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Baxter Contaminated Heparin Class Action Lawsuit Filed

A class action suit against the maker of a blood thinning Heparin drug claims the company is substituting safer ingredients – cooked, dried pig intestines – with more dangerous ones.

Joyce Ann Osteen of Illinois is suing Baxter over its anticoagulant drug Heparin in St. Clair County Circuit Court.

She claims the company began substituting a more dangerous ingredient to “reap greater profits as a result of utilizing cheap component parts.”

Baxter began making the drug from enzymes found in pork intestines, according to the complaint filed Jan. 5.


It takes about 3,500 pigs’ intestines to produce 2.2 pounds of raw Heparin, the suit states.

Once intestines are gathered from slaughtered pigs, intestines are cooked.

After the intestines are dry, a granular substance called crude Heparin emerges, according to the complaint.

“The crude Heparin is then processed to remove impurities and results in the production of an API such as Heparin Sodium or Heparin Lithium,” the suit states. “This processing may include, but is not limited to, fractional precipitation, purification and chemical treatment.”

On March 5, Baxter found a much cheaper way to produce the drug, the suit claims.

The company discovered a molecule similar to Heparin in Heparin Sodium, according to the complaint.

“On or about March 19, 2008, and prior thereto, the heparin-like molecule contaminant in Heparin products was identified as over-sulfated chondroitin sulfate (hereinafter “OSCS”),” the suit states.

OSCS mimics Heparin’s activities, and Baxter began to use it to dilute or to substitute for the active pharmaceutical ingredient in Heparin, according to the complaint.

OSCS costs only $9 to produce compared to the $900 it takes to produce heparin, the suit states.

“Un-approved API’s significantly increases the likelihood that exposed patients will experience adverse side effects and reactions that can result from the un-approved doses,” the suit states. “In other words, an unapproved API enhances the risk and danger.”

When there was an abnormal increase in the number of reports of adverse patient reactions associated with the use of Heparin, Baxter issued press releases regarding a voluntary recall of nine lots of Heparin Sodium Injection multiple dose vials on Jan. 17, according to the complaint.

Then, on Feb. 28, Baxter expanded the recall to include all lots and sizes of its multi-dose vials of Heparin Sodium injection, single-dose vials and Heparin lock flush products, the suit states.

The FDA made an announcement on March 19 that the mysterious contaminant in Heparin was an inexpensive, unapproved ingredient altered to mimic the real ingredient.

As of April 8, there have been 103 reported deaths in patients who received Heparin since Jan. 1, 2007, the suit states. Of those deaths, 91 were reported after Jan. 1, 2008, the suit states.

“On or about July 30, 2008, the FDA conclusively linked the deaths of patients infused with Heparin to specific lots made by Baxter,” the suit states. “The specific lots of Baxter product tested positive for OSCS.”

For the most part, Heparin is manufactured in China and in Wisconsin, according to the complaint.

But China has not met the requirements for importation and sale in the United States, which includes an inspection and approval by the United States Food and Drug Administration, the suit states.

When inspectors went to visit China’s facility, they reported the there had been no critical processing steps identified for Heparin Sodium USP process, there had been no impurity profile established for Heparin Sodium and no evaluation for degradants, the manufacturing instructions were incomplete and there had been no test method verification performed for the reported USP test methods, Osteen claims.

In addition, inspectors found Heparin crude lots received in August 2006 included material from an unacceptable workshop vendor, that raw material inventory records were incomplete, that control of material flow in the processing area was inadequate, that certain outer foil bags containing Heparin Sodium were no labeled and that there was no report or data to show the leachable for certain bags used to Heparin Sodium had been evaluated, according to the complaint.

Osteen, who was given Heparin, claims Baxter’s conduct showed “reckless indifference to the interest of others.”

“The Recalled Heparin was adulterated, misbranded, defective, unreasonably dangerous and unfit for its intended uses,” the suit states. “Baxter placed tens of thousands of patients, including the Plaintiff at unnecessarily risk of serious injury and/or death.”

Baxter engaged in unfair and deceptive acts and violated the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act by knowingly concealing its own data from investigations about the true efficacy of Heparin, Osteen alleges.

It also violated the ICFA by knowingly suppressing its own data from investigations on the safety of Heparin, by intentionally concealing the true health hazards of Heparin and by recklessly omitting that use of Heparin poses a significant increased risk of sepsis and other serious infections, according to the complaint.

Baxter omitted the true health risks of Heparin from Osteen’s prescribing physicians with the intent that the omissions convince her to purchase the drug, the suit states.

“Plaintiff and the Class members who purchased Heparin suffered actual damages as a proximate result of Baxter Healthcare Corp.’s deception in that they were deprived of the benefit of their bargain,” the suit states.

In the four-count suit, Osteen is asking the court certify the complaint as class action and that the court judge the practices of Baxter unfair.

She is also seeking damages, attorney’s fees, costs and pre-judgment interest in an amount less that $74,999 per plaintiff or class member.

If you or a family member has been injured medically because of the fault of someone else: by the use of dangerous drugs, bad products, or toxic injury etc then please contact the Fort Worth Texas Dangerous Drugs Product Liability Attorney Dr. Shezad Malik. For a no obligation, free case analysis, please call 817-255-4001 or Contact Me Online.

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