Public may lose if Botox goes on trial
Though her claim seems unlikely, we'll probably never know whether or not it has merit.
A jury may decide the claim's fate at a trial tentatively scheduled for next February.
In the meantime, Ms Medavoy seems bent on crusading against Botox - a course of action that could wind up unjustifiably denying many of the benefits of the treatment.
Botox is a complex of proteins produced by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum, which contains the same toxin that causes food poisoning. Botox has been used for the last 20 years to treat many chronic neurological disorders.
More recently, Botox has been used for cosmetic purposes.
Injecting small doses of Botox into the forehead area interferes with the muscles' ability to contract, reducing and eliminating existing frown lines.
Ms Medavoy, wife of Hollywood producer Mike Medavoy, alleges that dermatologist-to-the-stars Dr Arnie Klein treated her migraine headaches with Botox on four visits from May 2001 to March 2002.
Use of Botox to treat migraines is "off-label" meaning that such use has not been officially approved by the Food and Drug Administration.
But physicians frequently prescribe medications for off-label uses as such applications are discovered. Botox was first reported in the medical literature to be effective with migraines in 1998.
Ms Medavoy claims the treatments caused her "life-altering and unrelenting migraine headaches; upper respiratory problems; fever; weakness; severe muscle pain; hives over much of her body; and other ailments".
In an interview with Vanity Fair last May, Ms Medavoy melodramatically exclaimed, "I feel like Jane Fonda in 'The China Syndrome'. This is my Three Mile Island."
Ms Medavoy, in any event, has definitely gone nuclear with her efforts to smear Botox.
In addition to inciting the Vanity Fair attack on Botox, Medavoy also persuaded old friend, Maria Shriver, to follow up with another hit piece on Dateline NBC.
Much more media coverage has ensued.
The problem with Medavoy's fury is that she's blown the situation out of all proportion.
Botox was used to treat more than a million people last year and has been used in millions more over the past 20 years for a variety of conditions. Ms Medavoy, though, seems to be the only one or, at most, one of a very few going ballistic with allegations of health problems related to Botox.
Whatever happened to Medavoy is not happening to the vast majority of patients treated with Botox.
Medavoy, nevertheless, seems bent on destroying Botox.
She or her lawyers even launched a website apparently to trawl for others who think they've been harmed by Botox treatment possibly trying to gin up a class action lawsuit against Botox manufacturer Allergan Inc.
We rely on our pharmaceutical and medical products industry for many innovations that make us healthier, and that make us look and feel better.
Ms Medavoy may deserve her day in court, but her self-absorbed campaign against Botox jeopardises everyone else's access to medical progress.





