Philadelphia Jury Hands J&J Subsidiary a Defense Win in Latest Pelvic Mesh Trial
The defense win in 'Krolikowski v. Ethicon Women's Health and Urology' was handed up Wednesday after more than three weeks of trial before Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas Judge Charles Cunningham III.
April 18, 2019 at 12:03 PM
3 minute read
The original version of this story was published on The Legal Intelligencer
A Philadelphia jury has declined to hold Johnson & Johnson subsidiary Ethicon liable for injuries that a woman claimed she suffered as a result of the company's allegedly defective pelvic mesh product.
The defense win in Krolikowski v. Ethicon Women's Health and Urology was handed up Wednesday after more than three weeks of trial before Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas Judge Charles Cunningham III.
Plaintiffs suing in Philadelphia over Ethicon's mesh products have repeatedly won multimillion-dollar verdicts, including a $41 million award in January. The verdict in Krolikowski marks only the second time a Philadelphia jury has found in favor of Ethicon over its pelvic mesh product, although the prior defense win was subsequently reversed by the trial court judge, a decision that is currently on appeal.
The plaintiff, Malgorzata Krolikowski, was represented by Kline & Specter attorneys Colin Burke and Elia Robertson, and Ethicon was represented by Butler Snow attorney Andrea La'Verne Edney, as well as Melissa Merk and Eileen Somers of Drinker Biddle & Reath and Julie Callsen and Jennifer Steinmetz of Tucker Ellis.
In an emailed statement Burke said the case presented unique challenges because of Krolikowski's related medical issues and gaps in her medical coverage and treatment. He also noted that, although the jury found Ethicon's conduct was not causally related to the injuries, the jury also determined that the company had failed to exercise due care in its design, marketing and sale of the mesh device.
“We have witnessed this finding of negligence against the defendants consistently throughout these cases. The juries in Philadelphia had uniformly made it clear to the defendants that their conduct is unacceptable,” he said. “We look forward to continuing our fight on behalf of women and holding Ethicon and Johnson & Johnson responsible for the harm they have caused women.”
Mindy Tinsley, a spokeswoman for Ethicon, said the evidence showed the company's TVT-Secur device was properly designed and not the cause of the injuries.
“We empathize with women suffering from stress urinary incontinence, which can be a serious and debilitating condition,” Tinsley said in the statement. “There are various treatment choices for women with this condition seeking to improve their quality of life, including surgical treatment with implantable mesh, which is backed by years of clinical research and is considered by most doctors to be the gold standard treatment.”
Krolikowski's was one of nearly 90 lawsuits pending in Philadelphia over claims that Ethicon negligently designed mesh products and failed to warn doctors and patients about the dangers. More than 10,000 suits are also pending against Ethicon in federal court over the same products.
The first pelvic mesh case in Philadelphia was tried in late 2015, and since then six cases have resulted in wins for plaintiffs, with awards ranging from $2.16 million to $57.1 million.
The only other case to come to a defense win was Adkins v. Ethicon. That case was handled by Bryan Aylstock of Aylstock, Witkin, Kreis & Overholtz. About a month after the win in that case, the judge who handled Adkins issued a one-page order granting Adkins' posttrial motion, which had contended that the jury's findings were inconsistent on the issue of whether the alleged design defect caused the injuries. The judge ultimately determined that the case should proceed to a damages hearing, but that decision is currently on appeal to the Pennsylvania Superior Court.
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