Pubdate: Tue, 19 Jun 2001 Source: Roanoke Times (VA) Copyright: 2001 Roanoke Times Contact: http://www.roanoke.com/roatimes/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/368 Author: Laurence Hammack Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?186 (Oxycontin) OXYCONTIN LAWSUIT AIMS FOR CLASS-ACTION STATUS Lawyers Say About 100,000 In Va. Could Benefit Purdue Pharma, maker of the drug, said the suit's allegations are "completely baseless." A.F. McCaulley is a retired coal miner who went to the doctor last year with a sore shoulder, was given the painkiller OxyContin, and quickly became addicted after taking just one pill. Cathy Helton is a mother of two who wound up in jail for forging checks to support her OxyContin addiction, which began when she was prescribed the drug following a hysterectomy. Carol Wagnoner is raising her two young granddaughters after their mother, an OxyContin addict, deserted the children. Those stories are just some of the allegations in a lawsuit brought last week against Purdue Pharma, the Connecticut company that manufactures OxyContin. Attorneys who filed the $5.2 billion suit in Lee County Circuit Court hope to expand it into a class-action proceeding on behalf of anyone harmed by OxyContin. Based on the reaction so far, they said Monday, it won't be hard to find additional plaintiffs. "We've had phone calls all day long about it," said Abingdon attorney Strother Smith, who estimated the suit might benefit 100,000 Virginians in the area west of Roanoke. Far Southwest Virginia was the first part of the state to experience problems with OxyContin, which is easily converted into a street drug by addicts who crush the pills and snort or inject the powder. At least 37 people in the region have died from overdoses of oxycodone, the active ingredient in OxyContin, and police say they have been overwhelmed by addicts who turn to crime to support their habits. Attorneys involved in the lawsuit likened it to the massive litigation brought against tobacco companies for selling a product they knew was a health risk. Pharmaceutical companies such as Purdue Pharma "are corporate drug lords who have and are inflicting pain throughout Southwest Virginia and the nation, and they should be held accountable," said Emmitt Yeary, another Abingdon attorney who joined forces with Smith and the Washington, D.C., firm of Henrichsen Siegel in bringing suit. The suit accuses Purdue Pharma, which sold more than $1 billion worth of OxyContin last year, of touting its product as a cure-all treatment for moderate to severe pain while turning a blind eye to its addictive side. The company "continues to make false and fraudulent misrepresentations because their appetite for significant future profits far outweighs their concern for the health and safety of the citizens of Virginia," the suit claims. Purdue Pharma said in a statement Monday that it had not seen a copy of the lawsuit, but believed based on media accounts that the allegations are "completely baseless." "We will vigorously defend ourselves and fully expect to prevail," the statement continued. "We want the many thousands of patients in Virginia receiving pain relief from OxyContin tablets to rest assured that nothing in this case, or in any other case, will cause us to abandon them or deter us from making sure our drug is available to them." The company has maintained that only those who abuse OxyContin become addicted. While some of the plaintiffs in the lawsuits used the drug improperly, most of them took it exactly as it was prescribed, Yeary said. Also named as defendants in the lawsuit are Abbott Laboratories, a Chicago-based company that helped market and distribute OxyContin, and two physicians accused of excessively prescribing the drug. One of the lawsuit's main allegations is that Purdue Pharma heavily marketed OxyContin while downplaying the addictive risks of the drug, which is derived from opium. But the lawsuit also makes other claims: violation of the Virginia Consumer Protection Act; negligence; creation of a public nuisance; false advertising; conspiracy, and breach of implied warranty. Earlier this month, West Virginia's attorney general filed suit against Purdue Pharma, claiming that its intensive marketing influenced doctors to over prescribe the drug. Virginia does not plan to take similar legal action. "A lawsuit against the manufacturer over its marketing practices years ago will not help stop the illegal use of OxyContin," Randy Davis, spokesman for acting Attorney General Randolph Beales, said last week. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek