Ohio Ketek® Lawyers
KETEK CLAIMS
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What is Ketek?
Ketek is an antibiotic used for respiratory tract infections, acute
exacerbation of chronic bronchitis for those 18 years and older, acute
bacterial sinusitis, and some forms of pneumonia. It is the only drug in
a new class of antibiotics known as Ketolides.
Who is
the manufacturer?
Ketek is made by Sanofi-aventis, with global headquarters in Paris, France, and
U.S. headquarters in Bridgewater, New Jersey. Sanofi-aventis is the
world's third largest pharmaceutical company, ranking number 1 in Europe.
What
is the problem with this drug?
Ketek has been linked to hepatitis and liver damage resulting in liver
transplants and death.
What
is hepatitis?
Hepatitis is liver disease, and it is characterized by fatigue, malaise, joint
aches, abdominal pain, vomiting two or three times a day for the first five
days, loss of appetite, dark urine, fever, jaundice, and an enlarged liver.
However, some forms of hepatitis show very few of these signs. Certain
liver function tests can detect hepatitis. Signs and symptoms of hepatitis
include:
- jaundice (yellowing of the skin and/or eyes)
- redness, blistering, peeling or loosening of the
skin, including inside the mouth
- severe or watery diarrhea or persistent diarrhea
- skin rash, itching
- swelling of tongue or throat
- difficult breathing
- fainting spells
- eye problems such as blurred vision, difficulty
focusing, and objects doubled
- vomiting
Is
Ketek still on the market?
Yes.
However, Dr.
David Graham of the FDA believes that the FDA's 2004 approval drug Ketek was a
mistake.
In May 2006, Dr. Graham wrote in an e-mail to another official, "It's as
if every principle governing the review and approval of new drugs was abandoned
or suspended where telithromycin [Ketek] is concerned." He went on,
"We don't really know if the drug works; no one is claiming it works
better than other, safer drugs; and we're flying blind as far as safety goes,
except for our own A.D.R. data that suggests telithromycin is uniquely more toxic
than most other drugs."
Do I
have a case?
If you developed liver failure, hepatitis, or other liver problem while taking
Ketek, you might have a case. There are also cases for people who died of
liver failure linked to Ketek.
How do
I make a claim or get more information?