A California jury has ordered drugmaker Pfizer Inc., whose research and development headquarters is in Connecticut, to pay $38 million to a leading Bay Area medical research nonprofit for stealing trade secrets to develop a pain relief drug.
A Santa Clara County Superior Court jury reached the verdict this week in a 2004 lawsuit filed against Pfizer by the San Bruno-based nonprofit Ischemia Research and Education Foundation.
The lawsuit said Pfizer in 2002 wanted to use the foundation’s database for clinical trials on Bextra, a drug to treat acute pain chiefly caused by arthritis. The drug was eventually taken off the market over concerns it posed a heart risk.
After the New York-based drugmaker and the foundation could not agree on terms for use of the database, the lawsuit alleged Pfizer arranged a side deal with Ping Hsu, a lead statistician at the foundation. Hsu provided the data without approval, according to the suit.
Pfizer said it plans to appeal. Pfizer’s global research and development headquarters are in Groton and New London.
“The company stands by the belief that its conduct was proper,” Pfizer said in a written statement. “Pfizer continues to believe that it was unjustly caught in a crossfire between (the foundation) and one of its former employees.”
Hsu’s lawyer did not immediately return calls seeking comment. (AP)
