Painters & Allied Trades District Council 82 Health Care Fund v. Takeda Pharm. Co., 2023 WL 4191651, -- F. Supp. 3d --, No. 2:17-cv-07223-JWH-AS (C.D. Cal. May 24, 2023)
I tell my students that probabilistic claims are easier for
competitors to bring than directly harmed consumers themselves, because competitors
can aggregate harm, whereas if a court thinks that only 45% of consumers were deceived
it may well reject a direct consumer protection claim. This case illustrates
that principle well, though in a slightly different configuration. Here, a national
third-party payer class was certified, but not a California consumer class.
The claims relate to the drug Actos and allege RICO violations
and violations of state consumer protection laws because defendants conspired
to market Actos fraudulently by concealing the association between its use and
its users’ subsequent development of bladder cancer. Defendants allegedly misled
the FDA regarding the risk of bladder cancer by generating false studies,
manipulating study results, and controlling the messaging about Actos to
conceal aspects of the drug’s mechanism that could have raised concerns, and
also misled prescribing physicians, consumers, and third-party payors into
believing that Actos did not create an increased risk of bladder cancer. A
group of patients who developed bladder cancer sued and a jury returned a
verdict in favor of bellwether plaintiffs.
Painters alleged that it “reimbursed a significant number of
claims at potentially elevated prices for Actos” that would not have been
reimbursed “but for the fraud. Emails, testimony, and internal marketing
studies suggested that defendants were aware that language linking Actos to
bladder cancer would reduce sales of Actos, and sales of Actos indeed began to
decline when the FDA announced that it would investigate Actos for bladder
cancer risk. Sales dropped even more precipitously after a bladder cancer
warning was added to the Actos label. Plaintiffs’ expert found that, had a
bladder cancer warning been issued from the beginning, third-party payors would
have paid for 56% fewer Actos prescriptions during the class period.
The expert estimated that around 40% of the Actos
prescriptions would have still been written (and, thus, would have been
reimbursed), even if there was full awareness of the bladder cancer risks,
while 56.77% were fraudulently induced. Only third-party payors who paid for at
least five Actos prescriptions would be part of the class; the odds were thus
that any TPP that paid for at least five Actos prescriptions had,
statistically, a 98.5% chance of suffering an injury; that 1.5% chance didn’t
defeat predominance. And other data indicated that only about 4% of patients
switched from Actos to an equally or more expensive drug, which again wasn’t
enough to defeat predominance for the TPPs.
But there was no predominance for the consumer class,
because the individual plaintiffs would vary so much in whether they still
would have taken the drug if they’d known the true risks. There was “some
compelling common evidence of materiality,” such as a “wave” of physician
contacts in the wake of the actual risk disclosures, and one defendant’s
concession that bladder cancer risks would be a “serious thing” for a
healthcare professional.
Nonetheless,
the materiality of that bladder
cancer risk to patients’ diabetes prognoses is highly individualized. Moreover,
some medicines and treatment regimens would be ineffective; some patients would
have no other option other than Actos, notwithstanding the bladder cancer risks.
Those determinations necessarily reside with the patients and their physicians.
Even Comanor recognized that reality. Therefore, the question of whether Takeda
or Lilly’s omissions were material to the choices of any physician-patient
tandem is an individualized one.
California’s ordinary presumption of reliance from material
deceptiveness was insufficient, because doctors consider so many patient-specific
factors in prescribing. Although the bladder cancer risks here were “ones that
most reasonable physicians and patients would evaluate before choosing an
appropriate healthcare regimen,” materiality exists only where the omission of
those risks “would have been important to the decision-making process.” And
that was individualized.
The Court is loath to insert itself
into the doctor’s office and impose its judgment onto physicians and their
patients, blanketly concluding on behalf of all “reasonable persons” that some
risks matter (i.e., bladder cancer risk) and that some do not (i.e., untreated
or mismanaged diabetes). … And indeed, [plaintiffs’ expert’s] own model
suggests that 40% of Actos purchases would have been made even if full
information of the risks was known. Forty percent is not a trivial amount ….
This also meant that there were individualized questions of
actual injury (for the CLRA claim) that predominated over common issues. The
court also thought the damages model wasn’t sufficiently explained, compared to
the damages model for the TPPs.
No comments:
Post a Comment