IV. DISCUSSION
A. AIDS Healthcare Foundation v. Gilead
AIDS Healthcare Foundation previously filed an antitrust action concerning Gilead's TDF- and TAF-based drugs that also sought a declaration of patent invalidity and relief under California and Nevada unfair competition laws. AIDS Healthcare Found. ,
Gilead knew of the efficacy and safety benefits of TAF in 2004 but shelved its clinical trials until 2011, leading to FDA approval (and a grant of NCE exclusivity) in 2015, just before the patents on TDF were set to expire.
This, AIDS Healthcare contends, delayed the expiration date of Gilead's NCE exclusivity and thus delayed the moment that competitors would seek to challenge Gilead's patents on TAF. Further, it left consumers to bear the higher bone and kidney toxicity of TDF longer than necessary.
Id. at *9.
Gilead seeks to rely on this decision to bar Plaintiffs from asserting any claims based on the contention that Gilead had a duty to introduce TAF drugs earlier. However, the Court does not find AIDS Healthcare Foundation to be dispositive. First, the case was an antitrust action, which addressed the question of whether Gilead had engaged in anticompetitive conduct. Concluding that Gilead owed no duty to its competitors says nothing about any duties Gilead might owe to consumers under state tort law.
B. Preemption
Gilead argues that Plaintiffs' claims based on design defect and failure to warn are preempted by federal law because it is impossible to comply with both state and federal regulations.
First, "the purpose of Congress is the ultimate touchstone in every pre-emption case." Second, "[i]n all pre-emption cases, and particularly in those in which Congress has 'legislated ... in a field which the States have traditionally occupied,' ... we 'start with the assumption that the historic police powers of the States were not to be superseded by the Federal Act unless that was the clear and manifest purpose of Congress.' "
Wyeth v. Levine ,
In the past decade, the Supreme Court has considered three preemption cases concerning drug manufacturers. First, in Wyeth v. Levine , the Court considered "whether the FDA's drug labeling judgments 'preempt state law product liability claims premised on the theory that different labeling judgments were necessary to make drugs reasonably safe for use.' "
The FDA's premarket approval of a new drug application includes the approval of the exact text in the proposed label. See21 U.S.C. § 355 ;21 CFR § 314.105 (b) (2008). Generally speaking, a manufacturer may only change a drug label after the FDA approves a supplemental application. There is, however, an FDA regulation that permits a manufacturer to make certain changes to its label before receiving the agency's approval. Among other things, this "changes being effected" (CBE) regulation provides that if a manufacturer is changing a label to "add or strengthen a contraindication, warning, precaution, or adverse reaction" or to "add or strengthen an instruction about dosage and administration that is intended to increase the safe use of the drug product," it may make the labeling change upon filing its supplemental application with the FDA; it need not wait for FDA approval. §§ 314.70(c)(6)(iii)(A), (C).
In PLIVA, Inc. v. Mensing ,
In the third case to consider preemption in this context, the Supreme Court held that "state-law design-defect claims that turn on the adequacy of a drug's warnings are pre-empted by federal law" as to generic manufacturers. Mut. Pharm. Co. v. Bartlett ,
Reading these cases together, this Court discerns the following two-step analysis for impossibility preemption in the drug-manufacturing context: First, courts must determine whether a drug manufacturer may independently take action that complies with both state and federal law. An action is independent under this analysis if the manufacturer can take such action without prior FDA approval, even if the FDA may subsequently reject approval of the action post hoc. If independent action is not possible, then the state-law claims are preempted. If independent action is possible, then the claims are preempted only if there is clear evidence that the FDA would not grant approval. Levine ,
1. Design-Defect Claims Based on Drug Composition
Plaintiffs allege that Gilead violated various state laws by designing and submitting for FDA approval drugs that contained TDF rather than TAF, which they allege was a safer alternative available at the time. Plaintiffs also allege that Gilead should have designed Stribild with a lower dose of TDF. Gilead argues that these design-defect claims based on drug composition are preempted.
Before considering whether a manufacturer can comply with both state and federal law, courts must determine a manufacturer's duties under each law. E.g. , Bartlett ,
The Supreme Court has not addressed whether federal law preempts design-defect claims against a brand-name manufacturer on grounds that, prior to initial FDA approval, the drug should have had a different composition.
The Sixth Circuit is the only Court of Appeals to have ruled on whether pre-approval design-defect claims against a brand-name manufacturer are preempted. In Yates , the court noted that "counsel for defendants has cited no federal law that restricts a brand-name drug manufacturer from designing a reasonably safe product prior to FDA approval"; that the plaintiff argued that the existence of a different contraceptive that was chemically distinct *823and marketed in other countries "shows that redesign of ORTHO EVRA ® [the contraceptive at issue] was possible prior to submitting for FDA approval"; and that the defendants "have offered no evidence that the FDA would have exercised its authority to prohibit defendants from creating and submitting such a design for approval."
But Yates's argument regarding defendants' pre-approval duty is too attenuated. To imagine such a pre-approval duty exists, we would have to speculate that had defendants designed ORTHO EVRA ® differently, the FDA would have approved the alternate design. Next, we would have to assume that Yates would have selected this method of birth control. Further yet, we would have to suppose that this alternate design would not have caused Yates to suffer a stroke. This is several steps too far. Even if New York law requires defendants to produce and market a different design, the ultimate availability to Yates is contingent upon whether the FDA would approve the alternate design in the first place.... Defendants could not have complied with whatever pre-approval duty might exist without ultimately seeking the FDA's approval prior to marketing ORTHO EVRA ®, and certainly prior to Yates's use of the drug.
District courts that have considered the question have ruled both ways. Of those courts that are not bound by the Sixth Circuit's ruling in Yates , a majority has found no preemption under these circumstances. In re Xarelto (Rivaroxaban) Prods. Liab. Litig. , No. MDL 2592,
Additionally, a case raising similar allegations against Gilead regarding its TDF and TAF drugs is currently pending in California state court. The judge in that case recently distinguished Yates and overruled Gilead's demurrer as to the plaintiffs' pre-approval design-defect claims. Lujano v. Gilead Scis., Inc. , No. BC702302, at 2-4 (Cal. Sup. Ct. Feb. 13, 2019) (ECF No. 55-1 at 3-5 ).
The Court finds persuasive the weight of authority against a finding of preemption. As noted above, the Court must first consider whether Gilead could take independent action in compliance with both state and federal law. The question is not whether a drug manufacturer can "independently sell pharmaceutical drugs without FDA approval"; it is whether "a drug manufacturer [can] independently design a reasonably safe drug in compliance with its state-law duties before seeking FDA approval." Guidry ,
The Court rejects the Yates court's "too attenuated" theory because, as the Guidry court reasoned:
[T]he Sixth Circuit merely outlines the requisite assumptions for all defective design claims.... Indeed, every defective design claim requires consideration of hypothetical scenarios - what different steps could have been taken that may have prevented the plaintiff's injury. The only added assumption in the pharmaceutical context is that the FDA would have approved the safer, hypothetical drug. It is not too attenuated to assume that the FDA would approve a safer, alternative design of a drug that it has already approved.
*825Similarly, the Court agrees that " Yates misstates the 'stop selling' rationale explained in Bartlett. " Young ,
At this stage of the proceedings, Gilead has not satisfied the "demanding" defense of impossibility preemption as to those claims. Levine ,
2. Failure-to-Warn Claims
Gilead argues that Plaintiffs' failure-to-warn claims are preempted under Buckman Company v. Plaintiffs' Legal Committee , in which the Supreme Court held that "[s]tate-law fraud-on-the-FDA claims" - i.e., claims that a defendant caused injuries based on its fraudulent representations to the FDA - are preempted.
The allegations at issue occur outside the context of the regulatory process, unlike in Buckman. Where the plaintiff in Buckman alleged that the defendant made fraudulent representations during the market approval process, to the FDA , McClellan's requested instructions here have little to do with direct regulatory interaction with the FDA.
*826a. Pre-Approval
Nor are Plaintiffs' claims preempted to the extent that Plaintiffs contend that Gilead should have submitted different warnings as part of their initial submissions for FDA approval. Just as Gilead has pointed to no federal law that would have prevented it from submitting TAF drugs rather than TDF drugs for approval in the first instance, it has also cited no federal law that would prevent a drug manufacturer from submitting a different warning label to the FDA prior to initial approval of a drug.
The Court does not find the cases relied on by Gilead to be persuasive. The First Circuit interpreted Levine as barring claims "based on information available at the commencement of marketing, while allowing the states to reach contrary conclusions when new information not considered by the FDA develops." In re Celexa & Lexapro Mktg. & Sales Practices Litig. ,
b. Post-Approval
Levine ,
The parties dispute whether Plaintiffs' allegations satisfy this test. Specifically, Gilead argues that Plaintiffs do not allege any "newly acquired information," as required by the 2008 amendments to the CBE regulation. Federal regulations define "newly acquired information" as "data, analyses, or other information not previously submitted to the Agency."
The rule accounts for the fact that risk information accumulates over time and that the same data may take on a different meaning in light of subsequent developments: "[I]f the sponsor submits adverse event information to FDA, and then later conducts a new analysis of data showing risks of a different type or of greater severity or frequency than did reports previously submitted to FDA, the sponsor meets the requirement for 'newly acquired information.' "
Levine ,
*828The Ninth Circuit has not considered sufficiency of claims in this context, but two other circuits have affirmed dismissal of failure-to-warn claims that, in their views, failed to adequately allege "newly acquired information," and another circuit has found claims to be preempted based on the plaintiff's failure to present such information at trial. The First Circuit found claims to be preempted where the labeling change sought by the plaintiffs "was plainly known to the FDA prior to approving the label," and the CBE procedure therefore could not have been used to implement that change. In re Celexa ,
i. Pre-2008
The CBE regulation was not amended to include the requirement that the labeling change be based on "newly acquired information" until 2008. Levine ,
ii. Post-2008
Regarding post-2008 claims, Gilead correctly notes that Plaintiffs allege that the company knew that TDF posed risks to patients' kidneys and bones before the first TDF drug was approved by the FDA. For example, the complaint alleges that:
Before Gilead began selling its first TDF Drug, Viread, in 2001 , Gilead knew that TDF posed a safety risk to patients' kidneys and bones. Gilead knew that two of its other antiviral drugs with structures similar to tenofovir, cidofovir and adefovir dipivoxil, had been highly nephrotoxic (i.e., toxic to kidneys) and that preclinical data for TDF showed that it could cause significant kidney and bone damage. Gilead also knew that the relatively high dose of TDF created a greater risk of toxic effects, and that bone and kidney toxicities were even more likely to be seen with long-term use of TDF for the treatment of a virus that, for the foreseeable future, has no cure.
ECF No. 1 ¶ 5 (emphasis added); see also id. ¶ 210 ("Since scientists first synthesized TDF, studies [including one published in 1999] have consistently shown that it *829could cause significant kidney and bone damage."). Similarly, Plaintiffs allege that:
Gilead knew years before it developed Stribild that: (a) higher tenofovir concentrations in patients' blood, as opposed to the target cells, endangers the kidneys; (b) tenofovir concentrations in patients' blood increase significantly when patients take tenofovir with a booster; and (c) TDF-associated renal toxicity occurs more frequently in patients taking TDF as part of a boosted regimen.
Id. ¶ 13.
However, the complaint also alleges that Gilead acquired additional information after FDA approval. For example, Plaintiffs allege that Gilead became aware of "increasing post-approval marketing evidence that patients with and without prior risk factors were experiencing kidney and bone adverse effects, and expanding support within the scientific community to frequently monitor multiple indicators of renal function in all patients." Id. ¶ 363. Plaintiffs also allege that "Gilead's knowledge of the toxic effects of TDF only grew as patients began treatment with and were injured by each successive TDF product. By the time Gilead designed Stribild, it had ten years' worth of cumulative evidence that TDF injured patients' kidneys and bones." Id. ¶ 6. Plaintiffs further allege that, "less than one month after Viread entered the market, the first published case of TDF-associated acute renal failure occurred. Thereafter, additional reports of TDF-associated kidney damage, including but not limited to Fanconi syndrome, renal failure, renal tubular dysfunction, and nephrogenic diabetes insipidus began to appear in the medical literature. Many of those adverse events occurred in patients without preexisting kidney dysfunction." Id. ¶ 214. Additionally, Plaintiffs make the following allegations: "Gilead was also seeing renal adverse events in its postmarketing safety data. In fact, the most common serious adverse events reported to Gilead were renal events, including renal failure, Fanconi syndrome, and serum creatinine increase," id. ¶ 215 (footnotes omitted); "Gilead's long-term clinical data also demonstrated that TDF was damaging patients' bones," id. ¶ 218; and "[a]fter Gilead brought Truvada to market, the medical literature continued to identify cases of TDF-associated kidney damage, including in patients without pre-existing renal dysfunction or co-administration with another nephrotoxic drug," id. ¶ 219. Finally, Plaintiffs allege that various studies from 2006 to 2012 reported adverse renal events in TDF patients and "continued to show that TDF caused a significant loss of renal function in HIV-infected patients." Id. ¶¶ 220-21, 226-28.
The problem with Plaintiffs' allegations is that it is not possible to discern from the complaint whether - and, if so, when - any such information was provided to the FDA. Plaintiffs allege that the risks of TDF drugs were known before Gilead submitted its first TDF drug for approval. It would be an unreasonable inference to conclude that Gilead did not present any information concerning the risks of TDF drugs to the FDA, especially when Plaintiffs allege that Gilead submitted multiple applications for different TDF drugs and that it also "update[d] its Viread labeling at least four times [between 2002 and 2006] to describe the kidney damage patients experienced when taking TDF," id. ¶ 217, and again modified its labeling (as to unspecified drugs) in 2007 and twice in 2008, id. ¶¶ 224-25. Such changes could not have been made without application to the FDA for approval. See Levine ,
In short, as currently pleaded, Plaintiffs' failure-to-warn claims are preempted as to post-approval, post-2008 labeling changes. They are not preempted as to pre-approval labeling changes or pre-2008 labeling changes to Viread, Truvada, or Atripla, the three TDF drugs that were approved prior to 2008.
C. Adequacy of Causation Allegations in Failure-to-Warn Claims
Gilead argues that Plaintiffs have not adequately alleged causation on their failure-to-warn claims. Plaintiffs do not dispute that they must allege that the allegedly inadequate warnings caused them injury, or that the state laws they invoke require warnings to Plaintiffs' physicians and not to Plaintiffs directly. Instead, Plaintiffs argue that they "have alleged what Gilead says is required - i.e., that but for Gilead's warning failures, Plaintiffs' physicians 'would have acted differently.' " ECF No. 54 at 27 (quoting ECF No. 45 at 25).
Gilead asserts that Plaintiffs must allege that their physicians would not have prescribed the TDF drugs had Gilead given different warnings, but that position is not supported by the case law. Although choosing not to prescribe a particular medication or device is one way that a physician might have acted differently, it is not the only adequate means of demonstrating causation on a failure-to-warn claim. To the contrary, as the first case cited by Gilead demonstrates, the relevant question is whether the plaintiff's physician would have "prescribed the drug in the same manner. " Byrd v. Janssen Pharm., Inc. ,
*831would have known [the plaintiff] was not anticoagulated and would have proceeded with her surgery much sooner," thus avoiding "significant medical issues"); Georges v. Novartis Pharm. Corp. , No. CV 06-5207 SJO (VBKx),
Plaintiffs' causation allegations here are sufficient. First, Plaintiffs allege that their physicians would have acted differently if Gilead's warning labels had contained different monitoring instructions: "Had Gilead adequately warned and instructed Plaintiffs' doctors, Plaintiffs' doctors would have read and heeded such adequate warnings and instructions" and "would have monitored Plaintiffs differently."
D. Fraud and Consumer Protection Law Claims
Gilead moves to dismiss Plaintiffs' fraud and consumer protection claims for failure to comply with Rule 9(b)'s heightened pleading requirements. The rule applies to state-law fraud claims, as well as to consumer protection claims that "sound in fraud" - i.e., that allege "a unified course of fraudulent conduct and rely entirely on that course of conduct as the basis of that claim." Kearns v. Ford Motor Co. ,
The Court agrees with Plaintiffs that not all of their claims sound in fraud. For example, Plaintiffs allege that "Gilead knowingly designed unreasonably dangerous TDF Drugs that injured Plaintiffs to make more money - conduct which is 'unfair' under the laws of numerous states." ECF No. 54 at 29 (citations omitted). Gilead does not argue that such conduct would not be "unfair," but it argues that Rule 9(b) nonetheless applies because the alleged conduct is part of a unified course of fraudulent conduct.
Rule 9(b) does, however, govern Plaintiffs' fraud claims and their consumer protection claims to the extent that the latter allege a course of fraudulent conduct. Plaintiffs contend that their claims are based only on omissions and not affirmative misrepresentations, but Gilead correctly observes that the complaint also alleges misrepresentations. For example, in the count alleging violation of consumer protection laws, Plaintiffs allege that:
Gilead intentionally misrepresented material facts in its promotional, marketing, and labeling communications about the risks and benefits of the TDF Drugs to Plaintiffs and Plaintiffs' doctors, including but not limited to, that the TDF Drugs: 1) presented limited risk of kidney and bone toxicity resulting from purportedly unavoidable side effects of tenofovir; and 2) did not require careful, *833frequent monitoring of all TDF Drug patients for TDF-associated kidney and bone toxicity.
ECF No. 1 ¶ 536 (emphasis added); see also id. ¶¶ 539-43 (referring to "misrepresentations" as well as "omissions"). Plaintiffs elsewhere allege that Gilead "misrepresent[ed] the safety profile of TDF when promoting TDF to doctors" and gave "misleading marketing messages" to doctors, including "that Viread was a 'miracle drug,' 'extremely safe,' and 'extremely well-tolerated' with 'no toxicities.' " Id. ¶¶ 327, 333. Similarly, Plaintiffs allege that Gilead "misrepresent[ed]: (a) that any tenofovir-induced toxicity was rare and unavoidable; (b) why Gilead had purportedly abandoned development of TAF in 2004; and (c) that TAF was 'new' once Gilead finally introduced the safer TAF design over a decade later." Id. ¶ 511; see also id. ¶ 332 (alleging that "Gilead continued to downplay the risks of TDF-induced toxicity when promoting its TDF Drugs to doctors by misrepresenting the drug as safe, dismissing case reports of acute renal failure and other TDF-associated adverse events as purportedly unavoidable side effects of tenofovir in an otherwise 'safe' drug, and discouraging doctors from monitoring patients for drug-induced toxicity using more sensitive markers of kidney function"). Even Plaintiffs' opposition brief argues that "Plaintiffs' fraud by omission and consumer protection claims ... are based, in part, on Gilead's omissions and misrepresentations with respect to TDF and TAF." ECF No. 54 at 26-27 (emphasis added). Thus, at least as currently pleaded, Plaintiffs' claims are not only about omissions, and Plaintiffs may not rely on the lower level of specificity allowed for claims based on alleged omissions to avoid dismissal of their misrepresentation claims. Plaintiffs do not argue that they have satisfied Rule 9(b) as to those claims, and the Court will therefore dismiss those claims with leave to amend.
However, Plaintiffs' omissions-based claims are sufficiently pleaded. In MacDonald v. Ford Motor Co. ,
Plaintiffs adequately allege the "who what when and how," given the inherent limitations of an omission claim. In short, the "who" is Ford, the "what" is its knowledge of a defect, the "when" is prior to the sale of Class Vehicles, and the "where" is the various channels of information through which Ford sold Class Vehicles.
Gilead intentionally suppressed, concealed, and omitted material facts in its promotional, marketing, and labeling communications about the risks and benefits of the TDF Drugs to Plaintiffs and Plaintiffs' doctors, including but not limited to, that: 1) all TDF patients should be carefully and frequently monitored for adverse kidney and bone effects on a frequent schedule; 2) Gilead had already developed the safer TAF design for delivering tenofovir into the body but nevertheless designed the TDF Drugs to contain TDF, and withheld the safer [TAF] design, in order to maximize profits on its TDF-based products and extend its ability to profit on its HIV
*834franchise for years to come; and 3) Gilead knew that the tenofovir prodrug dose should be reduced when combined in a fixed dose combination pill with cobicistat, but did not reduce the TDF dose in Stribild.
ECF No. 1 ¶ 535 ; see also id. ¶ 507 ("Gilead intentionally omitted from its prescriber and patient labeling an adequate warning regarding the need for doctors to monitor all TDF patients, on a frequent, specific schedule, for the adverse effects of TDF-associated bone and kidney toxicity."). The complaint is "specific enough" as to omissions "to give defendants notice of the particular misconduct so that they can defend against the charge and not just deny that they have done anything wrong." Vess ,
The Court denies Gilead's alternate request to require Plaintiffs to submit a more definite statement under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(e). First, Gilead's moving papers made this argument only in a footnote. ECF No. 45 at 30 n.15. "Arguments raised only in footnotes, or only on reply, are generally deemed waived" and need not be considered. Estate of Saunders v. Comm'r ,
CONCLUSION
Gilead's motion to dismiss is granted in part and denied in part. The motion is granted as to Plaintiffs' failure-to-warn claims based on post-approval, post-2008 labeling changes, and as to Plaintiffs' fraud and consumer protection claims to the extent those claims are based on misrepresentations and not omissions. Plaintiffs are granted leave to amend the dismissed claims. The motion is denied in all other respects.
As confirmed at the April 23, 2019 case management conference, the parties have agreed that Plaintiffs can amend the complaint "to allege consumer protection claims for damages under the state consumer protection laws of Alabama, California, Indiana, and Texas." ECF No. 59 at 5 ; ECF No. 62. Plaintiffs should also consider whether to incorporate the Dowdy plaintiffs' claims into the amended complaint, such that there is a single consolidated complaint for these cases.
Any amended complaint must be filed on or before May 31, 2019. Failure to file a timely amended complaint will result in dismissal with prejudice of the claims dismissed by this order.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
New chemical entity ("NCE") exclusivity "bars the FDA from approving any application for a drug containing the covered new chemical entity for five years following approval of the first NDA [new drug application] containing that ingredient. The FDA also cannot receive applications for drugs containing that ingredient until the fourth year following the approval of the first NDA." AIDS Healthcare Found. ,
Even AIDS Healthcare Foundation's UCL claim was based on alleged anticompetitive conduct, rather than a violation of any duty to consumers under state-law theories of strict liability and negligence:
AIDS Healthcare's second theory (which appears only in its brief, not in its complaint) fares no better. AIDS Healthcare contends that Gilead knew of the efficacy and safety benefits of TAF in 2004 but shelved its clinical trials until 2011, leading to FDA approval (and a grant of NCE exclusivity) in 2015, just before the patents on TDF were set to expire.
This, AIDS Healthcare contends, delayed the expiration date of Gilead's NCE exclusivity and thus delayed the moment that competitors would seek to challenge Gilead's patents on TAF. Further, it left consumers to bear the higher bone and kidney toxicity of TDF longer than necessary.
AIDS Healthcare fails to explain how this "delay" constituted unfair competition. Gilead's patents gave it a monopoly over both TDF and TAF. It had no obligation to introduce the improved product at an earlier date. Any competitor could have beaten Gilead to market (and thus NCE exclusivity). "Without more, it is not unlawful [under antitrust law] for any competitor in any market to delay the introduction of a new product or an entire line of new products until, as [the plaintiff] alleged in this case, the competition forces such introduction." Foremost Pro Color, Inc. v. Eastman Kodak Co. ,, 545 (9th Cir. 1983). Under Chavez , AIDS Healthcare cannot recast its claim that Gilead unreasonably restrained competition by allegedly delaying the release of TAF as a claim under the unfair prong of the UCL. 703 F.2d 534
Id. at *9 (emphasis and alterations in original). Gilead's attempt to recast AIDS Healthcare Foundation as a "consumer protection" case by quoting selectively from this passage, ECF No. 60 at 16-17, falls flat when the language is read in its entirety.
Gilead argues that "Plaintiffs' remaining causes of action are based on the same flawed theories as their design defect and failure to warn claims" and are therefore preempted for the same reasons. ECF No. 45 at 22.
On January 7, 2019, the Supreme Court heard oral argument in Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp. v. Albrecht (No. 17-290), an appeal from In re Fosamax (Alendronate Sodium) Products Liability Litigation ,
On reply, Gilead makes a cursory argument that one of the cases relied on by Plaintiffs "ultimately dismissed plaintiff's pre-approval design defect claim as a matter of state law, because 'courts throughout the country have held that a party may not show a reasonable alternative design by pointing to the availability of a different drug available for the same purpose. ' " ECF No. 60 at 10-11 (emphasis in original) (quoting Young v. Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. , No. 4:16-CV-00108-DMB-JMV,
Plaintiffs' opposition makes clear that they are not pursuing claims that Gilead should have pursued a different drug composition after approval. ECF No. 54 at 9 (arguing that "no federal law prevented Gilead from designing its TDF drugs to be safer before U.S. Food and Drug Administration ('FDA') approval"); id. at 21 ("Gilead's remaining cases are inapposite because they did not address allegations that the manufacturer should have changed the drug design before approval."). The Court therefore does not consider whether post-approval claims are pre-empted.
As with claims regarding drug composition, the parties do not discuss Gilead's duties under particular state laws regarding drug labeling. For purposes of this motion, the Court assumes without deciding that the state laws invoked by Plaintiffs require Gilead to use different labeling.
Gilead does not argue that there exists "clear evidence" that the FDA would not have approved the labeling changes that Plaintiffs contend were necessary. The Court therefore does not address that component of the preemption analysis.
The Lujano court found sufficient the plaintiffs' allegations that Gilead "should have viewed the accumulating evidence of the risks associated with Viread, Truvada and Atripla with respect to potential kidney damage, including Fanconi syndrome, and with respect to bone loss as requiring strengthened warning labels." Lujano , at 5 (ECF No. 55-1 at 6 ). However, it did not discuss whether the "accumulating evidence" satisfied the definition of "newly acquired evidence," including that it not have been previously submitted to the FDA.
The Court recognizes a difference of opinion as to whether such allegations are sufficient to state a claim. For example, one court dismissed as "merely conclusory" an allegation that "had [the plaintiff's] physician been adequately informed about the extensive dangers associated with the use of the Ventralex patch, his physician would not have implanted the device in Plaintiff." Hammarlund v. C.R. Bard, Inc. , No. 2:15-cv-05506-SVW-JEM,
As with the design-defect and failure-to-warn claims, the parties do not present argument on the specific requirements under state law. For purposes of this motion, the Court assumes without deciding that Plaintiffs are correct that the alleged conduct would be considered "unfair" under various state laws.
