Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton just filed a lawsuit against pharmaceutical giants Sanofi and Bristol-Myers Squibb for one of the most damning accusations in modern healthcare: they knew their blockbuster drug didn’t work for millions of patients—and they hid it.
The drug is Plavix (clopidogrel bisulfate). It’s prescribed to prevent heart attacks, strokes, and blood clots. And for certain populations, it was essentially useless. But the companies made billions anyway.
What Plavix Is Supposed to Do
Plavix works by stopping platelets in the blood from clumping together. It’s a blood thinner. A life-saver for people at risk of heart attacks or strokes.
But here’s what the companies didn’t tell patients or doctors: for certain groups of people, Plavix had diminished effect or no effect at all.
Who Got Hurt Most
The lawsuit specifically names Black, East Asian, and Pacific Islander patients as groups that showed diminished or no response to the drug.
Think about that. Millions of people in these communities were prescribed a medication they were told would prevent heart attacks and strokes. And for them, it didn’t work.
They followed their doctor’s orders. They took the medication as prescribed. They thought they were protecting their health. And the entire time, the drug companies knew the medication wasn’t effective for them.
The Deception
Sanofi and Bristol-Myers Squibb falsely marketed Plavix as effective. They hid information showing its diminished performance. They prioritized profits over patient safety.
The companies made billions off Plavix. Billions. While patients—particularly patients in communities of color—were taking a medication that wasn’t doing what it was supposed to do.
Paxton put it bluntly: “Defendants prioritized profits even if it meant putting patients’ lives at risk.”
The Legal Violation
The lawsuit charges that the companies violated the Texas Health Care Program Fraud Prevention Act. In Texas law, that’s a serious charge. It means the companies:
- Knowingly defrauded the healthcare system
- Submitted false claims
- Concealed material facts
- Put patients at risk through deception
This isn’t about disagreeing on efficacy. This is about deliberately hiding information that would have changed treatment decisions.
The Scale of the Problem
We don’t know exactly how many patients were affected. But Plavix was one of the most prescribed blood thinners in America for years. If millions of patients were prescribed it, and a significant percentage of them didn’t respond to it, we’re talking about potentially hundreds of thousands of people who received ineffective treatment.
Those people might have suffered heart attacks or strokes that could have been prevented with a different medication. Those people might have died because they were taking a drug that didn’t work for them.
What Paxton Said
“It’s despicable how Big Pharma puts lives at risk by refusing to be honest with patients,” Paxton said. “We are going to make Sanofi and Bristol-Myers Squibb pay a heavy cost for their utter lack of regard or concern for Americans and the company’s clear violations of Texas law.”
He also sent a message to the entire pharmaceutical industry: “Every healthcare and pharmaceutical company should be put on notice that anyone who endangers the health of Americans absolutely will be held accountable.”
The Genetic Factor
This case highlights something important: different populations metabolize drugs differently. Genetic variations affect how your body processes medications. What works perfectly for one group might not work for another.
The pharmaceutical industry has known about this for years. There’s published research on pharmacogenomics—how genetics affect drug response. The companies had access to this information. They understood that Plavix might not work effectively in certain populations.
And they hid it anyway.
Why This Matters Beyond Texas
Texas is filing this lawsuit. But Sanofi and Bristol-Myers Squibb operate nationwide. If they hid information about Plavix’s ineffectiveness from Texas patients, they hid it from patients everywhere.
This case could trigger action from other state attorneys general. It could lead to federal investigations. It could change how pharmaceutical companies are required to disclose genetic variations in drug effectiveness.
The Precedent
This lawsuit matters because it establishes that hiding information about drug effectiveness isn’t just unethical—it’s illegal. Companies can’t market drugs as universally effective when they know effectiveness varies significantly by population.
If successful, this case could require pharmaceutical companies to:
- Conduct more comprehensive testing across different populations
- Disclose efficacy rates by demographic group
- Warn doctors when a drug works differently for certain patients
- Invest in personalized medicine approaches
What Comes Next
The lawsuit has been filed. Discovery will begin. Paxton’s office will demand documents, emails, and internal communications that show what the companies knew and when they knew it.
The companies will defend themselves. They’ll argue about efficacy rates. They’ll dispute the claims. The case could take years.
But the message is already sent: Texas is holding Big Pharma accountable.
The Real Impact
Somewhere right now, a patient is taking Plavix thinking it’s protecting them. If they’re in one of the populations where Plavix doesn’t work effectively, they might be at risk of a heart attack or stroke that could have been prevented with a different medication.
That patient deserved to know the truth. Their doctor deserved to know the truth. The companies knew the truth and hid it.
That’s what this lawsuit is about.
Bottom Line
Sanofi and Bristol-Myers Squibb made billions by marketing a drug as effective when they knew it didn’t work for millions of patients. Texas is suing them for it.
And Paxton is sending a message to every pharmaceutical company in America: hide the truth about your drugs, and Texas will come after you.
That’s accountability. That’s what happens when a state attorney general decides patient safety matters more than protecting corporate profits.




