Wall Street Journal
April
4, 2013, 7:17 p.m. ET
Cases Challenge Liability
Protection Enjoyed by Device Makers
By CHRISTOPHER WEAVER and JENNIFER SMITH
A raft of lawsuits filed Thursday against St. Jude Medical Inc. STJ -0.99%
over an implanted heart device could challenge the broad liability protection
that medical-device makers have enjoyed since a key Supreme Court ruling in
2008.
The lawsuits, filed both in Los Angeles Superior Court and federal court
in the Central District of California, claim
that problems with the manufacturing and oversight of Riata defibrillator
"leads" injured or killed more than 30 patients. Faulty leads,
which connect the heart to defibrillators that zap irregular heart rhythms back
to normal, caused the devices to fail or
needlessly deliver blasts of electricity, the suits allege.
One plaintiff, Rebecca Clawson, said in an interview that she was
shocked several times over 25 minutes while in bed at her Orange County,
Calif., home last November. Her lead was surgically removed and doctors said it
displayed faulty wiring, said Ms. Clawson, who is 55 years old.
"As a matter of policy, we generally don't comment on pending
litigation," a St. Jude spokeswoman said.
If the new cases succeed, they could help reopen a closed-off corner of the law that has left people who believe they were
injured by medical devices with little recourse—and tempered the
business of both plaintiff and defense lawyers who once earned hefty fees from
device cases.
In recent years, the legal landscape has shifted against would-be
plaintiffs injured by devices that go through the Food and Drug
Administration's premarket approval process, lawyers specializing in device
cases say.
The 2008 Supreme Court ruling, Riegel v. Medtronic, MDT -1.78%
shielded makers of such devices from most product-liability claims, which are
governed by state law, so long as the companies had complied with the federal
standards of the FDA, including those for manufacturing, labeling and device
monitoring. That meant that even if such
devices were later found to be defective, companies are protected from
many suits.
A 1976 law governing medical devices generally prohibits states from
attempting to regulate devices, which are subject to federal rules, but Riegel
broadly interpreted those provisions in a way that plaintiffs' attorneys say
made it much harder to pursue claims.
To push cases through, lawyers generally must find state laws that
specifically address violations of the FDA's requirements.
"Riegel was basically a graveyard for"
device cases, said George Conk, a professor at Fordham Law School in New York and
former product-liability attorney. In 2010, an appeals court upheld the
dismissal of more than 8,000 cases alleging that a Medtronic Inc. defibrillator
lead had injured patients, after the firm argued Riegel protected it. The
company, though, had agreed to pay $268 million to settle the cases days
earlier.
Medtronic said that without such protections from state law, "there
would be no central standard for device safety, effectiveness, testing,
labeling and marketing, which would ultimately be detrimental to
patients."
Lawyers in the new Riata cases are
alleging that St. Jude violated both the FDA's requirements for the company to
report device flaws to the agency, along with state product-liability laws,
an emerging approach to clearing Riegel's hurdles that has been buttressed by
several recent appeals-court rulings.
They will also attempt to show St. Jude erred in manufacturing the
devices in accordance with FDA rules, the approach favored in most device cases
since Riegel.
The industry defends Riegel and its broad protections. "There is no
absolutely safe medical device," said Ralph Hall, a Minnesota lawyer who has
worked with device makers. "Making risk-benefit determinations in any
design is FDA's job," he said.
St. Jude's Riata problems led to a recall of the leads in late 2011, and
researchers have attributed at least 20 deaths to problems with the leads. Wires
inside the Riata leads can break through their insulation, becoming exposed and
potentially leading to electrical problems.
Some patients with the leads have seen their cases turned down by
lawyers. Greg Jessee, 51, the general manager of a hydraulics-repair firm in
Portsmouth, Va., was shocked three times before his heart briefly stopped
during his son's football game in late 2011. He consulted an attorney last year
to consider suing St. Jude, but the lawyer declined the case. "He studied
it and came back to me to say he has found no way around" the protections,
Mr. Jessee said.
The lawyer, Duncan Garnett, of Newport News, Va., didn't immediately
respond to a request for comment.
Since the ruling "we've had numerous clients—including clients who
have had Medtronic devices implanted in them—who have been reluctant to bring a
case," said Brian J. McCormick Jr., a partner with Sheller PC, a
Philadelphia law firm that specializes in cases involving defective products,
drugs and medical devices.
Attorneys at large law firms that once made a lucrative business of
defending the industry also say the Riegel ruling affected their businesses.
"It has narrowed the playing field by 75%," said one defense lawyer
specializing in devices who declined to be named because he still represents
the industry in some matters.
Appeals courts are now split on the breadth of claims that Riegel
blocks. A January ruling, for instance, in the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals, which includes California, found Medtronic wasn't protected from
liability related to a Medtronic pain-medicine pump malfunction, in part
because the plaintiff, a patient named Richard Stengel, alleged the company
failed to warn the FDA about known risks.
Medtronic said it disagreed with the January ruling.
The lawyers in the newly filed cases are hoping such rulings could
propel their cases.
"What the judges are recognizing now is that
there's no recourse for consumers, and that's changing," said
Reza Torkzadeh, a Los Angeles attorney representing the plaintiffs in the new
cases.
Write to Christopher Weaver at christopher.weaver@wsj.com
and Jennifer Smith at jennifer.smith@wsj.com
Joleen Chambers The medical device industry actively obscures the cascade of harm (and cost) when their products do not perform as advertised. Long-term post-market surveillance that is available in other countries via national registries are proprietary silos here in the U.S. Patients cannot access basic information prior to surgery about which devices perform best. Purchasing a toaster oven is more predictable. And when a device fails the debilitated patient is expected to go to federal court to face a lawyered-up industry. The aviation industry stops everything for a battery issue in a new airplane, Lulu-lemon gets national attention for failed fabric in their yoga pants but vaginal surgical mesh, ICD leads, joint replacement failures: silence! Why is the medical device industry "special"? Follow the money and see the cost of the entitlements to this small segment of our national economy! It is costly and immoral.
Joleen Chambers The medical device industry actively obscures the cascade of harm (and cost) when their products do not perform as advertised. Long-term post-market surveillance that is available in other countries via national registries are proprietary silos here in the U.S. Patients cannot access basic information prior to surgery about which devices perform best. Purchasing a toaster oven is more predictable. And when a device fails the debilitated patient is expected to go to federal court to face a lawyered-up industry. The aviation industry stops everything for a battery issue in a new airplane, Lulu-lemon gets national attention for failed fabric in their yoga pants but vaginal surgical mesh, ICD leads, joint replacement failures: silence! Why is the medical device industry "special"? Follow the money and see the cost of the entitlements to this small segment of our national economy! It is costly and immoral.
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