MARK MILLER, et al., Plaintiffs, v. PFIZER INC. (ROERIG DIVISION), Defendant.
CIVIL ACTION No. 99-2326-KHV
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF KANSAS
2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9816
June 23, 2000, Decided
June 23, 2000, Filed; June 26, 2000, Entered on the Docket
DISPOSITION:
[*1] Defendant Pfizer Inc's Motion To Exclude Opinion Testimony Of Morton M.
Silverman (Doc. # 200) filed April 18, 2000 SUSTAINED IN PART and DENIED IN
PART. Defendant Pfizer Inc's Motion To Exclude Opinion Testimony Of Donald H.
Marks (Doc. # 202) filed April 18, 2000 DENIED.
COUNSEL: For MARK MILLER, CHERYL MILLER, plaintiffs: Paul F Waldner, Ruth M. Benien,
Benien Law Offices, Chtd., Kansas City, KS.
For MARK MILLER, CHERYL MILLER, plaintiffs: Arnold Anderson Vickery, Richard W
Ewing, Vickery
& Waldner, Houston, TX.
For PFIZER INC, defendant: Patrick Lysaught, Robert J. E. Edwards, Polsinelli,
White, Vardeman
& Shalton, Kansas City, MO.
For PFIZER INC, defendant: James E Hooper, Malcolm E Wheeler, Amy L Padden,
Michael L O'Donnell, Wheeler Trigg
& Kennedy, P.C., Denver, CO.
JUDGES: Kathryn H. Vratil, United States District Judge.
OPINIONBY: Kathryn H.
Vratil
OPINION:
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This matter comes before the Court on Defendant Pfizer Inc's Motion To Exclude
Opinion Testimony Of Morton M. Silverman (Doc. # 200) and Defendant Pfizer
Inc's Motion To Exclude Opinion Testimony Of Donald H. Marks (Doc. # 202), both
filed April 18, 2000.
Analysis
Rule 702, Fed.
[*2] R. Evid., provides that a witness who is qualified by knowledge, skill,
experience, training or education, may testify in the form of opinion as to
scientific, technical or other specialized knowledge if such testimony will assist the
trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue. Under
Daubert, when
expert testimony is offered, a district court must determine at the outset, pursuant to Rule
104(a), Fed. R. Evid., whether the
expert testimony is reliable and whether it will assist the trier of fact to
understand or determine a fact in issue. See
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., 509 U.S. 579, 592, 113 S. Ct. 2786, 125 L. Ed. 2d 469. The district court may consider several nondispositive factors in determining
whether a particular
scientific theory or technique is reliable. These factors include (1) whether the
proffered technique can and has been
tested; (2) whether the technique or theory has been subject to peer review; (3) the
known or potential rate of error; and (4) the general acceptance of a technique
in the relevant
scientific community.
Id. at 593-94. The proponent of
expert testimony must show
"a grounding in the methods and procedures of science which must be based on
actual knowledge and not subjective belief
[*3] or unaccepted speculation."
Mitchell v. Gencorp. Inc., 165 F.3d 778, 780 (10th Cir. 1999). An expert's
qualifications are relevant to the reliability inquiry. See
United States v. Taylor, 154 F.3d 675, 683 (7th Cir. 1998);
In re Indep. Serv. Org. Antitrust Litig., 85 F. Supp. 2d 1130, 1163 (D. Kan. 2000).
1. Dr. Silverman
In his
expert report of December 15, 1999, Dr. Silverman
opines that Matthew Miller experienced increased
psychological and interpersonal difficulties beginning in the spring of 1997, but that his
"symptom picture" did not fit the usual profile for a pre-adolescent at high risk for
suicide. Defendant does not challenge Dr. Silverman's expert
qualifications but argues that his testimony, in its entirety, is
inadmissible. n1 Specifically, defendant claims that (1) Dr. Silverman has not
tested his
methodology; (2) his rate of error is
unacceptably high; and (3) he lacks an adequate factual basis for his opinions
regarding
suicide.
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n1 Dr. Silverman is clearly qualified in the field of
suicidology. He is a licensed physician and professor of psychiatry at the University of
Chicago. He has co-edited books on
suicidology, authored or co-authored peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters on
suicide, lectured nationally and internationally regarding
suicide and risk assessment, and serves as editor in chief of
Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, the official journal of the American
Association of
Suicidology.
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[*4]
At his
deposition, Dr. Silverman conceded that the medical community has a dismal record for
predicting human behavior and that persons who predict
suicide are incorrect between 80 and 82 percent of the time. Armed with this
concession, plus the fact that Dr. Silverman has never
tested the rate of error of his specific
methodology, defendant reasons that Dr.
Silverman's testimony should be excluded.
While the rate of error is not a dispositive factor, see
Daubert, 509 U.S. at 593-94, the Court agrees that
"conjectures that are probably wrong are of little use . . . in the project of
reaching a quick, final, and binding legal judgment--often of great
consequence--about a particular set of events in the past."
509 U.S. at 597. In this case, however, the Court is in no position to agree that Dr.
Silverman's testimony, as reflected in his original
expert report, should be entirely excluded. The record which defendant has submitted in
support of its motion is highly incomplete. It omits three of the six pages of
Dr. Silverman's
expert report and the pages which are missing apparently contain the heart of his analysis.
n2 The record is supplemented by random
[*5] pages from Dr. Silverman's
deposition on March 2, 2000. It also includes a
"supplemental report"
dated March 7, 2000 which purports to incorporate all opinions advanced in the
deposition as well as
"those expressly set forth" in the
supplemental report. Defendant has not sought to strike the
supplemental report, but neither has it explained any agreement of counsel or other arrangement
which would give the
supplemental report equal stature to the original report. n3 In other words, the Court cannot
evaluate the limited record which is before it in a way which might persuade it
that defendant's motion is well taken.
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n2 While plaintiffs bear the burden of proving that Dr. Silverman's testimony
is admissible, see
United States v. Kelley, 6 F. Supp. 2d 1168, 1183 (D. Kan. 1998), defendant bears an initial burden of properly raising the issue. Defendant
cannot make a reasonable argument that Dr. Silverman's
methodology is improper without at least
providing Dr. Silverman's
methodology to the Court.
n3 Defendant argues in its reply brief that the Court should exclude the
supplemental opinions because they were not contained in Dr. Silverman's original report
and defendant did not have an opportunity to depose him on the
supplemental opinion. Defendant did not make this argument in its original motion, however,
and the Court therefore does not consider it because plaintiffs have not had a
chance to respond. See
Medina v. City of Osawatomie, 992 F. Supp. 1269, 1272-73 (D. Kan. 1998) (court will not consider issues first raised in reply briefs);
Mike v. Dymon, Inc., 1996 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10799, 1996 WL 427761 at *2 (D. Kan. July 25, 1996) ("In pursuit of fairness and proper notice, the court generally summarily denies
or excludes all arguments and issues first raised in
reply briefs.") (citations omitted). In footnote 2 of Defendant Pfizer Inc's Memorandum In
Support Of Motion To Exclude Opinion Testimony Of Morton M. Silverman (Doc. #
201), and again in footnote 3 of the Reply In Support Of Defendant Pfizer,
Inc's Motion To Exclude Opinion Testimony Of Morton M. Silverman (Doc. # 407),
defendant asks the Court to order that Dr. Silverman be re-deposed at
plaintiff's cost if his
warning opinions are not stricken. The proper procedure would be for Pfizer to file a
separate motion to strike the
supplemental report on grounds of untimeliness and to seek appropriate relief such as a further
deposition on the terms described. Motion practice via footnotes is not recognized by
either the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure or the local rules of court. See D.
Kan. Rule 7.1(a) (all motions,
unless made during a hearing or at trial, shall be in writing and shall be
filed with the clerk; original and one copy shall be filed; motions shall be
accompanied by a brief or memorandum unless otherwise provided in these rules).
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[*6]
The attack on Dr. Silverman's
methodology must ultimately fail because defendant does not inform the Court what the
metholodogy is, much less how it is fatally untested. Defendant characterizes
Dr. Silverman's
"methodology" as a
"methodology in
predicting
suicide." In the limited portions of the one
expert report which appears to be properly before the Court, however, Dr. Silverman merely
opines that Matthew Miller's
"symptom picture" did not fit the usual profile for a pre-adolescent at high risk for
suicide. This opinion does not strike the Court as a
"methodology in
predicting
suicide," but rather a
diagnostic evaluation -- in retrospect -- of Matthew Miller's
psychological condition relative to his environment. Dr. Silverman does not go so far as to
state that Matthew Miller would not have committed
suicide but for Zoloft and the rate of error for
predicting
suicide is therefore not a reason for striking his evaluation of Matthew Miller's
psychological condition.
Further, while suicidologists may not be able to accurately predict which given
individuals will successfully attempt
suicide, various Daubert factors weigh in favor of admitting evidence whether Matthew
Miller was
[*7] at risk of committing
suicide. Publications regarding
suicide assessment note both
"risk factors" and
"protective factors" which help determine whether a person is at increased risk of committing
suicide. The factors which Dr. Silverman used have therefore apparently received peer
review. In addition to their appearance in medical literature, Dr. John
Mann, defendant's expert, concedes that the
scientific community has generally accepted the use of such factors. Because risk factors
and
protective factors are so widely accepted by the
scientific community, the Court must reject any effort to prevent Dr. Silverman from
testifying to the existence of generally accepted risk factors. See
Gier v. Educational Serv. Unit No. 16, 845 F. Supp. 1342, 1353 (D. Neb. 1994) (allowing expert to provide characteristics of abused children but not testify
that plaintiffs were abused).
In his
supplemental report, Dr. Silverman states that (1)
"SSRI drugs like Zoloft can cause
akathisia that, in turn, are [sic] likely to
trigger
suicidal behavior;" n4 and (2)
"there is evidence to indicate that Matthew Miller may have had a drug-induced
akathisia." Dr. Silverman does not state that
[*8] Zoloft probably caused Matthew Miller to
commit suicide and at his
deposition, Dr. Silverman admitted that he could not state
to a reasonable degree of medical certainty that Matthew Miller had a drug-induced
akathisia or that SSRI drugs like Zoloft (by producing
akathisia) were
"likely to
trigger
suicidal behavior."
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n4
Akathisia, loosely defined, is an inability to sit still; a condition of motor
restlessness.
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Defendant argues that these opinions in the
supplemental
expert report are
inadmissible because Dr. Silverman cannot testify that Zoloft
probably caused Matthew Miller to
commit suicide. Specifically, defendant insists that Dr. Silverman cannot state to a
reasonable degree of medical certainty that Zoloft causes
suicide or that Matthew Miller
akathisia. See
Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579, 125 L. Ed. 2d 469, 113 S. Ct. 2786 (1993). Defendant is correct, to the extent that Dr. Silverman might
opine at trial that Zoloft caused Matthew Miller to
commit suicide.
[*9] This prospect appears to raise a straw man argument, however, for nowhere in
the record before the Court does Dr. Silverman purport to advance such an
opinion. Indeed, he appears to stop gingerly short of any such claim. Therefore
the Court need not exclude Dr. Silverman's testimony on that ground. Dr.
Silverman merely
opines that Zoloft
can cause
akathisia and that Matthew Miller
may have had
akathisia. Such language constitutes nothing more than speculation, when measured against
an unequivocal claim that Zoloft caused
akathisia, which in turn caused Matthew Miller to
commit suicide. See
Nunez v. Wilson, 211 Kan. 443, 447, 507 P.2d 329 (1973). The Court is unconvinced, however, that either tenet, standing alone, is
speculative. Defendant has not
cited compelling evidence that Zoloft does not cause
akathisia, that Matthew Miller did not have
akathisia, or that Matthew Miller did not
commit suicide. n5 To the extent that these matters may be called into question at trial, Dr.
sHeaverman's testimony may be relevant if not sufficient to carry the burden of
proof on the issue of causation. Defendant does not argue that this evidence
should be excluded under Rule
[*10] 403, and on this record the Court is not prepared to address that difficult
issue.
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n5 Defendant also
complains that Dr. Silverman's opinion that Zoloft is associated with
suicide contradicts statements which he has made in certain published works. This does
not make his current opinion
inadmissible. Defendant can sufficiently point out any contradictions on cross-examination.
Daubert, 509 U.S. at 596.
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In his
supplemental report, Dr. Silverman states that
"SSRI drug manufacturers like Pfizer should definitely give explicit and
prominent
warnings about the potential for their drugs to
trigger
suicidal behavior and the
protective measures that clinicians, patients and their parents should employ," particularly in the early phase of drug therapy. Defendant argues that this
opinion is
inadmissible because Dr. Silverman lacks the
qualifications to testify regarding the sufficiency of defendant's
warnings.
Under FDA rules, defendant must change the
warnings
"as soon as there is evidence of a reasonable
[*11] association" between a drug and a harmful side effect and
"a causal relationship need not have been proved."
21 C.F.R. § 201.57(e). While Dr. Silverman's testimony might be offered to prove the existence of a
"reasonable association" between Zoloft and
suicide, however, plaintiffs provide no evidence that Dr. Silverman is aware that this
is the FDA standard. For all that the record reveals, Dr. Silverman's opinion
on the
duty to warn is strictly a personal opinion on what is ultimately
a legal question, and it would not be helpful to the jury. The Court therefore
excludes Dr. Silverman's opinion that defendant should have warned that Zoloft
is associated with
suicide.
Finally, defendant argues that the Court should exclude Dr. Silverman's
testimony because he improperly formed his opinion and then looked for evidence
to support it. Other than cryptic notes which Dr. Silverman made on the day
before he issued his initial
expert report, defendant has no evidence to support this allegation. Defendant reads these
notes as establishing that plaintiffs' counsel told Dr. Silverman to rule out
other explanations for Matthew Miller's
suicide. Because Dr. Silverman's expert reports do not
[*12] claim that Matthew Miller would not have committed
suicide but for Zoloft, defendant's scenario is irrelevant. Therefore, the Court will
not exclude Dr. Silverman's testimony on this ground.
2. Dr. Marks
Dr. Donald Marks is board certified in Internal
Medicine, with a Ph.D. in both microbiology and immunology from UCLA. Dr. Marks
has extensive experience as a research physician for the
pharmaceutical industry, and has written and conducted randomized clinical trials. He also
has experience in writing investigational new drug ("IND") applications, new drug applications ("NDA"), integrated summaries of safety, and annual safety reports. Dr. Marks has
experience reporting adverse drug and vaccine effects to the FDA. Dr. Marks
currently serves as a consultant to companies regarding FDA-related matters.
Dr. Marks has offered his opinion that Pfizer had a
duty to warn of a connection between Zoloft and
suicide and that it had a duty to conduct further
testing on the issue. Defendant argues that his testimony must be excluded because Dr.
Marks lacks the necessary
qualifications to testify concerning
warnings and
testing. Defendant also argues that the
methodology which Dr. Marks
[*13]
used is unreliable and that he improperly formed his testimony to reach an
outcome desired for this litigation.
Defendant argues that Dr. Marks lacks the necessary
qualifications to testify about
warnings, emphasizing that he lacks experience in psychiatry or
psychotropic drugs. As plaintiffs note, however, Dr. Marks will not testify about the
science behind SSRI drugs or what the FDA requires for approval of these drugs.
Dr Marks will merely testify that based on his experience in the
pharmaceutical industry, the information which suggests a link between Zoloft and
suicide is sufficient to require
warnings. He does not need specific knowledge about Zoloft or
psychotropic drugs; he only needs to look at the data which suggests that such a link
exists and rely on his experience in the
pharmaceutical field to determine whether this data would require a reasonable
pharmaceutical company to issue
warnings. n6
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n6 Defendant also argues that Dr.
Marks lacks the credentials to testify regarding a
duty to warn because he does not know the difference between hyperkinesia and agitation --
two terms which are contained on the package insert for Zoloft. This has no
bearing on the issue at hand. Dr. Marks can easily determine from reading the
insert that it does not
warn of a possible link between Zoloft and
suicide. He therefore
opines that this
warning is insufficient.
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[*14]
Similarly, defendant argues that Dr. Marks lacks the
qualifications to testify whether further
testing was required. Again, his lack of experience about psychiatry and
psychotropic drugs does not mandate exclusion of his testimony. Defendant notes that Dr.
Marks is generally unfamiliar with the
testing which the FDA required before Zoloft was approved and that Dr. Marks is unable
to create his own protocols for further
testing. The Court is not persuaded. Plaintiffs have evidence that defendant has never
conducted a study which is specifically designed to
determine the connection (if any) between Zoloft and
suicide. Plaintiffs also have evidence of such a connection. Based on his work in the
pharmaceutical field, Dr. Marks has sufficient experience to testify whether the available
information would cause a reasonable
pharmaceutical company to conduct further
testing to determine whether a link exists. Even though Dr. Marks cannot establish a
specific protocol for further
testing, further
testing may be in order. Dr. Marks is not suggesting that defendant should perform a
specific study of his own design; he only
opines that defendant should conduct further
testing. His lack of experience
[*15] in creating the necessary protocols does not require that the Court exclude
his testimony.
Defendant next argues that the
methodology which Dr. Marks has used is flawed because it disagrees with FDA regulations
and with Kansas law regarding a
duty to warn. Dr. Marks
opines that defendant has a
duty to warn when there is a
reasonable possibility that Zoloft causes or contributes to
suicide. Defendant first contends that this standard is lower than the FDA standard,
which defendant defines as requiring a reasonable
"probability." Defendant cites no evidence, however, which establishes that the FDA requires
a reasonable
"probability." FDA regulations specifically require a
"reasonable association." They do not elucidate whether this standard requires a possible association or
a probable association. Furthermore, FDA standards do not set the limit on
defendant's
duty to warn.
Savina v. Sterling Drug, Inc., 247 Kan. 105, 127-28, 795 P.2d 915, 931 (1990). Further, while defendant notes that Kansas requires it to
warn of side effects of which it knows or should know, defendant does not establish
that Kansas requires a
"reasonable probability" that the drug causes the side
[*16] effect. The Kansas Supreme Court has
noted that a
duty to warn arises
"where
scientific or medical evidence exists tending to show that a certain danger is associated
with use of the drug."
Wooderson v. Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp., 235 Kan. 387, 406, 681 P.2d 1038, 1054 (1984). Kansas requires plaintiffs to prove that
"a reasonably prudent product seller could and would have taken additional
precautions."
Savina, 247 Kan. at 128, 795 P.2d at 931. A jury could well find that a reasonably prudent product seller would take
additional precautions when it becomes aware of a
reasonable possibility that its drug causes
suicide. Indeed, defendant's own Worldwide Director of Safety, Dr. Gretchen Dieck,
testified that defendant uses the
"reasonable possibility" standard in determining whether
warnings are required. The Court is therefore not persuaded to exclude Dr. Marks'
testimony because he believes that drug
companies should
warn of reasonable possibilities of harmful side effects.
Defendant then contends that Dr. Marks failed to fully
investigate the studies which it has already performed. Defendant argues that Dr. Marks is
therefore unaware of the scope
[*17] of defendant's
testing of Zoloft and that his
methodology is therefore flawed. This statement is simply incorrect. While Dr. Marks is
not aware of every test which defendant has completed, plaintiffs have provided
evidence that defendant has never conducted a study which is specifically
designed to determine whether Zoloft is connected to
suicide or
suicide ideation, even though scientists had designed studies specifically for
defendant for just this purpose. It is therefore reasonable for Dr. Marks to
testify that defendant could have done further
testing. While defendant
complains that Dr. Marks ignores the
testing it has conducted, defendant does not contend that no further
testing is possible. This is insufficient to show that Dr. Marks' opinion is
unreliable.
Defendant also argues that the Court should
prevent Dr. Marks from
testifying that it had a duty to more fully
investigate a 1993 incident where an eight year old boy attempted to harm himself. A
Pfizer employee concluded that Zoloft had caused the attempt. Defendant
contends that Dr. Marks did not consider its evidence before concluding that
Pfizer did not fully
investigate the incident. Dr. Marks has evidence regarding
[*18] the incident, however, and how defendant reacted to it. Defendant only argues
that Dr. Marks should have looked at more evidence before forming his opinion;
it provides no evidence which suggests that it could not have investigated more
fully. Therefore, the Court cannot say that Dr. Marks' opinion is so
unsupported by the evidence that it is unreliable and excludable. If defendant
has contrary evidence, it can present this evidence on cross-examination and
attempt to create an issue of fact for the jury.
Finally, defendant argues that the Court should preclude Dr. Marks from
testifying because he did
not reach his opinion independently of the litigation. Defendant again
complains of Dr. Marks' inexperience regarding
suicide and psychiatry and argues that he
"read up" on the subject after plaintiffs retained him. The Court has already found that
Dr. Marks is suitably qualified for the opinions which he proffers. The Court
is hardly surprised that an expert in a particular area would
"read up" on facts and issues which could affect his opinion. Defendant does not cite
any evidence that Dr. Marks improperly formed his opinion and then sought to
justify it. The Court finds defendant's
[*19] argument to be without merit.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that Defendant Pfizer Inc's Motion To Exclude Opinion Testimony Of Morton M.
Silverman (Doc. # 200) filed April 18, 2000 be and hereby is
SUSTAINED IN PART and
DENIED IN PART. The Court will not allow Dr. Silverman to testify that
"SSRI drug manufacturers like Pfizer should definitely give explicit and
prominent
warnings about the potential for their drugs to
trigger
suicidal behavior and the
protective measures that clinicians, patients and their parents should employ," particularly in the early phase of drug therapy. In all other respects,
defendant's motion is
DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Defendant Pfizer Inc's Motion To Exclude Opinion Testimony Of Donald H.
Marks (Doc. # 202) filed April 18, 2000 be and hereby is
DENIED.
Dated this 23rd day of June, 2000 at Kansas City, Kansas.
Kathryn H. Vratil
United States District Judge