HRT sales rep whistleblower admits improper promotion

October 5th, 2007 by Scott Thomas

The Reno trial involving three survivors who are suing Wyeth is now nearing the end of its fourth week. The Nevada plaintiffs are suing Wyeth, the manufacturer of Prempro and Premarin, after they each developed attributed to their long-term use of combination hormone replacement drugs.


Brett Hendricks, a former sales representative for Wyeth, provided riveting testimony regarding his twenty-one year career with the largest manufacturer of hormone replacement therapy drugs that outlined the organized deception of doctors and patients that plaintiffs contend overstated the benefits of therapy while concealing the risks.

“That’s how we were trained,” Hendricks said. “To offset any bad publicity, we would redirect and emphasize the benefits of the product and say the benefits far outweighed any problems that might be out there.”

On the stand, Hendricks confirmed Wyeth’s marketing strategy that had already been laid out in the millions of pages of documents produced by Wyeth and others in the HRT litigation that has been pending for more than five years. Wyeth sales representatives were encouraged to engage in aggressive, one-on-one sales tactics with prescribing physicians to supplement the manufacturer’s advertising plan which included overselling the benefits of drugs, discrediting scientific studies that raised any questions about safety (especially risks), criticizing physicians who chose safer alternative drugs or counseled their patients on the option of not taking any drugs at all, and pushing menopausal women to take combination product drugs from the onset of menopause (or perhaps even before) and to continue taking the drugs throughout the rest of their lives.

In July of 2002, the Women’s Health Initiative (””) study was published and confirmed what many had long suspected – that Prempro and combination replacement products (including Wyeth’s Premarin taken in combination with Pfizer’s Provera or another progestin such as medroxyprogesterone) are associated with an increased risk of -positive breast cancers as well as other health risks, including heart attacks, strokes, blood clots, and ovarian cancer, etc.

The Study (which was funded by the United States government, after manufacturers of replacement drugs failed to conduct proper studies to evaluate the risks of -induced ) led to a fundamental shift in the manner in which drugs were prescribed. Today, physicians and patients are being told that is not right for every woman, and instead should only be considered by those for whom the symptoms of menopause are severe and interfering with their lives. In addition, patients have been encouraged to use drugs for the shortest time possible and at the lowest possible doses.

In fact, the Prempro product ingested by most women prior to 2002 no longer exists, and instead was replaced by a lower dose product (although it is not yet known whether a lower dose actually equates to a lower risk). There is also a strong movement in the medical community to investigate other drugs for menopausal symptoms and osteoporosis, including SERMs (selective estrogen receptor modulators) and natural or bioidentical hormones that more closely resemble those that are made by a woman’s body. Prempro, for example, includes an estrogen compound derived from the urine of pregnant horses and chemically synthesized progestin (which is a necessary additive since estrogen alone has long been known to cause uterine cancer, but also eliminates many of the benefits that have been shown with use of estrogen alone and increases the risks of ).

The pharmaceutical industry has long maligned alternative therapies for menopausal patients, but evidence continues to mount that the -induced epidemic noted in recent registries might have been avoided if women had been given more information in order to make meaningful decisions regarding treatment options years ago.

The Reno trial is expected to last for a few more weeks. Alley, Clark, Greiwe & Fulmer will be trying the first case in Florida in Pinellas County in June of 2008. This will be the first wrongful death claim to be brought to trial in the national litigation. The case was brought on behalf of a Clearwater grandmother who was diagnosed in early 2002 at the age of 59 with -positive lobular (the type most strongly associated with use of drugs), just months prior to announcement of the study results. Her cancer was very aggressive and had already spread to brain and bones by that time. After fighting valiantly for several years, she lost her battle and died late last year before her case was scheduled for trial. The lawsuit is now being prosecuted by her loving husband of forty-one years on behalf of her estate and survivors.

October 5th, 2007

blog comments powered by Disqus

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.