Friday June 9, 3:08 AM
Two file lawsuits claiming Lipitor side effects
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Two men who say that Pfizer Inc.'s
cholesterol fighter Lipitor caused health problems such
as memory loss have sued the company, adding the world's
best-selling drug to a long list of those targeted by
plaintiffs' attorneys.
Charles Wilson, a 67-year-old Georgia man, charges that
Lipitor caused his memory loss, nerve damage and bouts of
fatigue, according to a lawsuit filed late on Wednesday in New
York State Supreme Court.
Another plaintiff, Michael Mazzariello -- a 47-year-old
trial attorney from New York -- is also suing Pfizer in a
separate suit over side effects he said are caused by Lipitor.
The $12 billion-a-year drug "ruined his life" by causing
muscle and nerve damage and memory loss, Mazzariello told a
news conference on Thursday, which was held to announce the
personal injury lawsuits.
Mazzariello took Lipitor for two months, while Wilson was
on the drug a little more than a year, they said.
A spokesman for Pfizer said the company would vigorously
challenge in court all claims in these suits, adding that
Lipitor is one of the most studied cholesterol drugs in the
world.
"Any potential risk factor involving Lipitor has been
reported and added to the drug's label," Bryant Haskins, a
spokesman for Pfizer, said. "Doctors widely prescribe this
medication because the benefits of this drug are well known to
outweigh any potential risks."
Mark Krum, the plaintiffs' attorney, would not comment on
whether he has additional Lipitor litigation in the works.
Pharmaceutical companies are often sued by patients who say
they were not sufficiently warned about a drug's side effects.
For example Merck & Co. Inc. faces more than 11,500
lawsuits over its recalled pain killer Vioxx, which has been
shown to double the risk of heart attack with long-term use.
And Wyeth faces a trial this summer over claims its
combination hormone replacement therapy Prempro used to treat
menopausal symptoms causes breast cancer. Moreover, Wyeth still
faces tens of thousands of product liability lawsuits related
to two of its "fen-phen" diet drugs recalled in 1997, after
they were linked directly with heart-valve damage.
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