Posted On: November 29, 2007

St. Jude Lead Wires: Following the Medtronic Path?

A recent editorial in Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology reports findings of perforations in St. Jude Riata defibrillator leads. Coming on the heals of the recent Medtronic defibrillator lead recall, this editorial raises new manufacturing concerns about some of St. Jude’s newer and thinner leads. These perforations, coupled with their late presentation, pose a duel threat to patients. The lead perforation sometimes is not caught until it is “well beyond the right ventricular free wall” and protruding centimeters into surrounding tissue. This protrusion can lead to complications which can result in a lot of complications, including sudden death.

St. Jude has responded to these concerns by citing product analysis data showing that the perforation rate of St. Jude’s Riata lead wires is lower than the rates reported by similar leads. But, honestly, on the heals of the Medtronic recall, my confidence in reports from medical device companies about their safety and efficacy data is about the same as my confidence in Brittany Spears’ parenting skills.

Posted On: November 28, 2007

Phantom Vehicle Accident Cases Value and Success Frequency

A new Jury Verdict Research study based on data from the past ten years offers information on plaintiffs’ recovery in phantom auto accident cases. Phantom cases are generally uninsured motorist cases where there is no contact between the negligent driver's car the injury victim. In most phantom cases, the defendant’s vehicle is unidentified (thus the nickname "phantom"). In these auto accidents, the plaintiff almost invariably must make an evasive move due to the negligent driving of the defendant and is either forced off the road or into another vehicle or object as a result.

The recent study shows not only that 51 percent of these plaintiffs receive an award but it also breaks down where on the spectrum the values of the awards fall. Nearly one half of the damages awarded in these cases fall somewhere in the range of $10,000 to $100,000, with one quarter of the cases winning awards between $10,000 and $25,000. Although most cases fall somewhere in the middle, there are a substantial number which fall into one of the two extremes. While 11 percent of all no contact cases were awarded less than $2,500, 8 percent received damages exceeding a quarter of a million dollars. The study goes farther than offering just the award median ($21,441) and provides a more useful breakdown of the plaintiffs’ recovery in these types of cases.

Phantom auto accident cases are tough and easy for the plaintiffs' lawyer at the same time. The best part is there is rarely a witness to refute the plaintiff. The tough part is there are a lot of single car accident and every single car accident without a witness can potentially be fabricated into a phantom accident case. In the end, the entire trial becomes about the plaintiff's credibility.

Posted On: November 26, 2007

Maryland Lawyer Wanted

Miller & Zois is looking to add another personal injury lawyer to our growing team in Anne Arundel County. We are looking for a motivated, upbeat person with 2-5 years personal injury or insurance defense experience. Full benefits package available and salary commensurate with experience. If you are interested, please fax your resume and salary requirements to 410-760-8922 or e-mail Laura G. Zois at laurazois@millerandzois.com.

Posted On: November 13, 2007

Medtronic Class Action Suit

Two Kansas City men have filed separate class action lawsuits in the Medtronic defibrillator lead recall cases. Interesting, because Kansas City is in two states, the men have filed separate lawsuits in two different states.

Our Medtronic lead recall lawyers suspect all of these individual class actions will be consolidated in an MDL in one jurisdiction, most likely in Minnesota. Tomorrow, I will write about what the MDL is and how it will likely be applied in the Medtronic cases.

Posted On: November 5, 2007

Medical Malpractice Verdict in West Virginia

The Charleston Daily Mail reports that the West Virginia Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal of a $1.7 million medical malpractice verdict against a West Virginia physician who blinded a patient during an elective surgical procedure.

This is the second article I have seen on this case. The first article was after the jury rendered its verdict. The interesting thing about the case is that the doctor’s lawyers essentially alleged that the plaintiff was faking his injury. All of the articles I have seen have said the same thing. The defendants presented 50 hours of surveillance video from a construction site, but the trial judge found the video showed, “Heckel was disabled, even though the defense omitted footage showing him struggling at such tasks as walking down steps.”

You can Google that sentence and you will find it in a number of different articles. But it makes no sense. Did the jury consider the evidence or was it inadmissible? What happened to the omitted footage? Was it destroyed? What was the practical effect of the judge’s ruling? (If anyone knows, let me know.) But the interesting thing is that that doctor’s lawyers apparently wanted to use the snippets from 50 hours of surveillance that would lead the jury to believe that he might not be blind, but wanted to omit (or delete) the evidence that showed he was blind.

It seems like this doctor’s medical malpractice lawyers had a pretty difficult time showing the doctor did not commit medical malpractice, so they took a shot at attacking the plaintiff. This usually backfires, just as it did in this medical malpractice case.

Posted On: November 1, 2007

Anne Arundel County Circuit Court Vacancy

More judicial vacancy news....the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County has a vacancy created by the retirement of Judge Joseph Manck. There are seven candidates (listed below) as well as five "pool candidates" who are persons whose names were submitted to the Governor O'Malley for previous positions.

Philip A. Dales III, a general practice attorney in Annapolis, MD
Kathleen Marie Elmore
Mark W. Howes, a civil and criminal attorney in Annapolis, MD
Joseph Robert Laumann, a family law attorney in Annapolis, MD
Milissa Ann Murray
Kathleen E. Rogers, an Assistant State's Attorney in Anne Arundel County
Hon. J. Michael Wachs, (District Court for Anne Arundel County)

The pool candidates are:

Hon. David Shelton Bruce (formerly Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County)
Ronald Howard Jarashow, a civil attorney in Annapolis, MD
James A. Johnson, from the defense firm Semmes, Bowen & Semmes in Baltimore
Charles J. Muskin (a domestic Master in Anne Arundel County)
Frank J. Ragione, Sr., Anne Arundel County Assistant State's Attorney

Posted On: November 1, 2007

Medtronics Lead Recall

On October 30, 2007, the Wall Street Journal summarized the events leading up to the recall of the Medtronics Defibrillator Lead Recall. According to the article, Medtronics first became aware of the problems with the lead wires when problems with the Sprint Fidelis 6949 surfaced back in January. This was when doctors at the Minneapolis Heart Institute decided that they would no longer use the device, because six patients had come back to the Institute reporting that they were experiencing unnecessary shocks. However, it was not until after an October 7th meeting at Medtronics that the company stopped selling its malfunctioning product. The company also cited five deaths in the three years its product was on the market.

The FDA, which has come under fire from Congress and others for not more closely monitoring medical device manufacturers, will no doubt receive increased criticism for its failure to move more quickly to take this product off the market. Dr. Daniel Schultz, Director of the FDA, is quoted as saying that despite having information about the malfunctioning device, “there was nothing we could point to specifically to say this is a violative product that needs to come off the market.” The article discussed the speculation that the FDA did not require that this product have pre-market clinical trials or post-market studies, because it was similar in design to earlier products.

As I have written elsewhere, the problem in the vast majority of the cases is not the timing – even if flawed – of the recall, because this is not a recall. In most cases, these Sprint Fidelis lead wires cannot be recalled anyway because they cannot safely be taken out of a patient. For people that had wires implanted between January and October, the delay is a real issue. But for the majority of the over 250,000 people who have these leads, the negligence claim against Medtronics will focus primarily on the fact that the Sprint leads were on the market in the first place.

First and foremost, if the reports are true that there were no clinical trials, because the new leads were similar in designs to the old leads, Medtronics and the FDA completely ignored patient safety. The Medtronics Sprint Fidelis leads are almost half the size of traditional leads. This is not a similar product, it is a technological innovation and Medtronics marketed these leads as such. But when you have a new product, as these defibrillator leads were, you have to adequately test the product to be sure it is safe, especially before you allow a quarter of a million of them to go on the market for insertion into people’s chests to monitor their hearts. It really is as simple as that.

The second problem is the failure of adequate post market studies. This is a Medtronics fault, of course, but is also a systematic flaw in the FDA itself. Safety and speed have been called the yin and yang of the regulation of drugs and medical devices and there is some measure of truth to this. We all want safe medical devices that have been tested, but, particularly with serious medical conditions, we want immediate access to breakthrough drugs.

In 1992, it was possible that the pendulum had swung too far toward safety. The most notable example was the slow speed with which new AIDS medications were being brought to the market. The Prescription Drug User Fee Act in 1992 represented a deal between the FDA and the drug industry. Pharmaceutical companies agreed to pay millions of dollars in fees, and the FDA guaranteed that drug and medical device reviews would be completed within a year for fast track drugs.

But all of this new FDA money was for clinical trials and other pre-market efforts. The pharmaceutical companies made no investment into the post-market safety once the drug or medical device was on the market. So what happened at the FDA? The agency became a pseudo private agency and the influence of the pharmaceutical companies rose dramatically. At FDA advisory committee meetings, they begin by asking the doctors to put on the record their conflicts of interest. Today, it seems 90% of any panel has some tie in with a pharmaceutical company. While the FDA still looked at drugs and medical devices after they were put on the market, this branch of the FDA became the black sheep with insufficient funding, which obviously led to those post-market people at the FDA being overworked and underappreciated. You know how the story goes from here.

This is exactly what has happened in the Medtronics defibrillator lead recall cases, which should soon be certified as a class action. This will likely cost Medtronics over a billion dollars in lost revenues, litigation costs, and payouts in settlements and verdicts in a class action and individual lawsuits.

If you are looking for a Medtronics recall lawyer to assist you in your defibrillator recall claim, our lawyers are representing patients with these Medtronic defibrillators with defective leads throughout the United States and Canada. Fill out this brief form if you need additional information or would like us to review you case, or call us at 800-553-8082. You can also click here for answer to questions about the Medtronics defibrillator recall that many of our clients are asking.