Makers of sodium valproate sent ‘clear message’ after Sanofi ordered to pay €280,000 to mother whose children were harmed! B
Marketed since 1967 it has been found the drug “can cause problems for a baby’s development, including birth defects and lifelong learning difficulties”. However, in the UK, a legal challenge was discontinued in 2010 after funding was terminated by the legal services commission.
Valproate campaigner Emma Friedman and her son Andy
British valproate campaigners say the makers of the antiepileptic drug have been sent a “clear message” after a manufacturer was ordered to pay more than a quarter of a million euros to a French mother whose children were damaged in the womb.
Sodium valproate was sold under brand names such as Epilim in the UK, in France it is better known as Dépakine.
Marketed since 1967, it has been found the drug “can cause problems for a baby’s development, including birth defects and lifelong learning difficulties,” according to the latest advice on the NHS website. However, in the UK, a legal challenge was discontinued in 2010 after funding was terminated by the legal services commission.
The Paris case was brought by Marine Martin whose eldest child, Salomé, was born with facial malformations and suffers from dyspraxia. Florent, the youngest, was born with malformations which required two surgical interventions and was also diagnosed with Asperger’s autism.
Sanofi was ordered to pay €280,000 (£236,539) and Mdm Martin’s victory could lead to hundreds of other French challenges.
According to French newspaper Le Monde, the court declared Sanofi “responsible for a lack of information on the malformative and neurodevelopmental risks of Dépakine, which it marketed, for maintaining in circulation a product that it knew to be defective, and of a lack of vigilance during the pregnancies of Mdm Marine Martin, between 1998 and 2002.”