Battle over Botox Lawsuit alleges malpractice from Hollywood doctor
EXCERPTS:
But she also blames Dr. Klein for not telling her he was a paid consultant to the company that makes Botox, which she maintains was a conflict of interest.
But what they're trying to keep the public from knowing is that there are a lot of people what are not going to be helped and are gonna be hurt."
Some of the reported reactions have been mild, but some of them have been serious and associated with hospitalization, disability, even death.
For Mrs. Medavoy the low-point since filing her lawsuit, she says, was finding out she was being followed by private investigators. She filed a stalking report, and "Dateline" was with her when officers stopped a private investigator, one of three we saw shadowing her. That's just business as usual, according to the drug manufacturer's general counsel,...
The FDA has cited the drug company in the past for promotional literature that was "misleading" and "minimizing of side effects."
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http://www.msnbc.com/news/927823.asp
NBC NEWS June 17 It's the drug of choice for millions who want to keep looking young and appealing. A Botox shot for wrinkles is the fastest growing cosmetic procedure in the country, with women and men flocking to doctors, to spas, even to so-called "Botox parties" for the injections. Now there's a Botox lawsuit, a case involving a well-known Hollywood doctor, that's making some of the rich and famous both anxious and angry. ENTER THE WORLD of 44-year-old Irena Medavoy and her Botox horror story. She says the hottest drug on the cosmetic market nearly ruined her life. According to her, the ordeal began when her dermatologist injected her with Botox for migraine headaches. What began as the medical story of one angry patient has now made salacious headlines, sparked heated debate and even elicited charges of stalking. The whole episode has turned into a drama of division and loyalty on a scale that surprises even Hollywood veterans. Carrie Fisher: "There are people on this side, and there are people on this side." Hollywood's big guns are blazing, dishing about a lawsuit that pits the beautiful wife of movie producer and former studio chief Mike Medavoy, the man behind dozens of films from "Rocky" to the current "Holes," against the billion-dollar company Allergan that manufactures Botox and the man who administered it to her, one of Tinseltown's most cherished citizens and revered doctors, Arnold Klein, known as the dermatologist to the stars. And some very big ones are standing up for him. Elizabeth Taylor: "Down to the very finest detail, he is the definitive description of perfectionist." There is no doubt Dr. Klein has been a big booster of Botox, an acknowledged early pioneer in its cosmetic and medical use, even demonstrating how to use it on NBC News three years ago. And there is also little doubt that Irena Medavoy was once one of the drug's biggest fans, willing to brave a needle and pay up to $1,000 a treatment to get her flawless look. Medavoy: "I don't know anybody who wasn't using it... every single friend. Absolutely. We all have the exact same forehead. We used to walk around with the same kind of forehead. No expression kind of thing." No expression because Botox, the trade name for the neurotoxin botulinum toxin Type A, is a potent drug produced by bacteria that can kill you but properly administered temporarily paralyzes muscles, reducing the appearance of wrinkles and frown lines. Most people who've heard about Botox know of it as a medical fountain of youth from advertisements on television and magazines. But the drug is increasingly being used to treat a variety of medical ailments, from crossed eyes to spastic muscles, sweaty palms, back pain, even multiple sclerosis. The FDA has only approved Botox for three medical conditions and, cosmetically, for the frown line between the eyes. But it's routine to test new drugs for what are called off label uses, that is, for treatments not yet approved by the FDA. Several of those off label uses involving Botox seem to hold great promise. Among them, the use of Botox for migraines.
It's estimated that nearly one in five women suffer from migraines, Irina Medavoy among them. She says she discussed her headaches with Dr. Klein while she was being treated with Botox cosmetically. Medavoy: "There was a discussion about headaches, migraines. Oh, do you get headaches? Yes, I get migraines. Oh, well you know what? We're using Botox for migraines. I said, really? wow, I don't, you know, I don't know. Oh, no side effects. It's nothing. It'll definitely help you, it's great." Maria Shriver: "Now you had a neurologist on the side that you were seeing, who was treating your migraines. Did you think to call him up and say, you know what. my dermatologist tells me Botox for migraines. What do you think?" Medavoy: "Guess what? I didn't. I trusted Klein. I've known him for 25 years." In retrospect, Irena Medavoy blames herself for not asking more questions. But she also blames Dr. Klein for not telling her he was a paid consultant to the company that makes Botox, which she maintains was a conflict of interest. She also claims he didn't tell her that using Botox for migraines was off-label. She admits, however, to previously signing a consent form when she first got Botox for wrinkles, when that use was also off-label. Medavoy: "Off-label? What is off-label? Shriver: "You didn't know what off-label was?" Medavoy: "No. And I signed this consent form, and you know what else it says in there? Don't lay down for four hours. And you might get an eyelid droop and a transient headache. That's what it said." She says the side effects for her last migraine treatment were much more severe, so severe they have changed her life. Medavoy: "One of the reasons I'm suing is that I would never have taken the treatment if I had known that I could have life altering headaches which is by the way, what I have now, life altering headaches." She says she had no reaction to her first Botox treatments for wrinkles and migraines, but says that changed with her fourth treatment for the headaches. According to the medical file Irena Medavoy provided NBC News, Dr. Klein injected her on that occasion for the second time in the neck, at the base of the skull, but this time with 86 units of Botox, the largest dose he'd ever given her. According to several neurologists we spoke with, both the location of the injection and the dosage are standard for treatment of migraines. But Irena Medavoy says she knew right away that something was wrong. Medavoy: "I remember when I got up, I said, it's too much, Arnie. It's too much. because there were so many shots." Advertisement
She says she followed instructions given by Dr. Klein's office: no exercise, no lying down for several hours. She says she felt fine, well enough the following day to take her four-year-old son and some of his friends to Disneyland. But within days she says, she began to feel unwell. Medavoy: "About like the third day, fourth day, still, but thinking, you know what, I'm thinking I'm coming down with the flu. Something's wrong. I'm getting a little bit of chills. Something's wrong. Kind of feeling off. The sixth, the seventh day, I got a headache that I thought I was having a stroke. I got a headache like I've never had in my life." She says the pain increased and wouldn't respond to her regular migraine medication. She called Dr. Klein. Medavoy: "I said, Arnie, something's wrong. I've got like this headache. He says, "oh I gave you too much. I gave you cosmetic and migraine at the same time. Next time, I won't give you that much.'" Shriver: "He said that to you, "I gave you too much?'" Medavoy: "I gave you too much.' And I said, Arnie, there's never going to be a next time. What can I take. Help me. What do I take?" She says Dr. Klein told her that nothing could help the pain, but that it would subside in a matter of days. It didn't. She called UCLA to speak with her neurologist, Dr. Andrew Charles, whom she had been seeing for the migraines that plagued her three times a month. But this headache was different. Dr. Charles: "This was a incapacitating, unremitting headache that was centered more around her neck and shoulders, and something that didn't respond to any of the medications we tried on her." Medavoy: "I wound up in the emergency room on the Saturday. I said, I can't breathe, my head, I can't breathe."
There was a second trip to the emergency room, followed by endless visits to doctors. Her internist of over five years, Dr. Robert Huizinga, says he was perplexed by how his patient had suddenly become so ill. Dr. Huizinga: "She was really bedridden for several months. And we were confused initially. And obviously we wondered, gee, is it an infection? Because she did have flu-like symptoms and a temperature up to 102." Irena Medavoy says she spent most of the next three months in bed, rarely able to leave her room. She says she could barely swallow, that she lost 18 pounds in four weeks, suffered from extreme fatigue, fever and excruciating pain. Her baffled team of doctors tested for everything, even doing a brain screen and other tests to rule out auto-immune and psychiatric diseases. Dr. Huizinga: "At the end of the day, we felt it was due to a Botox reaction, both because temporarily it happened within several days. And number two, because it seemed to fit the pattern described in previous reports." Irena Medavoy says she finally began to function after three months in bed followed by another three months of being pretty much housebound. Even a full year later, she still complains of fatigue and pain. Medavoy: "The big difference in my life is that I went from never taking a daily medication, to taking five." Convinced that these health problems are a direct result of using Botox, she filed suit, not just against Dr. Klein for malpractice and failing to disclose his business relationship to Allergan, but also against Allergan for producing and marketing a drug she calls "an inherently dangerous product" when injected for off-label uses. As word spread of the Medavoy lawsuit, the Hollywood gossip machine went into overdrive, especially when it was learned that Irina Medavoy's husband, Mike, added the legal claim that his wife's Botox-induced illness had deprived him of "her companionship, intimacy and services..." Shriver: "Why did you have him go in on this lawsuit with you? why not just say, this happened to me. This is my lawsuit and I'm going it alone?" Medavoy: "Mike sued to give me support and say, you know what, they're gonna take hit. Let's take the hit together.'" Mike Medavoy has since dropped out of the lawsuit, but stands firmly behind his wife's claims that Botox harmed her. And Irena Medavoy's attorney, Arthur Leeds, says his client's case against the drug company is solid. Leeds: "This is not a situation where everyone who takes Botox is going to be injured. Maybe a lot of people are going to be helped. But what they're trying to keep the public from knowing is that there are a lot of people what are not going to be helped and are gonna be hurt."
Leeds says Irena Medavoy's case is bolstered by the numerous letters and calls he's received since the case went public from other people who say they've also had adverse reactions to the off label use of Botox and some of their stories sound eerily similar to Irena Medavoy's." Last year, a 38-year-old woman who doesn't want her name used, went to the dermatologist, who told her Botox could erase laugh lines around the eyes. Within seven to 10 days she says she started getting headaches, intense fatigue and flu-like symptoms. She didn't call Allergan, but did call her doctor, who diagnosed her with palsy. By day 10, the left side of her face became paralyzed. Woman: "I'd look in the mirror and I didn't even see myself. I mean, it's just been like the last few months where you look in the mirror and you start seeing the person that you saw all those years." In another case, 40-year-old nurse Debbie Sulzle says she spiked a fever, suffered intense headaches and had the lower part of her face paralyzed after getting Botox for the lines between her nose and mouth. Frightened, she reported her reaction to Allergan. The drug company does not deny that Sulzle may have had a reaction, but says not all of her symptoms can be attributed to Botox, particularly the ones she claims she still suffers from three years after her treatment. Sulzle: "I still drool a little bit off and on if I'm real tired or something. It's just very weak in that area still. The muscles are just not strong like they used to be." It's difficult to know how many people have had adverse reactions to Botox, and whether they were caused by the drug or how it was administered. The FDA says it's received more than a thousand reports on Botox since the drug was approved in 1989, but says that number is small given the estimated two and a half million people who've used the drug. Some of the reported reactions have been mild, but some of them have been serious and associated with hospitalization, disability, even death. Irena Medavoy says it is the stories of others who've had similar problems with Botox that inspire her to continue with a lawsuit she admits has tested her mettle. And she knows the big hurdle ahead will be to prove that her medical problems have nothing to do with her personality and life and everything to do with Botox. Shriver: "So when people say, Irina Medavoy, crisis queen, dramatic, she's got a lot of other stuff going on not Botox related, she will, she's doing this for the money and the attention?'" Medavoy: "It's about they harmed me with Botox. I was injured by it. It's the only way is it to hit them in the pocketbook so they understand that they have to disclose the full risk." Shriver: "What do you think did happen to Mrs. Medavoy?" Howard Weitzman (Klein attorney): "Could have been a nervous breakdown, could have been chronic depression, could have been a number of things. According to Dr. Klein's attorney, there is another side to the story Irena Medavoy is telling. THE OTHER SIDE Irena Medavoy may complain of intense fatigue and excruciating headaches a year after getting her fateful Botox injection, but according to the manufacturer of the drug and the lawyer working for the doctor who administered it, she will have a difficult time convincing a jury that Botox is at fault. Weitzman: "I don't dispute for a moment she was ill at some point, and maybe very ill. I just don't think the evidence will show that Botox was the cause."
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Weitzman is an attorney accustomed to trying high profile cases that play themselves out in the press, having represented both John DeLorean and briefly, O.J. Simpson. Weitzman: "Some jury will decide if Dr. Klein committed malpractice. I don't think any evidence will surface that he did." Dr. Klein declined to be interviewed by Dateline, but through his lawyer, disputes Irena Medavoy's story. The first point he contests is that she wasn't told that Botox for migraines was an off-label use of the drug. Weitzman says Dr. Klein told her it was, and that she understood what that meant. Weitzman: "I think Mrs. Medavoy is a smart lady. I think she understood what off-label is." Weitzman also denies that Dr. Klein ever told Irena Medavoy that he gave her too much Botox. And he dismisses her charge that there was any ethical problem with Dr. Klein working as a paid consultant for Allergan. Shriver: "Is it the ethical thing to do for Dr. Klein to have divulged his relationship with Allergan to Mrs. Medavoy before he injected her with Botox?" Weitzman: "I absolutely think it has nothing to do with that. I think being a consultant to a pharmaceutical companies is done by doctors all over the world. That's the way pharmaceutical companies learn how their product reacts in clinical situations." Weitzman does admit, however, that the case has taken on a life of its own. Weitzman: "I don't think it can get much uglier, honestly." For Mrs. Medavoy the low-point since filing her lawsuit, she says, was finding out she was being followed by private investigators. She filed a stalking report, and "Dateline" was with her when officers stopped a private investigator, one of three we saw shadowing her. That's just business as usual, according to the drug manufacturer's general counsel, Douglas Ingram. Ingram: "We have absolutely observed Mrs. Medavoy in public places, which is very common in cases like this." Shriver: "So you hired private investigators to observe her, to follow her?" Ingram: "To simply observe her in public places. Remember Mrs. Medavoy has asserted not only in the lawsuit but in the media the claim that this chronic condition has impacted her social life. We obviously have to go to trial at some point in this case." Shriver: "Her claim is that this changed her life. She is an altered person from her experience from Botox." Ingram: "If Mrs. Medavoy is suffering from any of these ailments, I certainly feel sorry for her and I hope that she gets relief and she finds out the cause of them. But never, to my knowledge in the history of Botox has a constellation of side effects occurred as Mrs. Medavoy is contending and persisted for a year." The intensity and duration of Irena Medavoy's reaction does surprise many doctors we spoke with, including the Chief of Neurology at Kaiser Permanente in San Diego, Dr. Andrew Blumenfeld, who runs the headache clinic. He says he has used Botox for 14 years, treating migraines with it for the past five. He frequently injects in the neck area and often in doses much larger than what Dr. Klein gave Irena Medavoy and, he says, with great success. Dr. Blumenfeld: "I've used it in relatively large doses and I have not run into any significant side effects. most of the side effects that I've seen have been mild or transient." Shriver: "Such as?" Dr. Blumenfeld: "It depends on the site that I'm injecting." Dr. Blumenfeld says stiff necks, an increase in headaches and droopy eyelids are the consequences he most commonly sees. And those, he adds, can be minimized with medical expertise. Dr. Blumenfeld: "The sites that we inject are very specific and the technique is very important." But Dr. Blumenfeld admits that while he hasn't seen a condition as severe as Irena Medavoy's, incorrectly used, Botox could cause problems. Dr. Blumenfeld: "It's true that if you inject in large doses and possibly incorrectly, that you would produce muscle weakness. It's not into the artery, it's deep into the muscle where you're going to maybe give too much of the medication, and you could aggravate the headaches when you do that."
Allergan's general counsel insists Botox is safe. He says it's been administered over seven million times and points out that in the development of all new drugs from aspirin to penicillin, some patients have had bad reactions. He acknowledges that in rare instances, the side effects of Botox, especially with it's medical use, can be severe." The FDA has cited the drug company in the past for promotional literature that was "misleading" and "minimizing of side effects." Allergan says its materials have been updated, including the product inserts it is required to send to doctors. Shriver: "It says there are reports of adverse reactions with cosmetic use that include headaches, respiratory infection, flu syndrome, nausea and with Botox general use, even rare spontaneous reports of death sometimes associated with dysphasia, pneumonia and/or other significant disability." Ingram: "I don't dispute that's in the label. There were reports of not common, but rare reports of the various side effects you mentioned pain at the injection site, headache and the like. it should also be noted, however, that every one of those particular side effects, were also noted in the placebo group." In other words, according to Ingram, patients not injected with Botox exhibited the same symptoms as those who were. And as for whose responsibility it is to inform patients about the side effects listed on those labels, he says that's in the hands of doctors. Ingram: "Its really the physician's professional judgment and responsibility that guides the physician in determining what kind of conversations ought to occur between a physician and his or her patient." It's a conversation attorney Weitzman says did take place, despite Irena Medavoy's claim that it did not. Weitzman: "I think he met the standard of care necessary and required by the medical profession. I think that's what the evidence will show. Until this lawsuit received notoriety, the only attention Dr. Klein was accustomed to getting was praise for his considerable medical and philanthropic accomplishments. But his high profile friends and patients like Carrie Fisher and Elizabeth Taylor recognize that today he is caught in the middle of a lawsuit that threatens a lot more than just his medical practice Shriver: "What's this case done to him? What effect has it had?" Carrie Fisher: "Well, it challenges his integrity. I mean, he's this beloved man, and it challenges his word and his integrity and stuff like that." Shriver: "You obviously feel that it's important to support this man, not just because he's your friend." Elizabeth Taylor: "No. It's because I believe in him with all my heart. I believe in his integrity more than any other human being alive. He cannot, and does not, do or make a wrong move." Shriver: "Isn't it possible that he made a mistake?" Taylor: "No." Shriver: "No?" Taylor: "Arnie does not make mistakes." The stakes are high not just for Dr. Klein, but also for Allergan. Publicity could hurt the image of a drug estimated to earn the company $580 million this year alone. Ingram: "Dr. Klein and Allergan are both defendants in this lawsuit and we're going to work together to ensure that this frivolous lawsuit is resolved... and our product and Dr. Klein are vindicated. And as for Irena Medavoy, she says it has become her mission to warn other people who are considering the use of Botox to research the possible consequences first. Shriver: "You're not saying, don't touch Botox." Medavoy: "It's everyone's life. They have to choose for themselves. Is it worth the rewards they're going to get? But just be informed." Both sides have a court appearance next week, though no trial date has yet been set. The FDA review of Botox incidents should be completed in the next few months.
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