Friday, October 14, 2011

J&J Unit Cleared of Liability for Alleged Levaquin Injuries in New Jersey - Bloomberg

A unit of Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) isn’t responsible for tendon damage suffered by two New Jersey men who took the drugmaker’s Levaquin antibiotic, a jury found.

The state court jury in Atlantic City, New Jersey, deliberated about eight hours over two days before clearing J&J’s Ortho-McNeil-Janssen Pharmaceutical unit of liability for Paul Gaffney’s and Robert Beare’s injuries. The two men contend their Achilles tendon snapped after they took Levaquin to treat respiratory infections.

It’s the company’s second win in a Levaquin case. In June, a Minnesota jury rejected a man’s claim that the antibiotic caused his Achilles injury. Another Minnesota jury in December 2010 awarded another former Levaquin user a total of $1.8 million in damages over his tendon injury.

“The evidence showed Ortho-McNeil-Janssen Pharmaceuticals properly informed of the benefits and risks associated with the use of Levaquin and that the company acted responsibly by providing appropriate and timely information about” the drug, William Foster, a spokesman for the J&J unit, said in an e- mailed statement.

Levaquin, which generated more than $1 billion in sales over an eight-year period starting in 2000, was J&J’s third- largest selling product at one point. In 2008, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration required all makers of antibiotics in Levaquin’s class to beef up warnings about tendon ruptures.

‘Obviously Disappointed’

Regulators required the upgraded warnings after finding that the antibiotics increased the risk of tendon ruptures to three to four times that of the general population, FDA officials said.

J&J faces more than 2,600 claims in U.S. courts blaming Levaquin for causing users’ tendon damage, court dockets show.

“We’re obviously disappointed with the verdict,” Andy Alonso, a lawyer for Gaffney and Beare, said in an interview after the panel announced its decision. “We felt the evidence was clear that the warnings were flawed. The jury felt otherwise.”

Both Gaffney, 67, and Beare, 72, got Levaquin prescriptions to deal with sinus infections that developed into bronchitis, their lawyers told jurors during the trial. Both men wound up with Achilles-tendon injuries that left them unable to walk and required surgery.

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