In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 17‐3030
WENDY B. DOLIN, Individually and as Independent
Executor of the Estate of STEWART DOLIN, Deceased,
Plaintiff‐Appellee,
v.
GLAXOSMITHKLINE LLC,
Formerly Known as SMITHKLINE BEECHAM CORP.,
Defendant‐Appellant.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
For the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
No. 12‐CV‐6403 — William T. Hart, Judge.
____________________
ARGUED MAY 30, 2018 — DECIDED AUGUST 22, 2018
____________________
Before WOOD, Chief Judge, and SYKES and HAMILTON,
Circuit Judges.
HAMILTON, Circuit Judge. Defendant GlaxoSmithKline LLC
(GSK) appeals from a jury verdict awarding $3 million to
plaintiff Wendy Dolin for the death of her husband, Stewart
Dolin. Mrs. Dolin alleges that GSK’s negligent omissions in
the drug label for Paxil caused her husband’s death. Stewart
2 No. 17‐3030
did not actually take Paxil. In 2010, a doctor prescribed Paxil,
the brand‐name version of paroxetine, to treat Stewart’s de‐
pression and anxiety. But his prescription was filled with ge‐
neric paroxetine manufactured by another company (one that
is no longer a defendant). Six days later, Stewart committed
suicide. Blood tests showed that paroxetine was in his system.
He was 57 years old.
At the time of Stewart’s death, GSK manufactured brand‐
name Paxil and was responsible under federal law for the con‐
tent of the drug’s label. When Stewart died, the labels for par‐
oxetine and similar antidepressant drugs warned that they
were associated with suicide in patients under the age of 24.
The labels did not warn about any association between the
drugs and an increased risk of suicide in older adults.
The current state of federal law makes it virtually impos‐
sible to sue generic drug manufacturers on a state‐law theory
for failure to warn. In response to this legal landscape, plain‐
tiffs have advanced a new theory of liability and have sued
brand‐name manufacturers, who have more control over
drug labels, for injuries caused by taking the generic drugs.
Mrs. Dolin followed this recent trend here, suing GSK on the
theory that it negligently failed to include warnings that par‐
oxetine was associated with suicide in patients older than 24.
Throughout the lawsuit, GSK has maintained that it is not
liable under Illinois law simply because Stewart Dolin did not
consume a drug that GSK manufactured. Mrs. Dolin responds
that the relevant harm was caused by the incomplete label, not
the drug, and that under federal law, only GSK could change
the label. GSK also argued that federal law preempted Illinois
law from requiring the warning that Mrs. Dolin claims was
No. 17‐3030 3
negligently omitted because the FDA had rejected GSK’s at‐
tempts to add just such a warning. The district court disa‐
greed with GSK’s various arguments, and the case proceeded
to trial and a verdict for Mrs. Dolin.
In this appeal, GSK challenges the district court’s conclu‐
sions about liability under Illinois law and preemption. GSK
also argues that the evidence at trial did not support the jury’s
verdict. We agree with GSK that federal law prevented GSK
from adding a warning about the alleged association between
paroxetine and suicides in adults. On that basis of federal
preemption, we reverse the judgment. The case must be dis‐
missed.
I. Legal and Factual Background
A. Regulation of Drug Labels
We start with the regulatory background that explains
why the parties make the arguments they do. The Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act bars pharmaceutical companies from man‐
ufacturing new drugs unless the Food and Drug Administra‐
tion approves a “new drug application.” 21 U.S.C. § 355(a).
The new drug application must show that the drug is safe and
effective, which requires an extensive series of clinical trials.
Guilbeau v. Pfizer, Inc., 880 F.3d 304, 307 (7th Cir. 2018); see also
21 U.S.C. §§ 355(b) & (d). The application must also include
“the labeling proposed to be used for such drug.”
§ 355(b)(1)(F); 21 C.F.R. § 314.50(c)(2)(i).
The label contains a lot more than the drug’s name. It must
disclose, among other things, warnings and precautions re‐
lated to the drug’s effects. The FDA reviews the proposed la‐
bel to determine whether it is “false or misleading.” 21 U.S.C.
4 No. 17‐3030
§ 355(d)(7); 21 C.F.R. § 314.125(b)(6). Once the new drug ap‐
plication is approved, the manufacturer must distribute the
drug using the FDA‐approved label. Otherwise, the drug is
misbranded and may not be distributed in the United States.
See 21 U.S.C. §§ 331(a), 333(a), & 352(a), (c). In 1992, the FDA
approved GSK’s new drug application for paroxetine, includ‐
ing a label.
Plaintiff’s theory of liability is based on GSK’s ability to
change the paroxetine label after the FDA approved it in 1992.
There were two ways relevant to this lawsuit for GSK to
change the label without running afoul of federal law. First,
GSK could have asked the FDA for permission to change the
label. 21 C.F.R. § 314.70(b)(2)(v)(A). This is the default rule for
most substantive changes to drug labels. Second, in narrow
circumstances GSK could unilaterally change the label under
what is called the “changes being effected” or CBE regulation.
The CBE regulation is an exception to the general rule that
changes require advance FDA permission. It allows manufac‐
turers to change a label to “reflect newly acquired infor‐
mation” if, as relevant here, the changes “add or strengthen a
… warning” for which there is “evidence of a causal associa‐
tion … .” 21 C.F.R. § 314.70(c)(6)(iii)(A). In other words, GSK
needed FDA permission to change the paroxetine label unless
three things were true: (1) GSK had newly acquired infor‐
mation about paroxetine (2) that showed a causal association
(3) between the drug and an effect that warranted a new or
stronger warning. The FDA reviews CBE submissions and
can reject label changes even after the manufacturer has made
them. See 21 C.F.R. § 314.70(c)(6), (7).
The new drug approval process is “onerous and lengthy.”
Mutual Pharmaceutical Co., Inc. v. Bartlett, 570 U.S. 472, 476
No. 17‐3030 5
(2013). Generic manufacturers can avoid much of this costly
process, but they have little influence on the contents of drug
labels. Under the Drug Price Competition and Patent Term
Restoration Act of 1984, commonly known as the Hatch‐Wax‐
man Act, a manufacturer can file an “abbreviated new drug
application” for approval to distribute a generic drug. See 21
U.S.C. § 355(j). The Supreme Court summarized the require‐
ments for generics:
First, the proposed generic drug must be
chemically equivalent to the approved brand‐
name drug: It must have the same “active ingre‐
dient” or “active ingredients,” “route of admin‐
istration,” “dosage form,” and “strength” as its
brand‐name counterpart. 21 U.S.C.
§§ 355(j)(2)(A)(ii) and (iii). Second, a proposed
generic must be “bioequivalent” to an approved
brand‐name drug. § 355(j)(2)(A)(iv). That is, it
must have the same “rate and extent of absorp‐
tion” as the brand‐name drug. § 355(j)(8)(B).
Third, the generic drug manufacturer must
show that “the labeling proposed for the new
drug is the same as the labeling approved for
the [approved brand‐name] drug.”
§ 355(j)(2)(A)(v).
Bartlett, 570 U.S. at 477. “This allows manufacturers to de‐
velop generic drugs inexpensively, without duplicating the
clinical trials already performed on the equivalent brand‐
name drug.” PLIVA, Inc. v. Mensing, 564 U.S. 604, 612 (2011).
In sum, “brand‐name and generic drug manufacturers
have different federal drug labeling duties.” Mensing, 564 U.S.
6 No. 17‐3030
at 613. “A brand‐name manufacturer seeking new drug ap‐
proval is responsible for the accuracy and adequacy of its la‐
bel.” Id.; see also 21 U.S.C. § 355(b)(1), (d); Wyeth v. Levine, 555
U.S. 555, 570–71 (2009). “A manufacturer seeking generic
drug approval, on the other hand, is responsible for ensuring
that its warning label is the same as the brand name’s.” Mens‐
ing, 564 U.S. at 613; see also 21 U.S.C. §§ 355(j)(2)(A)(v) &
(j)(4)(G); 21 C.F.R. §§ 314.94(a)(8) & 314.127(a)(7). Thus, from
1992 to 2014, when GSK sold the right to distribute brand‐
name Paxil, GSK was responsible for the “accuracy and ade‐
quacy” of the drug’s label. To change the label, GSK needed
either FDA permission or newly acquired information that
supported a strengthened warning under the CBE regulation.
B. The History of Paroxetine’s Label
Paroxetine is a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, one
of a class of antidepressants commonly called SSRIs. For dec‐
ades, the FDA has scrutinized data on the relationship be‐
tween SSRIs and suicidal behavior. The FDA’s analysis of that
relationship is central to the preemption question in this ap‐
peal.
1. The New Drug Application Approval
GSK’s predecessor, SmithKline Beecham Corporation,
submitted a new drug application for paroxetine in 1989.
Around that time, the FDA began investigating a potential re‐
lationship between suicidal behavior and SSRIs. The FDA re‐
quested GSK to submit a supplemental analysis of data re‐
lated to suicide. GSK submitted the additional analysis in
May 1991. In June 1991, the FDA safety reviewer for GSK’s
paroxetine application reported: “there is no signal in this
large data base that paroxetine exposes a subset of depressed
No. 17‐3030 7
patients to additional risk for suicide, suicide attempts or su‐
icidal ideation.”
The FDA continued its investigation of the risk of suicide.
In September 1991, the agency convened an independent
committee of experts to review whether SSRIs were associ‐
ated with suicide. The FDA also asked the committee to eval‐
uate data specific to paroxetine. The committee “unanimously
agreed that there is no credible evidence of a causal link be‐
tween the use of antidepressant drugs … and suicidality or
violent behavior.” The committee also found that paroxetine
was safe and effective for treating adult depression.
In December 1992, the FDA approved the new drug appli‐
cation for paroxetine, which allowed GSK to market the drug
as Paxil. The original label did not contain any paroxetine‐
specific warning about suicidality. Instead, the FDA required
that the label contain the same warning as all other antide‐
pressants at the time: “The possibility of a suicide attempt is
inherent in depression and may persist until significant remis‐
sion occurs. Close supervision of high‐risk patients should ac‐
company initial drug therapy.”
Throughout the late 1990s and early 2000s, GSK submitted
additional data on paroxetine to the FDA. The FDA continued
to reject any link between paroxetine and suicidality. In Janu‐
ary 2004, the FDA summarized its findings as follows:
FDA has done several analyses on com‐
pleted suicides for adult data sets provided to
us in response to a request for patient level data
sets for all relevant studies involving 20 antide‐
pressant drugs studied in 234 randomized con‐
trolled trials with [major depressive disorder].
8 No. 17‐3030
Based on our initial analyses of these data, we
have reached a similar conclusion, i.e., that
there does not appear to be an increased risk of
completed suicide associated with assignment
to either active drug or placebo in adults with
[major depressive disorder].
2. The FDA’s 2004 Pediatric Suicide Warning
Later in 2004, however, the FDA found an association be‐
tween SSRIs and suicide in pediatric patients. The FDA con‐
vened an advisory committee to review data on nine antide‐
pressant drugs, including paroxetine and other SSRIs, in pe‐
diatric patients. The committee unanimously agreed that the
“data in aggregate indicate an increased risk of suicidality” in
“pediatric patients.” As a result, the FDA required that the la‐
bels for paroxetine and other SSRIs be changed to include a
warning that antidepressants “increase the risk of suicidal
thinking and behavior (suicidality) in children and adoles‐
cents with major depressive disorder (MDD) and other psy‐
chiatric disorders.”
The FDA required that this appear as a “black‐box” warn‐
ing, meaning that it “should be added to the beginning” of the
label “with bolded font and enclosed in a black box.” The
FDA also required new language in the “WARNINGS—
Clinical Worsening and Suicide Risk” section of the previous
label applicable to all SSRIs. The new language warned that
patients “with major depressive disorder (MDD), both adult
and pediatric, may experience worsening of their depression
and/or the emergence of suicidal ideation and behavior …
whether or not they are taking antidepressant medication,”
and that a “causal role for antidepressants in inducing suicid‐
ality has been established in pediatric patients.” The FDA did
No. 17‐3030 9
not require a warning about any association between antide‐
pressants and suicidality in adults.
3. GSK’s 2006 Adult Suicide Warning
After finding that SSRIs were associated with suicide in
pediatric patients, the FDA began a similar analysis of suicide
in adults. The FDA requested more data from manufacturers
of antidepressants, including data from GSK on paroxetine.
The FDA limited its data request to “completed, double‐blind,
randomized, placebo‐controlled trials.” GSK submitted data
to the FDA.
At the same time, GSK conducted its own re‐analysis of
data on adult suicidality and paroxetine. In the re‐analysis,
GSK looked for an association between paroxetine use with
suicidal ideation and increased suicide attempts. GSK found
no statistically significant difference when looking at suicidal
ideation, but it found “evidence of an increase in suicide at‐
tempts in adults with [major depressive disorder] treated
with paroxetine compared with placebo.” GSK submitted its
findings to the FDA, explaining that its data showed a 6.7‐fold
increase in suicide attempts in adults treated with paroxetine
compared to a placebo. GSK cautioned the FDA that “these
data should be interpreted with caution” because “the abso‐
lute number and incidence of events” were “very small.”
After completing the re‐analysis, GSK acted unilaterally to
change paroxetine labeling on April 27, 2006. It did so under
the CBE regulation, i.e., without advance FDA approval. GSK
removed language that described the risk of suicide in adults
as “unknown” and added the following:
10 No. 17‐3030
In adults with [major depressive disorder]
(all ages), there was a statistically significant in‐
crease in the frequency of suicidal behavior in
patients treated with paroxetine compared with
placebo (11/3,455 [0.32%] versus 1/1,978
[0.05%]); all of the events were suicide attempts.
However, the majority of these attempts for par‐
oxetine (8 of 11) were in younger adults aged 18‐
30 years. These [major depressive disorder] data
suggest that the higher frequency observed in
the younger adult population across psychiatric
disorders may extend beyond the age of 24.
GSK also sent a letter to doctors nationwide, attaching the
new paroxetine label and explaining the “important changes
to the Clinical Worsening and Suicide Risk subsection of the
Warnings section.”
4. FDA’s Meta‐Analysis & the 2007 Class‐Wide Label
Change
About seven months later, in November 2006, the FDA
completed a meta‐analysis—that is, a statistical analysis of a
large group of similar studies—to study the risk of suicide in
adults who use antidepressants. The meta‐analysis consid‐
ered 372 placebo‐controlled clinical trials and involved nearly
100,000 adult patients, including data on paroxetine submit‐
ted by GSK. The FDA found “an elevated risk for suicidality
and suicidal behavior among adults younger than 25,” but
concluded that the “net effect appears to be neutral on sui‐
cidal behavior but possibly protective for suicidality for
adults between the ages of 25 and 64 and to reduce the risk of
both suicidality and suicidal behavior in subjects aged 65
years and older.”
No. 17‐3030 11
The FDA’s meta‐analysis analyzed the data for each drug.
For paroxetine, the FDA data showed a statistically‐
significant 2.76‐fold increase in suicidal behavior compared
with adults treated with placebo. The FDA noted this result,
but concluded that “the significance of those findings must be
discounted for the large number of comparisons being made.”
In response to these findings, in 2007, the FDA took action
that is central to GSK’s preemption defense in this case. The
agency ordered that all SSRI labels be updated based on the
results of the meta‐analysis. Critically, the FDA decided to or‐
der that warnings be uniform for all SSRIs. On May 1, 2007,
the FDA directed GSK to revise the paroxetine labeling “to
ensure standardized labeling pertaining to adult suicidality
with all of the drugs to treat major depressive disorder.” Def.
Ex. 122. The SSRI labels were to warn of a suicidality risk in
patients 24 years old or under, and to state that “studies did
not show an increase in the risk of suicidality with antidepres‐
sants compared to placebo in adults beyond age 24; there was
a reduction with antidepressants compared to placebo in
adults aged 65 and older.” The FDA required all SSRI labels
to include this language “verbatim.” This action had the effect
of rejecting GSK’s unilateral change to the paroxetine label in
2006 using the CBE regulation to warn of increased risk
among older adults.
5. Later Attempts to Add a Paroxetine‐Specific Warning
After the FDA ordered uniform warnings for all SSRIs,
GSK asked the FDA several times for permission to maintain
a paroxetine‐specific suicide warning. Within a week of the
FDA’s announcement, GSK emailed the FDA to “clarify”
whether it could retain the paroxetine‐specific warning it had
12 No. 17‐3030
added in 2006 under the CBE regulation. The FDA immedi‐
ately said no. It replied that GSK should “replace the previous
warning section with the new language” that the FDA had
circulated. Def. Ex. 124.
Four days later, on May 11, GSK more formally asked the
FDA to maintain the paroxetine‐specific warning. In a letter
to the FDA, GSK proposed keeping the paroxetine‐specific
language and argued that it “would complement the class la‐
beling” and “could help physicians.” The FDA advised GSK
to submit the paroxetine‐specific warning as a separate CBE
supplement and explained that the FDA would “be discuss‐
ing all” manufacturers’ “proposals during the last week of
May.” GSK submitted the CBE supplement that the FDA re‐
quested.
On June 21, 2007, the FDA finalized the new class‐wide
warnings. The FDA stressed that “it is critical that the labeling
be consistent for all” SSRIs. This final version omitted GSK’s
paroxetine‐specific warning. The next day, GSK again fol‐
lowed up with the FDA to clarify whether the FDA had re‐
jected its most recent CBE supplement adding a paroxetine‐
specific warning. It had. The FDA responded that it was re‐
jecting product‐specific warning language:
[T]he Agency has reviewed your proposed
changes, and we do not believe that your prod‐
uct specific analysis should be included in class
labeling revisions since the labeling is targeted
at the class of drugs. If you would like to discuss
this matter further, please submit a formal meet‐
ing request.
Def. Ex. 129. GSK did not pursue the matter any further.
No. 17‐3030 13
On June 25, 2007, GSK implemented the new class‐wide
warning that the FDA ordered. GSK continued to assert to the
FDA that “the paroxetine specific language” would “be useful
for prescribers.” On August 2, 2007, the FDA approved GSK’s
supplement—and thus the new paroxetine label—containing
only the class‐wide SSRI suicide warning. GSK continued to
market paroxetine under the Paxil brand name in the United
States using the FDA‐approved label through 2014, when
GSK sold the right to sell Paxil to another manufacturer. The
paroxetine label maintains the FDA’s class‐wide warning to‐
day. It does not warn of any association with an increased risk
of suicide in adults older than 24.
C. This Lawsuit
Mrs. Dolin sued GSK in state court, alleging that paroxe‐
tine increases the risk of suicide in adults; that GSK negli‐
gently failed to update the paroxetine label to reflect that risk;
and that GSK’s negligence caused Stewart’s death. GSK re‐
moved to the Northern District of Illinois, asserting diversity
jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1). Mrs. Dolin is a citi‐
zen of Illinois. GSK is a limited liability company organized
under Delaware law, and its sole member is GlaxoSmithKline
Holdings (Americas) Inc., a Delaware corporation with its
principal place of business in Delaware. The amount in con‐
troversy exceeds $75,000.1
1 Mrs. Dolin also sued Mylan, Inc., the company that manufactured
the generic paroxetine that Stewart Dolin actually took. Mylan moved to
dismiss on preemption grounds under Mensing, 564 U.S. 604, and Bartlett,
570 U.S. 472. The district court granted Mylan’s motion, and Mrs. Dolin
has not appealed that decision.
14 No. 17‐3030
Once in federal court, GSK made two arguments that are
relevant to this appeal. First, GSK argued that it did not owe
Stewart—who consumed paroxetine made by another
company—a duty of care under Illinois law. Second, GSK
argued that plaintiff’s claim was preempted under Wyeth v.
Levine, 555 U.S. 555 (2009), because the FDA had rejected the
paroxetine‐specific warning that, according to plaintiff,
Illinois law required. The district court denied GSK’s motions
for summary judgment, and the case proceeded to trial.
GSK moved for judgment as a matter of law during and
after trial. GSK argued that plaintiff had failed to provide ev‐
idence that paroxetine causes suicide and that the paroxetine
labeling caused Stewart’s suicide. GSK also renewed its argu‐
ments that it was not liable both because it did not owe Stew‐
art a duty under Illinois law and because federal law
preempted the failure‐to‐warn claim. The district court de‐
nied GSK’s motions and entered final judgment in favor of
Mrs. Dolin.
II. Preemption
The Supremacy Clause was at the core of the Framers’ ef‐
fort to provide a national government with the powers
needed to govern the new Republic effectively. It provides:
“This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which
shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or
which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States,
shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every
State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or
Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.” U.S.
Const. art. VI, cl. 2. The Supremacy Clause “invalidates state
laws that ‘interfere with, or are contrary to,’ federal law.”
Hillsborough County v. Automated Med. Labs., Inc., 471 U.S. 707,
No. 17‐3030 15
712 (1985), quoting Gibbons v. Ogden, 22 U.S. 1, 211 (1824).
State law includes duties imposed by court decisions apply‐
ing state tort law. E.g., Mensing, 564 U.S. 604 (invalidating
state laws imposing duty on generic manufacturers to change
drug labels).
“Preemption comes in three forms.” Mason v. Smithkline
Beecham Corp., 596 F.3d 387, 390 (7th Cir. 2010). First is express
preemption, “which occurs when Congress clearly declares
its intention to preempt state law.” Id. Second is implied
preemption, “which occurs when the ‘structure and purpose’
of federal law shows Congress’s intent to preempt state law.”
Id. This case involves the third form, called conflict or impos‐
sibility preemption. Conflict preemption occurs when there is
“an actual conflict between state and federal law such that it
is impossible for a person to obey both.” Guilbeau v. Pfizer, Inc.,
880 F.3d 304, 310 (7th Cir. 2018), quoting Mason, 596 F.3d at
390. When that is true, “federal law controls and the state‐law
tort claims must be dismissed.” Id.
In Wyeth v. Levine, the Supreme Court addressed how con‐
flict preemption applies to state‐law claims against brand‐
name drug manufacturers. The Court held that state‐law
claims based on labeling deficiencies are not preempted if the
manufacturer could have added the warning unilaterally un‐
der the CBE regulation. 555 U.S. at 573 (finding that defendant
had “failed to demonstrate that it was impossible for it to
comply with both federal and state requirements” when the
“CBE regulation permitted” defendant “to unilaterally
strengthen its warning” on its brand‐name drug). In a later
case addressing how Levine would apply to claims against
manufacturers of generic drugs, the Court reiterated that the
“question for ‘impossibility’ is whether the private party
16 No. 17‐3030
could independently do under federal law what state law re‐
quires of it.” Mensing, 564 U.S. at 620, citing Levine, 555 U.S. at
573. As a general rule, then, state law can hold a brand‐name
manufacturer liable for failing to use its powers under the
CBE regulation to add a new warning to a drug label.
There is one final part to this standard, and it is decisive
here. Recall that the FDA can reject CBE submissions and re‐
quire manufacturers to revert to the prior version of the label.
Levine acknowledged that the FDA retains this authority, and
“held that there could be preemption if the manufacturer met
the stringent standard of proving that there was clear evidence
the FDA would have rejected the proposed change in the
drug’s label.” Mason, 596 F.3d at 391, citing Levine, 555 U.S. at
571. The evidence here meets that standard.
In sum, Dolin’s state‐law claim against GSK is preempted
if GSK could not have added the adult‐suicidality warning us‐
ing the CBE regulation. See In re Celexa & Lexapro Marketing &
Sales Practices Litigation, 779 F.3d 34, 41 (1st Cir. 2015) (finding
that plaintiff must allege a label deficiency that defendant
“could have corrected using the CBE regulation.”). To add a
warning through the CBE regulation, GSK needed newly ac‐
quired information about paroxetine that would allow it to
add a warning about suicide risk in adults. And even if GSK
had newly acquired information along these lines, GSK can
still succeed on its preemption defense if there is clear evi‐
dence that the FDA would have rejected the adult‐suicidality
warning that plaintiff argues was tortiously omitted. Based on
the evidence in this case, we conclude that, as a matter of law,
(1) there is clear evidence that the FDA would have rejected
No. 17‐3030 17
the warning in 2007, and (2) GSK lacked new information af‐
ter 2007 that would have allowed it to add an adult‐suicidality
warning under the CBE regulation.2
A. Standard of Review
Before we can reach the merits of GSK’s preemption de‐
fense, we must address a threshold issue. Plaintiff argues that
we must review the district court’s preemption finding for
clear error. In the district court, both plaintiff and GSK main‐
tained that preemption under Levine was a question of law.
The district court initially found that Levine preemption was a
question of fact to be submitted to the jury. GSK objected to
the wording of the court’s proposed jury instructions and con‐
tinued to argue that the issue was a legal one. The district
court ultimately omitted the instruction and did not submit
the question of preemption to the jury.
Our cases have analyzed preemption under Levine as a le‐
gal question. In Guilbeau, we wrote that “preemption is a legal
question for determination by the courts … .” 880 F.3d at 318,
quoting Watters v. Wachovia Bank, N.A., 550 U.S. 1, 20 (2007);
see Mason, 596 F.3d at 390, 393–96 (referring to preemption
issue as “a legal one” and analyzing preemption as a matter
of law). Recently, the Third Circuit determined that “the ulti‐
mate question of whether the FDA would have rejected a label
change is a question of fact for the jury rather than for the
2 Judge Zagel denied GSK’s motion for summary judgment on the
preemption defense, finding that the FDA’s invitation to request a meet‐
ing after the fourth denial of a paroxetine‐specific warning defeated the
Levine preemption defense. App. 28. We respectfully disagree with our
colleague’s finding on this point, though our decision is based on the trial
record rather than the summary judgment record. The case was later re‐
assigned from Judge Zagel to Judge Hart for trial.
18 No. 17‐3030
court.” In re Fosamax Products Liability Litig., 852 F.3d 268, 282
(3d Cir. 2017). The district court in this case relied on the Third
Circuit’s decision when it proposed submitting the preemp‐
tion defense to the jury.
The Third Circuit noted that other circuits treat the Levine
“test” as “a legal question.” Id. at 287 & nn.103–105 (collecting
cases). To reach a contrary conclusion, the Third Circuit relied
in part on Boyle v. United Technologies Corp., 487 U.S. 500
(1988), which addressed conflict preemption for products lia‐
bility claims against manufacturers of military equipment
whose products must comply with military specifications.
The Court stated that “whether the facts establish the condi‐
tions for the [government specification] defense is a question
for the jury.” Id. at 514. The Supreme Court has granted certi‐
orari to review the Third Circuit’s decision on this issue.
Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp. v. Albrecht, 138 S. Ct. 2705 (2018).
We need not determine in this case whether preemption
under Levine involves a factual question for the jury. As the
Third Circuit noted, “when no reasonable jury applying the
clear‐evidence standard” could “conclude that the FDA
would have approved a label change,” then “the manufac‐
turer will be entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” In re
Fosamax, 852 F.3d at 282. That is the case here. As we explain
next, given the facts in this case, no reasonable jury could find
that the FDA would have approved an adult‐suicidality warn‐
ing for Paxil under the CBE regulation between 2007 and
Stewart Dolin’s suicide in 2010.
B. Clear Evidence of Rejection?
GSK has provided undisputed evidence that the FDA re‐
jected any adult‐suicidality warning in 2007 when the agency
No. 17‐3030 19
required all SSRIs to adopt the same class‐wide warnings. By
2000, a potential association between SSRIs and suicide was a
high‐profile controversy at the center of the FDA’s attention.
As part of its response to that controversy, the agency re‐
viewed data on suicidal behavior in patients taking paroxe‐
tine. In 2007, after completing that review, the FDA ordered
GSK to remove a paroxetine‐specific warning of increased su‐
icide risk in adults from the paroxetine label. It is hard to im‐
agine clearer evidence that, considering the data available in
2007, “the FDA would not have approved a change” to the
paroxetine label at that time. Levine, 555 U.S. at 571. No rea‐
sonable jury could find otherwise.
When deciding preemption in this context, “Levine is our
intellectual anchor.” Mason, 596 F.3d at 392. We “look at the
long and fairly extensive administrative history” for the drug
in Levine “and compare it to the administrative history of
Paxil.” Id. In Levine, the Court found four key facts critical
when it found no preemption: (1) there was “no evidence …
that either the FDA or the manufacturer gave more than pass‐
ing attention” to the risk at issue; (2) the manufacturer had not
“supplied the FDA with an evaluation or analysis” of the risk;
(3) the manufacturer never “attempted to give the kind of
warning required” under state law; and (4) the FDA “had not
made an affirmative decision” to reject the warning. Id. at 572–
73.
All four of those evidentiary gaps in Levine were filled
here. In 2006, GSK re‐analyzed the placebo‐controlled data on
paroxetine and found a link between paroxetine and suicide
in adults. It then made a unilateral change to the label, using
the CBE regulation and adding a warning “that the higher fre‐
20 No. 17‐3030
quency” of suicidality “observed in the younger adult popu‐
lation … may extend beyond the age of 24.” GSK submitted
that data to the FDA. But within a year, the FDA completed
its own analysis of the same data and ordered GSK to remove
that warning. The FDA notified manufacturers that all SSRIs
needed to contain the same warning, saying there was a risk
of suicide in patients under 24 but that “studies did not show
an increase in the risk of suicidality … in adults beyond age
24.”
After the FDA effectively told it to remove the paroxetine‐
specific warning, GSK followed up with four requests to re‐
consider and to allow that warning. Each time, the FDA told
GSK not to add the paroxetine‐specific warning. These re‐
quests by GSK and the responses are clearly documented.
They are not subject to reasonable dispute. This is clear evi‐
dence that, as of 2007, the FDA rejected an adult‐suicidality
warning for paroxetine.
To avoid the consequences of this evidence, plaintiff raises
two arguments. Neither argument undermines the preemp‐
tive effect of the FDA’s actions or decisions. First, plaintiff ar‐
gues that the FDA rejected the paroxetine‐specific warning
only because GSK proposed adding it to the wrong spot on
the label. GSK proposed warning about the risks of paroxetine
in the middle of the class‐wide SSRI warning, which FDA
wanted to maintain as a uniform warning for all SSRIs. Be‐
cause GSK never proposed adding the warning elsewhere in
the label, plaintiff argues, there is no “clear evidence” that the
FDA would have rejected a proposal along those lines.
This is an unreasonable interpretation of the discussions
between the FDA and GSK. When the FDA rejected GSK’s
No. 17‐3030 21
paroxetine‐specific warning, the relationship between sui‐
cide, age, and SSRI use was at the forefront of the agency’s
attention. The FDA had just completed two lengthy meta‐
analyses on the topic. In its analyses, the FDA observed a sta‐
tistically significant association between paroxetine and sui‐
cidal behavior in adults, but decided to discount that result in
favor of uniform SSRI labeling. That labeling affirmatively
stated that SSRIs’ “net effect appears to be neutral on suicidal
behavior but possibly protective for suicidality for adults be‐
tween the ages of 25 and 64.” Plaintiff asks us to believe that
the FDA—after deciding against an adult‐suicidality warning
based on its own analysis—rejected GSK’s warning only be‐
cause GSK proposed putting it in the wrong place. That is un‐
reasonable.
Second, plaintiff argues that GSK could have followed up
with a formal meeting with the FDA to discuss the
paroxetine‐specific warning. According to plaintiff, GSK lacks
clear evidence that the FDA would have rejected the warning
after such a meeting. This misunderstands the preemption
standard. State laws requiring a label change are preempted
unless the manufacturer could unilaterally add the new
warning under the CBE regulation. Levine, 555 U.S. at 573; see
also Mensing, 564 U.S. at 620.
The Supreme Court has rejected a very similar preemption
argument in Mensing, where the Court held that federal law
preempts state laws that require generic drug manufacturers
to change a drug’s label. In reaching that conclusion, the
Court rejected the plaintiff’s argument that the generic man‐
ufacturer could have asked the FDA to change the brand‐
name label. 564 U.S. at 619–20. The Court explained: “when a
22 No. 17‐3030
party cannot satisfy its state duties without the Federal Gov‐
ernment’s special permission and assistance, which is de‐
pendent on the exercise of judgment by a federal agency, that
party cannot independently satisfy those state duties for pre‐
emption purposes.” Id. at 623–24. That is what plaintiff’s sec‐
ond argument amounts to. The preemption analysis asks only
whether GSK could have added the adult‐suicidality warning
through the CBE regulation, not whether GSK might have
been able to persuade the FDA to change its mind in a formal
meeting—and certainly not whether GSK could have per‐
suaded the FDA after already asking four times to include
that warning and being told no four times.3
C. Newly Acquired Information?
The FDA’s rejection of the adult‐suicidality warning in
2007 does not definitively answer whether GSK could have
added the warning between 2007 and 2010, when Stewart
Dolin took paroxetine and committed suicide. The CBE regu‐
lation allows manufacturers to add or strengthen a warning
when they acquire new information about the drug that
makes the warning necessary. Plaintiff has failed to offer evi‐
dence that GSK acquired new information after 2007, when
3 In Mason, we found that GSK’s predecessor had not shown the clear
evidence needed for Levine preemption for a 23‐year‐old’s suicide that oc‐
curred in 2003. 596 F.3d at 395–96. Mason thus addressed a suicide by a
patient who would have fallen within the scope of the 2004 and 2007 class‐
wide warnings for pediatric suicide risk, so it does not control the preemp‐
tion question here. Plaintiff also cites Tucker v. Smithline Beecham Corp., 596
F. Supp. 2d 1225, 1236 (S.D. Ind. 2008), which similarly found that GSK’s
predecessor had not established a preemption defense for Paxil. Tucker ad‐
dressed a 55‐year‐old’s suicide in 2002, and was decided before Levine and
Mensing, so its analysis does not apply here, to a 2010 suicide with the
direction of Levine and Mensing available to the court.
No. 17‐3030 23
the FDA rejected its proposal to add an adult‐suicidality
warning to the paroxetine label that would have justified a
change in the label and thus undermine GSK’s preemption
defense.
Newly acquired information “is data, analyses, or other
information not previously submitted to the Agency.” 21
C.F.R. § 314.3. Newly acquired information is not limited to
new data. It includes new analysis of old data. Id. The “rule
accounts for the fact that risk information accumulates over
time.” Levine, 555 U.S. at 569.
Plaintiff proposes two ways that GSK had newly acquired
information that supported the paroxetine‐specific warning.
First, plaintiff argues that GSK withheld or manipulated data
in its submissions to the FDA. Plaintiff argues that the com‐
plete, untainted data showed an association between paroxe‐
tine and suicide in adults, and that the FDA never considered
this information.
This argument fails because the undisputed evidence
shows that the FDA was aware of the nature of the data it re‐
ceived from GSK. Plaintiff argues that GSK improperly at‐
tributed suicides that occurred in the “wash‐out” phase of
drug tests as occurring on the placebo. The wash‐out phase
refers to the period when patients are given placebos to wash
out other drugs in their system before the study begins. By
attributing negative incidents that occurred during the wash‐
out phase to the placebo, Paxil looks better by comparison.
We have already rejected this argument about the same
Paxil/paroxetine data in Mason. 596 F.3d at 394. As we noted
then, “each erroneous datum had a star by it which noted that
part of the suicidal behavior occurred during the wash‐out
24 No. 17‐3030
phase.” Id. The FDA scientist who reviewed the data “under‐
stood that the wash‐out events were included when he ana‐
lyzed the data,” and his analysis “found no relationship be‐
tween Paxil and suicidal behavior.” Id. And in 2002 and 2003,
GSK re‐analyzed the data while excluding the wash‐out
phase and submitted that data to the FDA. Id.
Plaintiff points to one other possible source of newly ac‐
quired information. She offers an article published in 2011 as
evidence that GSK conducted a re‐analysis in 2008 that found
a statistically significant association between adult suicidality
and paroxetine. Plaintiff’s expert testified, however, that this
was not new analysis. He testified that the article was “sub‐
mitted for publication in 2008 and published in 2011,” but
“was based on” GSK’s “2006 analysis.” The article contained
the same figures as GSK’s 2006 analysis, which GSK submit‐
ted to the FDA. There is no basis to conclude that this was a
new analysis or that it was “not previously submitted to the
Agency.” 21 C.F.R. § 314.3.
* * *
GSK asked the FDA for permission to modify the paroxe‐
tine label as plaintiff argues was needed. The FDA said no,
repeatedly. Federal law thus preempted plaintiff’s Illinois‐
law claim that GSK should have warned of a risk of adult su‐
icidality on the paroxetine label in 2010. GSK added a similar
warning in 2006, and the FDA ordered that GSK remove that
label and replace it with a class‐wide SSRI warning in 2007.
As a matter of law, this is what Levine called “clear evidence”
that the FDA would have rejected the warning that plaintiff
seeks under Illinois law. After 2007, GSK lacked newly ac‐
quired information that would have allowed it to add an
adult‐suicidality warning under the CBE regulation.
No. 17‐3030 25
The parties and amici have briefed extensively whether Il‐
linois law would impose a duty on a brand‐name drug man‐
ufacturer toward a patient like Stewart Dolin, who took a ge‐
neric form of the drug manufactured by a different company.
The Illinois courts have not yet considered the new theory of
liability that plaintiff advances. Because the evidence of fed‐
eral preemption is decisive, we do not offer for that question
of duty a prediction of state law under Erie Railroad Co. v.
Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938). We also need not consider GSK’s
other arguments based on the trial evidence. The judgment of
the district court is REVERSED.