In re Lipitor (Atorvastatin Calcium) Marketing, Sales Practices & Products Liability Litigation

226 F. Supp. 3d 557, 2017 WL 83509, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 45826
CourtDistrict Court, D. South Carolina
DecidedJanuary 3, 2017
DocketMDL No. 2:14-mn-02502-RMG
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 226 F. Supp. 3d 557 (In re Lipitor (Atorvastatin Calcium) Marketing, Sales Practices & Products Liability Litigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Lipitor (Atorvastatin Calcium) Marketing, Sales Practices & Products Liability Litigation, 226 F. Supp. 3d 557, 2017 WL 83509, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 45826 (D.S.C. 2017).

Opinion

CASE MANAGEMENT ORDER NO. 99

This Order relates to the cases listed in Appendix 1

Richard Mark Gergel, United States District Court Judge

Before the Court is Defendant’s Omnibus Motion for Summary Judgment, (Dkt. No. 1564).1 For the reasons stated below, the motion is GRANTED IN PART.2

I, Background

A. Procedural History

On February 18, 2014, the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Ligation created this MDL, centralizing cases where female plaintiffs “allege that they have developed type 2 diabetes as a result of taking Pfizer’s cholesterol-lowering drug Lipitor.” (Dkt. No. 1 at 1). Plaintiffs allege that Defendant failed to warn physicians and consumers adequately of the risk of developing Type 2 diabetes from taking Lipitor, knew or should have known that taking Lipitor increased the risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, and negligently, recklessly, and carelessly marketed Lipitor without adequate instructions or warnings. (See id., Dkt. No. 160).

This Court held an initial status conference on March 27, 2014, and, after a second status conference on April 25, 2014, discovery commenced when the Court entered CMO 4, which among other things, set forth an initial discovery plan. (Dkt. No. 101 at 17-24). This plan provided for certain document production by Pfizer (including electronic discovery), interrogatories served by Plaintiffs on Pfizer, and depositions of Pfizer and its current and former employees. (Id.) On May 2, 2014, the Court entered CMO 5, which required Plaintiffs to serve Plaintiff Fact Sheets and certain mandatory disclosures on Pfizer. (Dkt. No. 110).

With discovery underway, the Court turned to the process for selecting a bellwether case for trial. Under Amended CMO 6, entered on May 22, 2014, the Plaintiffs’ Steering Committee (PSC) and Defendant each selected seven (7) cases for the Discovery Pool in June of 2014. (Dkt. No. 148 at 4). More in depth case specific discovery was taken in these 14 cases in the Fall of 2014, including the propounding of written discovery on Discovery Pool Plaintiffs, depositions of Discovery Pool Plaintiffs, immediate family members and healthcare providers, depositions Pfizer sales representatives, and completion of a Defendant Fact Sheet by Pfizer. (Id. at 5).

On January 30, 2015, the Court convened the parties to randomly select the first cases for bellwether trials from the Discovery Pool cases. (Dkt. No. 739). By stipulation, the parties narrowed the fourteen (14) Discovery Pool cases to four (4) [561]*561cases. The Court then randomly selected the first bellwether trials from these four (4) cases. The first case selected was Daniels v. Pfizer, Case No. 2:14-cv-01400, and the second case selected was Hempstead v. Pfizer, Case No. 2:14-cv-01879. Thereafter, the parties conducted additional case-specific discovery in these two cases. (See CMO 29, Dkt. No. 746; CMO 30, Dkt. No. 790).

From the beginning of this MDL, the parties have agreed that Plaintiffs must prove both general and specific causation as elements of their claims and have litigated this case as if expert testimony is needed to prove both. General causation is whether a substance is capable of causing a particular injury or condition (in this instance, whether Lipitor is capable of causing diabetes); specific causation is whether the substance caused the injury of the particular plaintiff at issue (in this instance, whether Lipitor caused Ms. Hempstead’s diabetes). E.g., Norris v. Baxter Healthcare Corp., 397 F.3d 878, 881 (10th Cir. 2005). “Plaintiff[s] must first demonstrate general causation because without general causation, there can be no specific causation.” Id. Here, if Lipitor is not capable of causing diabetes, it follows that it is not the cause of diabetes in particular plaintiffs.

The parties served common expert disclosures, including general causation experts, in March and April of 2015. (See CMO 29, Dkt. No. 746). Over Defendant’s objection, the Court allowed Plaintiffs to supplement these disclosures in May of 2015 “to ensure this Court has the best information possible when addressing Daubert motions.” (CMO 34, Dkt. No. 869 at 2). The parties then served specific causation expert disclosures in the two bellwether cases, in May and June of 2015. (See CMO 29, Dkt. No. 746; CMO 34, Dkt. No. 869). The Court allowed Plaintiffs to serve a rebuttal report by one of these case specific experts, again over Defendant’s objection. (See CMO 38, Dkt. No. 967).

After full discovery, Defendant filed motions to exclude Plaintiffs’ general causation expert testimony as well as Plaintiffs’ specific causation expert testimony in the two bellwether cases. (Dkt. Nos. 972,1004, 1006). The Court ultimately excluded Plaintiffs’ expert testimony on general causation with respect to dosages of less than 80 mg but allowed Dr. Singh’s expert testimony that Lipitor 80 mg was capable of causing diabetes. (See CMO 49, Dkt. No. 1197; CMO 68, Dkt. No. 1469). For the purposes of this motion only, the Court assumes the Plaintiffs at issue here ingested Lipitor 80 mg prior to being diagnosed with diabetes.3 Thus, the Plaintiffs here have admissible expert testimony on general causation.

As explained in more detail below, after extensive briefing and oral argument, the Court excluded the expert testimony of Dr. David Handshoe and Dr. Elizabeth Murphy, the two specific causation experts in the bellwether cases because their opinions were based on nothing more than an increased risk and temporal association. (CMO 55; Dkt. No. 1283; CMO 76, Dkt. No. 1517). However, Plaintiffs noted that in the SPARCL study, patients with certain characteristics and taking 80 mg of Lipitor had a relative risk ratio of developing diabetes greater than 2.0, meaning it [562]*562was more likely than not that these individuals would not have developed diabetes in the absence of Lipitor.4 Thus, it was possible that Plaintiffs with such characteristics and taking 80 mg of Lipitor might be able to proffer a specific causation expert opinion that would survive Daubert, even if the Court’s ruling in CMO 55 was correct, and the Court entered a scheduling order to identify and take to trial such a case. (See CMO 61, Dkt. No. 1323).

However, in a hearing on the matter on January 22, 2016, Plaintiffs’ Lead Counsel stated that there was no plaintiff in the MDL that met those criteria. (Dkt. No. 1347 at 5). Thus, the Court turned to where that left the MDL proceedings:

THE COURT: Let’s talk for just a minute about where that leaves us. ... let me ask this first from the plaintiffs: Is there any reason to believe that if we picked a 20- or 40- milligram case to try as a bellwether that you would have any class of cases or factual presentation or new theory that might survive specific causation, assuming the correctness of the Murphy order? Mr. Hahn?
MR. HAHN: The short answer is no, sir, Your Honor, we don’t. Given the Murphy order and the Court’s reading of the medicine, we are not going to be able to get a differential diagnosis that’s going to survive.
THE COURT: Well, it’s not a differential diagnosis, you’ve got to show specific causation more likely than not.

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Related

Straw v. State of North Carolina
E.D. North Carolina, 2020
Lipitor (Atorvastatin Calcium) Mktg. v. Pfizer, Inc.
892 F.3d 624 (Fourth Circuit, 2018)
Avendt v. Covidien Inc.
262 F. Supp. 3d 493 (E.D. Michigan, 2017)

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Bluebook (online)
226 F. Supp. 3d 557, 2017 WL 83509, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 45826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-lipitor-atorvastatin-calcium-marketing-sales-practices-products-scd-2017.