http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-03-22/drugmaker-investor-lawsuits-backed-by-u-s-supreme-court-4-.html
By Greg Stohr and William
McQuillen - Mar 23, 2011 5:02 AM GMT+0700 inShare8More
Matrixx stopped selling its Zicam nasal spray and gel in June 2009 after the
Food and Drug Administration warned consumers the treatments may cause a loss
of smell, a condition known as anosmia.
The U.S. Supreme Court, allowing a suit over a withdrawn cold remedy, gave
shareholders more power to sue drugmakers and biotechnology companies for
failing to reveal indications about dangerous side effects.
The justices unanimously said Matrixx Initiatives Inc. (MTXX), acquired in
February by HIG Capital LLC, must defend against accusations that it should
have told investors that some users of the Zicam nasal spray and gel had lost
their sense of smell.
Matrixx argued that drugmakers need not say anything until reports of side
effects become statistically significant. The high court today rejected that
argument, saying that less definitive evidence in some cases is enough to
require disclosure under the federal securities laws.
“Given that medical
professionals and regulators act on the basis of evidence of causation that is
not statistically significant, it stands to reason that in certain cases
reasonable investors would as well,” Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote for the
court.
The court also ruled
against business groups in a second case today. The justices ruled 6-2 that,
under a federal labor law, employers can’t retaliate against employers who
orally complain about workplace conditions.
Matrixx stopped selling its Zicam nasal spray and gel in June 2009 after the
Food and Drug Administration warned consumers the treatments may cause a loss
of smell, a condition known as anosmia. Matrixx says it disagrees with the
FDA’s findings. Other versions of the cold remedy remain on the market.
Link Alleged
Sotomayor limited the
impact of the ruling by saying it “does not mean that pharmaceutical
manufacturers must disclose all reports of adverse events.” She called those
reports “daily events” in the industry.
In Matrixx’s case, the company allegedly “received information that plausibly
indicated a reliable causal link between Zicam and anosmia,” Sotomayor wrote.
She pointed to allegations that three medical professionals and researchers had
compiled reports describing more than 10 patients who had lost their sense of
smell after using Zicam.
The suing investors also pointed to lawsuits filed on behalf of nine people
from October 2003 to January 2004.
“The inference that Matrixx acted recklessly (or intentionally, for that
matter) is at least as compelling, if not more compelling, than the inference
that it simply thought the reports did not indicate anything meaningful about
adverse reactions,” Sotomayor wrote.
Company Confident
A lawyer representing Matrixx said the company is confident it will be able to
refute the allegations when the case returns to a federal trial court in
Arizona.
“There was certainly no
intentional or reckless failure to disclose any information to the public,”
said the lawyer, Michael Yoder, a partner at O’Melveny & Myers LLP in
Newport Beach, California.
The investor suit seeks class-action status on behalf of people who bought
Zicam from Oct. 22, 2003, to Feb. 6, 2004.
The case is Matrixx Initiatives v. Siracusano, 09-1156.
To contact the reporter on this story: Greg Stohr in Washington at gstohr@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Mark Silva at msilva34@bloomberg.net
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