In Re Digitek Products Liability Litigation

821 F. Supp. 2d 822, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 128580, 2011 WL 5282595
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. West Virginia
DecidedNovember 3, 2011
DocketMDL 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 821 F. Supp. 2d 822 (In Re Digitek Products Liability Litigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Digitek Products Liability Litigation, 821 F. Supp. 2d 822, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 128580, 2011 WL 5282595 (S.D.W. Va. 2011).

Opinion

*823 PRETRIAL ORDER # 87

(Memorandum Opinion and Order re Dispositive and Daubert Motions)

JOSEPH GOODWIN, Chief Judge.

Pending are the (1) Actavis defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment [Docket 523], their Motion to Exclude Plaintiffs’ General Liability Experts [Docket 525], their Motion to Exclude Unreliable Hearsay [Docket 527], their Motion to Strike the Affidavit of Lynne Farrell [Docket 572], their Motion to Strike Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 620, which is the declaration of David M. Bliesner, Ph.D. [Docket 579], and the Mylan defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment and to Exclude Expert Testimony [Docket 528], all of which are filed in *824 2:08-md-1968; (2) the defendants’ Motions for Summary Judgment and to Strike Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 621, which is the declaration of Reynolds Delgado III, M.D., both of which are filed in the Vega case [Docket 55 and 68 in 2:09-cv-00768], and (3) the defendants’ Motions to Exclude the Decedent’s Postmortem Blood Digoxin Concentration and the Expert Testimony of Richard Mason, M.D., and Keith Gibson, and for Summary Judgment [Docket 120], their Motion to Strike the Affidavit of Lynne Farrell [Docket 144], and their additional request to Strike Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 620, the declaration of Dr. Bliesner [Docket 145], all of which are filed in the McComack action, 2:09-cv-00671.

I do not reach the defendants’ MDL motions for summary judgment [Docket 523 and 528] or their motion to exclude plaintiffs’ general liability experts [Docket 525]. I GRANT the other motions.

I.

This case is about a pharmaceutical manufacturing plant that experienced quality control problems. A few of the problems at the plant over a two-decade period had to do with a brand of digoxin called Digitek®. A recall of that drug occurred in 2008. It was trumpeted as a public-safety success story by the Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”).

The trouble started with a plant worker who spotted a couple of double-thick Digitek® pills. A massive visual search of the entire batch ensued by those experienced in making the drug. Eighteen more tablets were found. The total of 20 tablets never made it to market of course. The recall was an understandable precaution by the FDA. The 20 pills represented about 0.0004 percent of the entire batch that the workers visually inspected.

Mass litigation followed. Thousands of plaintiffs alleged that double-thick tablets hit the market and injured consumers. Not one of them produced a double-thick tablet. The cases have essentially now settled or have been dismissed but two individual actions remain. There has been no evidence that either of the decedents in those two cases, or their loved ones, ever saw a double-thick Digitek®. That is true as well of their pharmacists, nurses, and doctors. Some of the plaintiffs still have many untested pills in their possession. The ones they have had tested were fine.

The decedents had serious medical problems of their own. They were also taking other drugs known to interact with digoxin and make its blood levels spike. Digoxin itself is tricky to manage even without other drugs in the mix. Taking too little has no effect. Taking too much can kill you. There is a narrow therapeutic range that provides relief. Keeping the drug in the helpful range proves tough at times and people die as a result.

The defendants say the plaintiffs have failed to prove, as a matter of law, that a defective product caused their family members to die. The plaintiffs’ theory comes down to an attempt to use speculation about a defect to prove causation and speculation about causation to prove a defect. I GRANT summary judgment.

II.

A. Background Common to All Cases in the MDL 1

Digitek® is a tablet brand name that includes an active pharmaceutical ingredient (“a.p.i.”) called digoxin. Digoxin is a plant-based pharmaceutical. It has been used for hundreds of years. Doctors often *825 prescribe it to treat two diseases, (1) an arrhythmia called atrial fibrillation, and (2) congestive heart failure. The rub is that it has a narrow therapeutic window. That means there is a fine line between therapy and toxicity. There are a variety of reasons why a person taking digoxin might have elevated digoxin blood levels or digoxin toxicity symptoms. One is a too-high dose of digoxin. Other reasons are (1) drug interactions, (2) reduced elimination, and (3) increased sensitivity. So even at the right dosage digoxin has serious risks.

Digitek® was first sold in the early 1990s by Amide Pharmaceuticals. Amide produced Digitek® until 2005. Actavis Totowa (“Actavis”) acquired Amide at that time and took over production. Actavis continued production until April 2008. All Digitek® manufactured by Amide and Actavis after 1999 was sold to Mylan. Mylan either distributed it or sold it to its subsidiary, UDL Labs, for distribution.

In the spring of 2008, the FDA inspected Actavis in advance of the company transferring certain functions from one facility (Little Falls, NJ) to another (River-view, NJ). The agency looked at a number of production aspects. One focus was an Actavis report about a manufacturing defect investigation it performed on Digitek® batch 70924A. Batch 70924A was made between November 17 and 20, 2007. The investigation led to the recall of all Digitek® lots produced.

On November 30, 2007, batch 70924A was being packaged. A line operator found two thick tablets. The operators promptly shut down the line. They then visually inspected several buckets of tablets. They found one additional oversized tablet. They resumed packaging at that point. They later found two more double-thick tablets. Actavis’s Quality Assurance and Manufacturing departments met. They placed the batch on hold pending a more thorough investigation.

Between January 15 and 18, 2008, Actavis unpackaged batch 70924A. Employees visually inspected the tablets. Fifteen more double-thick tablets were found, resulting in a total of 20. The entire batch was just under 4.8 million tablets. On January 22, 2008, Actavis conducted an additional, tightened sampling inspection. It randomly tested 40 tablets from each of 33 full buckets and 10 from a partial 34th bucket. No further double-thick tablets were found. The batch was repackaged and released for distribution on January 28, 2008. It was sent to Mylan a short time later.

When the FDA learned about the difficulty with batch 70924A, it suggested a recall. It was first said that only batch 70924A should be taken back. On April 24, 2008, however, Actavis and the FDA agreed to recall all Digitek® batches then on the market and within expiration dates. That amounted to 171 batches, 2 or 680 million tablets manufactured since early 2006.

An FDA-approved, April 25, 2008, Digitek® recall press release said that “[t]he voluntary all lot recall is due to the possibility that tablets with double the appropriate thickness may have been commercially released.” Pharmacy customers received the same notice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
821 F. Supp. 2d 822, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 128580, 2011 WL 5282595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-digitek-products-liability-litigation-wvsd-2011.