Though Accutane was pulled from the market in 2009 after 27 years of sales to unwary consumers, generic acne medication Accutane remains widely available in the United States. One brand of generic Accutane is Claravis.

Like Accutane, Claravis contains the powerful drug Isotretinoin and is only prescribed when all other treatments have failed to clear up acne. Also like Accutane, Claravis can cause serious harm to the user’s bowels.

Isotretinoin may clear up pimples and blemishes in the process, by lessening the oil which the body’s glands secrete. Yet the acne drug also can lead to a lifelong and debilitating inflammatory bowel disease, or IBD, which has no real cure. Indeed, its symptoms can only be treated, not eliminated, and an IBD can only go into remission, but not end.
 

 

One IBD is ulcerative colitis. Another is Crohn’s disease. Each is extremely harmful and damaging, causing severe abdominal pain and necessitating sudden and frequent bowel movements. Some victims even must have their colon removed, as part of surgeries made necessary by the defective drug.

When Accutane or a generic Accutane treatment such as Claravis causes such harm, the victim has a legal right to seek just and fair compensation for his or her losses, from medical costs to lost wages to pain and suffering. And that’s when an Accutane lawsuit or Claravis lawsuit becomes an important answer.

Claravis isn’t the only generic Accutane product. Others include Sotret and Amnesteem. All have the potent yet harmful drug Isotretinoin, which clears acne but causes immense harm in the process.

Claravis, Sotret and Amnesteem all were released in 2002, just after Roche Pharmaceuticals, Accuane’s creator, lost its 20-year patent on the drug.

Facing new competition from generic Accutane such as Claravis, and having already made billions of dollars in profits by selling its defective drug, Roche removed Accutane from the market in 2009. At least, that was Roche’s excuse for doing so. But mounting lawsuits also must have been a factor. Now Roche faces many such lawsuits for its negligence in allowing the drug to be sold despite full knowledge of its harmfulness.

Besides an IBD, Claravis can cause or contribute to a user feeling suicidal, and it also can cause birth defects in babies whose mother used the drug during their pregnancy.

In short, like Accutane, Claravis is bad news. Yet it remains available, as do Amnesteem and Sotret -- and despite each having a “black box warning” from the Food and Drug Administration on its packaging.

In the event that you or a family member has been harmed via Accutane or generic Accutane such as Claravis, alert a personal injury attorney or lawyer with Accutane-Lawsuit-Lawyer.com. The nationwide attorney group can provide legal help for an Accutane lawsuit or a Claravis lawsuit in states across America.