Amiodarone Cases

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 3, 2022
DocketA161023
StatusPublished

This text of Amiodarone Cases (Amiodarone Cases) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amiodarone Cases, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 11/3/22 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

AMIODARONE CASES. A161023, A161762

(Alameda County Super. Ct. No. JCCP004956)

In the coordinated cases underlying these consolidated appeals, plaintiffs allege that they suffered serious side effects as a result of taking the prescription drug amiodarone, which their physicians prescribed for them “off-label”—that is, for uses not approved by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Plaintiffs sued the companies that promoted, distributed, and sold amiodarone, alleging that the companies failed to warn them about the dangers of the drug and promoted the drug aggressively and unlawfully for unapproved uses. The trial court sustained defendants’ demurrers without leave to amend. Plaintiffs appeal, making two arguments: (1) as to all defendants, that it was error to dismiss as preempted their claims that defendants failed to warn them about the dangers of amiodarone because defendants did not ensure that they received the content of the FDA-required Medication Guide for the drug; and (2) as to one defendant, Wyeth Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Wyeth), that it was error to dismiss common law fraud claims and statutory claims arising from Wyeth’s

1 allegedly unlawful promotion of the drug. We reject the arguments and we affirm. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The General Setting The drug amiodarone was developed in Belgium in the 1960’s for the treatment of angina, and about that time was released for marketing in most countries other than the United States. Amiodarone is associated with serious side effects, including pulmonary fibrosis, blindness, thyroid cancer, and death. In the 1970’s, U.S. physicians began obtaining amiodarone from other countries for use in patients with life-threatening ventricular fibrillation or ventricular tachycardia who did not respond to other drugs. The FDA allowed this activity, but did not approve or test the drug. In 1985, foreign manufacturers of the drug threatened to cut off the supply to U.S. patients unless the FDA allowed the drug to be sold in the United States, and that year the FDA approved Wyeth’s formulation of amiodarone, called Cordarone, as a drug of last resort for patients suffering from documented recurring life-threatening ventricular fibrillation and ventricular tachycardia when those conditions would not respond to other drugs and therapies. The FDA approval of amiodarone was, and remains, a “special needs” approval, issued without randomized clinical trials of the drug. In December 1989, the FDA sent a letter to Wyeth’s chairman describing Wyeth’s current promotional activities and characterizing them as “false and misleading.” Among other things, the letter stated that by claiming “ ‘an early decision for Cordarone can improve the odds,’ ” Wyeth was promoting an unapproved use of the drug, failing to “recognize the drug’s unique role as a drug of last resort.” The letter concluded that Wyeth was

2 “promot[ing] Cordarone, an extraordinarily hazardous drug, in a manner we consider clearly misrepresentative of its known hazards.” In December 1990, Senator Ted Kennedy issued a press release claiming that Wyeth’s promotional campaign for Cordarone was intended “to promote the drug’s use for a large population of patients that could generate higher revenues, [and] to push a product beyond the limits of its scientific data, even if the company is putting patients at risk.” In February 1992, the FDA sent a letter to a Wyeth assistant vice present for regulatory affairs objecting that several promotional labeling pieces for Cordarone “present[ed] an unbalanced view of Cordarone’s benefits as opposed to its risks,” and explaining its concerns about specific statements in the labeling. Various other manufacturers began developing generic amiodarone, which has been available since 1998. Trial Court Proceedings Several hundred individuals filed lawsuits in California superior courts alleging that they suffered unnecessary and serious side effects when they took amiodarone, as prescribed by their doctors, for off-label use to treat atrial fibrillation, a more common—and less serious—condition than ventricular fibrillation.1 The FDA never approved amiodarone for the treatment of atrial fibrillation, even on a special-needs basis.2

1Some plaintiffs allege that their spouses or decedents used amiodarone. Like the parties, we use the term “plaintiffs” to refer to the patients who used amiodarone. 2A physician may legally prescribe a drug for a purpose other than that for which it has been approved by the FDA. (T.H. v. Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp. (2017) 4 Cal.5th 145, 158, fn. 1 (T.H.).)

3 The plaintiffs, who were prescribed amiodarone between 2005 and 2017, alleged that their physicians prescribed amiodarone for them as a result of aggressive campaigns by Wyeth and others that promoted the drug to physicians as a first-line treatment for atrial fibrillation and failed to disclose the dangers of the drug.3 Plaintiffs alleged these promotional efforts “would have materially affected” their physicians’ decisions to prescribe amiodarone for off-label use. Plaintiffs also alleged that they would not have taken amiodarone if they had received a “Medication Guide,” which contains warnings about the drug and which the FDA requires be provided to pharmacies for distribution to patients.4 In March 2018, the cases were coordinated for pretrial proceedings in the Alameda County Superior Court, where they were assigned to the Honorable Brad Seligman. In May 2018, plaintiffs filed a Master Administrative Complaint (MAC) that combined the allegations of the underlying lawsuits.5 The MAC asserted multiple causes of action against Wyeth, 10 manufacturers of generic amiodarone, and McKesson Corporation,

3 The record before us does not reveal when the underlying lawsuits were filed. Of the two individual plaintiffs named in the complaint, one allegedly started taking amiodarone in 2005 and began experiencing adverse effects from the drug in October 2015, after his doctor doubled the dose. The other plaintiff allegedly started taking amiodarone in December 2015 and began experiencing adverse effects in May 2016. 4 We provide background on Medication Guides in the “Discussion,” below. 5 Among the original plaintiffs named in the MAC were some from states other than California. In July 2020 this court affirmed the trial court’s dismissal of those plaintiffs’ claims for lack of personal jurisdiction in In re Amiodarone Cases (July 30, 2020, A157035, A158160, A159522) (nonpub. opn.).

4 which was alleged to be the primary distributor of amiodarone.6 We refer to these parties collectively as “defendants.” As relevant here, the MAC alleged claims against all defendants for fraud, violation of California’s unfair competition law (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 17200 et seq., UCL), and violation of California’s Consumers Legal Remedy Act (Civ. Code, § 1750 et seq. CLRA), arising from defendants’ allegedly misleading promotion of off-label uses of amiodarone. Plaintiffs also alleged claims for failure to warn against all defendants under theories of strict liability and negligence arising from defendants’ alleged failure to ensure that consumers were provided with FDA-required Medication Guides. In response to defendants’ demurrer to the Second Amended MAC, the trial court struck the Medication Guide claims against all defendants without leave to amend on the ground that the claims were preempted by federal law and lacked any independent basis in state law. The court gave plaintiffs leave to amend their off-label promotion claims, and plaintiffs did so in their Third Amended MAC. Defendants demurred to the Third Amended MAC.

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Amiodarone Cases, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amiodarone-cases-calctapp-2022.