Plaintiffs filed the class action J.E. et al v. Alere Inc. et al, Case No. 1:16-cv11515, US District Court, District of Massachusetts in July 2016, claiming that Alere misled consumers by knowingly selling inaccurate home blood coagulation tests. The tests were used to determine how quickly blood clots in patients taking warfarin, a drug used to stop harmful clots from forming.
The plaintiffs alleged that Alere's INRatio System, which consists of INRatio Monitors, INRatio 2 Monitors and INRatio Test Strips, often provided "significantly inaccurate results" and exposed users to risks caused by inaccurate warfarin dosing.
According to the complaint, Alere received more than 18,000 complaints between 2013 and 2014 about its INRatio System, including reports of serious injuries and deaths.
Alere in 2014 issued a Class I recall on its INRatio system products but allegedly failed to take necessary measures to inform all the patients relying on the inaccurate INRatio system for critical test results, according to the lawsuit petition.
In January 2017, Alere filed a motion to dismiss the class action, arguing that the plaintiffs, who reside in Arizona and Virginia, cannot assert their claims in Massachusetts federal court because they have no connection to Massachusetts. Alere attorneys also argued that the plaintiffs' other "one size fits all" state law claims were inadequate to make a case for Alere's liability.
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Then Alere on February 3 filed another motion in support of its motion to dismiss the lawsuit and strike class allegations.
"Plaintiffs have failed to counter the numerous, on-point decisions dictating that where, as here, the complaint fails to specify which state’s law they intend to proceed under, such claims should be dismissed," according to Alere's motion to dismiss.
"There is no reason why the court and parties should have to reinvent the wheel anew, where numerous other courts have analyzed these claims and concluded that state-by-state variations preclude certification," according to Alere's motion to dismiss."
A hearing on the motion for dismissal is set for April 14.