About 80,000 lawsuits, or about 93 percent of Zantac cases pending against the British drug manufacturer in U.S. state courts, will be settled with this agreement. GSK is expected to settle with the remaining 7 percent of plaintiffs, but said those cases could proceed to trials.
As well, GSK has agreed to pay $70 million to settle a Zantac whistleblower lawsuit filed by Valisure, a Connecticut laboratory. Its testing first rang the alarm that Zantac was linked to cancer. Valisure contended that GSK knew its drug was associated with cancer risk but it chose to keep silent.
Despite the FDA finding that ranitidine--previously sold under the brand name Zantac, among others--could degrade into NDMA over time or when exposed to heat, GSK has not admitted any wrongdoing: it’s part of the deal. Rather, it said that there was "no consistent or reliable evidence" that ranitidine, Zantac’s active ingredient, increased the risk of cancer.
However, to avoid the risk of continuing litigation, GSK said the settlements were in the best long-term interest of the company. And lead attorneys (from 10 law firms) for the plaintiffs agreed, saying in a joint statement that they were "thrilled" with the deal. GSK wasn’t the only company involved: Pfizer and Sanofi also marketed the heartburn drug, and they too have reached settlements. The German drugmaker Boehringer Ingelheim is continuing with litigation.
According to the U.K.’s Financial Times, a Delaware judge’s decision allowing plaintiffs’ scientists to testify that the drug caused cancer, which left the company exposed to the risk of future US jury trials, hastened settlement discussions. And in August Delaware supreme court judges reviewed that ruling. “That definitely prompted both sides to roll up their sleeves and get it done,” said one of the plaintiffs’ lawyers, adding that the outcome was great “for people who suffered cancer.”
NDMA
N-nitroso dimethylamine is a by-product or waste product of various industrial processes, including the manufacture of rocket fuel. Plaintiff Christopher Montgomery said in his lawsuit that, “NDMA’s lone medical use is to cause cancer in animals for laboratory experimentation,” and that, “Cigarette smoking…has been banned, in part, because it produces NDMA, and animal studies have shown that exposure to NDMA has caused tumors primarily of the liver, respiratory tract, kidney and blood vessels.” Once present in the human body, NDMA further metabolizes into other known carcinogens, including formaldehyde.
Zantac Lawsuits
READ MORE ZANTAC HEARTBURN MEDICATION LEGAL NEWS
Zantac was first approved for sale in the US in 1983 and within five years it became the world’s best-selling drug, with annual sales reaching $1billion. Sanofi, which bought the marketing rights to Zantac from Boehringer Ingelheim in 2017, released Zantac 360 (Famotidine), which contains no ranitidine. The FDA hasn't found any NDMA contamination in famotidine and has approved it as a safe alternative to the old Zantac.