Joseph R. Graham v. American Cyanamid Company, Roy Lee Lundy v. American Cyanamid Company

350 F.3d 496, 62 Fed. R. Serv. 1507, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 24279, 2003 WL 22849539
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 3, 2003
Docket01-4175, 01-4176
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 350 F.3d 496 (Joseph R. Graham v. American Cyanamid Company, Roy Lee Lundy v. American Cyanamid Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph R. Graham v. American Cyanamid Company, Roy Lee Lundy v. American Cyanamid Company, 350 F.3d 496, 62 Fed. R. Serv. 1507, 2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 24279, 2003 WL 22849539 (6th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

SUTTON, Circuit Judge.

Joseph Graham and Roy Lee Lundy, along with several members of their families, challenge the district court’s order granting summary judgment to American Cyanamid Company on a series of fraud and product liability claims. American Cyanamid manufactures Orimune, which is an oral polio vaccine. Plaintiffs allege that the use of Orimune in one instance and the exposure to it in another caused a family member to contract polio.

Seeking compensation for these injuries, both sets of plaintiffs filed fraud claims against American Cyanamid, asserting that the company publicly represented Ori-mune as licensed, manufactured, tested and released in accordance with FDA regulations, when in fact the Orimune vaccines at issue (according to plaintiffs) did *447 not comply with FDA standards. The Graham plaintiffs separately brought strict liability and negligent failure-to-warn claims against American Cyanamid. Both sets of plaintiffs also filed derivative claims for loss of consortium and punitive damages. The district court granted American Cyanamid’s motion for summary judgment on all claims. We AFFIRM.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Polio and the Orimune Vaccine.

Poliomyelitis (or polio) is a disease of the central nervous system that causes illness, paralysis and in some instances death. It affected thousands of individuals in this country during the first half of the twentieth century. See Dorothy M. Horstmann, Poliovirus (Poliomyelitis), in 2 Textbook of Pediatric Infectious Diseases 1186, 1189-90 (Ralph D. Feigin & James D. Cherry, eds., 1981). At its height between 1951 and 1955, polio led to 21,000 cases of paralysis per year in the United States. See id.

That this scourge did not continue through the second half of the twentieth century is a credit to the work of several scientists. In 1955, Dr. Jonas Salk developed the first widely successful vaccine against polio. Derived from a dead polio virus, the Salk vaccine is known as an inactivated polio vaccine (“IPV”) and was licensed for production and use in the United States in 1955. See In re Sabin Oral Polio Vaccine Prods. Liab. Litig., 743 F.Supp. 410, 412 (D.Md.1990) (“Sabin I”). The vaccine decreased the incidence of polio but did not eradicate it. Between 1958 and 1961, for example, nearly 19,000 cases of the disease were still reported in the United States. Id. Thirteen thousand people became paralyzed by the disease, and more than 1,000 people died from it during this period. Id.

At the same time that Dr. Salk was developing his vaccine, Dr. Albert Sabin began working on an oral polio vaccine (“OPV”) made from attenuated strains of the polio virus. The Sabin OPV, unlike the Salk IPV, is produced from a live polio virus that has been weakened but not killed. “ ‘Like all vaccines cultivated from live viruses,’ ” such as those used for smallpox and yellow fever, “ ‘OPV creates immunity by inducing a mild infection in the recipient.’ ” United States v. St. Louis Unin, 336 F.3d 294, 295 (4th Cir.2003) (quoting Stuart v. Am. Cyanamid Co., 158 F.3d 622, 625 (2d Cir.1998)).

OPV has several advantages over IPV. OPV is less expensive and requires only a single dosage, while IPV requires three inoculations and a follow-up booster shot. OPV is administered orally, commonly on a sugar cube, while IPV must be injected by a hypodermic needle. The interaction of the live virus in OPV with the immune system confers lifetime immunity, while IPV requires periodic re-administration. See generally Sabin I, 743 F.Supp. at 412. And OPV creates “herd immunity,” because an individual who has not received the vaccine can obtain immunity by contact with someone who has been vaccinated. Id. Individuals who have been immunized with IPV, by contrast, may still serve as carriers of the wild polio virus and may pass it on to others even though they themselves have been immunized. Id.

OPV, however, also has several inherent risks in view of the way it — and all vaccines developed from live viruses — work. The live but weakened viruses of OPV grow in the intestinal tract of the vaccinated individual. They eventually trigger the production of antibodies, which in turn make the individual immune to the disease after thirty days. On rare occasions, however, the virus reproduced in the vaeci-nee’s intestinal tract reverts to the virulent *448 form. When this occurs, vaccinated individuals or persons coming in close contact with them during the thirty-day period may contract polio. Unvaccinated adults may take two precautions to avoid the risk of contracting polio: (1) alternative vaccination with IPV prior to contact with the vaccinee; or (2) avoidance of contact with the vaccinee for one month, during which time live polio viruses are being shed from the intestinal tract of the vaccinee.

In 1958 and 1959, epidemiologists conducted a series of field trials on the use of OPV. See Sabin I, 743 F.Supp. at 412-13. On the basis of these tests, the Surgeon General in 1960 determined that OPV was suitable for use in the United States, and it soon became the most widely used of the polio vaccines. Id.

The Federal Government granted licenses to three manufacturers to make live polio vaccines from the strains developed by Dr. Sabin. American Cyanamid purchased strain material that Sabin had developed, and its Lederle Laboratories division received one of the three authorized licenses from the Division of Biologic Standards (“DBS”) of the National Institutes of Health to manufacture and sell OPV.

The polio virus has three types — types I, II and III — and different vaccines address each of them. Some vaccines address just one type of polio, and one vaccine is designed to prevent all three types of polio. American Cyanamid first produced “monovalent” vaccines, which contain just one of the three types of polio virus vaccine. In 1963, however, the Federal Government granted American Cyanamid a license to make and distribute a “trivalent” vaccine, which contains all three types of polio virus vaccine. Since then, American Cyan-amid has distributed a trivalent OPV product under the name Orimune.

The production of Orimune proceeds in several stages. Manufacturers initially obtain wild polio virus and attenuate its neu-rovirulent properties by passing it through animal hosts. What results is a “strain,” which in small portions is then injected into monkey kidney cell cultures. This process, known as a “tissue culture passage,” leads to the growth of more virus and the creation of vaccine “seeds.” Small portions of this seed material are frozen periodically and again injected into monkey kidney cell cultures to create “pools” of vaccine for each of the three types of polio manufactured. Each monopool contains a single type of vaccine and is given a designation indicating the type of vaccine and the number of the pool (e.g., 3-442 is a type III vaccine from monopool 442).

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