Read the ruling here.
NewJersey.com ruling article here.
http://www.charlestondailymail.com/policebrfs/201402120147
NewJersey.com ruling article here.
http://www.charlestondailymail.com/policebrfs/201402120147
Wednesday February 12, 2014
Trial against pelvic mesh
manufacturers ongoing
Daily Mail Staff
CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- A Johnson & Johnson
president of North American businesses was the latest to testify in one of
several cases against the manufacturers of pelvic mesh.
Trial began Monday in the case brought by women
who say the mesh used to treat stress urinary incontinence led to pain and permanent injury
because of its defective
design.
Carolyn
Lewis, Kenneth Lewis, Augistina Brown-Singletary, Andre Singletary-Smith,
Karin Harrison, Robert Harrison, Patricia Headrick, Darrell Headrick, Katie
Uszler, Nick Uszler, Kelly Young and Kenneth Young originally filed the lawsuit
in July 2012 in the Northern District of Texas.
Lewis received surgery in 2009, where doctors
implanted the TVT, or transvaginal tape. The lawsuit alleges because of the
defective design of the product, Lewis experienced pain when she emptied her
bladder and during sex.
Defendants in the case are Johnson & Johnson,
Ethicon Inc., Ethicon Women's Health and Urology, Gynecare and American Medical Systems
Inc. This is the first case against Ethicon.
Attorneys for the companies said the plaintiffs
never complained about problems from the mesh until after they filed the
lawsuit and said the product was not defective.
U.S. District Judge Joseph Goodwin is overseeing
the consolidation of more than 26,000 similar cases alleging injury from plastic mesh devices
used to treat bladder and other organ weaknesses.
Laura Angelini, who has served in several marketing positions at
Johnson & Johnson and Ethicon, appeared in a pre-recorded video deposition.
In her video testimony, Angelini agreed with the
attorney, saying a Swedish company and the inventor of the TVT signed an
agreement that later led to the company being the exclusive supplier of the
tape. She said the
inventor was a 20 percent shareholder in the company.
Angelini said the TVT initially was launched in
Europe and was launched in the U.S. in late 1998. She agreed the type of mesh
was used in hernia repair.
In Monday's opening statements, Lewis' attorney,
Thomas Cartmell, alleged Ethicon used mesh to treat hernias but problems caused
by the heavy nature of the product and small pores required surgeries to remove
it.
Cartmell said a Swedish inventor later contacted
Ethicon saying he used the old mesh to treat stress urinary incontinence and
experienced no complications.
In her video testimony, Angelini said the Swedish
company and the inventor signed an agreement where his company would be the exclusive supplier of the
TVT.
Under the agreement, Agenlini agreed Johnson
& Johnson would pay $400,000 to the company if it received acceptable
clinical trial results.
In her opening statements, Christy Jones, an
attorney representing the mesh manufacturers, said there were several studies
on the transvaginal tape, not just those conducted by the inventor.
She said those studies have shown the tape is
effective to treat stress urinary incontinence and said it was deemed the gold standard
to treat this condition.
In the video, the attorney read off the
agreement, saying Johnson & Johnson would pay $20 million for the TVT and a
second installment of $2 million. If 140,000 units of TVT were sold, then
Johnson & Johnson would pay another $2 million to the seller.
Angelini
agreed that if all payments were made, that would total more than $24 million
for the TVT device.
The video also showed an email from Angelini in
response to her colleagues in the U.S. The attorney asked if she wrote they
should spin it to more of a safety aspect than the complications and asked if
she had influenced the title of a medical presentation.
Angelini responded that she provided her
perspective to provide a more balanced position to show the safety data they
had.
Goodwin dismissed the jury early Wednesday and
told them to come back at 9 a.m. today. According to the court calendar, the
trial is scheduled to last through Feb. 25.
Contact writer Andrea Lannom at Andrea.Lan...@dailymailwv.com
or 304-348-5148. Follow her at www.twitter.com/AndreaLannom.
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