In Re Amarin Corp. PLC Securities Litigation

689 F. App'x 124
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 2017
Docket16-2640
StatusUnpublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 689 F. App'x 124 (In Re Amarin Corp. PLC Securities Litigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Amarin Corp. PLC Securities Litigation, 689 F. App'x 124 (3d Cir. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION *

RENDELL, Circuit Judge:

Appellant-Plaintiff James Reiss (the “Plaintiff’) appeals an Order of the District Court dismissing his putative securities fraud class action complaint (the “Second Consolidated and Amended Class Action Complaint” or “SAC”) against the Appellee-Defendant Amarin PLC., a bio-pharmaceutical corporation, and certain of its individual officers (the “Defendants”). The District Court held that the Plaintiff failed to state a claim because none of the eighty-seven statements made by the Defendants and recounted in the SAC were false or misleading. For the reasons that follow, we agree with the District Court’s reasoning and will affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

Amarin’s primary drug is Vascepa, an ultra-pure omega-3 fatty acid product designed to reduce triglycerides in the blood stream. Triglycerides (“TGs”) are a common form of fat molecule. During the Class Period (November 29, 2010 through October 16, 2013), the Defendants sought FDA approval of Vascepa for treatment of patients with elevated TGs who are already taking a statin drug like Lipitor (the “ANCHOR Indication”). The Defendants theorized that administering Vascepa in this regime would result in a statistically significant reduction of major adverse cardiac events like heart attacks. They have vigorously pursued ANCHOR because the potential treatment population is thirty-six million people. 1

To support its application for the ANCHOR Indication, Amarin proposed conducting a 12-week trial (the “ANCHOR Study”) to demonstrate the efficacy of the drug. Given its short duration, the ANCHOR Study could not measure cardiovascular outcomes directly as the clinical endpoint of the study. Such a measurement would require an expensive and time-consuming long-term outcomes study. Rather, Amarin proposed to rely on the reduction of TGs ás a “surrogate endpoint,” on the assumption that a significant reduction of TGs would lead to reduced major adverse cardiac events.

On July 14, 2008, senior Amarin officials met with the FDA to determine *126 whether the design of its ANCHOR Study was “adequate to provide the clinical efficacy data necessary to support the proposed [ANCHOR] indication[.]” SAC ¶ 114. The FDA responded, as documented in the official minutes of that meeting (the “2008 Minutes”)’ that it was “not aware” of any long-term outcomes trials demonstrating that the reduction of TGs in patients on statin therapy significantly reduces the risk of major adverse cardiac events. SAC ¶115. It then noted that three then-ongoing outcome studies, titled AIM-HIGH, ACCORD, and IMPROVE-IT, “while not designed to address this specific gap in knowledge, [would] provide important information on the incremental benefit of adding a second lipid-active drug to statin therapy.” JA.483; SAC ¶¶ 4; 116; Consequently, the FDA stated that “before [it] would entertain granting [Vascepa] an indication ,..Amarin would “at a minimum” have to submit data from the ANCHOR Study and “initiate an appropriately-designed cardiovascular outcomes study” that was “well under way” by the time the FDA began its review. JA.484; SAC ¶21. The Defendants did not share the 2008 Minutes with investors.

Amarin later entered a Special Protocol Assessment (“SPA”) Agreement with the FDA memorializing some of this feedback in July 2009 (the “2009 SPA”). An SPA Agreement binds the FDA as to design, methodological, and approval criteria for a given drug application, although the FDA may rescind an SPA if it identifies “a substantial scientific issue essential to determining the safety or effectiveness of [a] drug ... after the testing has begun.” 21 U.S.C § 355(b)(5)(C)(ii). In the 2009 SPA, the FDA agreed with the proposed “design” of the ANCHOR Study, including Amarin’s proposed “endpoints.” JA.508. But when asked whether statistically significant results from the ANCHOR Study would “provide an adequate basis for approval” of the indication, the FDA responded only that “[t]his is a review issue.” SAC ¶ 127. The Defendants did not share all of the FDA’s comments in connection with the 2009 SPA with investors.

In April 2011, Amarin announced that the results of the ANCHOR Study showed statistically significant reduction of TGs in the ANCHOR population. However, around this time, two of the three outcomes studies mentioned by the FDA in 2008 (ACCORD and AIM-HIGH) failed to achieve their endpoints. 2 On a conference call between Amarin and the FDA on April 14, 2011, the FDA told Amarin that an advisory committee “was likely before the indication could possibly be granted.” 3 SAC ¶ 247.

Four months later, the FDA and Amarin entered into a second SPA agreement (the “2011 SPA”) covering the design and endpoints of the long-term outcomes study mentioned as a “minimum” requirement in 2008 (the “REDUCE-IT Study”). The FDA agreed with Amarin’s design of the REDUCE-IT Study, but again declined to commit to approval criteria. See SAC ¶ 278 (noting that “approvability of the indication will be a review issue”).

By February 2013, the REDUCE-IT Study was substantially underway, so Amarin submitted a supplemental New Drug Application for ANCHOR. On October 16, 2013, however, the FDA convened *127 an advisory committee and voted to reject the ANCHOR application because it found that there was insufficient data to support the use of reducing TGs as a surrogate endpoint. The FDA, shortly thereafter, rescinded the 2009 SPA citing the results from ACCORD, AIM-HIGH, and a third study not mentioned in the 2008 Minutes, HPS2-THRIVE, as establishing a substantial scientific issue.

The Defendants appealed the FDA’s decision to rescind the 2009 SPA, but the appeal was denied. Reviewers, such as Drs. Rosebraugh and Jenkins, rejected Amarin’s arguments and made clear that the 2008 Minutes “indicate[d] the fragile nature of the evidence supporting TG’s hold onto surrogate status,” SAC 1Í134, and “that there were still concerns regarding [TG lowering],” SAC 11137. Dr. Ketchum, one of the individual defendants, acknowledged understanding as much from these minutes in post-Class Period correspondence. The appeal decisions emphasized, however, that at the time of the 2008 Minutes and 2009 SPA, the FDA believed the scientific data supported TG lowering and thus that the FDA was justified in entering the 2009 SPA. The decision to rescind, Dr. Jenkins added, “was based on the accumulation and totality of scientific data and information, including reevaluation and improved understanding of the relevant scientific knowledge, that have become available since the ANCHOR trial began....” JA.685.

B. Alleged Material Misrepresentations

Lead Plaintiff James Reiss then brought this securities fraud action, claiming violations of §§ 10(b) and 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

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689 F. App'x 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-amarin-corp-plc-securities-litigation-ca3-2017.