ImprimisRX, LLC v. OSRX, Inc., 2023 WL 7390842, No. 21-cv-01305-BAS-DDL (S.D. Cal. Nov. 8, 2023)
Imprimis sued defendants, competitors in the compounding
pharmacy industry, for false advertising, trademark and copyright infringement,
and related claims. It alleged that defendants falsely advertised that they’re
in compliance with Section 503A of the FDCA, governing compounding.
The court here admits the parties’ experts.
Imprimis’s trademark survey expert (for secondary meaning)
didn’t use a control group, but that went to weight rather than admissibility
in the absence of other serious problems. The survey targeted an appropriate
population (ophthalmologists and optometrists as confirmed via a series of
employment questions), used a standard question format, provided a “don’t
know/have no opinion answer,” excluded respondents who answer questions too
quickly, randomized the questions, and surveyed an appropriate population size.
Nor did failure to address genericity render the survey inadmissible.
Another expert surveyed prescribers to opine on the extent
to which a company’s advertising claim that it operates in full compliance with
Section 503A is important to them. In the closed-response survey, the expert included
a question asking whether it would be “important to [respondents] when
selecting a compounding pharmacy” that the “Pharmacy is in compliance with
local zoning requirements” as a control question: Respondents that selected
this question were removed from her final estimates. Whether this control
adequately accounted for noise went to weight rather than admissibility. Again,
there weren’t other serious problems.
Defendants argued that the expert didn’t evaluate the
advertising at issue—the survey didn’t ask whether the “small-font claim” on defendants’
actual webpage would be important to prescribers in their purchasing decisions.
Using hypotheticals rather than the exact statements at issue went only to
weight; it was still relevant to materiality.
Defendants also argued that the survey’s results were
logically contradictory and thus fundamentally flawed. Although 54.1% of survey
respondents selected “Pharmacy operates in full compliance with Section 503A
regarding compounded drugs” under the FDCA as an important factor in selecting
a compounding pharmacy, in a separate question, 57.4% of survey respondents
answered they were not aware of Section 503A prior to taking the survey. Again,
this went to weight rather than admissibility unless “a survey’s results are so
illogical as to cast doubt over its reliability, the inquiry can move from
weight to admissibility,” which didn’t happen here.
The results were logically possible: “Prescribers can
maintain a preference that compounding pharmacies follow all applicable rules
and regulations without having an awareness of all the applicable rules and
regulations.” Also, the control question attempted to isolate Section 503A’s
importance relative to other, hypothetical regulations. Finally, “even if the
response is irrational where a respondent believes Section 503A compliance was
an important factor in selecting a compounding pharmacy but is unaware of
Section 503A, the assumed percentage of irrational responses is not so
significantly pervasive as to morph the issue from weight to admissibility.”
Plaintiffs also designated an expert on pharmacology and
pharmacy operations to opine on what compound medications are, what the
differences are between Section 503A and Section 503B facilities, what
restrictions govern Section 503A pharmacies, whether defendants operate in
compliance with Section 503A regulations, and why compliance with Section 503A
regulations is important.
The proposed expert was qualified: he was clinical faculty
at the University of California San Diego School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical
Studies where he teaches classes in pharmacy law and ethics, among other
things. Although he wasn’t a licensed attorney, “his practical and academic
experience with compounding regulations qualifies him to offer his opinions
about compliance with Section 503A regulations.” And his expertise would assist
the jury: he was interpreting the evidence for whether defendants were filling
bulk orders in contravention of Section 503A and evaluating their suggestions
for order volume according to his familiarity with industry norms and
practices.
But did he offer impermissible legal conclusions? “The Ninth
Circuit has previously allowed expert testimony about compliance with industry
standards and regulations, where that testimony does not reach the ultimate
issue of law, even if that testimony was couched in legal terms.” This depends
a lot on exactly what the expert says. Here, he wouldn’t be allowed to present
statements such as “OSRX routinely violates the rules ... of 503A pharmacies,”
but he could testify to his opinions on how to understand Sections 503A and
503B regulations and apply those industry norms, regulations, and practices to
the facts at hand.
Defendants’ proposed expert on the same topic got in too.
She didn’t need to be a statistician to testify that “OSRX routinely dispenses
its compounded drugs pursuant to valid patient-specific prescriptions, as
required under section 503A of the [FDCA].” She had “the requisite exposure and
experience to select a simple subset of prescriptions to review and is
qualified to opine on the subject matter as an expert witness under Rule 702.” But,
like plaintiff’s expert, she would not be allowed to say “OSRX’s dispensing
practices are compliant with 503A pharmacy requirements.” Instead, she could
testify about her review of OSRX’s prescription data and whether defendants
appear to prescribe products in bulk. Her review of the records would assist
the jury in understanding whether a valid prescription was present for each
allegedly bulk order/office stock, which a layperson would struggle to do.
No comments:
Post a Comment