

If you are a woman who took the fluconazole antifungal drug Diflucan while pregnant and gave birth to a baby with birth defects such as congenital heart disease, oral cleft or bone deformities, the lawyers of Napoli Bern Ripka Shkolnik LLP want to speak with you today. The drug manufacturer may not have warned you adequately about these Diflucan side effects. You may have cause to file a Diflucan birth defects lawsuit. Please fill out the contact form to request a free legal consultation with our lawyers to determine your rights.
Diflucan (fluconazole) is a prescription medication prescribed by doctors for the treatment of fungal infections such as yeast infections of the vagina, mouth, esophagus, lungs, blood and organs. Fluconazole is in a class of medications called triazoles that slow the growth of fungi causing the infection.
Serious Diflucan side effects can occur with this medication, including liver injury and anaphylaxis or allergic reaction. Women taking long-term or high doses of Diflucan while pregnant in their first trimester are at risk of having a baby with birth defects such as congenital heart disease, cleft palate and deformities of the head, bones, joints and muscles. Case studies of these birth defects in human babies exposed to the drug have confirmed results seen in animal studies. Due to these Diflucan side effects, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) changed the drug to a Pregnancy Category D in August 2011, meaning there is positive evidence of human fetal risk based on human data but in some instances, benefits of the drug may outweigh the risks.
Congenital Heart Disease
Babies exposed to Diflucan (fluconazole) and born with congenital heart disease (CHD) have a problem with their heart structure and function due to abnormal heart development before birth. Congenital heart disease can be fatal. More babies in their first year of life die from congenital heart disease than any other birth defect.
Babies with Birth Defects of the Skull
Women who take Diflucan while pregnant may also have a baby with birth defects of the skull including abnormal calvarial development and brachycephaly, which can result in a short, broad head.
Facial Deformities
A baby with birth defects associated with fluconazole may have an abnormal facial appearance, called abnormal facies.
Cleft Palate
Babies exposed to this drug in the womb can suffer a cleft palate, a birth defect in which the two plates of the roof of the mouth fail to join. A cleft palate can be so severe it creates an opening between the mouth and nasal cavity.
Bone Deformities
A baby with birth defects such as bowing of the thighbones, thin ribs or long bone, who also suffered exposure to Diflucan in the womb, may be suffering Diflucan side effects.
Arthrogryposis
Fluconazole can cause Arthrogryposis in unborn babies, also known as Arthrogryposis Multiplex Congenita, a congenital birth defect affecting the joints and muscles, resulting in limited movement and muscle weakness.
If you took Diflucan while pregnant and have a baby with birth defects such as congenital heart disease or any of the conditions above, these may be Diflucan side effects. Your child’s suffering may be the result of the drug manufacturer’s failure to warn you of the risks of taking this drug while pregnant. The law firm of Napoli Bern Ripka Shkolnik LLP represents people nationwide what have suffered injury from Diflucan (fluconazole). Fill out our contact form today for a free legal consultation with our lawyers to learn your legal rights.
Prescription medications are a valuable resource for many people suffering acute or chronic medical conditions. Most Americans will take a pharmaceutical drug at some point in their life. When pharmaceutical companies test these medications for safety and ensure labeling carries clear directions and warnings of possible medication side effects or drug interactions, these medications may substantially increase the quality of life and life expectancy.
Unfortunately, serious or potentially fatal adverse medication side effects of many pharmaceutical drugs only become known after they have been on the market for a while and large numbers of people are affected. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulates pharmaceutical drugs. However, defective drugs sometimes make it to the market because the pharmaceutical company did not disclose the drug side effects during clinical trials or communicate the consequences of long-term use. When this occurs, the FDA requires an update to the labeling to warn of drug side effects risk or determines it is a defective drug and issues a drug recall. If the drug company fails to do this, you and your doctor have no way to know the dangers. People affected by defective drugs should consult with a personal injury lawyer such as Napoli Bern Ripka Shkolnik LLP to find out their legal options.
The FDA approves drugs based partly on efficacy and drug side effects of clinical trials, and pharmaceutical companies sometimes perform clinical trials after a drug is on the market, but the way the pharmaceutical industry performs clinical trials has fallen under scrutiny.
A 2010 report by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services found that prescription drug trials conducted outside the United States and used as a basis for U.S. drug approvals lack oversight by the FDA. In 2008, 80% of FDA drug approvals were based in part on foreign clinical trial data. 8% included only foreign study data. Yet in 2008, the FDA inspected less than 1% of foreign clinical trial sites. The investigation also found the FDA is completely unaware of many foreign clinical trials or their results because pharmaceutical companies or drug sponsors often do not submit Investigational New Drug (IND) forms to notify the agency.
A study funded by the U.S. government and published August 2010 in Annals of Internal Medicine entitled “Outcome Reporting among Drug Trials Registered in ClinicalTrials.gov” examined 546 clinical drug trials conducted between 2000 and 2006. The study found that clinical trials funded by the pharmaceutical industry were dramatically more likely to report positive drug outcomes than were trials funded by other sources.
Just in September 2010, the FDA changed requirements for reporting risks or adverse reactions found during clinical trials, after an inquiry by the Senate Committee on Finance, who oversees the FDA, found that pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline knew of potential cardiac risks of the company’s prescription drug Avandia (rosiglitazone) years before it became public and failed to disclose those risks. The FDA first approved Avandia in 1999. Between then and when heart attack side effects came to public light in 2007, the FDA estimates that Avandia caused approximately 83,000 heart attacks. The new FDA rule requires that pharmaceutical companies or drug sponsors report clinical trial findings that suggest a significant risk to study participants or any suspected adverse reactions that occur at a rate higher than expected, which previously did not require reporting to the FDA, within 15 days of becoming aware of findings.
The FDA also regulates medical devices, everything from tongue depressors to heart valves, including medical implants such as hip replacements, diagnostic devices such as MRI machines and treatment devices such as infusion pumps. New medical devices must go through a premarket approval (PMA) and requires makers of the medical device to provide clinical trial data to prove the medical device is safe and effective. However, many new medical devices never go through this process. If a maker can prove their device is substantially similar to another device already approved for market, that device can get FDA approval through the 510(k) process that requires no clinical trial data support.
This FDA fast track process for medical device approvals is facing scrutiny from a U.S. Senate Special Committee after a study published in the February 2011 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine found that the majority of defective medical devices recalled by the FDA due to serious or fatal device side effects were approved using the 510(k) process. Defective medical devices have affected the lives of millions of people, including such medical devices as defective hip implants, defective defibrillators and defective infusion pumps.
Many serious and potentially fatal injuries from a defective medical device, medication side effects or drug interactions discovered after a medical device or drug has been on the market have prompted increased warnings on the device or drug labeling, restriction of the drug’s use or resulted in a medical device or drug recall. Anyone who suffers serious side effects from defective medical device or prescription medication, or those who lost a loved one to a fatal side effect, may have grounds to file a lawsuit to recover damages such as medical expenses, loss of wages or financial support or the wrongful death of a loved one. Speak with a personal injury lawyer of Napoli Bern Ripka Shkolnik LLP today and find out if you are entitled to compensation for your injury.


