Acne Drug's Psychiatric Side-Effects
Kahn Gauthier Swick is investigating possible
Accutane lawsuits against
Hoffman-La Roche, Inc., manufacturer of the prescription acne drug Accutane, to
recover for psychological damage--sometimes leading to suicide--suffered by
Accutane users. As of late 2000, the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
had received reports of 66 suicides and 1,373 other psychiatric adverse events
in Accutane users. Accutane was approved in 1982 to treat only a very special
type of acne--severe nodular acne that had not responded to other therapies.
Critics estimate that most of the 500,000 people in the United States who try it
each year have acne too mild for the Accutane.
The possible connection between Accutane and suicide
became national news in October, 2000, after U.S. Rep. Bart Stupak from Michigan
said that his 17-year-old son's suicide earlier that year might be linked to
Accutane. Bart
Stupak Jr., known as 'B.J.,' shot himself in the head with his father's gun in
the early hours of May 14. Stupak, a football player who was popular in school,
commited suicide after a prom-night party.
Our
full article contains more information on the Accutane lawsuit.