Merck has
released that it will agree to pay about $4.85 billion to settle a significant
portion of the 27,000 cases against it's painkiller Vioxx
From
www.angelreyesblog.com
By Angel Reyes
November 9, 2007
In a very significant announcement today, Merck has
released that it will agree to pay about $4.85 billion to settle a significant
portion of the 27,000 cases against it's painkiller Vioxx. A Wallstreet Journal
article is below. Not everyone is eligible and we are working on analyzing
the proposal and how it applies. To find out if you are eligible for consideration,
email me directly at
angel@reyeslaw.com, and we will help determine your
eligibility.
Merck to Pay $4.85 Billion To Settle Most Vioxx Cases
By HEATHER WON TESORIERO and PETER LOFTUS
November 9, 2007 11:10 a.m.
Merck & Co. announced that it agreed
to pay about $4.85 billion to settle a significant portion of the claims
over injuries allegedly linked to its Vioxx
painkiller after insisting for years that it would fight all 27,000 cases
filed rather than compromise.
Shares of Merck rose $1.64, or 3%, to $56.41 in morning trading on the New
York Stock Exchange.
The drug maker said if certain conditions under the agreement are met, Merck
will pay a fixed amount of $4.85 billion into a settlement fund for qualifying
claims that enter into the resolution process.
"This is a good and responsible agreement that will allow the company
to concentrate even more fully on its mission of discovering, developing
and delivering novel medicines and vaccines," said Chief Executive Richard
T. Clark.
Negotiating teams met more than 50 times in eight states and spoke hundreds
of times over the telephone to hammer out the deal, according to attorneys.
"I'm very happy with it,'' Chris Seeger, one of the six plaintiff lawyers
who helped negotiate the settlement, said Friday. It's a tremendous way to
resolve this litigation.''
Two Funds
Under the agreement, Merck will set up two funds, a $4 billion one for claims
of myocardial infarction and a $850 million one for ischemic stroke claims.
The amount awarded to individual plaintiffs will vary. The company said it
does not know the number of plaintiffs covered by the agreement.
This is not a class-action settlement, Merck said, and claims will be evaluated
on an individual basis. The company expects to record a fourth-quarter pretax
charge of $4.85 billion to cover the cost of the agreement. Under the terms
of the agreement, Merck does not admit fault or causation. The company said
it will continue to defend all claims that are not included in the resolution
process.
Vioxx was approved for sale in 1999 and quickly became a popular drug, with
annual sales reaching $2.5 billion before the Whitehouse Station, N.J., company
pulled it from the market in September 2004 amid cardiovascular-safety concerns.
Since then, Merck has won 11 cases that have gone to trial and lost five.
What's more, the company won four of five cases considered to be bellwethers
of how future cases would likely turn out, making the decision to settle
somewhat surprising. U.S. District Judge Elden E. Fallon, who oversees the
litigation, had said following those test cases that he wanted the parties
to meet to gauge where things stood.
Conference Call
Merck $4.85 billion fund excludes some of the cases won by plaintiffs at
trial because they are being appealed, a Merck attorney said Friday. On the
company's morning conference call, outside Merck attorney Ted Mayer said
the settlement doesn't include the cases of Frederick Humeston, who won a
$47.5 million verdict against Merck in March, and the family of Robert Ernst,
who won a $253 million verdict in the very first Vioxx trial in 2005.
Merck is in the process of appealing those cases, and will continue doing
so to clarify "governing law going forward," Mr. Mayer said. Some
other cases tried so far are excluded as well. The case
of Gerald Barnett, however, who won a $51 million verdict last year,
will be part of the settlement, Mr. Mayer said.
Merck has spent about $1.9 billion in defense costs for the Vioxx litigation
since it withdrew the pain drug from the market, said Kenneth Frazier, head
of Merck's human health unit and the former general counsel.
About 60,000 claims have been filed against Merck alleging injuries caused
by Vioxx, said Bruce Kuhlik, general counsel. The company expects about 45,000
to 50,000 of them to be part of the settlement. Merck doesn't believe the
remaining cases would be eligible for the settlement.
Good Omens
The drug maker has gotten some good omens of late. In September, New Jersey's
highest court ruled that health insurers' lawsuits against Merck couldn't
be consolidated into a nationwide class action, removing the company's greatest
financial exposure from the Vioxx litigation. The suit sought reimbursement
for as much as $9.6 billion of Vioxx purchases. And last April, a ruling
by a Texas state court judge undercut the legal basis for the roughly 1,000
cases filed there.
Plaintiffs' attorneys have long said they wanted to engage in settlement
talks with Merck. It is expensive to bring cases to trial and even when plaintiffs
prevail, it often takes years for the suits to wind their way through the
appellate process.
Merck's stock has rebounded significantly since the lows shortly after the
company withdrew Vioxx. In late 2004, the stock fell to the high $20s. On
Nov. 1, the stock hit a 52-week high of $58.36.
But the company has incurred considerable costs from the litigation. In its
most recent earnings statement, Merck said it spent $160 million in the third
quarter for world-wide Vioxx litigation costs. It also took a charge of $70
million to shore up its litigation coffers, and in the year-earlier period
took a charge of $598 million. The company currently has set aside $720 million
for its Vioxx legal defense costs, which doesn't include any potential damages
to plaintiffs.
Vioxx was approved to relieve arthritis and other types of pain, and was
taken by an estimated 20 million Americans. Its withdrawal drew questions
from critics and government regulators about safety issues and marketing
practices in the drug industry. Vioxx was one of three painkillers in the
class of so-called Cox-2 inhibitors. Only Pfizer
Inc.'s Celebrex remains on the market, and it now carries the Food and
Drug Administration's strongest warning label. Bextra, also made by Pfizer,
was withdrawn from the market.
Earlier this year, a regulatory panel voted against the approval of Arcoxia,
Merck's follow-on Cox-2 inhibitor, which is sold abroad.
--Kathy Shwiff and the Associated Press contributed to this article.
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