Healthcare
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Incident & Breach Response
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Industry Specific
Maine-Based Firm Already Facing Several Proposed Class Action Lawsuits in Breach

A Maine developer of software for medication infusion therapy is notifying more than 118,000 individuals that their information was potentially stolen in a hacking incident discovered in February. The company, Endue Software, is already facing at least five proposed federal class action lawsuits involving the data theft.
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Endue reported the incident to regulators on April 11.
The company said it “learned” on Feb. 17 of potential unauthorized access to certain Endue systems.
An investigation determined that an unauthorized actor accessed “certain computer systems for a brief period of time on Feb. 16,” Endue said. “During this time, files from certain internal systems were copied.”
Endue said it performed an extensive review of the involved files. The types of information potentially compromised varied by individual but may include full name, address, Social Security number, date of birth and medical record number.
On its website, Endue says its software is hosted on Google Cloud platform. “Our software is HIPAA and SOC 2 Type 1 compliant, so your patient data will always be secure,” Endue asserts.
Endue says its software platform integrates with electronic medical records including Epic, NextGen, Azalea, CareCloud, Meditab and others. “We also integrate with pharmacy systems such as CareTend, CPR+, NewLeaf and many others,” Endue said.
At least one of the proposed class action lawsuits alleges that Endue was negligent in securing the individuals’ sensitive information.
The lawsuit allege the data breach puts plaintiffs and class members at risk of identity theft and fraud crimes. Litigants seek financial damages as well as an injunctive relief requiring Endue to improve its data security practices.
Endue did not immediately respond to Information Security Media Group’s request for additional details about the hacking incident and for comment on the proposed class action lawsuits filed against the company.
In total, as of Monday, the HHS Office for Civil Rights’ HIPAA Breach Reporting Tool website shows a total of 231 major health data breaches posted so far in 2025 affecting 20.3 million individuals.
Of those, the website shows 84 major health data breaches reported so far in 2025 involving business associates. In total, those incidents have affected nearly 8 million individuals – or about 40% of those people affected so far this year by major health data breaches.
The Endue Software breach currently ranks as the seventh largest posted on the HHS OCR website so far this year involving a business associate.