FACT SHEET
TORT LITIGATION AGAINST PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES INVOLVING
Hundreds of cases have been brought in the last several years against
pharmaceutical companies arising from deaths and injuries attributed to drugs
used to treat psychiatric disorders. These cases have revealed much that is not
commonly known about these drugs, and have resulted in a number of cases
which develop the law regarding the application of Daubert v. Merrel -Dow, 509
U.S. 579 (1993) to the testimony of psychiatric experts. Because so many of our
clients take psychiatric drugs, this Fact Sheet reviews what is currently known
about some of the most commonly used medications, including the recent
publication of expert consensus recommendations which contain warnings and
cautions about the medical hazards associated with use of these drugs. The
Fact Sheet also summarizes the status of pending litigation involving psychiatric
drugs, and discusses how the law in these cases may be applicable to the work
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requires that pharmaceutical
companies provide label ing for drugs including 1) contraindications (e.g. people
taking Mel aril should not be prescribed Haldol, or people with a history of
diabetes should not be prescribed Zyprexa); 2) warnings (e.g. Clozaril is
associated with aplastic anemia, which can be fatal); 3) precautions (e.g. people
who are suicidal and who are prescribed SSRIs should be closely monitored for
the first month); and 4) adverse reactions, which are divided into several
categories, including common, infrequent and rare (e.g. stroke in elderly patients
withdementia who are taking Risperdal). The most urgent warnings are those
known as “black box” warnings, in which drug companies are required to (or
voluntarily) post warnings in bold black print in a bold black box. These warnings
appear in the Physician’s Desk Reference and in the package inserts for the
drugs, which doctors are presumed to read (see below).
One aspect of drug regulation that many people do not know is that
psychotropic drugs have different names and different warning labels in different
countries. Thus, pharmaceutical companies can and do publish more stringent
warnings in Europe or Canada than in the United States, and it is not uncommon
for the companies to pul a drug off the market earlier in Europe or Canada than
in the United States. In many cases chal enging the failure to warn, plaintiffs’
lawyers have introduced evidence of more strongly worded warnings on labels in
other countries, to mixed effect (see below). Clozaril (clozapine) Developed by Sandoz (which became Novartis) and
approved by the FDA in 1989. A new formulation of Clozaril was approved in
1997. From the beginning, Clozaril was known to be associated with fatal cases
of aplastic anemia, and anyone on Clozaril must have his or her blood drawn
every week for the first six months to check white blood cel counts. In 2001, an
article by an FDA researcher in The American Journal of Medicine warned of a
causal relationship between clozapine and hyperglycemia and diabetes. A
majority (62%) of adverse events relating to hyperglycemia and diabetes occur
within the first month of taking the drug, and doctors are warned that
unexplained fever, fatigue and malaise in patients taking Clozaril should be
More recently, Clozaril has been strongly associated with possibly fatal heart
problems from myocarditis (inflammation of the heart lining). In 2002, Novartis
added warnings about myocarditis to the black box warnings after receiving 82
reports, some of which included fatalities. A consensus conference of
psychiatric and medical experts convened to develop recommendations for the
physical health monitoring of patients with schizophrenia treated in outpatient
settings made explicit recommendations that patients taking Clozaril be
specifical y monitored for myocarditis. [1] I could not find any litigation against
Clozaril based on myocarditis or cardiomyopathy. One case was found based on
failure to warn against abrupt discontinuation, Presto v. Sandoz, 226 Ga. App.
547 (1997). The verdict was for the defendant on the basis of learned
Desyrel (trazodone): Manufactured by Bristol Myers Squibb, and
introduced in 1982. Desyrel can cause priapism, an extremely painful,
involuntary, and long lasting erection that can result in permanent medical
damage. Juries tend to be very sympathetic to painful medical side effects[2] of
psychiatric drugs, see Hooper v. Capobianco and Thrifty Payless d/b/a Rite-Aid,
No. 99 AS 01792 (Superior Court, Sacramento County September 10, 2001)
(available on LEXIS under Verdicts Directory)(jury verdict of $3,424,017 for
plaintiff, with two mil ion dol ars for pain and suffering reduced by court to total
damages of $1,674,017) and McDonald v. Thrift Drug, Case No. 1907 (Superior
Court, Pennsylvania, Sept. 21, 2000) )(available on LEXIS under Verdicts
Directory)(damages of $10,500,000 awarded by jury in priapism case involving
Trazodone lowered to $1,500,000 based on pre-trial agreement). The drug
Serzone is “the chemical and pharmacologic analog of trazodone,” and was
recently withdrawn from the market by Bristol-Myers Squibb after reports of liver
Effexor (venlafaxine) Made by Wyeth Labs. On October 15, 2004, the FDA
ordered Wyeth and other manufacturers of SSRI antidepressants to add a black
box warning to Effexor’s labels warning physicians about prescribing this drug for
children or adolescents. The proposed warning included notification that the
average risk of suicidal thinking or behavior associated with taking Effexor was
twice the risk associated with taking a placebo. The FDA order included
proposed language and invited pharmaceutical companies to comment on the
proposed language. Apparently some (but not al ) pharmaceutical companies
have responded with comments, but as of Jan. 1, 2005, no drug company has
complied with the FDA’s order. Effexor is banned in the United Kingdom for use
with children because of concerns about increased suicidality. In addition,
Effexor cannot be prescribed to anyone in the UK except by specialists because
of concerns about association with irregular heartbeat and fatalities from
arrhythmia. Its discontinuation effects or withdrawal difficulties are reputed to be
even harsher than those of Paxil. No published class litigation is currently
Geodon (Ziprasidone) First introduced in 2001 by Pfizer. Associated with sudden
death from QT (heartbeat) prolongation. Pfizer has warned that this drug should
not be taken by people with histories of cardiac arrhythmia, or who are taking
quinidine or droperidol. A consensus conference of psychiatric and other
medical experts convened to develop recommendations for the physical health
monitoring of patients with schizophrenia treated in outpatient settings made
explicit recommendations for cardiac monitoring of persons taking Geodon. [3]
Despite the seriousness of this side effect, no published cases were found on
Mel aril (thioridazine) Manufactured by Sandoz (now Novartis) and approved by
the FDA in 1959. In 2000, the FDA required Novartis to add a black box warning
that it is associated with the risk of sudden death, due in part to its association
with QT prolongation (irregular heartbeat).
The only use for which it is approved by the FDA is “the management of
schizophrenic patients who fail to respond adequately to treatment with other
antipsychotic drugs.”Any other prescription of Mel aril is an off-label use. The
FDA has also warned that the fol owing drugs should never be used in
association with Mel aril: Prozac, Luvox, Paxil, Inderal, Haldol and Chlor-
Trimeton. This is because these drugs inhibit one of a group of liver enzymes
that metabolize thioridazine, and thus lead to build-up of the drug associated
with a greater risk of heart disturbance. A consensus conference of psychiatric
and other medical experts convened to develop recommendations for the
physical health monitoring of patients with schizophrenia treated in outpatient
settings made specific recommendations for cardiac monitoring of persons
taking Mel aril. [4]Despite the seriousness of this side effect, no published cases
were found on LEXIS concerning this drug. Public Citizen has warned people not
to take this drug because of its risk of sudden death, see www.
Citizen.org./eletter/articles/mel aril.htm.
The drug Serentil (mesoridazine) is chemical y very similar to Mel aril and carries
Neurontin (gabapentin)Manufactured by Parke-Davis, a subsidiary of Warner-
Lambert (bought by Pfizer in 2000). Although it is only approved by the FDA as a
supplementary treatment for partial seizure after maximum tolerated doses of
older drugs are used, Parke-Davis promoted its off-label use for many other
conditions, including bipolar disorder, for years. Neurontin garnered $2.9 bil ion
dol ars in sales in 2003. Pfizer recently pled guilty to medical fraud involving this
off-label use (among others), since Neurontin actual y works less wel than a
placebo in treating bipolar disorder. The fraud was disclosed by a whistle-blower,
David Franklin, who wil receive over 26 mil ion dol ars under the False Claims
Act. There are many pending cases against Pfizer over Neurontin, but they al
involve fraud in marketing, rather than al eging that the drug actual y caused any
harm. The case law of interest arising out of the Neurontin litigation is about the
right of public access to discovery documents from cases against pharmaceutical
companies. A recent case permitted public access to al non-confidential
discovery documents in the case, holding that “parties operating under a blanket
protective order cannot rely on an unreasonable expectation that such an order
wil never be altered,” United States ex rel David Franklin v. Parke-Davis, 210
Paxil: (paroxetine)(known as Seroxat in the United Kingdom) Paxil is
manufactured by GlaxoSmithKline. It was original y approved for depression in
1992, and shortly thereafter for panic disorder and obsessive-compulsive
disorder. In 1999, Paxil was approved for the treatment of “social anxiety
disorder.” In 2001, the FDA approved Paxil for “generalized anxiety disorder”and
post-traumatic stress disorder. The same year, a jury found that Paxil had
caused a man to go on a murderous rampage, kil ing his wife, daughter, and
granddaughter before taking his own life, and awarded over six mil ion dol ars in
damages, Tobin v. SmithKlineBeecham, 164 F.Supp.2d 1278 (D.Wyo. 2001), In
2003, it was approved by the FDA for the treatment of premenstrual dysphoric
disorder. Annual y, GlaxoSmithKline nets 2.1 bil ion dol ars from Paxil. On
October 15, 2004, the FDA required Pfizer to add a black box warning to Paxil
indicating that it might cause some minors to become suicidal, and that studies
had shown that this suicidality occurred for people taking Paxil at a rate twice as
high as for people taking a placebo. Pfizer has not added this warning as of
Paxil, as wel as Prozac, is more often linked in litigation to injurious and even
homicidal behavior against others than other SSRIs such as Zoloft, which are
more frequently linked to suicidal behavior. The charge that Paxil causes violent
behavior is also being litigated in the murder case of juvenile Christopher
Pittman, who was prescribed first Paxil and then Zoloft before he kil ed his
grandparents at the age of twelve. It is important to remember that SSRIs do not
have identical properties or effects on al patients; for example, Paxil’s half life is
much shorter than many other SSRIs, which causes far more difficulties for
people attempting to wean themselves off Paxil (see below).
In other litigation, New York City has sued GlaxoSmithKline, al eging that it was
forced to pay unlawful y high Medicaid prices for Paxil. Medicaid spent more than
23.1 mil ion dol ars on Paxil for New York City residents in 2002.
As noted above, a significant problem with Paxil is that it may be addictive in the
sense that people suffer extremely adverse effects, such as panic attacks, racing
hearts, nausea, stomach pains, insomnia, and other withdrawal symptoms if they
try to cease taking it. Drug companies dispute that this makes a drug addictive.
They argue that the properties of addictiveness require that a person must take
more and more of the same substance to achieve the same effect. Drug
companies prefer the term “withdrawal symptoms” or “discontinuation effects” to
“addiction.” Whatever the name, this is a problem particularly associated with
Paxil. One of the differences between Paxil and other SSRIs is its half-life. While
Prozac wears off in two to four days, Paxil leaves the system in twenty hours.
Short half-lives are associated with addiction—Paxil causes withdrawal
symptoms three times as often as Zoloft and four times as often as Prozac.
Warnings about withdrawal are placed on Paxil’s label in a number of European
countries. A presentation at the American Psychiatric Association in 1993 found
that up to 42% of individuals suffered withdrawal symptoms when they ceased
taking Paxil. In 2001, the FDA ordered GlaxoSmithKline to begin warning
consumers that they might suffer withdrawal when tapering off Paxil.
GlaxoSmithKline complied by warning about “discontinuation effects” rather than
“withdrawal.” A number of lawsuits have been filed around the country charging
that GlaxoSmithKline did not effectively warn about Paxil’s addictiveness. These
lawsuits are consolidated in the Southern District of California, and emphasize
the difference in the warning labels in warning labels in other countries, such as
France and Ireland, where users are warned of “dizziness, sensory disorders
and sleep disturbances” if they abruptly to use Paxil. Prozac (fluoxetine)(known as Sarafem when prescribed for
premenstrual dysphoric disorder): Eli Lil y first began marketing Prozac in the
United States in 1988. By 1990, an article in The American Journal of Psychiatry
noted that six depressed but previously non-suicidal patients had experienced
intense, violent, suicidal thoughts shortly after beginning Prozac, which abated
when they ceased taking the drug.[5] Beginning in 1990, concerns began to be
raised about a possible connection between Prozac and increased suicidality. In
October 1990, the Church of Scientology filed a petition with the FDA claiming
that Prozac caused suicide and asking that it be withdrawn from the market. In
May 1991 the Public Citizen Health Research Group petitioned the FDA to
require a black box warning that Prozac might be associated with suicide in a
smal number of patients. Both petitions were rejected. By 1992, the Federal
Judicial MultiDistrict Litigation Panel had consolidated over 75 lawsuits against
Lil y in the Southern District of Indiana, which involved both suicidal and
homicidal behavior attributed to the drug. Prozac is the only antidepressant
which has been conclusively linked to increases in suicidality, in a large study by
Jick, Kaye and Jick., showing that individuals who take Prozac are more than
twice as likely to attempt suicide as those taking other anti-depressants[6]. In
1997, the FDA rejected yet another petition to expand the suicidality warning on
the Prozac label. The fol owing year, a court refused to dismiss punitive damage
claims against Lil y, citing evidence that it suppressed adverse studies, Forsythv. Eli Lil y, 1998 U.S.Dist.LEXIS 541 (D. Hawai 1998). For a substantial
summary of studies linking Prozac to suicide, see Cloud v. Pfizer, 198 F.Supp.2d
118, 1122-1126 (D.Ariz. 2001)(litigation involving Zoloft but summarizing SSRI
In 2003, the FDA approved Prozac to treat depression and obsessive
compulsive disorder in children and adolescents aged 7 to 17 years. Prozac is
actual y the only one of these drugs which has been shown in any study to be
effective as a treatment for depression in adolescents. Like Paxil, however,
Prozac has also been linked to behavior injurious to others. On October 15,
2004, the FDA required Eli Lil y to add a black box warning to Prozac indicating
that it might cause some minors to become suicidal, and that studies had shown
that this suicidality occurred for people taking Prozac at a rate twice as high as
for people taking a placebo. Eli Lil y has not complied with this order as of
January 1, 2005. Concerns have also been raised about the effects on babies if
www.cerhr.niehs.nih.gov/news/fluoxetine_final.pdf.
Eli Lil y’s most recent difficulties have emerged with the publication in the
January 2005 issue of the British Medical Journal of “missing” documents
indicating that the company was aware of a link between Prozac and increased
suicidality as early as 1988, and suppressed theinformation.[7]
Risperdal (Risperidone): Risperdone was developed by Janssen Pharmaceutica
(which has since been taken over by Johnson& Johnson). It has been prescribed
for schizophrenia since 1993. In December 2003 the FDA approved its use for
short-term treatment of mania in bipolar disorder. In early 2003, Janssen warned
doctors that the use of risperidone in elderly patients with dementia might
increase the risk of cerebrovascular accidents (e.g.“strokes.”), see
www.janssen.com/ourcompany/news_detail.jsp?id=041603. That year,
Risperdal’s worldwide sales were 2.5 bil ion dol ars. In 2004, the FDA forced
Jannsen to issue a letter to doctors acknowledging that it was linked to excess
blood sugar and diabetes, and to recommend regular testing of individuals taking
Risperdal for diabetes. There have been no reported cases involving
Serentil (mesoridazine): Manufactured by Boehringer Ingelheim, it is chemical y
very similar to Mel aril (see above). It is associated with many of the dangers of
Mel aril, including potential y fatal heart arrhythmias. A consensus conference of
psychiatric and other medical experts convened to develop recommendations for
the physical health monitoring of patients with schizophrenia treated in outpatient
settings made specific recommendations for cardiac monitoring of persons
taking Mel aril. [8] In an unusual y candid admission about Serentil’s
characteristics, the National Institute of Health’s website on drug information
answers the question“Why is this Medication Prescribed?” with “…It can also
reduce hyperactivity and uncooperativeness.”[9] This web site also notes that if
the liquid concentrate of Serentil comes into accidental contact with skin, it
should be washed immediately because it is a powerful skin irritant.
Serzone: (nefazodone) Bristol-Myers Squibb began sel ing Serzone in 1994 as
an antidepressant. In 2002, the FDA added the strongest type warning (black
box) about liver failure, after reports of at least 94 adverse liver reactions,
including 55 liver failures and twenty fatalities. There is a class action suit
pending regarding liver damage related to the drug. Serzone was also al eged to
cause priapism, a persistent and painful erection which can cause permanent
injury. Thom v. Bristol-Myers Squibb, 353 F.3d 848 (10th Cir. 2003)(charging
makers of Serzone with insufficent information about the risks of priapism).
Bristol-Myers Squibb voluntarily pul ed Serzone from the U.S. market in June
2004 (it had been taken off the market previously in Europe, Canada, Australia
and New Zealand, but the company continued to sel the drug in the United
Zoloft: (sertraline) (known in the United Kingdom as Lustral). Zoloft was
developed by Pfizer and first approved by the FDA for the treatment of
depression in 1991. Over the next few years, the FDA approved Zoloft for the
treatment of adult obsessive-compulsive disorder (1996), panic disorder (1997),
pediatric obsessive-compulsive disorder (1997), and post-traumatic stress
disorder (1999). The FDA never approved Zoloft as a treatment for pediatric
depression. There have been hundreds of cases al eging a connection between
Zoloft and the suicide of a previously non-suicidal individual, including, in one of
the most famous cases, a thirteen year old boy, Mil er v. Pfizer, 356 F.3d 1326
(10th Cir.), cert. denied 2004 U.S.LEXIS 6230 (Oct. 4, 2004).
Zoloft was among the drugs covered by the FDA order of October 15,
2004, requiring drug manufacturers to warn about dangers of suicidality when
the drug is prescribed to children and adolescents. Testimony about Zoloft
before the public hearing of the FDA’s Psychopharmacologic Drugs and
Pediatric Advisory Committees on September 13 and 14 also concentrated on
Zoloft’s lack of proven efficacy in treating depression. In a 1991 internal FDA
memorandum, Dr. Paul Leber, who was principal y involved in the investigation,
analysis and approval of the SSRI class of drugs, noted that numerous countries
around Europe had already rejected or were about to reject approval of Zoloft
because Pfizer could not prove efficacy. Dr. Leber wrote, “In recommending [the
approval of Zoloft for adults], I have considered the fact that the evidence
marshaled to support [Zoloft’s] efficacy as an antidepressant is not as consistent
or robust as one might prefer it to be.” In September 2004, Dr. Leber was quoted
in the Denver Post as saying “Second generation antidepressants were
approved by a regulatory process that requires only a limited proof of efficacy
Zyprexa (olanzapine): Zyprexa is manufactured by Eli Lil y, and was introduced
on the market in 1996. Zyprexa is Eli Lil y’s top sel ing drug, garnering 3.7 bil ion
dol ars in sales per year. Zyprexa was original y approved for schizophrenia and
then for the short-term treatment of acute manic episodes associated with
Bipolar I disorder. However, it is prescribed for other “off-label” uses, and at least
one case has charged that it contributed to a child’s death when it was
prescribed for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, Tardy v. Eli Lil y, 2004
Me.Super.LEXIS 168 (August 4, 2004)(autopsy reports “acute hyperglycemia
Zyprexa has been linked in multiple studies with diabetes and severe
hyperglycemia. Patients taking Zyprexa are ten times more likely to develop
diabetes than the general population. Whether the link with diabetes is direct or
secondary to acute weight gain associated with Zyprexa (itself a health hazard of
considerable dimension) is a matter of controversy. Although many psychiatric
drugs include weight gain as a side effect, it is particularly noticeable as a side
effect of Zyprexa. A number of cases have just been consolidated in the Eastern
District of New York. Most, but not al , of the cases center around the connection
between Zyprexa and diabetes, In re Zyprexa Products Liability Litigation, 314
F.Supp.2d 1380 (Multidistrict Litigation Panel 2004).
II. Law that has Emerged from these Cases
Cases against pharmaceutical companies are based on a variety of legal
claims,including strict liability, failure to warn, negligence, breach of warranty,
A. Background: The Centrality of Warnings about Drug Side Effects to Drug
1. The “Unavoidably Unsafe” Exception to Strict Liability
The doctrine of strict liability—that a manufacturer of a defective and
unreasonably dangerous product is strictly liable for damages to a consumer
harmed by that product-- has been held not to apply to products that are
beneficial but “unavoidably unsafe” when used for their intended purpose. No
litigation has addressed the question of whether off-label use is use outside the
intended purpose of the drug. “Unavoidably unsafe” products are those which “in
the present state of human knowledge, are quite incapable of being made safe
for their intended and ordinary use. These are especial y common in the field of
drugs…Such a product, properly prepared, and accompanied by proper
directions and warning, is not defective, nor is it unreasonably dangerous.”
Restatement (Second) of Torts, 402A, comment k.
The question of whether psychiatric drugs are unavoidably unsafe has been a
subject of some litigation, since a finding that they are not would leave
pharmaceutical companies vulnerable to strict liability claims. However, in most
cases, plaintiffs appear to concede that psychiatric drugs fal into this category,
and focus on whether the drug company properly warned of the dangers
The “learned intermediary” doctrine shields pharmaceutical companies
from liability for failure to directly warn consumers of the dangers of psychiatric
drugs if the companies provide adequate warnings to prescribing physicians,
who are presumed to act as “learned intermediaries” between the manufacturer
of the drug and the patients who use it. Therefore, the law does not require the
pharmaceutical company to warn the consumer of known dangers associated
with the use of their drugs. Rather, it requires the pharmaceutical company to
warn doctors, Thom v. Bristol-Myers Squibb, 353 F.3d 848 (10th Cir. 2003)
(charging makers of Serzone with providing insufficent warnings about the risks
of priapism).[11] Thus, the pharmaceutical company’s duty ends if it can be
shown that it appropriately warned physicians about the side effects of the drugs
it manufactures. If the pharmaceutical company can show that the doctor did not
read the warnings accompanying the drug before he or she prescribed the drug,
the plaintiff loses a failure to warn case against the pharmaceutical company,
since the content of the warnings is irrelevant if it does not influence the
prescribing physician’s decisionmaking, Motus v. Pfizer, 358 F.3d 659 (9th Cir.
2003). The learned intermediary doctrine also general y protects pharmacies and
pharmacists from charges that they should have warned the consumer of
dangers of the drug, Tardy v. Eli Lil y 2004 Me.Super.LEXIS 168 at *8-9 (August
In order for the learned intermediary doctrine to apply, “the physician
`must be an intervening and independent party between the patient and
manufacturer,’” Tal ey v. Danek Medical, Inc., 179 F.3d 154 at 164 (4th Cir.
1999). A rather surprising number of prescribing doctors in these lawsuits have
financial ties to the pharmaceutical companies which manufacture the drugs they
prescribe, but courts have repeatedly rejected arguments that the learned
intermediary doctrine should not apply when doubts have been cast on the
doctor’s impartiality in recommending the drug, Mil er v. Pfizer, 195 F.Supp.2d
1095, 1129 (D.Kan. 2002)(court finds that no reasonable jury would discredit
prescribing doctor’s testimony based solely on the fact that he was a paid
consultant to Pfizer and made speeches around the country praising Zoloft at the
time he prescribed the drug to plaintiffs’ son); Tal eyv. Danek Medical Inc., 179
F.3d at 157 and 164 (4th Cir. 1999)(rejecting claim that learned intermediary
doctrine should not apply where prescribing physician was consultant receiving
$250,000 a year from defendant as wel as 25,000 shares of stock , a travel
budget, and research funds, when there was “no evidence that the consulting
relationship…interfered with Dr. Matthre’s independent medical judgment”).
No court has yet considered whether the learned intermediary doctrine
wil be or should be affected by the burgeoning direct marketing by
pharmaceutical companies to individuals, including TV and print ads, and by the
increasing availability of pharmaceuticals through the internet. However, some
courts have held that even if a drug company voluntarily provides sheets of
information or pamphlets about their drugs for patients, it does not void the
learned intermediary doctrine because the patient is stil expected to rely
primarily on his or her doctor for judgment about the appropriateness of the drug
The learned intermediary doctrine does not, however, protect the drug
company if it does not give adequate warnings to the physicians. Therefore, the
adequacy of the warning becomes a crucial concern in litigation against
pharmaceutical companies. Ironical y, the FDA’s recent action in final y requiring
black box warnings about the possibility of SSRIs increasing suicidality may spel
the death knel for any subsequent litigation against those drug companies for
suicides caused by use of the drugs, with the liability fal ing entirely on the
prescribing doctor. On the other hand, pharmaceutical company liability for any
suicide or suicide attempt that is demonstrably linked to the use of SSRIs may
be stronger during the current period between the FDA’s October 15, 2004 order
to add the warning as a black box warning—a time when the pharmaceutical
companies knew of an extremely serious danger and physicians theoretical y did
not-- and the time that the pharmaceutical companies actual y comply with the
order. Pharmaceutical companies may argue that physicians would have to be
aware of the FDA order because of the media publicity which has attended the
issue, but the learned intermediary doctrine requires that the pharmaceutical
companies—not the media—warn the physicians of any significant dangers
In order to prove damages in a tort case involving psychiatric drugs, the plaintiff
must show that the drug actual y caused the harm al eged. This is not a difficult
proposition if the harm is medical, such as seizures or priapism, but it is
exceedingly difficult when the harm resembles a symptom of the underlying
condition the drug is intended to treat, such as increased suicidality for people
One benefit of proving that a pharmaceutical company’s warning is inadequate is
that it creates a rebuttable presumption of causation, i.e., a finding of inadequate
warnings creates a presumption that if the warning had been adequate, the
doctor would have not prescribed the drug or would have alerted the patient, and
the patient would not have taken the drug. Restatement (Second) of Torts, 402A,
The presumption is rebuttable, however, and pharmaceutical companies have
won cases when they show that either the physician did not read the warning, so
that it did not matter whether it was adequate or not, or when the physician
testifies that he or she would have recommended the drug anyway, even if the
warning had been written as the plaintiff al eges it should have been, Mil er v.Pfizer, 196 F.Supp.2d 1095, 1101 (D.Kan.2002); Woulfe v. Eli Lil y, 965 F.Supp.
1478 at 1481 (D.Okla. 1997)(dismissing case under learned intermediary
doctrine when psychiatrist would have prescribed Prozac to suicidal patient even
if he had been aware of the contents of the warning label used for Prozac in
B. Expert Witness Testimony, Daubert, and Developments in
Although researchers had been debating whether SSRIs contributed
to suicidality since the early 1990s, and watchdog organizations had chal enged
the FDA to investigate this issue, litigation chal enging the sufficiency of warnings
on the newer SSRIs introduced after Prozac did not take off until the victory in
Estate ofTobin v. SmithKlineBeecham, 164 F.Supp.2d 1278 (D.Wyo. 2001). Tobin, in which the jury awarded over six mil ion dol ars in damages, received a
great deal of attention national y, and plaintiffs’ attorneys began to bring a large
volume of litigation, frequently using the same experts used in Tobin.
The pharmaceutical companies, and Pfizer (manufacturer of Zoloft) in particular,
fought these cases vigorously. They concentrated their attacks primarily on
discrediting and precluding plaintiffs’ expert testimony. In the process, they
caused judges to focus far more attention on the application of Daubert to
testimony in cases involving psychiatric experts. It should be noted that the
target of the pharmaceutical companies was the testimony of plaintiffs’ experts
regarding causation: the link between the psychiatric drugs and the suicides or
homicides they were al eged to have caused, rather than testimony involving
diagnosis, dangerousness, competence, systems reform, or any of the other
subjects for which we general y hire expert witnesses. However, as noted below,
the judicial scrutiny can spil over into areas of greater interest to mental health
1. Post-Daubert and pre-Tobin When the Supreme Court decided Daubertv. Merrel -Dow, 509 U.S.
579 (1993), many commentators believed its insistence on what appeared to be
a relatively rigorous scientific basis for expert testimony would disqualify a
substantial amount of expert psychiatric and psychological testimony, since
much of the testimony has no substantial basis in scientific research or
methodology. Rather, most testimony by mental health professionals is based on
clinical experience. However, courts were too accustomed to relying on
psychiatric testimony in cases ranging from criminal to civil commitment to tort
law. Many courts simply found that expert testimony based on psychiatric or
psychological observation and analysis did not readily lend itself to analysis
under the factors laid out by the Supreme Court in Daubert, and continued to
admit the testimony despite Daubert chal enges.[12] At first, courts simply limited
Daubert’s scope to “novel” scientific methodology or testimony, Jugle v.Volkswagen of America, Inc., 975 F.Supp. 576, 580 (D.Vt. 1997). [13]Then the
Supreme Court decided Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmicheal, 526 U.S. 137 (1999),
holding that Daubert applied, albeit flexibly, to al forms of expert testimony,
The pre-Kumho approach frequently taken by courts to Daubert
chal enges of psychiatric testimony, even in early cases against pharmaceutical
companies over the effects of their drugs, was to cite to the expert’s credentials
and experience, thus conflating the question of whether the expert was qualified
to testify on the subject with the Daubert issue, which properly chal enges not the
expert’s credentials or experience but the scientific methodology underlying his
or her conclusions—the scientific basis for the expert’s conclusions. In these
cases, the expert’s methodology was often simply clinical judgment, making the
distinction between methodology and credentials even more murky. This kind of
practice makes it difficult for attorneys to chal enge any testimony by a
reasonably wel -credentialed mental health expert, no matter how clear it is that
little or no scientific basis exists for the testimony. The prime example in this area
is testimony predicting dangerousness, which is given every day in courts
deciding on sentencing (including death sentences) and civil commitment. As
noted above, there is very little traditional scientific basis for the conclusions of
many expert mental health witnesses, so that courts which, as a practical matter,
needed the testimony, have general y equated credentials with admissibility
A prime example of this can be seen in the pre-Tobin case of Forsythv. Eli Lil y, 1998 U.S.Dist.LEXIS 541 (D.Hawai Jan. 5, 1998), which featured Dr.
David Healy, among others, as an expert. The court’s Daubert analysis, at *33-
39, is typical. After citing the requirements of Daubert v. Merrel -Dow, including
the four factors courts may use to judge whether a theory or technique
constitutes “scientific knowledge”, the court applies them. Its entire Daubert
Dr. Healy is an experienced and wel -qualified psychopharmacologist who has
reviewed medical records, depositions in this case, published studies and other
relevant material. Dr. Healy intends to testify that “Prozac was a substantial
cause of Wil iam Forsyth’s murder of his wife and his subsequent suicide.” Dr.
Healy has authored medical articles on Prozac and suicidality and published a
review of the literature on this topic. His published articles were subject to peer
review and appear to have a particular degree of acceptance within the scientific
community. Dr. Healy relies on the Jick study to testify to evidence that Prozac
causes suicide, homicide, or suicide-homicide. The Court finds that Dr. Healy’s
opinion is supported by scientific methodology and procedures. Forsyth v. Eli Lil y at *33 (D. Hawai Jan. 5, 1998).
In 2000, after Kumho, Rule 702 of the Federal Rules of Evidence was
rewritten to conform to Daubert. It now provides that “ witness qualified as an
expert…may testify…in the form of an opinion…if (1) the testimony is based
upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony is the product of reliable principles
and methods, and (3) the witness has applied the principles and methods
Neither Kumho nor the alteration in the Federal Rules of Evidence appeared to
affect the admissibility of expert witness testimony by mental health
professionals. Courts continued to liberal y admit such testimony, as reflected in
In the Tobin case, Dr. David Healy, an international y known
neuropsychopharmacologist whose testimony was accepted in the Forsyth
case, and Dr. John Maltsberger, a psychiatrist and suicidologist, testified that
taking Paxil had caused Donald Schel to go on a violent rampage, kil ing his
wife, daughter, and granddaughter, and then himself.
Dr. Healy’s and Dr. Maltsberger’s theory of the relationship between
SSRIs and suicide, adopted from the research literature in the area, is that
SSRIs cause akathisia (known by the World Health Organization as
‘hyperkinesia’), a motor restlessness and extreme internal agitation that
increases suicidality because it is “often accompanied by unendurable emotional
pain, and patients destroy themselves in order to escape it.” Smith v. Pfizer,
2001 U.S.Dist.LEXIS 12983 at *19 (D.Kan. Aug. 14, 2001).
The trial took on political overtones when Dr. Healy rejected reliance on the
methodology of epidemiological studies and randomized control ed trials [RCTs]
that purported to show no connection between Paxil and suicidality. In his
opinion, most epidemiological studies of psychiatric drugs are so expensive that
general y the chief funders of the studies are the very pharmaceutical companies
whose products are being tested. In his opinion, “the portrayal of [randomized
control ed trials and epidemiological studies] as gold standards owes everything
to a strategy which involves occupying the playing field rather than one which in
actual fact delivers what is claimed for it,” Mil er v. Pfizer, 196 F.Supp. 1062,
1066 (D.Kan. 2002). In the place of randomized control trials, Dr. Healy and Dr.
Maltsberger substituted Koch’s Postulates, a series of factors designed to assist
in determining general causation and whether a drug may cause a certain
reaction, Reference Manual on Scientific Evidence (1st Ed. 1994). Applying
Koch’s Postulates, they argued, the causal connection between Paxil, akathisia,
and uncontrol able violence of Mr. Schel was clearly demonstrated. The jury
accepted their testimony, and returned a verdict of over $6 mil ion against the
Defendant SmithKlineBeecham appealed the verdict in Tobin, but the
judge upheld it, with a finding that was typical of much post-Daubert judicial
practice involving testimony in the psychiatric arena: “This Court finds that its
initial ruling on the defendant’s Daubert motion that: `Dr. Healy’s education,
experience, training and extensive research regarding SSRIs, serotonin, and
depression, qualify him to offer expert testimony with regard to general causation
in this litigation,” Estate of Tobin v. SmithKlineBeecham, 164 F.Supp.2d 1278,
1283 (2001). The judge in Tobin, like most post-Daubert judges (erroneously)
equated a Daubert chal enge with a voir dire on whether the expert was qualified
to testify. Dr. Healy’s credentials were impeccable, and therefore he was
Another factor in the judge’s refusal to overturn the jury verdict, however, was
the traditional deference to jury verdicts. The evidence at trial must be
considered in the light most favorable to the plaintiff and only if a reasonable jury
could not have found for the plaintiff can the judge overturn the verdict. The
pharmaceutical companies’ subsequent strategy was to prevent cases from ever
reaching a jury by disqualifying the expert testimony on which plaintiff relied. This
strategy has been successful in the majority of federal cases, although many
state courts have resisted taking decisions from the jury.
3. The Swing of the Daubert Pendulum: Cases since Tobin
In some cases against pharmaceutical companies since Tobin, defendants have
not only insisted on the application of Daubert to the admissibility of expert
psychiatric testimony, but they have also filed chal enges under Daubert to each
step of the methodology utilized by the expert, and to every article or study
forming the basis for the expert’s opinion, see Mil er v. Pfizer, 196 F.Supp.2d
1062, 1065 (D.Kan. 2002). This elevates Daubert analysis to a level of
punctiliousness far beyond that which the Supreme Court intended in Daubert
and in its later decision in Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmicheal, 526 U.S. 137 (1999),
and general y beyond what most courts require in other cases. For example, in
one case a judge appointed two experts to advise her whether the plaintiff’s
expert’s “methodology and his application of it in this case, constitute valid,
scientifical y reliable reasoning in support of his opinions [on general and specific
causation].” Mil er v. Pfizer, 356 F.3d 1326, 1329 (10th Cir. 2004). The Supreme
Court in Daubert assumed that judges were general y capable of making a
judgment regarding the reliability of expert testimony. The judge’s function as
“gatekeeper” did not have to involve such a detailed and intensive inquiry that
judges would not feel competent to undertake it.
In contrast to the perfunctory approach taken by district courts prior to Tobin, the
district court in Mil er excluded Dr. Healy’s testimony based in part on the
conclusion that Daubert’s peer review requirement had not been met. The court
found that although Dr. Healy had published peer-reviewed articles on the theory
that Zoloft caused suicide, his specific calculations of the risk of suicide had not
been subject to peer review. The district court was lauded by the Court of
Appeals for the Tenth Circuit as “thorough” in its Daubert analysis. Id. at 1330
and 1335. Even more surprisingly, the Tenth Circuit affirmed the district court,
holding that the judge “did not exceed the scope of Daubert inquiry by, for
example, considering Dr. Healy’s credibility or weighing the evidence.” Id.
(Compare with the judge’s correct holding in Tobin that “whether Dr. Healy has
become more of an advocate than a scientist [is] an issue of credibility for the
jury to determine,” Estate of Tobin v. SmithKlineBeecham, at 1285.)
Another district court disqualified an expert from testifying regarding causation,
quoting with scorn the expert’s statement that he was “relying upon textbooks,
treatises and other papers to reach an opinion,” Smith v. Pfizer, 2001
U.S.Dist.LEXIS 12983 at *26 (D.Kan. 2001). This was clearly insufficient in the
court’s view, and the judge made clear that only the testimony of epidemiologists
or psychopharmacologists would be al owed to show general causation. This
runs counter to the holdings of courts in other cases, which do not require either
epidemiologists or epidemiological studies for testimony to be admissible under
Courts in cases involving psychiatric drugs have also consistently rejected case
studies under Daubert, although courts applying Daubert in other contexts
accept case studies, ruling that problems with the size of the sample or the lack
of a control group are matters to be weighed by the jury, Pick v. AmericanMedical Systems, 958 F.Supp. 1151 (E.D.La. 1997).
For example, in Blanchard v. Eli Lil y, 207 F.Supp.2d 308 (D.Vt. 2002),
the court found that plaintiff’s expert witness (Dr. Maltsberger of Tobin ) was
eminently qualified in suicidology, and that a psychological autopsy is a general y
accepted methodology for trying to determine what led to a suicide. Under a
correct reading of Daubert, the finding that the expert’s methodology is
appropriate should be the end of the inquiry; it is not the function of the court to
decide whether the expert’s conclusion is accurate. As long as there is “fit”
between the method (psychological autopsy) and the question on which the
expert is testifying (what caused plaintiff’s decedent to commit suicide), the
testimony should be admissible. However, the court ruled that Dr. Maltsberger’s
opinion as to the cause of the plaintiff’s suicide was not admissible. While a large
and controversial body of research exists linking Prozac to suicide, the
mechanism posited by the researchers largely involves akathisia (uncontrol able
and very unpleasant agitation or restlessness), mania or disinhibition. In the
plaintiff decedent’s case, there was evidence that the murder-suicides were very
careful y planned. The psychiatrist’s opinion was that the disinhibition caused by
Prozac led to behavior that caused her great shame and shattered her self-
esteem, and that this was a contributing cause of her suicide.
The court, while acknowledging that the psychiatrist’s opinion might wel be
correct[14], ruled it inadmissible. Essential y, the court required the expert to
show either a number of very specifical y similar cases in his clinical experience
(that patients of his experienced suicidal thoughts or violent behavior without
contemporaneously experiencing akathisia, mania, hypomania, or disinhibition)
or research supporting his hypothesis, id at 320.
It seems fairly clear that cases involving chal enges to the adequacy of warnings
on psychiatric drugs have been subject to more rigorous standards and analysis
than other cases involving expert psychiatric witnesses or other mass tort cases
against drug manufacturers. The drug company litigation is sui generis in a
number of ways, described briefly below.
The question of what evidence plaintiffs must proffer to meet the first causation
requirement: to show that defendant’s product can, in general, cause the result
that plaintiff claims it caused, varies widely from court to court. For example, in
the mass tort litigation involving Meridia, a diet drug al eged to cause heart
attacks, in which defendants al eged that the very condition which caused the
patients to take the drug—obesity—caused the cardiac problem, the court
concluded that plaintiffs do not need expert epidemiological testimony to prove
general causation.In re Meridia Products Litigation 328 F.Supp.2d 791 (N.D.
Ohio 2004). Al courts in cases chal enging the adequacy of warnings relating to
psychiatric drugs have held that epidemiological expert testimony is required to
prove general causation, Smith v. Pfizer, at *22. A district court in the Ninth
Circuit held an expert’s evidence on general causation inadmissible in part
because “Dr. Johnstone also has not provided sufficient epidemiological
evidence of causation,” Cloud v. Pfizer, 198 F.Supp.2d 1118 at 1134 (D.Ariz.
2001), even as it acknowledged that the Ninth Circuit did not require
epidemiological evidence to prove general causation, id. On the other hand, a
court excluded testimony by experts regarding whether Propulsid caused QT
elongation, citing the absence of peer review studies, and rejecting the plaintiffs’
common-sense explanation that since Propulsid had been withdrawn from the
market because of health concerns, it would be both difficult and unethical to
conduct such research, In re Propulsid Product Liability Litigation 261 F.Supp.2d
In addition, to show general causation, the 9th Circuit has specifical y held that
experts can rely on the published research of others to support their findings,
Metabolife Internationalv. Wornick, 264 F.3d 842, 845 (9th Cir. 2001), while the
court in Smith v. Pfizer disqualified an expert for relying solely on scientific
materials. “In effect, plaintiff argues that the jury may rely on a witness who has
`relied upon’ textbooks, scientific articles and `other papers’ to reach his opinion,
but who has no expertise to explain the basis for his opinion. Such a holding
would defeat much of the purpose of Fed.R.Evid. 702 and the rule of Daubert
and its progeny.” Smith v. Pfizer, 2001 U.S.Dist.LEXIS 12983 at *26(D.Kan. Aug.
The court held that as a matter of law psychiatrists are not qualified to testify as
experts to establish causal associations between drugs and side effects or
symptoms. The court held that a psychiatrist is not qualified to testify as an
expert regarding the ability of clinical trials, scientific studies, or case histories to
establish an association or causal relationship between Zoloft and akathisia,
emergency suicidality, or violent behaviors. The court held that only
epidemiologists can testify about whether the evidence establishes an
association and the strength of the association, and only pharmacologists can
testify about the mechanism whereby the drug affects the person. Smith at *24.
The procedural barriers erected by courts in the cases against pharmaceutical
companies involving psychiatric drugs have also been substantial. Dr. David
Healy delivered his expert report in Mil er v. Pfizer, and after court-appointed
experts submitted their own report questioning Dr. Healy’s methodology, the
court permitted him to answer their questions only by reference to material in his
previously submitted expert report, limiting him from introducing anything not
already in the record to answer questions he had not known would be asked
This addresses plaintiffs’ requirements in proving that defendant’s drug
specifical y caused the injury claimed by the plaintiff, and corresponds more
closely to the ordinary role of psychiatric experts in cases involving people
diagnosed with psychiatric disabilities. In other cases, courts have permitted
doctors to rely on records and established treatises, and have even al owed
experts to deviate somewhat from established treatises, S.M. v. J.K., 262 F.3d
914 (9th Cir. 2001)(rejecting defendant’s Daubert chal enge to plaintiff’s
psychiatric expert as unreliable because he had deviated from DSM III-R in his
diagnosis of PTSD). However, in at least one case involving psychiatric drugs,
the court required the specific causation expert to show that the methods he
used to reach his conclusions had been peer-reviewed, Cloud v. Pfizer, 198
F.Supp.2d 1118, 1136-37 (D.Ariz.2001)(also noting that Dr. Johnstone had not
considered alternative causes for plaintiff’s decedent’s behavior, and that he had
reached his opinion before reviewing al the records).
c. Minimum requirements for psychiatrist to testify about source of
Of interest in general, courts in these cases have prescribed the minimum
requirements for a mental health professional to testify as to whether a drug
caused certain behavior or to testify about causation of an il ness. Courts require
the expert to have “consider[ed] the possible causes of the behavior at issue,
[the individual’s] medical history and treatment, the circumstances existing when
the behavior occurred, the effect of the drugs based on doctor’s clinical
experience, [individual’s] history of alcoholic abuse and medical and research
literature.” Smith at *27, see also Cloud v. Pfizer 198 F.Supp.2d 1118, 1135-37
The FDA, the agency charged with protecting the safety of consumers, has
appeared in court to take the side of the pharmaceutical companies which
manufacture psychiatric drug. Perhaps unusual y for an administration which
decries federal centrality and supports state’s rights, the FDA under George W.
Bush’s leadership has filed amicus briefs with courts considering litigation
against pharmaceutical companies asserting that the FDA’s regulatory decisions
regarding the adequacy of warnings preempts tort claims that the warnings are
inadequate, Motus v. Pfizer, 127 F.Supp.2d 1085 (C.D.Ca. 2000).
Not only has the federal government argued that it has an interest in
ensuring “that state tort law does not undermine the agency’s authority to protect
the public health” but it has asserted that to add warnings about increased
suicidality would be “to require a statement that would be false or misleading,
and thus contrary to federal law.” Needleman v Pfizer, 2004 U.S.Dist.LEXIS
15495 at *6-7 (N.D.Tx. Aug. 6, 2004)(quoting the federal government’s brief in
Motus ).[15] Several courts accepted this argument and dismissed cases
against pharmaceutical companies. In the case of Needleman, the court
dismissed the case less than three months prior to the FDA ruling that
pharmaceutical companies must add a black box warning that SSRIs did indeed
Under the logic of the government’s arguments, the black box
warnings should now be considered heavily in determinations of general
causation, and indeed in other cases, FDA action has weighed heavily in proof of
general causation, In re Meridia Products Litigation 328 F.Supp.2d 791
Because so many of our clients take these drugs, we should keep
abreast of developments involving both the safety of the drugs and legal
developments. Regrettably, experience suggests that some prescribing
physicians either do not keep up with these developments, or do not inform their
patients, or both. Recent news has highlighted the inability or unwil ingness of
the FDA to credit the reports of its own experts regarding dangers of the drugs it
regulates. It wil assist us as counsel ors and negotiators on behalf of our clients
to be aware of these dangers and of the independent research regarding them.
In addition, we should be aware of the legal developments relating to these
drugs, and their implications for our clients, both directly and as they affect the
development of the law regarding negligence and admissibility of expert
[1] Stephen R. Marder, Susan M. Essock, Alexander L. Mil er, Robert W.
Buchanan, Casey E. Daniel, John M. Davis, et al, “Physical Health Monitoring of
Patients with Schizophrenia,” 161 American Journal of Psychiatry 1334 (2004).
[2] It is more difficult to prove that psychiatric drugs cause effects such as
suicidality or agitation when those may also be symptoms of the condition for
which the patient is taking the drug.
[3] Stephen R. Marder, Susan M. Essock, Alexander L. Mil er, Robert W.
[5] Martin Teicher and Jonathan Cole, “Emergence of Intense Suicidal
Preoccupation During Fluoxetine Treatment,” 147 Am.J. of Psychiatry 207
(1990). See also Anthony J. Rothschild and Carol A. Locke, “Reexposure to
Fluoxetine After Serious Suicide Attempts by Three Patients: The Role of
Akathisia,” 52 J.ClinicalPsychiatry 491 (1991), in which severe suicidality
developed in three patients upon taking Prozac, subsided when they
discontinued the drug, and reappeared when they (with informed consent)
[6] Jick, Kaye and Jick, “Antidepressants and the Risk of Suicidal Behaviors, “
Journal of the American Medical Association, July 21, 1995. The authors of the
article downplay the finding, pointing out that because it is almost impossible to
die from an overdose of SSRIs, it is possible that physicians prescribe them for
their most suicidal patients. There is no research supporting this hypothesis.
[7] Jeanne Lenzer, “FDA to Review “Missing” Drug Company Documents,”
www.bmj.bmj ournals.com/cgi/content/ful /330/7481/7.
[9] www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/druginfo/medmaster/a682306.html. Whether
being uncooperative is a condition for which people general y seek treatment is
[10] Testimony of Karen Barth Menzies before the FDA Psychopharmacologic
Drugs and Pediatric Advisory Committees, Sept. 13-14, 2004.
[11] Although tort law is individual y developed in each state, at least forty-six
states have adopted the learned intermediary doctrine, and the Wyoming federal
court predicts that Wyoming wil adopt it, see Thom at 852.
[12] See also Michael H. Gottesman, “Admissibility of Expert Testimony After
Daubert,” 43 Emory Law Journal 867, 875 (1994); C. Robert Showalter,
“Distinguishing Science from Pseudo-Science in Psychiatry: Expert Testimony in
the Post-Daubert Era,” 2 Va.J.Soc.Pol’y &L. 211 (1995), Christopher Slobogin,
“Doubts about Daubert: Anecdata as a Case Study,” 57 Washington and Lee
[13] But see Gier v. Educational Service Unit No. 16, 66 F.3d 940 (8th Cir.
1995) and Nichols v. American National Insurance Co., 154 F.3d 875 (8th Cir.
1998) for exclusions of psychiatric expert testimony post-Daubert and pre-
[14] “Given Dr. Maltsberger’s credentials and experience, his belief is not to be
lightly dismissed, but it remains just that, a belief, `an insightful, even an inspired
hunch…that….lacks scientific rigor.” Id at 320 [citation omitted].
[15] However, not al courts have accepted the government’s preemption
arguments, Cloud v. Pfizer, 198 F.Supp.2d 1118, 1121 (D.Ariz. 2001).
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