Injuries From Allergic Reaction to Motrin Lead to $10 Million Award

The family of a girl who suffered extensive skin burns and eye damage from an allergic reaction after taking Motrin for a fever has won a jury award of $10 million against the drug’s manufacturer, Johnson & Johnson.

A Philadelphia jury ruled that J&J failed to warn consumers that ibuprofen, the active ingredient in Motrin, could trigger a severe allergic condition known as Stevens-Johnson Syndrome and that failure was a “factual cause” of the young girl’s injuries.

At least two other Motrin liability lawsuits have gone to trial. The jury in one of those cases rejected the plaintiffs’ claims, and the judge in the other case threw out a $3.5 million award on procedural grounds.

In the latest case, Brianna Maya was left blind in one eye and suffered burns over 84 percent of her body after taking Motrin in 2000, when she was 3½ years old. Her family asked for at least $5 million in damages to cover medical bills and other expenses.

J&J later added a warning to the Children’s Motrin label that ibuprofen could cause “a severe allergic reaction,” the symptoms of which could include rashes and blisters. But the lawyer for the girl’s family, Keith Jensen, argued that the company was liable for not having such a warning on the label in 2000.

As AboutLawsuits.com explained, Stevens-Johnson Syndrome causes the skin to burn from the inside out and, in some instances, the top layer of skin is shed. When skin lesions cover more than 30 percent of the body, treatment in a hospital intensive care or burn unit often is required, and the condition can be fatal.

The jury award means that J&J “will be called to task” for failing to properly warn parents about Motrin’s risks, Jensen told Bloomberg.

A spokesman for J&J’s McNeil Consumer Products unit said the company “strongly disagrees” with the verdict and “we are considering our legal options.” According to the company, Stevens-Johnson Syndrome afflicts only 1 person out of 25 million who use Children’s Motrin.

J&J recalled more than 40 consumer brands last year, among them children’s and adult Motrin, along with varieties of Tylenol and St. Joseph Aspirin, because of concerns they had been tainted by production problems.

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