TRENTON, N.J. - Merck & Co. will start cutting checks for former users of its withdrawn painkiller Vioxx next month after announcing Thursday that it will fund a $4.85 billion settlement expected to resolve roughly 50,000 lawsuits.
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The decision marks the beginning of the end of the four-year legal saga, which began when cardiovascular side effects forced Merck to pull Vioxx off the market in 2004, triggering tens of thousands of lawsuits, sullying its once-spotless reputation and forcing out its then-chief executive.
The Vioxx case has cost Merck at least $6.8 billion, including more than $1.53 billion through March 31 on legal costs for defense research and individual trials, most of which it has won.
Vioxx, which was launched in 1999, brought Merck revenue of $2.5 billion at its peak in 2003 and a total of at least $11 billion.
On Thursday, Whitehouse Station, N.J.-based Merck said more than 97 percent of eligible claimants--48,550 out of 49,960--have enrolled in the settlement program, surpassing threshold levels the company required for the deal to proceed. Therefore, Merck said that on Aug. 4 it will waive its right to walk away from the deal reached with plaintiffs' attorneys last fall.
"I'm just glad that it's almost over," said Evelyn Irvin Plunkett of Palm Coast, Fla., who sued Merck in 2003 over the May 2001 heart attack death of her first husband, Richard "Dickie" Irvin. "It's just been a long, hard fight."
Plunkett's family had gone through a mistrial, then lost to Merck at a retrial and won the right to a third trial before being allowed to join in the settlement. She does not know how much she will receive.
Settlement amounts can run from the minimum of $5,000 up to a few million dollars. Payments will be decided by a complicated formula that factors in how serious a claimant's injury was, how much Vioxx was taken and how many other risk factors the person had.
"Long-term users of Vioxx who had a very severe injury will be well compensated," said lawyer Andy Birchfield, who served on the plaintiffs' steering and negotiating committees.
He said the number of plaintiffs participating shows the settlement is a good one.

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