Advance Dx, Inc. v. YourBio Health, Inc., --- F.Supp.3d ----, 2024 WL 4393314, No. 24-10595-WGY (D. Mass. Oct. 3, 2024)
Advance sued YourBio, which competes in the market for
at-home medical device testing patients’ level of anti-Mullerian hormone, for
false advertising, tortious interference, defamation/disparagement, unjust
enrichment, and unfair trade practices under Massachusetts statutory law.
Advance makes a card used to collect a blood sample
obtained from a patient’s lanced fingertip, while YourBio manufactures a device
that is used to collect a blood sample by attaching to the back of a patient’s
arm and piercing capillaries close to the skin’s surface with microneedles. In
2022, BioMed studied the parties’ products and conventional venipuncture. “After
processing the data, BioMed imposed an internal control, calculated based on
the Study’s data, to normalize Advance’s results to the venipuncture instead of
using the recommended internal control provided in Advance’s guidelines.” It
then published the study, concluding that YourBio’s testing device was more
accurate, superior, and has stronger consumer preference than Advance’s.
YourBio used PR Newswire to tout its superiority and also repeatedly promoted
the study “to consumers, industry professionals, and third parties at trade
shows and in YourBio’s marketing materials.” However, after it learned about
the use of the simulated control, the testing lab “stated that any discordance
noted in the Study may be due to BioMed’s failure to follow Advance’s
instructions for the Card, and not due to any fault of the Card.”
YourBio argued that the study was a non-actionable
scientific conclusion and statement of opinion and therefore could not be
falsified. The court disagreed. Even under the rule of ONY, Inc. v. Cornerstone
Therapeutics, Inc., 720 F.3d 490 (2d Cir. 2013), “we must take into account the
statement’s context, including the medium in which the statement was published
and the audience to which it was presented.” The medium here was republication
by YourBio specifically to promote its devices. “Unlike a typical scientific
journal, the medium in this case is not meant to communicate insights into
matters of scientific debate, despite the fact that the Study may have been
first published by BioMed for exclusively scientific reasons.” The audience was
also not “purely scientific,” but rather targeted at customers/potential
customers.
The court also found that Advance was not a public figure,
so defamation required only negligence, although it did plead that YourBio was
aware of the falsity. And damage could be presumed without evidence of economic
loss because the statements were of the kind that would harm Advance’s
business.
The same basic logic allowed the Lanham Act false
advertising claims to proceed. (Advance didn’t say a lot about “interstate
commerce,” but alleging that the false statements were published online
sufficed.) Unfair trade practices under Chapter 93A MGL are treated the same way
as Lanham Act false advertising claims, so they also survived.
Tortious interference and commercial/product disparagement
claims likewise survived. Under Massachusetts law, “[p]roduct disparagement is
similar to defamation but lacks a reputational harm element and makes greater
demands as to the ‘falsity of the statement[s], fault of the defendant and
proof of damage.’ ” That didn’t make a
difference here.
Unjust enrichment claims failed, however, because Advance
didn’t plead it had the right to some benefit/money that YourBio received.
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