Claude Knight v. Boehringer Ingelheim
Claude Knight v. Boehringer Ingelheim
Opinion
PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 19-1636
CLAUDE R. KNIGHT; CLAUDIA STEVENS, individually and as Personal Representative of the Estate of Betty Erelene Knight; BETTY ERELENE KNIGHT, Deceased,
Plaintiffs - Appellees,
v.
BOEHRINGER INGELHEIM PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.
Defendant - Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia, at Huntington. Robert C. Chambers, District Judge. (3:15-cv-06424)
Argued: October 29, 2020 Decided: January 6, 2021
Before NIEMEYER, DIAZ, and QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judges.
Reversed by published opinion. Judge Quattlebaum wrote the opinion, in which Judge Niemeyer and Judge Diaz joined.
ARGUED: Paul Schmidt, COVINGTON & BURLING LLP, Washington, D.C., for Appellant. James Darren Summerville, SUMMERVILLE FIRM, LLC, Atlanta, Georgia, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Phyllis A. Jones, COVINGTON & BURLING LLP, Washington, D.C.; Adam H. Charnes, Thurston H. Webb, KILPATRICK TOWNSEND & STOCKTON LLP, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, for Appellant. C. Andrew Childers, Emily T. Acosta, CHILDERS SCHLUETER & SMITH, Atlanta, Georgia; Neal L. Moskow, URY & MOSKOW, LLC, Fairfield, Connecticut, for Appellees. QUATTLEBAUM, Circuit Judge:
Under the preemption doctrine, a state-law challenge to federally approved
pharmaceutical warning labels may only proceed when the pharmaceutical company has
the unilateral ability to change that labeling. The Food and Drug Administration’s changes-
being-effected (“CBE”) regulation permits pharmaceutical companies to unilaterally
modify their physician labels only to “add or strengthen a . . . warning” based upon “newly
acquired information” about “evidence of a causal association” between the drug and a risk
of harm.
21 C.F.R. § 314.70(c)(6)(iii). Here we must determine some goalposts of “newly
acquired information.”
Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc. developed a drug called Pradaxa to
help reduce the risk of stroke. The FDA approved the drug and its label. After taking this
drug for over a year, Betty Knight suffered a gastrointestinal bleed. She then developed
other complications and eventually died. Her children, Claude Knight and Claudia
Stevens, 1 sued Boehringer asserting a variety of state-law claims alleging Boehringer failed
to adequately warn about the risks associated with taking Pradaxa.
Boehringer argued that federal law preempted the claims. The Knights disagreed,
claiming the risks were “newly acquired information” discovered after Pradaxa’s FDA
approval. If true, then Boehringer could have added warnings to its physician label without
FDA approval, and federal law would not preempt the state-law claims.
1 For clarity, we will refer to Betty Knight as “Knight” and her children as the “Knights.” 2 The district court agreed with the Knights and allowed the case to go to the jury.
The jury returned a mixed verdict, finding for Boehringer on the Knights’ failure to warn
and breach of express and implied warranty claims, but for the Knights on their fraud claim.
Boehringer filed a renewed motion for judgment as a matter of law, and, in the alternative,
a new trial. After the district court denied its post-trial motions, Boehringer appealed on
several grounds. Most relevant here, it argues it did not discover “newly acquired
information” that would have permitted a unilateral change of Pradaxa’s physician label.
Thus, according to Boehringer, the Knights’ fraud claim based on the physician label was
preempted. Because we agree with Boehringer, we reverse the district court’s order
denying Boehringer’s post-trial motion for judgment as a matter of law.
I.
Before addressing the preemption issues, we begin with some background on the
development of Pradaxa and its approval by the FDA. We then describe Betty Knight’s use
of the drug, the events that gave rise to this case and the case’s procedural history.
A.
Over two million Americans have atrial fibrillation (“AFib”), a condition that causes
the heart to beat irregularly. This irregular heartbeat can lead to blood clots, which in turn
can cause strokes. Therefore, many AFib patients take blood thinners to prevent clots and
thus reduce the risk of stroke. But while blood thinners reduce the risk of stroke, they create
other risks. One is the risk of uncontrollable, and potentially fatal, bleeding.
3 Before Pradaxa, the primary blood thinner on the market was warfarin. 2 Patients
taking warfarin must regularly monitor blood concentration levels of the medication.
Monitoring is needed because there is an optimal blood concentration range that applies to
all patients. If the concentration level of warfarin in the blood exceeds that range, the risk
of bleeding is too high. If the level is below that optimal range, the risk of clots and a stroke
is too high. The monitoring helps ensure that blood concentration levels stay within the
desired range. Alongside this monitoring, patients taking warfarin must comply with
dietary and medication restrictions as its effectiveness is reduced by eating certain foods.
Recognizing the market for an effective alternative that needs neither monitoring nor
dietary restrictions, Boehringer developed Pradaxa. 3
Boehringer’s development of Pradaxa included a three-year study—known as the
“RE-LY” study—involving over 18,000 patients. In it, Boehringer tested a 150 mg dose
and a 110 mg dose of Pradaxa. The results showed that the 150 mg dose of Pradaxa
prevented strokes more effectively than warfarin with no greater risk of bleeding. The 110
mg dose was no better than warfarin at preventing strokes but lowered the risk of bleeding.
2 Pradaxa is Boehringer’s brand name for the drug dabigatran, which is why it is capitalized. Warfarin, however, is the generic pharmaceutical name for the drug often sold under the brand names Coumadin or Jantoven. We follow the parties’ lead in referring to these drugs as Pradaxa and warfarin, respectfully, for simplicity. 3 Our decision should not be construed as an expression of support for Pradaxa as compared to warfarin. Warfarin, first approved in 1954, is an essential medicine according to the World Health Organization. See World Health Org., WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION MODEL LIST OF ESSENTIAL MEDICINES 34 (21st ed. 2019). Our discussion, rather, is simply to recount the background of Pradaxa’s development and the rationales provided to the FDA. 4 Importantly, in analyzing its data, Boehringer did not find a Pradaxa blood concentration
level for all patients that best balanced the risks and benefits of taking Pradaxa. Absent a
target blood concentration level, Pradaxa did not require regular blood monitoring.
Boehringer submitted a “new drug application” to the FDA for Pradaxa, which contained
all its clinical data, including the RE-LY study.
In considering Boehringer’s application, the FDA examined Boehringer’s study and
performed its own analysis. It concluded there was a “significant relationship” between
Pradaxa blood concentration and bleeding events. J.A. 1172. Still, in 2010, the FDA
approved the 150 mg dose. It did not approve the 110 mg dose, however, reasoning that it
did not provide enough increased benefit. Consistent with Boehringer’s analysis, the FDA
approval did not require the blood monitoring required for warfarin.
The FDA also directed Boehringer to sell a 75 mg dose of Pradaxa for patients with
severe kidney impairment. Because the kidneys eliminate Pradaxa from the bloodstream,
patients with low kidney function face a greater risk of too much Pradaxa in their blood,
which increases the chance of bleeding. But a lower dosage would mean less Pradaxa in
the blood and, thus, less risk of bleeding.
As the FDA knew, Boehringer had not studied this 75 mg dose, or even studied
Pradaxa in patients with severe kidney impairment. Its failure to do so was not because
Boehringer did not appreciate the potential risk of Pradaxa to patients with kidney
impairment. Rather, Boehringer was concerned with the medical ethics of such testing.
Like Boehringer, the FDA did not test Pradaxa on kidney-impaired patients. Instead, from
modeling Boehringer’s clinical data, the FDA determined that 75 mg was an appropriate
5 dose for patients with severe kidney impairment, so that these patients could still reap
Pradaxa’s stroke-prevention benefits. The FDA cautioned Boehringer, however, that “there
is no empirical data on this population with regard to bleeding risk,” so “particular attention
post-marketing should be paid to bleeding and other safety events” in those kidney-
impaired patients treated with the 75 mg dose. J.A. 1412.
At the same time as its approval of the 150 and 75 mg doses, the FDA also approved
a label for Pradaxa. The label had two parts: the physician label, which went to doctors,
and the Medication Guide, which went to patients. Both documents contained warnings of
bleeding. Relevant here, the physician label warned that “PRADAXA can cause serious
and, sometimes, fatal bleeding” and that the “[r]isk of bleeding increases with age.” J.A.
1253. It also stated that the “[m]ost common adverse reactions (>15%) are gastritis-like
symptoms and bleeding.” J.A. 1253. The Medication Guide similarly warned that
“PRADAXA can increase your risk of bleeding because it lessens the ability of your blood
to clot,” and this risk was heightened for patients “over 75 years old.” J.A. 1262.
Consistent with the FDA’s instructions, both documents also contained information
about the risk of bleeding for patients with kidney problems. The physician label indicated
that the “dose of PRADAXA in patients with severe renal impairment” should be reduced
to 75 mg, and, if kidney function fell below a certain threshold, Pradaxa was not
recommended at all. J.A. 1256. And the Medication Guide warned that “[y]ou may have a
higher risk of bleeding if you take PRADAXA and . . . have kidney problems.” J.A. 1262.
6 After the FDA approved Pradaxa and its warnings, Boehringer’s internal scientists
continued to study the RE-LY data. 4 One of the questions they continued to study was
whether a Pradaxa blood concentration range optimized the risk of bleeding with the
benefit of stroke prevention for all patients. The preliminary results of the continued study
began to emerge in the second half of 2011. During that time, Boehringer scientists began
to work on a paper (eventually known as the “Reilly Paper”) to describe their findings. The
purpose of the paper was to “evaluate the correlations between plasma concentrations and
efficacy and safety outcomes in [AFib] patients, and to identify factors affecting” Pradaxa
blood concentration. J.A. 929. In other words, was there an optimal Pradaxa concentration
range that might require regular monitoring?
As noted above, Boehringer’s earlier analysis of its data revealed no such optimal
range that applied to all patients. But Boehringer’s continued study of the data used
additional analytical approaches. The preliminary results of this continued study indicated
there might be, contrary to Boehringer’s earlier assessment, such an optimal range. Dr.
Reilly, one of the lead scientists conducting the study, recognized that identifying such a
range might compel Boehringer to require some testing to ensure a patient remained in that
optimal range. He also recognized that Boehringer’s marketing officials, who felt the lack
of a monitoring requirement distinguished Pradaxa in the marketplace, might not like the
preliminary results of the study. On August 1, 2011, he e-mailed a Boehringer executive
4 At least one impetus for this continued study, according to a lead Boehringer scientist, was that once Boehringer had “a competitor” with a drug “as good as” Pradaxa, Boehringer “will be looking for ways to make [Pradaxa] better.” J.A. 510. 7 that he was “aware that the conclusions that appear to emerge from this paper are not the
ones currently wished for by marketing (that dose adjustment will optimize therapy) . . . .”
J.A. 510. But Dr. Reilly made clear that the initial findings were not final. Continuing with
the email, he explained that he wanted to “just see where this paper ends up.” J.A. 510.
In November 2011, Boehringer revised the physician label pursuant to the CBE
regulation permitting unilateral modification of physician labels to “add or strengthen a . . .
warning” based upon “newly acquired information.”
21 C.F.R. § 314.70(c)(6)(iii). The
revised label disclosed that “[p]atients with severe renal impairment were not studied in
RE-LY. Dosing recommendations in subjects with severe renal impairment are based on
pharmacokinetic modeling.” J.A. 1286. It also warned that “impaired renal function” is a
“major” cause of heightened Pradaxa blood concentration levels, J.A. 1283, and
recommended “assess[ing] renal function prior to initiation and, in patients” with kidney
impairment or old age, at least once a year. J.A. 1281.
In December 2011, Boehringer scientists shared a draft version of the paper within
the company. Consistent with Dr. Reilly’s August 1, 2011, email, the draft found that
kidney function was the most important determinant of Pradaxa blood concentration and
that “[b]oth safety and efficacy of [Pradaxa] are related to” its concentration. J.A. 926–27.
It concluded that “[a]n optimal balance between benefit and risk occurs in the range of
concentrations between 40 and 215 ng/mL,” and that “less than 20% of patients would be
expected” to fall outside that range. J.A. 927, 937. Reflecting the concern Dr. Reilly raised,
some Boehringer officials opposed publication of this paper because of its potential conflict
8 with Boehringer’s marketing message that no testing to monitor blood concentration was
required for patients taking Pradaxa.
Boehringer continued to analyze the data and work on the paper. A year and a half
later, in June 2013, it submitted the finalized paper for publication. The final version
mirrored the draft version with one major exception: it did not conclude there was an
optimal therapeutic blood concentration range for all patients. Instead, it concluded that
kidney function was probably the most predictive factor of Pradaxa blood concentration
levels, and that the risk of stroke falls and the risk of bleeding rises in correlation with such
concentration levels.
B.
With that background of Pradaxa, we now turn to the facts involving the Knights.
In October 2011, Knight, eighty-five years old at the time, visited her primary care doctor
with her children. Knight suffered from multiple medical problems, including prior strokes,
a previous heart attack, congestive heart failure, coronary artery disease, COPD,
hypertension, diabetes, anemia, dementia and chronic kidney disease. She also suffered
from AFib for which she took warfarin. She disliked warfarin’s dietary restrictions and
monthly blood-monitoring requirements, so she inquired about switching to Pradaxa. At
the visit, her provider prescribed a 75 mg Pradaxa dose. 5
5 Unfortunately, our record is unclear as to who initially prescribed Pradaxa to Knight. Although one of Knight’s providers, Dr. MacFarland, testified it was her “general practice” to “go over risks and benefits” when prescribing a new medication, there is no evidence in the record that Dr. MacFarland met with Knight in October 2011. J.A. 1632. She did sign the Prior Authorization Form for insurance purposes after Knight’s
9 For a year and a half, Knight continued to take Pradaxa without incident. But in
April 2013, she suffered a heart attack, after which doctors placed a stent in her heart and
prescribed her new medications to prevent heart attacks. But the new medications, like
Pradaxa, increased the risk of bleeding. Still, her doctors kept her on Pradaxa.
The next month, Knight suffered a serious bleed in her colon. Her health did not
improve in the next several months. Although she did not suffer another bleed, Knight was
admitted to the hospital several times for various health issues. She died in September 2013
after another heart attack.
C.
Knight’s children, individually and as representatives of Knight’s estate, sued
Boehringer in the Southern District of West Virginia. They asserted claims for strict
liability failure to warn, negligent failure to warn, breach of express warranty, breach of
implied warranty and fraud. All the claims rested on the allegation that Boehringer failed
to properly warn that Pradaxa created a heightened risk in certain patients for serious
bleeding and that this led to Knight’s death.
During a three-week trial, the Knights focused on the Medication Guide’s alleged
failure to warn Knight that Pradaxa could cause bleeding and that the 75 mg dose was never
tested in patients, even though these risks were disclosed in the physician label as of
appointment in her office, but she does not specifically remember seeing Knight at that time. And according to Boehringer, it was a nurse practitioner in Dr. MacFarland’s office who initially prescribed Pradaxa to Knight, but she was never deposed. See Appellant’s Br. at 11; Reply Br. at 12 n.4.
10 November 2011. At the end of the Knights’ case, Boehringer moved for judgment as a
matter of law on all claims, arguing that federal law preempts any claim based on alleged
misstatements or omissions in the Medication Guide. The district court did not rule on the
motion at that time, but, at the end of the trial, granted the motion in part, holding “that any
claim by the plaintiffs that the Medication Guide should be modified to include the
warnings or statements that plaintiff has proffered is pre-empted.” J.A. 1712. Central to the
court’s decision was the fact that Boehringer, by law, cannot change the Medication Guide
without FDA approval.
The court denied the remainder of the motion and did not dismiss any specific
claims. It concluded that claims based on the physician label were not preempted. Unlike
the Medication Guide, which went to patients, the physician label went to doctors. The
court reasoned that the physician label can be modified without FDA approval to “add or
strengthen a . . . warning” based upon “newly acquired information” about evidence of a
causal association between the drug and a risk of harm. J.A. 1456 (quoting
21 C.F.R. § 314.70(c)(6)(iii)). It also noted that, although Knight never saw the physician label, West
Virginia law allows claims based on indirect reliance on a doctor’s advice, which is based
upon the physician label. See Roney v. Gencorp, No. 3:05-0788,
2009 WL 3073973, at *2
(S.D.W. Va. Sept. 18, 2009).
The jury returned a mixed verdict, finding for Boehringer on all claims except fraud.
The jury found that Knight would not have taken Pradaxa absent the fraud, and the drug
proximately caused her injuries, but not her death. It awarded the Knights $250,000 in
compensatory damages and $1,000,000 in punitive damages.
11 Boehringer renewed its motion for judgment as a matter of law under Federal Rule
of Civil Procedure 50(b), and, in the alternative, a new trial, arguing the fraud claim was
preempted and the verdict inconsistent. 6 The district court denied the motions. It held the
fraud claim was not preempted because, even though claims based on the Medication
Guide were preempted, the Knights had introduced evidence Boehringer had “newly
acquired information” which would have permitted it to unilaterally change the physician
label pursuant to the CBE regulation. Additionally, it found that, although there was no
evidence Knight read the physician label, there was evidence that her doctor reviewed it
and that Knight indirectly relied on that label through her doctor. Boehringer timely
appealed.
6 The district court held that Boehringer waived any objection to the inconsistent verdict because it was a general verdict with special questions under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 49(b), which requires a contemporaneous objection. Boehringer challenges this holding on appeal, but we do not reach the issue because we reverse on preemption grounds.
12 II.
Our central issue on appeal is whether the Knights’ fraud claim is preempted. 7
Preemption is a question of law, which we review de novo. Epps v. JP Morgan Chase
Bank, N.A.,
675 F.3d 315, 320(4th Cir. 2012). 8
In this context, federal preemption occurs when it is “impossible for a private party
to comply with both state and federal requirements.” Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp. v.
Albrecht,
139 S. Ct. 1668, 1672(2019). “The underlying question . . . is whether federal
law (including appropriate FDA actions) prohibited the drug manufacturer from adding
any and all warnings to the drug label that would satisfy state law.”
Id.at 1677–79. A state
law challenge to FDA-approved warnings, including a tort action under state law, can thus
7 Boehringer also challenges the sufficiency of reliance evidence presented. The record does not establish that Dr. MacFarland met with Knight when she was first prescribed Pradaxa, and there is no other provider in the record who testified to warning Knight about Pradaxa’s risks. And Knight’s children, who were present at the appointment when Knight was first prescribed Pradaxa, either do not remember the meeting at all or remember receiving no warnings about the drug. J.A. 1679 (“She didn’t question us or— or tell us anything else about the drug.”). The Knights’ evidence on this issue is that Dr. MacFarland customarily advises her patients of the disclosed risks of a drug. While Boehringer’s argument is compelling, we need not address it as we decide the case solely on preemption grounds. 8 From the portions of the record provided to us, it is unclear whether the district court decided the “newly acquired information” question itself or considered it a fact question for the jury. Regardless, we appreciate that the district court did not have the benefit of the Supreme Court’s decision in Albrecht, which clarifies that “a judge, not the jury, must decide the pre-emption question.” Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp. v. Albrecht,
139 S. Ct. 1668, 1676(2019). For that reason, Boehringer’s statement at trial that “there’s probably a fact issue on whether there’s newly acquired information” was made before Albrecht was decided and thus carries no weight. J.A. 1711. 13 proceed only when the defendant had the unilateral ability to change that labeling;
otherwise, the claim is preempted.
Under FDA regulations, companies cannot unilaterally change the Medication
Guide without prior FDA approval because doing so is considered a “major” change. See
21 C.F.R. § 314.70(b) (explaining that “any change to a Medication Guide” requires
“supplement submission and approval prior to distribution of the product made using the
change”). But companies can change the physician label under the CBE regulation “if the
change is designed to ‘add or strengthen a . . . warning’ where there is ‘newly acquired
information’ about the ‘evidence of a causal association’ between the drug and a risk of
harm.” Albrecht,
139 S. Ct. at 1673(quoting
21 C.F.R. § 314.70(c)(6)(iii)(A)).
That brings us to the heart of this case. The Knights allege a labeling deficiency—
the absence of a recommendation that patients with impaired kidney function taking
Pradaxa undergo blood testing to check Pradaxa concentration levels. But did Boehringer
have “newly acquired information” as defined in the CBE regulation that could have
justified a unilateral change in the Pradaxa physician label?
A.
To answer that question, we begin with the definition of “newly acquired
information.” Newly acquired information “reveal[s] risks of a different type or greater
severity or frequency than previously included in submissions to [the] FDA.”
21 C.F.R. § 314.3(b). Importantly, “newly acquired information is not limited to new data, but also
encompasses new analyses of previously submitted data.” Wyeth v. Levine,
555 U.S. 555, 569(2009) (internal quotation marks omitted). This “rule accounts for the fact that risk
14 information accumulates over time and that the same data may take on a different meaning
in light of subsequent developments . . . .”
Id.Still, the new analysis must reveal “risks of
a different type or of greater severity or frequency” to constitute “newly acquired
information.”
Id.(internal citation and quotation marks omitted).
B.
The Knights claim Boehringer’s post-approval study of the RE-LY data provided
“newly acquired information” about the risks Pradaxa posed to certain patients and the
need for blood monitoring. To assess this argument, we will first consider the final paper
by Dr. Reilly and then the internal discussions at Boehringer and the preliminary drafts of
the paper.
1.
For several reasons, the published Reilly Paper, which was the culmination of the
RE-LY post-approval analysis, does not offer “newly acquired information.” First, the
finalized version of the Reilly Paper was not sent to the publisher until June 2013, after
Knight’s bleed. Thus, by the date the paper was published, the information in it would not
have made any difference to Knight.
Second, and more substantively, although the paper consists of a “new analysis of
previously submitted data,” it does not “reveal risks of a different type or greater severity
or frequency than previously included in submissions to [the] FDA.”
21 C.F.R. § 314.3(b).
To be sure, the paper discusses the correlation between Pradaxa blood concentration levels
and bleeding risk. But the FDA was already aware of this correlation. In the FDA’s own
analysis when it approved Pradaxa, it concluded “[t]here is a significant relationship
15 between [Pradaxa] exposures and incidence of bleeding events,” and “the probability of a
life-threatening bleed within 1 year in a typical patient is predicted to increase from 0.27%
to 1.82%” depending on Pradaxa blood concentration levels. J.A. 1172. “Given that the
FDA already knew of the association between high Pradaxa blood plasma concentrations
and bleeds (and nonetheless did not require the defendants specifically to warn of it in the
label), the Reilly Paper’s reference to that association does not constitute . . . newly
acquired information.” Roberto v. Boehringer Ingelheim Pharm., Inc., No. CPL-HHD
cv16-6068484S,
2019 WL 5068452(Conn. Super. Ct. Sept. 11, 2019) (discussing the same
paper in a similar claim).
Moreover, the physician label in place since November 2011, and even before,
warned of these risks. The original label, from October 2010, instructed to “[r]educe the
dose of PRADAXA in patients with severe renal impairment” because those patients’ poor
kidney function would result in higher blood concentrations of the drug. J.A. 1256. And
the November 2011 label explained that “P-gp inhibition and impaired renal function are
the major independent factors that result in increased” Pradaxa blood concentration levels.
J.A. 1283. Therefore, it advised that “[r]enal function should be assessed . . . prior to
initiation of treatment with PRADAXA.” J.A. 1282.
Third, the paper’s conclusion—that “[t]here is no single plasma concentration range
that provides optimal benefit-risk for all patients”—plainly does not establish any new risk.
J.A. 113. That conclusion tracked Boehringer’s warnings since the FDA’s initial approval
of Pradaxa and its labeling. Therefore, the article cannot constitute “newly acquired
16 information” because it did not “reveal risks of a different type or greater severity or
frequency . . . .”
21 C.F.R. § 314.3(b).
2.
The more difficult question is whether the preliminary conclusions that emerged
before the analysis was complete, and which differed from the ultimate conclusion in the
Reilly Paper, constitute “newly acquired information.” Recall that in August 2011, just two
months before Knight was first prescribed Pradaxa, Dr. Reilly e-mailed an internal
executive “that the conclusions that appear to emerge from this paper are not the ones
currently wished for by marketing (that dose adjustment will optimize therapy) . . . .” J.A.
510. Indeed, a few months later, Dr. Reilly circulated a draft paper which concluded that
there was a range of Pradaxa blood concentration levels which optimized the “balance
between benefit and risk” and that up to twenty percent of patients could fall outside that
optimal range. J.A. 927.
Despite this evidence, the record does not demonstrate that Dr. Reilly’s emails or
the draft paper’s preliminary assessments of an optimal Pradaxa blood concentration level
reflected a revelation of risks of a different type or greater severity or frequency. Although
Dr. Reilly initially thought the analysis might reveal an optimal blood concentration range,
his view was preliminary, as evidenced by his comment that he wanted to “see where this
paper ends up.” J.A. 510. And after circulating a draft version that concluded such a range
existed, Boehringer continued to analyze the data and work on the paper. Almost two years
later, Boehringer came to a different conclusion.
17 Importantly, the scientific and regulatory community accepted Boehringer’s final
conclusion. The final version of the paper was published, peer-reviewed and submitted to
the FDA. And, after reviewing the Reilly Paper, the FDA has continued to approve labels
with no monitoring requirement. This undermines the Knights’ claim that Boehringer’s
preliminary analysis made it immediately apparent, before the paper was published, that
an optimal blood concentration range existed. Because the new analysis did not “reveal”
the conclusion that an optimal blood concentration range existed, Dr. Reilly’s preliminary
thoughts and draft conclusions were not “newly acquired information.”
21 C.F.R. § 314.3(b). 9
Our decision today, however, should not be construed to require final, peer-
reviewed publication of an analysis to constitute newly acquired information. Some
findings may be revealed instantly. Indeed, that occurred on some of the issues here.
Boehringer made a CBE label change before Dr. Reilly even circulated the draft paper to
clarify that “[p]atients with severe renal impairment were not studied in RE-LY” and “P-
gp inhibition and impaired renal function are the major independent factors that result in
increased” Pradaxa blood concentration. J.A. 1284. Boehringer’s analysis reasonably
justified these label changes because it immediately and conclusively demonstrated a
9 Several courts that have considered this identical question have reached the same result. These courts, despite the lack of precedential guidance, have all concluded that the preliminary discussions and conclusions that emerged from the RE-LY study regarding blood monitoring were not “newly acquired information.” See Silverstein v. Boehringer Ingelheim Pharm., Inc., 9:19-cv-81188-RAR,
2020 WL 6110909*33–36 (S.D. Fla. Oct. 7, 2020); Lyons v. Boehringer Ingelheim Pharm., Inc., No. 1:18-cv-04624-WMR,
2020 WL 5835125*8–9 (N.D. Ga. Sept. 29, 2020); Roberto,
2019 WL 5068452at *16. We commend their thorough analyses of this issue and echo their conclusions. 18 strong relationship between kidney function and Pradaxa blood concentration levels. But
the fact that some findings in an analysis may be revealed instantly does not mean that all
are. In contrast to the risks added to the physician label, monitoring Pradaxa blood
concentration levels needed further study to “see where this paper ends up.” J.A. 510.
Based on the record submitted to us, neither Dr. Reilly nor Boehringer had come to any
conclusion on this issue.
Likewise, peer review and publication of an article do not themselves prevent any
contrary findings from qualifying as newly acquired information. If, for example, the
record revealed that the company reached a conclusion about risks of a different type or
risks of greater severity or frequency, but either elected not to publish or published
something different in bad faith, the unpublished conclusion might indeed qualify as newly
acquired information. That appears to be the Knights’ position here. But the record does
not indicate that Boehringer’s scientists reached a conclusion on an optimal blood
concentration range, or that the final, published results were reached in bad faith. 10
Finally, we caution against a quick trigger in determining the existence of newly
acquired information. It is imperative for the scientific process that open dialogue and
10 Likewise, the other documents the Knights cite do not establish that Boehringer had “newly acquired information.” The 2011 Clinical Overview Statement discusses that the European label will refer to 200 ng/mL to be associated with an increased risk of bleeding. But even if this were considered “data, analys[is], or other information” within the meaning of the CBE regulation, the FDA was already aware of the association between high blood plasma concentrations of Pradaxa and the increased risk of bleeding. In fact, the FDA Clinical Pharmacology Review includes a graph depicting this association. So, any “information” here could not have been “newly acquired” because the FDA already knew about it. For the same reason, the Company Core Data Sheet was not “newly acquired information.” In fact, it was submitted to the FDA before it approved Pradaxa. 19 exchange of ideas take place during an analysis and drafting of a paper. That, along with
airing and testing opposing opinions, results in better decisions. That is why hypotheses,
differing viewpoints and even preliminary conclusions are not “reliable evidence of new
risks.” Roberto,
2019 WL 5068452at *16. If they were, companies might discourage the
open dialogue needed to reach the best results. Or, unnecessary warnings might flood labels
and distract from real risks. Accordingly, preliminary thoughts and discussions are not
“reasonable evidence of a causal association with a drug” and cannot, without more, reveal
“newly acquired information.”
21 C.F.R. § 201.57(c)(6)(i).
In sum, there is no bright-line, one-size-fits-all line marking the moment when an
analysis reveals new information. A careful review of the record is needed to determine
whether a conclusion has been reached. Such a review here reveals that Boehringer did not
have “newly acquired information” regarding an optimal Pradaxa blood concentration level
which would have warranted a unilateral change to the physician label. As a result, the
state-law fraud claim is preempted.
III.
For the reasons set forth above, the judgment below is
REVERSED.
20
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