nuisance cases.
(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth in New York and
Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Noeleen
Walder and Matthew Lewis)
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