Fri Jan 7, 2005 LARRY
NEUMEISTER, Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK -
Mouthwash is no
substitute for dental floss, a federal judge ruled,
calling a Listerine ad campaign false and misleading and a
public health risk.
Judge Denny Chin said in a
written ruling made public Friday that he expected to
order Pfizer Inc. as early as Monday to stop claiming that
its product, Listerine, is as effective as
floss at
reducing plaque and gingivitis between teeth.
The ruling came after
McNeil-PPC Inc., a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson, filed
a lawsuit saying that false claims in the advertising
campaign that began last June posed an unfair threat
against its sales of dental floss.
"Dentists and hygienists
have been telling their patients for decades to floss
daily," Chin wrote. "They have been doing so for good
reason. The benefits of flossing are real — they are not a
`myth.' Pfizer's implicit message that Listerine can
replace floss is false and misleading."
Pfizer in print ads had
featured a Listerine bottle balanced on a scale opposite a
floss container. The ad said: "Listerine antiseptic is
clinically proven to be as effective as floss at reducing
plaque and gingivitis between the teeth."
The campaign also featured a
television commercial titled the "Big Bang." In it, the
commercial announces that Listerine is as effective as
floss and that clinical tests prove it, though it does add
that there is no replacement for flossing.
The judge said "substantial
evidence" demonstrates that flossing is important in
reducing tooth decay and gum disease and that it cannot be
replaced by rinsing with a mouthwash.
The judge also noted that
the authors of articles on which Pfizer based its
advertising campaign had emphasized that dental
professionals should continue to recommend daily flossing
and cautioned that they were not suggesting that mouth
rinse be used instead of floss.
Chin said Pfizer based its
findings on two flawed studies of people with mild to
moderate gingivitis who did not use floss properly. The
studies, he added, proved only that Listerine is "as
effective as improperly used floss."
Gingivitis, which affects
some two-thirds of the U.S. population, causes inflamed,
swollen and sometimes bleeding gums. It can precede
periodontitis, a less common inflammation that develops in
deeper tissues and sometimes leads to tooth loss.
The judge noted that 87
percent of consumers floss either infrequently or not at
all, despite frequent warnings from dentists and dental
hygienists to do so.
The judge said Pfizer had
received complaints about its advertising, including one
from a dental professional who said he was "aghast" to
hear of the company's claims and another who said the
claims "can set back years of progress by the ethical
dental profession in convincing patients that
flossing is
essential for their oral health."
Chin wrote that flossing
provides benefits that Listerine does not, including the
ability to remove plaque below the gumline and to dislodge
pieces of food trapped between teeth.
The judge said he found it
"highly troubling" that Pfizer took the position in the
lawsuit that floss can be replaced by
Listerine even
though it had told dental professionals for two years that
it was not suggesting that was the case.