Four sisters allege that a synthetic estrogen known as DES caused them to get breast cancer. From left are Francine Melnick, Andrea Andrews, Donna McNeely and Michele Fecho.(Photo: Charles Krupa, AP)
BOSTON -- Four sisters who claimed their breast cancer was caused
by a drug their mother took during pregnancy in the 1950s reached a
settlement Wednesday with Eli Lilly and Co. in the first of scores of
similar claims around the country to go to trial.
Neither Eli
Lilly nor lawyers for the women would disclose the financial terms of
the settlement, which was announced on the second day of testimony
during a federal trial in Boston.
Eli Lilly said it continues to
believe its medication "did not cause the conditions alleged in this
lawsuit" but the settlement was in its "best interest."
"Settling
this trial helps us get back to what we want to focus on as a company;
developing important new medications through research and partnerships
with doctors and patients," it said in a statement.
A total of 51
women, including the Melnick sisters, filed lawsuits in Boston against
more than a dozen companies that made or marketed a synthetic estrogen
known as DES.
DES, or diethylstilbestrol, was prescribed to
millions of pregnant women over three decades to prevent miscarriages,
premature births and other problems. It was taken off the market in the
early 1970s after it was linked to a rare vaginal cancer in women whose
mothers used it.
Studies later showed the drug did not prevent miscarriages.
Attorney
Aaron Levine, representing the Melnick sisters, told the jury during
opening statements that Eli Lilly failed to test the drug's effect on
fetuses before promoting it as a way to prevent miscarriages.
Lawyer
James Dillon, for Eli Lilly, told the jury that there was no evidence
the drug causes breast cancer in the daughters of women who took it.
Dillon
also said that no medical records show the mother of the four Melnick
sisters took DES or that, if she did take it, it was made by Eli Lilly.
Leading researchers at the time recommended that DES be used for
pregnant women who had consecutive miscarriages, he said.
DES was not patented and was made by many companies.
The Melnick sisters, who grew up in Tresckow, Pa., said they all developed breast cancer in their 40s.
Levine
told the jury their mother did not take DES while pregnant with a fifth
sister and that sister has not developed breast cancer.
The four
Melnick sisters also had miscarriages, fertility problems or other
reproductive tract problems long suspected of being caused by prenatal
exposure to DES. They were diagnosed with breast cancer between 1997 and
2003 and had treatments ranging from lump-removal surgery to a full
mastectomy, radiation and chemotherapy.
Thousands of lawsuits have
been filed alleging links between DES and vaginal cancer, cervical
cancer and fertility problems. Many of those cases were settled.
Attorney
Andrew Meyer, who's handled numerous medical malpractice cases, said
the settlement in this case could signal settlements in other cases.
"When
one settles a case, they recognize they can lose it," he said. "The
reason they can lose it is because there's enough evidence for the
plaintiffs to be able to win it. So it's not just optics, it isn't."
Columbus,
Ohio, resident Irene Sawyer also is suing Eli Lilly, alleging that her
prenatal exposure to DES caused her breast cancer. She called the
settlement "a huge victory" for DES daughters.
"The bottom line is that this company put out a drug without testing, without knowing the consequences of this drug," she said.
It's wonderful, she said, that drug companies "are starting to realize this is not right, that there are consequences."
Associated Press