Allain v. Wyeth-Ayerst Laboratories, Inc et al
Filing
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MEMORANDUM OPINION Signed by Chief Judge Karon O Bowdre on 2/27/18. (SAC )
FILED
2018 Feb-27 PM 04:36
U.S. DISTRICT COURT
N.D. OF ALABAMA
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA
SOUTHERN DIVISION
MICHAEL W. ALLAIN, as
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Executor of the Estates of ROBERT )
EARL DREHER, SR., Deceased
)
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Plaintiff,
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v.
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WYETH PHARMACEUTICALS, )
INC.
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Defendant.
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Case No. 2:14-CV-00280-KOB
MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter is before the court on Defendant Wyeth Pharmaceuticals, Inc.’s
Motion for Summary Judgment. (Doc. 96). Plaintiff Michael Allain, as executor of
the estate of Robert Earl Dreher, Sr., sued Defendant Wyeth Pharmaceuticals for
failure to warn, failure to provide medication guides to Mr. Dreher’s pharmacy,
and “off-label” promotion of the drug Cordarone, alleging each of these actions
contributed to Mr. Dreher’s wrongful death. On June 29, 2015, this court dismissed
all Mr. Allain’s claims against Wyeth except for the claim regarding the off-label
promotion of Cordarone. (Doc. 58).
As explained more fully below, the court now finds no genuine dispute as to
any material fact in this case and Wyeth is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Therefore, the court will enter summary judgment in favor of Wyeth and against
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Mr. Allain regarding his only remaining claim.
I.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Mr. Allain has not responded to Wyeth’s motion for summary judgment.
Therefore, whenever Allain has failed to dispute one of Wyeth’s facts by not
responding to the motion, the court will review Wyeth’s cited evidence, and, if it in
fact fairly supports Wyeth’s factual assertion, it will accept Wyeth’s fact as true.
In 1985, Wyeth Pharmaceuticals received FDA approval to begin
manufacturing and selling Cordarone in the United States. (Doc. 34 at 8).
Cordarone is a prescription drug approved as a “drug of last resort” for patients
suffering from life-threatening ventricular fibrillation or ventricular tachycardia
and is only to be used in situations where the patient’s condition would not respond
to other available drugs and therapies. (Id. at 3–4). Wyeth was the sole
manufacturer of Cordarone from 1985 until the FDA granted other companies
approval to begin manufacturing and selling generic versions in 1998. (Id. at 10).
Sandoz Pharmaceuticals Corporation then produced a generic version, which is the
bioequivalent of Cordarone, known by the drug’s chemical name, amiodarone
hydrochloride. (Id. at 11).
In 1985, the same year that the FDA approved Cordarone, Wyeth began
aggressively marketing the drug. Although Wyeth was aware of the serious side
effects of Cordarone and that Cordarone was approved only as a “drug of last
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resort,” it nevertheless promoted Cordarone for “off-label” use —i.e. for a purpose
other than that approved by the FDA. (Id. at 9). According to Mr. Allain, Wyeth’s
marketing campaign misled “an entire generation of physicians,” id., and Wyeth’s
promotional activities “would have greatly affected” Mr. Dreher’s physicians’
decisions to prescribe generic versions of Cordarone to Mr. Dreher. (Id. at 12).
In February of 2011, Mr. Dreher’s physician, Dr. Macy Smith, prescribed
him a ninety-day course of generic amiodarone tablets manufactured by Sandoz to
treat Mr. Dreher’s atrial fibrillation. (Id. at 11). Because Mr. Dreher suffered from
atrial fibrillation, not ventricular fibrillation, and because his condition was not life
threatening, his use of the drug was considered “off-label.”
Dr. Smith is a member of the American College of Cardiology, the
governing board in the United States for cardiology, and relies upon the
organization’s guidelines concerning how to treat atrial fibrillation patients. (Doc.
97-1 at 21–22). He also testified that those guidelines recommend the off-label use
of amiodarone to treat such patients, especially when those patients have a
structural abnormality, like Mr. Dreher had. (Id.at 22). Dr. Smith further testified
that he prescribed the amiodarone knowing the risks involved and understanding
that it was for the purpose of an off-label use. (Id. at 23).
From February 2011 to January 2012, Mr. Dreher experienced many of the
symptoms associated with amiodarone use, including shortness of breath,
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wheezing, trouble breathing, coughing, and tiredness. (Doc. 34 at 16–17). Mr.
Dreher’s condition continued to deteriorate, and, on February 15, 2012, Mr. Dreher
passed away at the age of eighty four. (Id. at 17). Mr. Allain alleges that Mr.
Dreher died as a result of taking amiodarone. More specifically, Mr. Allain argues
Wyeth’s promotion of Cordarone’s “off-label” use “was a producing and
proximate cause” of Mr. Dreher’s death. (Doc. 34 at 13).
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
When a district court reviews a motion for summary judgment, it must
determine two things: whether any genuine issues of material fact exist, and
whether the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Fed. R.
Civ. P. 56.
The court must “view the evidence presented through the prism of the
substantive evidentiary burden” to determine whether the non-moving party
presented sufficient evidence on which a jury could reasonably find for the
nonmoving party. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 255 (1986). The
court must not weigh the evidence and make credibility determinations because
these decisions belong to a jury. See id. at 254.
Further, all evidence and inferences drawn from the underlying facts must be
viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. See Graham v. State
Farm Mut. Ins. Co., 193 F.3d 1274, 1282 (11th Cir. 1999). The court must grant
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the motion only if no genuine issues of material fact exist and if the moving party
is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 56.
III.
DISCUSSION
Mr. Allain’s First Amended Complaint provided two instances potentially
showing that Wyeth’s promotion of Cordarone’s off-label use could have caused
Mr. Dreher’s physicians to prescribe him amiodarone for off-label use. (Doc. 58 at
13–14). This court determined, at the motion to dismiss stage, those examples were
barely sufficient to establish a plausible cause of action, but noted that while the
allegations were “somewhat vague and dubious,” the court’s role at the motion to
dismiss stage is simply to determine whether Mr. Allain’s claim is plausible. (Id. at
14). Now, at the summary judgment stage, the court analyzes Mr. Allain’s claim in
light of the total body of evidence properly before the court.
Mr. Allain provides two incidents that may have been relevant to show that
Wyeth’s promotion of the off-label use of Cordarone caused Mr. Dreher’s death.
First, Mr. Allain alleges that in 1989, 1992, and 1998, the FDA sent “violation
communications” to Wyeth regarding Wyeth’s dissemination of false and
misleading materials to physicians. (Doc. 34 at 19). While these alleged
communications could perhaps indicate Wyeth’s wrongful or fraudulent promotion
of Cordarone, Mr. Allain never submitted any actual evidence of these
communications—either as to their existence or as to how they establish that
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Wyeth’s conduct led to Mr. Dreher’s death.
Second, Mr. Allain alleged that Wyeth sponsored a Continuing Medical
Education conference in 1998 during which it distributed a “68-page official
looking, peer review-appearing magazine” that downplayed the side effects of
Cordarone and promoted the drug for off-label use. (Id. at 21). However, Mr.
Allain never provided any further evidence showing how this magazine or any
other conduct actually affected the decision-making regarding Mr. Dreher’s
amiodarone prescription. In contrast, Dr. Smith testified that he has never been
exposed to any marketing materials regarding Cordarone or amiodarone.
Since Mr. Allain’s First Amended Complaint, and despite this court’s
acknowledgment of its doubts regarding Mr. Allain’s ability to establish causation,
Mr. Allain has not provided any further evidence linking Wyeth’s promotion of
Cordarone’s off-label use to Mr. Dreher’s death. Of the relevant incidents that Mr.
Allain cited in his First Amended Complaint, the most recent alleged event
occurred in 1998, three years before Dr. Smith was licensed to practice medicine,
and 13 years before he prescribed amiodarone to Mr. Dreher.
Also, Dr. Smith testified that he has never met with any pharmaceutical or
marketing representatives regarding Cordarone, nor viewed any Cordarone
marketing materials. (Doc. 97-1 at 10). He also testified that he based his decision
to prescribe amiodarone on his own training and experience, along with the
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American College of Cardiology’s published guidelines. (Doc. 97-1 at 22).
Notably, Dr. Smith admitted that he decided to prescribe the medication despite his
awareness of the drug’s inherent risks and that such use would be off-label.
Hence, the record reflects that Dr. Smith used his own medical judgment to
determine that the potential benefits of amiodarone outweighed its risks. Because
Mr. Allain provided no evidence to contradict Wyeth’s evidence, nothing before
the court supports his claim that Wyeth’s marketing or promotional activity
regarding the off-label use of Cordarone directly or proximately caused Mr.
Dreher’s death.
Therefore, even if Wyeth did engage in promotional campaigns—even
improper or fraudulent campaigns—encouraging doctors to use Cordarone for offlabel purposes, Mr. Allain has not provided any evidence showing how those
alleged promotional campaigns and marketing influenced Mr. Dreher’s physicians’
decision to prescribe the drug to him. Without such evidence, Mr. Allain cannot
establish that Wyeth’s alleged improper promotion of Cordarone contributed to or
caused Mr. Dreher’s death. Wyeth is therefore entitled to judgment as a matter of
law.
IV.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons explained above, the court will GRANT Wyeth’s motion for
summary judgment, enter SUMMARY JUDGMENT in favor of Wyeth and
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against Mr. Allain’s only remaining claim in this case, and will DIRECT the Clerk
to close the case. Costs are taxed as paid.
DONE this the 27th day of February, 2018.
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KARON OWEN BOWDRE
CHIEF UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
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