Anaya-Burgos v. Lasalvia-Prisco

607 F.3d 269, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 11706, 2010 WL 2293242
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 9, 2010
Docket09-1079
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 607 F.3d 269 (Anaya-Burgos v. Lasalvia-Prisco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anaya-Burgos v. Lasalvia-Prisco, 607 F.3d 269, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 11706, 2010 WL 2293242 (1st Cir. 2010).

Opinion

TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-appellant Albert Anaya-Burgos (“Anaya”) filed a complaint against Dr. Eduardo Lasalvia-Prisco (“Dr.Lasalvia”) and other Defendants-appellees alleging that the death of his wife, Juana Ramos (“Ramos”), occurred as a result of Defendants’ negligent acts and omissions by inducing her to purchase their supposed “cancer vaccine” treatment and forego conventional cancer treatments. The case was tried to a jury, which found for Plaintiff, awarding $500,000 in compensatory damages. At Defendants’ motion, the court granted them judgment as a matter of law, setting aside the jury verdict and dismissing the complaint. For the reasons below, we overturn the grant of judgment as a matter of law and reinstate the jury verdict for Plaintiff.

I. Facts and Procedural History 1

A. Cancer Diagnosis Treatment at Pharmablood

In April 2003, Plaintiffs wife, Ramos, was diagnosed with breast cancer. She consulted a surgeon who recommended a radical mastectomy. She sought a second opinion from another surgeon in early May of 2003, who also recommended a mastectomy. Subsequently, Ramos was referred to an oncologist, Dr. Rizek, who examined her for the first time on May 23, 2003. While Ramos had initially been diagnosed with a form of cancer called “invasive duct carcinoma,” Dr. Rizek’s diagnosis was of “inflammatory breast cancer,” a type of cancer that tends to progress much faster than Ramos’s earlier diagnosis. There was expert testimony at trial to the effect that someone diagnosed with inflammatory breast cancer could die within six to twelve *271 months without adequate treatment. Dr. Rizek recommended to Ramos that she begin chemotherapy on June 6, 2003. 2 Although Ramos never began the chemotherapy treatments, Anaya testified that Ramos agreed to proceed with chemotherapy. According to Anaya, Ramos did not begin chemotherapy on the scheduled date because she was never notified that she had been approved for coverage by her insurance carrier. 3

According to Anaya, Ramos had always been interested in a “natural” lifestyle, and regularly visited individuals who recommended various vitamin and other natural substances to her. She continued those visits after she was diagnosed with cancer. 4

At some point after visiting Dr. Rizek but before July 10, 2003, Ramos and Ana-ya became aware of Dr. Lasalvia’s company, Pharmablood, through a radio program. Anaya testified that he and Ramos heard a radio program that announced that Dr. Lasalvia, an Uruguayan doctor, had developed a new “cancer vaccine” that was available at the San Juan Bautista Hospital. 5

A Pharmablood commercial that aired in October 2003 was introduced at trial and touted Pharmablood as a “novel alternative to cancer patients in Puerto Rico.” A “Dr. Sylvia Cucci” explained in the commercial that the procedure was “comfortable” and “effective” and that it was an “FDA approved protocol.” A “Dr. Rubén Otero” was also heard in the commercial explaining that “terminal patients that were told that perhaps their life expectancy was six months or less ... were offered the Pharmablood immunotherapy and ... in 42% of the population treated, it was noticed there was an increase, not only in life expectancy, but also a great improvement in the quality of life itself.”

On July 10, 2003, Anaya and Ramos visited Pharmablood at the San Juan Bautista Hospital and met Dr. Lasalvia as well as other Pharmablood personnel. According to Anaya, Dr. Lasalvia examined Ramos and told her that his treatment could “cure” her. Anaya testified that after hearing this, Ramos made the decision to go with the Pharmablood treatment and forego other treatments. Anaya also explained that Pharmablood personnel told him and Ramos that their medical plan would eventually cover the treatments, but that they first had to make payments up front. 6 All told, Anaya and Ramos paid around $10,000 out-of-pocket for the Pharmablood treatments.

*272 At Pharmablood, Ramos signed an informed consent form which stated that the Pharmablood cancer vaccine’s risks were “minimal inflammation or pain in the areas of the blood extraction” and that it was reasonable to expect up to a one-hundred percent improvement in the survival rate of forty percent in the patients who were administered the vaccine treatment. Ramos began treatments with Pharmablood shortly after signing the consent form.

On June 29, 2004, after almost one year of regular treatments with Pharmablood, Ramos was hospitalized at the Auxilio Mutuo Cancer Center since she was having difficulty breathing. Expert testimony at trial revealed that at this point in time her cancer had progressed so far that all Ramos could receive was palliative chemotherapy, to extend her life but not to attempt to cure her. The chemotherapy failed to work; Ramos continued to deteriorate, and eventually died on July 30, 2004, “with her lungs full of tumors.”

B. Expert Testimony at Trial

1. Breach of the Standard of Care

At trial, Anaya’s expert, Dr. Cabanillas, testified that Dr. Lasalvia’s medical license had been revoked in Hawaii. Dr. Cabanillas testified that the Pharmablood treatments were “illegal,” 7 that they were never approved by the Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”), and that this was not mentioned in any of the Pharmablood literature he reviewed. 8 Dr. Cabanillas also explained that the medical papers Dr. Lasalvia had written about the Pharmablood treatment were published in what were, in his professional opinion, very poor journals. Dr. Cabanillas went on to criticize the studies published in these papers, stating that the design of the studies was very poor and that there were basic scientific reliability tests that were not performed. He stated: “I don’t know how the papers were published, not even in journals of low quality. I wouldn’t have accepted a paper like that.”

With regard to the forty percent or greater improvement mentioned in both the advertisement watched by the jury and the informed consent form signed by Ramos, Dr. Cabanillas testified that “there was, basically, no statistical analysis of the results [in Dr. Lasalvia’s studies] to be able to convince anyone that there’s a 40 percent improvement.”

Dr. Cabanillas also testified regarding Ramos’s medical records from the Pharmablood Cancer Center. He testified that it appeared that Dr. Lasalvia did not do a physical examination of Ramos because there were no notes of such an examination in the records, something which Dr. Cabanillas testified was surprising because he would have expected it of a doctor. Dr. Cabanillas also testified that as part of her treatment, Dr. Lasalvia gave Ramos two chemotherapy drugs. However, according to Dr.

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607 F.3d 269, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 11706, 2010 WL 2293242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anaya-burgos-v-lasalvia-prisco-ca1-2010.