Surviving family members of two Utah women have filed federal suits against the manufacturers of a pain medication skin patch, which they say leaked and caused the deaths of both women.
The family of Gina Dansie, 42, Salt Lake County, and Victoria Price, 56, Tooele County, have filed two independent suits, both against Alza Corp., which distributes the patches, and Janssen Pharmaceutica, a New Jersey company, which manufactures, markets and distributes the patch.
According to the suits, both women were prescribed the patch for two different medical conditions, but both were found dead in their homes within one or two days of receiving the Duragesic patch, which was designed to deliver the pain killer fentanyl in controlled doses..
According to the suits, both women were prescribed the patch for two different medical conditions, but both were found dead in their homes within one or two days of receiving the Duragesic patch, which was designed to deliver the pain killer fentanyl in controlled doses.
The complaints bring the the total to at least three filed against the companies over deaths in Utah related to the Duragesic patches.
The federal Food and Drug Administration issued a public health advisory in July stating the patches may cause death from overdose. "Patients who are using the fentanyl skin patch and their caregivers should be told about the directions for safe use of the patch and should follow the directions exactly," the advisory states.
Symptoms of fentanyl overdose are troubled or shallow breathing, tiredness, extreme sleepiness or sedation, inability to think, talk or walk normally and feeling faint, dizzy or confused.
A spokesman for Alza Corp. could not be reached late Wednesday.
According to the Dansie suit, she suffered from chronic pain, having suffered from Hirschsprung's disease, a birth defect that affects the digestive system. She was put on the Duragesic patch to help her manage her pain, the suit states.
On Dec. 22, 2003, the suit states, Dansie replaced her patch and the next day she was found dead in her home by her daughters. A coroner's report listed her death as due to "mixed drug poisoning" and concluded the levels of fentanyl in her body were in excess of what would be an expected dose.
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