In Re Pelvic mesh/gynecare Lit.

43 A.3d 1211, 426 N.J. Super. 167, 2012 WL 1957932, 2012 N.J. Super. LEXIS 88
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 1, 2012
DocketA-5685-10T4
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 43 A.3d 1211 (In Re Pelvic mesh/gynecare Lit.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Pelvic mesh/gynecare Lit., 43 A.3d 1211, 426 N.J. Super. 167, 2012 WL 1957932, 2012 N.J. Super. LEXIS 88 (N.J. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

43 A.3d 1211 (2012)
426 N.J. Super. 167

In re PELVIC MESH/GYNECARE LITIGATION.

No. A-5685-10T4

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued March 26, 2012.
Decided June 1, 2012.

*1212 Kelly S. Crawford, Morristown, argued the cause for appellants Ethicon, Inc. and Johnson & Johnson (Riker Danzig Scherer *1213 Hyland & Perretti, L.L.P., attorneys; Ms. Crawford, on the brief).

Adam M. Slater, Roseland, argued the cause for respondent Marci Levin (Mazie Slater Katz & Freeman, L.L.C., attorneys; Mr. Slater, of counsel and on the brief).

McCarter & English, L.L.P., attorneys for amicus curiae Product Liability Advisory Council, Inc. (David R. Kott, of counsel and on the brief; Gary R. Tulp, Newark, on the brief).

Gibbons P.C., attorneys for amicus curiae New Jersey Lawsuit Reform Alliance (Patrick C. Dunican, Jr., Newark, on the brief).

Before Judges A.A. RODRÍGUEZ, SABATINO and ASHRAFI.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

ASHRAFI, J.A.D.

Several hundred plaintiffs from many states have individually filed suit in New Jersey against defendants Johnson & Johnson and Ethicon, Inc., alleging they have suffered injuries caused by a line of defendants' medical products. The Supreme Court assigned the cases to the Law Division, Atlantic County, for joint case management. Subsequently, we granted defendants leave to appeal from the Law Division's May 26, 2011 pretrial order barring defendants from consulting with or retaining as an expert witness any physician who has at any time treated one or more of the plaintiffs. We now reverse that order.

I.

Johnson & Johnson and Ethicon, Inc. designed, manufactured, marketed, and sold pelvic mesh medical devices[1] used primarily to treat pelvic organ prolapse and stress urinary incontinence. The devices contain synthetic polypropylene mesh and are surgically implanted as a "vaginal sling" to support weakened vaginal walls.

In a Public Health Notification issued on October 20, 2008, the Food and Drug Administration warned healthcare practitioners about "serious" complications associated with transvaginal placement of surgical mesh, including mesh erosion, vaginal scarring, infection, pain, urinary problems, dyspareunia (painful sexual relations), recurrence of prolapse and incontinence, and perforation of bowel, bladder, and blood vessel during insertion.[2]

A few months earlier, in February 2008, the first of the plaintiffs in these New Jersey cases had filed suit against defendants alleging injuries sustained as a result of the surgical implantation of a pelvic mesh/Gynecare product. In October 2008, defendants retained as a consulting expert Halina Zyczynski, a physician from the University of Pittsburgh who specializes in obstetrics, gynecology, and urogynecology. From October to December 2008, four more pelvic mesh/Gynecare cases were filed against defendants in the Law Division.

In March 2009, defendants retained as a consulting expert Elizabeth Kavaler, a urologist from New York City. For the next several months, defense counsel consulted with Dr. Kavaler about the approximately thirty cases that had been filed by that time. In October 2009, while reviewing *1214 medical records of a plaintiff who had filed suit two months earlier, defense counsel discovered that Dr. Kavaler had surgically implanted a Gynecare product in treatment of that plaintiff. Defense counsel immediately informed plaintiffs' liaison counsel and advised Dr. Kavaler not to disclose to the defense any information about the plaintiff she had treated. Defense counsel then discontinued discussions with Dr. Kavaler pending determination of her eligibility to serve as a defense expert. Later, the plaintiff who had been treated by Dr. Kavaler testified in deposition that she stopped seeing Dr. Kavaler in July 2008, that is, some eight months before defendants first engaged her services as an expert.

Defense counsel identified another prospective expert and scheduled an introductory meeting for January 2010. When defense counsel learned that the prospective expert was the treating surgeon for another plaintiff in the litigation, defendants abandoned their intent to retain the proposed expert.

In September 2010, while reviewing medical records of a plaintiff who had filed suit nine months earlier, defense counsel discovered a largely illegible handwritten progress note with a reference to a "Dr. Zcycysky." The plaintiff had not identified a doctor by that name in her preliminary disclosures of treating physicians. Plaintiffs' counsel confirmed that the reference in the progress note was to a single consultation that the plaintiff had with defendants' expert Halina Zyczynski. Defense counsel informed plaintiffs' counsel in October 2010 that defendants had retained Dr. Zyczynski as a consultant in 2008, advised Dr. Zyczynski that a patient with whom she had consulted was now a plaintiff in the litigation, and discontinued their discussions with Dr. Zyczynski.

At the time of the Supreme Court's September 13, 2010 order assigning the cases for joint case management, approximately seventy-eight pelvic mesh cases had been filed in New Jersey against defendants. The same attorneys represent the parties in many of the cases. The Supreme Court's order allows one judge in the State to become closely familiar with the cases and to coordinate discovery, motion practice, settlement discussions, and scheduling of initial representative trials.

In January 2011, defendants moved to establish a protocol similar to ones used in some federal litigation for consulting with and possibly retaining as defense experts physicians who had treated a plaintiff in the pelvic mesh litigation. Defendants proposed that a treating physician would have no communication with the defense about his or her own patient-plaintiff and would not be used as an expert witness in the patient-plaintiff's own case.[3]

*1215 In support of their motion for a protocol and order, defendants submitted a certification stating:

The pelvic floor repair and incontinence "sling" surgeries at issue in this litigation are performed by a relatively small group of surgeons in the United States, which is comprised of urogynecologists, urologists, gynecologists and obstetrician/gynecologists. While it is impossible to determine precisely how many surgeons use mesh products in general, or even the products at issue in this litigation, Ethicon estimates that the number of surgeons who use the Gynecare pelvic floor repair products (such as Gynemesh PS and Prolift) is between 1,000 and 2,000, and the number who use the Gynecare TVT family of products is between 1,500 and 3,000. Given that many surgeons use both types of products, these numbers likely overlap to a significant extent.

Defense counsel also represented that in ten of the eighteen pelvic mesh cases for which counsel had received medical records, the plaintiffs appeared "to have ceased their physician-patient relationships with the surgeons who implanted the devices at issue."

Plaintiffs' counsel opposed the motion and cross-moved for a protective order barring defendants from retaining or consulting with any physician who at any time had treated any of the plaintiffs in the pelvic mesh litigation.

The trial court ordered plaintiffs to prepare a list of their treating gynecologists, urologists, and urogynecologists.

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43 A.3d 1211, 426 N.J. Super. 167, 2012 WL 1957932, 2012 N.J. Super. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pelvic-meshgynecare-lit-njsuperctappdiv-2012.