Judge Sets Date
for First Zyprexa Trial
Injury suits linked to side effects tentatively scheduled for Oct. 15
(June 23, 2007) -- Indianapolis-based Eli Lilly and Co. could face its
first trial this fall in personal injury lawsuits over the its top-selling
schizophrenia drug
Zyprexa, a federal judge in New York said Friday.

Eli Lilly and Co. has spent more than $1 billion to settle 26,000
product-liability claims against Zyprexa, its top-selling drug. -
Charlie Nye / The Star 2003 file photo |
U.S. District Judge Jack Weinstein in Brooklyn said he will try about 30
Zyprexa lawsuits at one time and set a tentative trial date of Oct. 15.
Lilly has spent more than $1 billion to settle 26,000 product-liability
claims against Zyprexa. Another 900 claims were settled this month, but
Lilly hasn't disclosed the amount of those settlements.
At least eight lawsuits have been filed by several states that claim
Lilly failed to disclose that Zyprexa causes high blood-sugar levels, weight
gain, diabetes complications and
other health problems.
At a hearing Friday, Weinstein told lawyers that cases filed in the
Eastern District of New York "will be tried, dismissed or settled." He said
he wants to "close them out by the fall."
Nina Gussack, a lawyer for Lilly with Pepper Hamilton, said after the
hearing, "It's plain that the judge wants to move the cases forward on a
variety of grounds. Lilly is going to be prepared to do whatever is
necessary to address his variety of requests."
Weinstein is presiding over lawsuits originally filed in state and
federal courts around the country by patients who sued Lilly over Zyprexa.
The drug was approved in 1996 by the Food and Drug Administration to treat
schizophrenia and
bipolar disorder.
Weinstein said he will send cases that weren't filed in New York back to
the courts where they originated. The judge said about 500 cases by Zyprexa
users are pending before him.
Some of the suits claim the company marketed Zyprexa for off-label uses,
including treatment of Alzheimer's disease,
Tourette's syndrome and
autism, without warning about its risks.
Zyprexa is Lilly's top-selling drug, with sales last year of $4.36
billion.
Source: IndyStar.com
Last updated: 06/07
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