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European Trends in Pharmaceutical Litigation and Regulation

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Title: European Trends in Pharmaceutical Litigation and Regulation


1
European Trends in Pharmaceutical Litigation and
Regulation
  • Duncan Fairgrieve, BIICL, 1 Crown Office Row.
  • Stefan Lenze, BIICL, Lovells

2
Overview
  • Causation as an EC law concept
  • Update on defect
  • Regulatory compliance
  • Immunity Pandemic flu vaccines

3
Causation EC law concept?
  • Article 4 Directive 85/374/EEC (PLD)
  • The injured person shall be required to prove
    the damage, the defect and the causal
    relationship between the defect and damage
  • Burden of proof EC law
  • Standard of proof national law
  • Test of causation courts apply national law
  • ? Consistent with maximum harmonisation goal?

4
Divergent approaches to causation
  • Loss of chance
  • Presumptions
  • Uncertain causation and multiple potential
    tortfeasors
  • Failure to warn

5
Loss of a chance
  • France broad application
  • UK restrictive
  • Gregg v Scott 2005 UKHL 2
  • Germany/Austria rejected

6
Presumptions
  • Germany Drug Act 2002
  • Presumption of causation if the drug is, in the
    individual case, capable of causing the damage
  • No presumption if other circumstances are also
    capable of causing the damage
  • France
  • Where concordant factors indicate causal link,
    presumption applies.

7
Uncertain causation and multiple potential
tortfeasors
  • UK
  • Fairchild v Glenhaven Funeral Services 2002 All
    ER 305
  • Comparative law approach
  • Germany
  • Negligence Joint liability where co-defendants
    are participants of a tort
  • Drug Act Joint liability where two or more
    defective drugs are capable of causing the damage
  • France
  • Cass civ 5 June 1957 whole group created a
    risk through negligent conduct.

8
European approach to causation?
  • Maximum harmonisation directive
  • ECJ, C-52/00, Commission v France
  • Divergence in key areas of causation
  • Lack of consistency in PL cases
  • Common principles?
  • Codifcation projects
  • Comparative law by the Courts
  • ECJ state liability
  • national courts Fairchild
  • BIICL PL Database http//www.biicl.org/plf/index.a
    sp?contentid700menuid106

9
Update on design defect
  • Risk-benefit test
  • Germany Yes
  • UK
  • Design cases Abouzaid v Mothercare, Boogle v
    McDonalds
  • Non-standard product A v NBA
  • France
  • traditional test of defect
  • Shift in recent pharma cases? (Cass civ 26 Jan
    2006)
  • European guidance
  • Article 1 (28, 28a) Directive 2001/83/EC
  • Eudralex Guidelines

10
Regulatory compliance
  • Defence where defect is due to compliance with
    mandatory regulations Art. 7 d PLD
  • Otherwise, compliance with regulations indicates
    absence of defect
  • Recent case law (Germany, Austria, France)
  • Comparison with US law (s 4 Restatement Third)
  • Pre-emption defence
  • US Federal pre-emption
  • Community pre-emption
  • Maximum harmonisation
  • Common Market

11
Immunity from liability
  • Current regulatory developments with respect to
    the risks of a pandemic flu outbreak

12
Pandemic flue vaccines
  • Public need
  • Design of virus and vaccine typically unclear
    until shortly before the vaccination period
  • Not suitable for normal authorisation procedure
  • No authorisation
  • Mock-up authorisation procedure

13
Pandemic flue vaccines
  • Patient Producer
  • Government

Product liability
Special legislation
Contractual relations
14
Directive 2001/83/EC (amended in 2004)
  • Article 5 (3) Marketing authorisation holders/
    manufacturers shall not be subject to civil
    liability if
  • damage is the consequence of medicinal product
  • no marketing authorisation off-label use
  • the use of the product is recommended or required
    by authority
  • in response to spread of pathogenic agents
  • Article 5 (4) Liability for defective products,
    as provided for by Directive 85/374/EEC, shall
    not be affected by Article 5 (3)
  • ? Contradiction?

15
UK Regulation SI 2005 No. 2759
  • 3B. (2) Marketing authorisation
    holders/manufacturers shall not be subject to any
    civil liability if
  • damage is the consequence of medicinal product
  • no marketing authorisation/off-label use
  • licensing authority recommend or required use of
    the product
  • in response to spread of pathogenic agents
  • the use of the product in accordance with
    recommendation or requirement
  • 3B. (3) Paragraph 2 shall not apply in relation
    to liability under section 2 of the Consumer
    Protection Act 1987(a)
  • ? In line with EC law

16
German Regulation of 7 April 2006
  • Marketing authorisation holders/ manufacturers
    shall not be subject to civil liability if
  • damage is the consequence of medicinal product
  • no marketing authorisation/off-label use
  • licensing authority recommend or required use of
    the product
  • in response to spread of pathogenic agents
  • lack of authorisation procedure is probable cause
    of the damage
  • Compliance with EC law questionable
  • Marketing authorisation holders/manufacturers
    shall be subject to liability in cases of gross
    negligence or intentional harm
  • ? Not in compliance with EC law

17
Pandemic flu vaccines Product liability risks
  • Claims in negligence excluded
  • ? No failure to test cause of action
  • Claims under strict liability provisions possible
  • Defect
  • Development risks defence
  • no failure to test claims
  • Contractual risk management
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