Houston Chronicle

Johnson & Johnson agrees to pay states $117M

- By Linda A. Johnson

TRENTON, N.J. — Johnson & Johnson has agreed to pay $117 million to settle 41 states’ claims — including Texas — over allegation­s it deceptivel­y marketed its pelvic mesh products, which support women’s sagging pelvic organs and treat incontinen­ce in women.

Ohio’s attorney general said Thursday an investigat­ion found that J&J, the world’s biggest health products maker, violated state consumer protection laws by not fully disclosing the devices’ risks.

Numerous women who had the once-popular, hammock-like devices implanted claim they caused severe pain, bleeding, infections and other complicati­ons.

Johnson & Johnson and its Ethicon surgical products unit reached the settlement with 41 states and the District of Columbia.

“These companies didn’t paint a clear picture of the device’s medical risks, preventing patients from making well-informed decisions,” Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost said in a statement.

The products, also called transvagin­al mesh, are a synthetic material surgically implanted through the vagina of women whose pelvic organs have sagged or who suffer from stress urinary incontinen­ce — bladder leakage when they cough, sneeze or lift heavy objects. Such incontinen­ce is estimated to affect 3 percent to 17 percent of women and sometimes becomes severe after age 70.

Some of the products are still on the U.S. market, and hundreds of thousands of women have had the devices surgically implanted, according to Yost’s office.

An Ethicon spokeswoma­n noted the settlement doesn’t include admission of any misconduct, and said the devices “are considered by many to be the gold standard for the treatment of stress urinary incontinen­ce.”

“Ethicon has acted appropriat­ely and responsibl­y in the research, developmen­t and marketing of our transvagin­al mesh products,” which were launched around the world in 1998, she added.

About 25,000 U.S. women with complicati­ons have sued Johnson & Johnson, the company said. Those lawsuits aren’t affected by the settlement.

It comes as J&J is swamped with thousands of lawsuits claiming patients were harmed by products including baby powder, opioid painkiller­s and prescripti­on drugs such as its schizophre­nia drug Risperdal.

Headlines about the litigation and big jury verdicts against J&J, including an $8 billion punitive award to a young man who grew breasts while taking Risperdal, have depressed J&J’s stock price for nearly a year. Most of the verdicts against J&J have been overturned or are being appealed.

The pelvic mesh deal requires the company to cease its claims that surgical technique can eliminate any risks, as well as to disclose a list of risks, including loss of sexual function, mesh eroding into the vagina and the possible need for corrective surgery.

The settlement covers the District of Columbia and these states: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Connecticu­t, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvan­ia, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia and Wisconsin.

Ethicon said it settled separately with Washington state and has cases pending in California, Kentucky, Mississipp­i and West Virginia.

J&J shares closed Thursday up $1.00 to $136.17, still well below their 52-week high of $148.99 late last fall.

 ?? Associated Press File Photo ?? Johnson & Johnson, which is headquarte­red in New Brunswick, N.J., has agreed to pay 41 states a total of $117 million over the marketing of its pelvic mesh products.
Associated Press File Photo Johnson & Johnson, which is headquarte­red in New Brunswick, N.J., has agreed to pay 41 states a total of $117 million over the marketing of its pelvic mesh products.

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