6th Circuit Paging Ph.D. Jones?: Reliable Physician Causation Testimony Requires More Than Clinical Experience
In Thomas, Melau, and Anderson v. Novartis Pharms. Corp., the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals recently affirmed a trio of cases prohibiting the testimony of treating physicians as specific causation experts. Though the appellate court’s opinion was not recommended for full-text publication, it nonetheless offers a salient reminder of a Daubert rule well-enunciated in the Sixth Circuit: A physician’s presumed expertise is in the diagnosis and treatment of disease, not necessarily in the scientifically reliable determination of its underlying cause.
Thomas involved three plaintiffs who filed separate lawsuits, but whose claims were heard by the Middle District of Tennessee pursuant to consolidated MDL proceedings. They alleged they developed biophosphonate-induced osteonecrosis of the jaw after taking Zometa and Aredia, drugs manufactured by Novartis for the prevention of bone maladies, typically in cancer patients. The plaintiffs retained general causation experts, but relied for proof of specific causation upon their non-retained treating physicians. Each plaintiff’s treating physician was excluded, but it is the exclusion rationale in Thomas that is of interest here.
The court began its analysis by noting that Thomas’ physician, Dr. Johnson, “appears to have used some form of a differential diagnosis, or differential etiology, which we have previously recognized is a proper basis for determining the cause of a medical condition when done properly.” Id. at 5. The propriety of such a method, however, depends upon the underlying expertise of the practitioner. The court acknowledged that Dr. Johnson was “unquestionably an experienced oral surgeon with many years of practice and training. He treated other patients with osteonecrosis of the jaw, and has read literature and attended conferences on osteonecrosis of the jaw.” Id. at 6. However, “[b]ecause Thomas relied on Dr. Johnson to give an expert opinion on the cause of his osteonecrosis of the jaw, it is not enough to show that Dr. Johnson can recognize and treat osteonecrosis of the jaw.” Id.
Continue Reading...