Monday, November 21, 2011

Actos Lawsuits surge in Illinois

More actos lawsuit are being filed by people who claim the type 2 diabetes drug caused them to develop bladder cancer. The most recent actos bladder cancer lawsuit, filed in federal court in Illinois by a Georgia woman, Josephine Stodgill, alleges Takeda Pharmaceuticals failed to warn patients about the bladder cancer risk associated with Actos.The Stodgill lawsuit is just the latest to be filed by a victim of bladder cancer allegedly caused by Actos. So far, at least 54 cases have been filed in federal district courts throughout the U.S. plaintiffs argue that Takeda failed to properly research the medication or warn about the risk.
Recent research has suggested that actos side effects may increase the risk of bladder cancer the longer the medications is taken. Actos is expected to be named in hundreds of lawsuits claiming it caused users to develop bladder cancer.

Actos Risks Post Potential Threats at Same Rate as Avandia


Actos (pioglitazone) was approved by FDA to treat Type 2 Diabetes in July, 1999. It is Takeda Pharmaceuticals’ best-selling drug, with sales of $3.4 billion last year. Sales have increased in recent years since a number of studies have suggested that Actos side effects appeared safer than its competitor, Avandia, which has been linked to an increased risk of heart attacks and deaths. Some experts and even federal regulators have called for an Avandia recall, which would likely lead to even greater use of Actos to treat diabetes, possibly increasing the risk of Actos bladder cancer sufferers. In 2005 results from the PROactive Study (PROspectivePioglitAzone Clinical Trial in Macro Vascular Events) demonstrated a higher percentage of  bladder cancer cases with Actos use than in competitors’ drugs following three years of research leading victims to file an Actos lawsuit. That information was not included when the study’s findings were published.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Bladder Cancer Risks WithActos May Be Found In Other Diabetes Drugs

A class action actos lawsuit has been filed against Takeda Pharmaceuticals and Eli Lilly on behalf of all users of the diabetes drug Actos, seeking financial compensation and medical monitoring as a result of the drug makers’ failure to adequately warn about the risk of bladder cancer from Actos. But Actos is not the only drug to contain its active chemical, pioglitazone. Avandia and Actos are members of a drug family called the thiazolidinediones, abbreviated TZDs. This is a relatively new class of oral anti-diabetic drugs which was developed during the 1990s. These drugs began their careers showing great promise in the treatment of insulin resistance, and hopes were raised by preliminary research that they might be able to rescue failing beta cells.Unfortunately, over time all three were found to cause life-threatening actos side effects, the risk of which was far greater than the benefit these drugs provided. 

The potential risk of actos bladder cancer problems is now being reviewed by health regulators in the United States and other countries throughout the world.

Rate of Bladder Cancer WithActos Leads To Mounting Lawsuits

On June 15, 2011, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) released a ‘Drug Safety Communication,’ informing the public that use of the diabetes medication Actos (pioglitazone) for more than one year may be associated with an increased risk of actos bladder cancer. Information about this risk will be added to the Warnings and Precautions section of the label for pioglitazone-containing medicines. In a five-year interim analysis of the Kaiser Permanente Northern California, study, the FDA found that there was no significant increase in the risk for bladder cancer in patients taking pioglitazone. However, it was found that the risk for bladder cancer did grow with increasing dose and use longer than one year. The data showed that pioglitazone treatment for over 12 months carried a 40% increased risk of bladder cancer.

In recent months, dozens of individuals throughout the United States have filed a bladder cancer actos lawsuits, alleging that Takeda pharmaceuticals failed to adequately research their medication or warn about the potential risks associated with use and knowingly sold the drug while being aware of those risks. Plaintiffs indicate that they are bringing the Actos class action to recover money damages, medical monitoring and other relief for all individuals who ingested Actos are having Actos Side effects in the United States or its territories since it was introduced in July 1999.

Friday, November 18, 2011

Consolidation of Actos Lawsuits Into MDL Requested

Actos is the best-selling type II diabetes drug in the world, but over the summer, growing concerns about its possible link to actos bladder cancer reached a crescendo. On June 15, 2011, the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) issued a safety communication stating that use of Actos for more than one year may be associated with an increased risk of bladder cancer. That same month, sales of the drug were suspended in France and Germany after a separate study commissioned by French regulators demonstrated an increased risk of bladder cancer associated with actos side effects in people who took it the longest and at the highest cumulative dose. On July 12, Takeda Pharmaceuticals officially recalled Actos from the market in France.

If an Actos MDL is formed, all cases involving allegations that plaintiffs developed bladder cancer from Actos would be transferred to the same judge. In addition, as actos lawyer continue to review and file new complaints in federal courts throughout the United States, those cases would also be transferred into the MDL for pretrial litigation.Actos (pioglitazone) was approved by the FDA to treat Type 2 Diabetes in July, 1999.

Actos Lawsuits Balloon Ahead of MDL Petition

Actos bladder cancer lawsuits could be headed for consolidation in a multidistrict litigation (MDL). Late last month, plaintiffs in one such actos lawsuit petitioned the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistriction Litigation for the consolidation, requesting that all pending and future actos bladder cancer lawsuits in federal courts be transferred to U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Illinois before Judge G. Patrick Murphy.An MDL allows lawsuits associated with a particular product to be coordinated under one judge for pretrial litigation to avoid duplicative discovery, inconsistent rulings and to conserve the resources of the parties, witnesses and the court. When lawsuits are consolidated as a multidistrict litigation, each retains its own identity. 

Concerns about the potential risk of bladder cancer from Actos first surfaced when it was discovered that rats given the drug had a higher rate of bladder tumors. Recent results from an on-going 10 year study, involving nearly 200,000 patients with diabetes, suggests that there may be a risk of bladder cancer from actos side effects the longer the medication is taken.Many have indicated that the FDA should remove Actos from the market in the United States as well, due to the risk of bladder cancer outweighing the potential benefits provided by the medication.

Actos Bladder Cancer: Why Weren’t Patients Warned?

Most of the Actos lawsuits filed by victims of harmful Actos side effects are  focused on the fact that the drug did not warn on its label of one of the most serious side effects that have been linked to the drug—Actos bladder cancer. Cancer is one of the most notorious diseases in our culture, and for good reason. It ravages the body of those it affects, causing them to undergo exhaustive and exhausting treatments which can range from grueling chemotherapy to painful and expensive surgery. The financial and physical cost of cancer, even when it is not fatal, is high—not to mention the psychological cost it takes from patients, their spouses, their children, and their loved ones.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Actos Lawsuit Sites Bladder Cancer as Cause for Patient’s Death

Public Citizen, a prominent consumer watchdog group, has indicate that the risk of actos bladder cancer from Actos is further proof that the diabetes drug needs to be removed from the market, and reinforces their earlier decision to place the drug on their “Do Not Use” list. This warning has come too late for some, as in the case of Robert Hodges, who died as a result of complications due to bladder cancer. Judith Hodges, filed a actos lawsuit on behalf of her late husband, alleging that his years of Actos use caused him to suffer severe, permanent and life-threatening personal injuries, pain, suffering, emotional distress, and a premature death.
Actos (pioglitazone) is a member of a family of drugs called thiazolidinediones, or glitazones, which have been linked to a number of health problems of actos side effects and have not been shown to reduce the risk of a heart attack or heart failure for diabetics,

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Actos Lawyers Prepare for Court Battle

Actos is a pharmaceutical medication used to treat Type 2 Diabetes, a condition that affects a large number of people worldwide. It was approved by the Food and Drug Administration for treatment of the condition in 1999 and has enjoyed relative success since then. However, including actos bladder cancer, a number of patients have seen a darker side of the drug and have experienced severe Actos side effects.

As anyone familiar with the disease knows, cancer is a serious and sometimes deadly condition that requires harsh and extensive treatment. Actos Lawyers are at court, battling for the patients who have had cancer and are at risk for contracting the disease again, and may never regain the same quality of life they had before.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Actos Side Effects Call Plaintiffs to Action

A significant number of patients of the type 2 diabetes treatment drug Actos have filed lawsuits against drugmaker Takeda because of potentially life-threatening Actos side effects. Most plaintiffs cite bladder cancer as their reason for filing suit. They are accusing Takeda of knowing that the drug caused bladder cancer based on tests on animals, which showed signs of bladder cancer when Actos was administered. Although this was allegedly already known by Takeda, they did apparently nothing to warn plaintiffs about the risk, instead continuing to market the drug. Only in June of 2011 did the Food and Drug Administration release the results of a study that seemed to point to the fact that taking Actos for over a year did, in fact, increase a patient’s chances of getting Actos bladder cancer.

There are such a significant number of cases that have been filed surrounding Actos that plaintiffs have petitioned the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation to consolidate the cases into multidistrict litigation by Actos lawyer.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Bladder Cancer is Acknowledged as Main Actos Side Effect


Actos was first presented as a safer alternative to Avandia as a type 2 diabetes treatment. In recent years though, information has come to light that has thrown that assumption into question. Early data from an on-going 10 year study of Actos side effects conducted by Takeda Pharmaceuticals has suggested that users of the diabetes drug may face an increased risk of cancer when the medication is taken for more than a year. According to a separate five-year data from the study, which involves 193,099 patients with data, patient taking the drug for 12 months or longer had a 40% increased risk of developing Actos bladder cancer. The risk increased with both dose size and duration of treatment.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Actos Cancer Litigation Beginning to Build


Sales of Actos have increased significantly in recent years, due to potential concerns about side effects of Avandia. However, recent research suggests that Actos side effects are also a potential concern for diabetes patients. Concerns about the potential risk of Actos cancer side effects first surfaced when it was discovered that rats given the drug had a higher rate of bladder tumors. Recent results from an on-going 10 year study, involving nearly 200,000 patients with diabetes, suggests that there may be a risk of Actos bladder cancer the longer the medication is taken. All of the Actos lawsuits involving cancer include similar

Friday, October 21, 2011

FDA Links Actos to Bladder Cancer and Issues New Warning


Actos (generic pioglitazone hydrochloride) is an oral medication used for treatment of Type 2 diabetes. Recent research suggests that users may face an increased risk of bladder cancer from Actos side effects the longer the medication is taken. The FDA announced a new Actos bladder cancer warning in June, after interim data from a review of 193,099 diabetics revealed that those taking the drug for more than a year had a 40 percent increased risk for bladder cancer. The 10 year study on which the new warnings are based will

Thursday, October 13, 2011

40% Increase In Bladder Cancer for Takers of Actos


According to a recent report by the Associated Press, several law firms already represent more than 100 clients who are considering a potential Actos lawsuit, due to the bladder cancer the drug may have cause, and the number of cases is expected to continue to grow as Actos lawyers run advertisements to inform individuals who developed bladder cancer that they may be able to pursue compensation through a lawsuit. Since warnings were issued in June, several Actos bladder cancer lawsuits have been filed in U.S. Courts. One of the first was filed by Nancy Rios, 54, who took Actos for nearly a decade. According to the Associated Press, Rios was diagnosed with bladder cancer in 2009, and has undergone two surgeries to remove tumors. She has missed work and is worried about paying her medical bills. She may end up losing her bladder, and could require chemotherapy.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Actos Recalled in France, U.S. Far Behind?


French health authorities have suspended Actos sales, following data that provides further evidence that users of the diabetes drug may face an increased risk of bladder cancer. The Actos recall was announced in June by AFSSAPS, the medical regulatory agency of France. The French decision to remove Actos from the market came after a review of French public insurance data found a slight increase in the risk of bladder cancer linked as a possible side effect of Actos. In France, the drug is taken by about 230,000 people. AFSSAPS said that patients should not stop taking the drug without consulting their physician, but told doctors they should no longer prescribe it.
The FDA and European Medicines Agency are both currently reviewing Actos bladder cancer risks, but neither has come to a conclusion yet. The EMA has said it will look at the French study that led to the recall there. In April, a study by Italian researchers found that more than a fifth of all bladder cancer reports received by the

Monday, October 3, 2011

Actos Side Effects Culminate in Lawsuits


Actos is a drug used to treat type 2 diabetes in patients, and has been successful for a time. Recently, however, patients are discovering some of the more serious Actos side effects associated with the medication. Actos, or pioglitazone, is a member of the diabetes drug class known as “thiazolidinediones”, or TZDs. The public was warned by the Food and Drug Administration in August of this year about the possibility of serious side effects, but many patients were unaware of them before they began experiencing these complications.
Actos, and Actos generic formula drugs, work because they lower blood sugar levels in the body and help the body return to normal insulin-absorbing rates, something that is complicated after the onset of type 2 diabetes. Diabetes comes with its own set of side effects, including kidney damage, nerve disorders, sexual dysfunction, amputation of limbs, eyesight deterioration, and heart attack. Actos has been proven helpful in reducing the occurrence of these complications associated with the disease itself.
However, one of the most talked-about side effects of Actos is the link between it