The FDA puts every Warning Letter it issues on its website. A medical technology and life sciences company should expect that a plaintiff will find any Warning Letters that a company has been issued and try to connect the alleged violations enumerated in them to the lawsuit, if possible. Even before any lawsuit is filed, publicity generated over a Warning Letter might alert some potential plaintiffs to possible issues at a company or encourage other potential plaintiffs to come forward with claims.
Courts are split on the admissibility of Warning Letters as evidence in litigation because the FDA considers them “advisory” and not conclusive of any Food Drug and Cosmetic Act (FDCA) violation. Whether or not your company’s Warning Letter will be admissible into evidence probably will depend on whether the product and alleged violation that are the subjects of the Warning Letter are substantially similar to the product/defect at issue in the lawsuit.
A Warning Letter recipient should anticipate that the letter, the response, and any other correspondence and documents related to the Warning Letter may be discoverable in subsequent litigation and draft them accordingly. In any written communications regarding a Warning Letter, the recipient-company should carefully describe the alleged violation as specifically as possible and not make any admissions regarding the FDA’s claims. Being specific about the issues raised by the Letter may later help to show that the subject of the Letter is different from the claims asserted in the lawsuit.
Charles Beans is a partner at Goodman McGuffey Lindsey & Johnson in Atlanta, Georgia. He specializes in defending products liability cases including those involving medical technology and life sciences companies.