Tasigna Atherosclerosis Lawsuit News

Tasigna Atherosclerosis Warning Never Made it to the US

Novartis may have put profits ahead of public safety when they failed to warn cancer patients in the US like they did in Canada and elsewhere

Friday, May 25, 2018 - When a pharmaceutical company makes a pronouncement warning an entire country that they have discovered that their drug has serious and sometimes deadly side effects, one would think that they would issue the warning globally. Why would a company warn one country and not the entire world if their drug that was intended to help people was, in fact, killing them? Cancer patients in the United States asked themselves that exact question when they found out that their cancer drug, Tasigna, caused their atherosclerosis and that the maker of the drug was aware of this fact and failed to warn them.

Back in the year 2013 Swiss pharmaceutical giant Novartis, maker of the anti-cancer drug Tasigna, issued a warning to Canadian health officials through the government's official health agency Health Canada, that the drug has unforeseen and potentially deadly side effects. The warning stated that there have been numerous reports that Tasigna causes rapid-onset atherosclerosis and that oncologists should screen patients for pre-existing heart conditions or blood abnormalities and abstain from using Tasigna with those patients.

Doctors were also warned that they should advise other cancer patients with healthy hearts that taking Tasigna causes atherosclerosis in an unacceptably high number of cases. Tasigna patients were likely to develop, in the words of Novartis, "peripheral arterial occlusive disease, femoral artery stenosis, coronary artery stenosis, carotid artery stenosis, and (have) cerebrovascular accidents," and all other conditions related to atherosclerosis.

Canadians were advised that atherosclerosis is irreversible and can lead to decreased blood flow to the extremities. Tasigna patients have developed necrosis of the toes and feet that required amputation. Other Tasigna patients have had strokes that have left them paralyzed and an equal number have died a sudden death from heart attacks. Canadian health officials were advised to ignore marketing materials distributed by Tasigna sales representatives that underestimated Tasigna's side effects as well as overestimated Tasigna's relative benefits.

No such warning, however, made its way to health officials in the United States. Physicians continued to prescribe Tasigna for years after the Canadian warning, permanently damaging the health of tens of thousands of Americans. Patients that have developed atherosclerosis and the loved ones of those who have died from the disease are hiring Tasigna atherosclerosis lawyers in order to file a claim against Novartis for failing to warn them of the atherosclerosis side effects. If you have been given Tasigna for treatment of Philadelphia chromosome-positive chronic myeloid leukemia (Ph+CML), and are experiencing atherosclerosis-related diseases related side effects such as of chest pains, shortness of breath, heart palpitations, weakness, dizziness sweating, and fever, your health may be in grave danger from instant death or paralysis due to suddenly experiencing a stroke or a heart attack, or you may be required to have your toes or feet amputated.

It is imperative that anyone who has been given Tasigna for treatment of cancer to immediately contact their physician and receive treatment for the condition they may have developed.

More Recent Tasigna Atherosclerosis Lawsuit News:

Lawyers for Tasigna Atherosclerosis Lawsuits

Attorneys handling Tasigna lawsuits for leukemia, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and multiple myeloma offer free, no-obligation case review for individuals and families who believe they may have grounds to file a Tasigna lawsuit. Working on a contingency basis, these attorneys are committed to never charging legal fees unless they win compensation in your Tasigna lawsuit. The product liability litigators handling Roundup claims at the Onder Law Firm have a strong track record of success in representing families harmed by dangerous drugs and consumer products.