The U.S. Department of Justice has settled several lawsuits concerning essentially of illegal price fixing between companies offering generic drugs. This is a continuation of the problems facing drug pricing and the generic market. Government production of generics may be the future. The U.S. Department of Justice press release states, in part:
Three generic pharmaceutical manufacturers, Taro
Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc., Sandoz Inc. and Apotex Corporation, have agreed to
pay a total of $447.2 million to resolve alleged violations of the False Claims
Act arising from conspiracies to fix the price of various generic drugs. These
conspiracies allegedly resulted in higher drug prices for federal health care
programs and beneficiaries according to the Justice Department.
The government alleges that between 2013 and 2015, all three
companies paid and received compensation prohibited by the Anti-Kickback
Statute through arrangements on price, supply and allocation of customers with
other pharmaceutical manufacturers for certain generic drugs manufactured by
the companies.
Taro Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc., headquartered in New York,
has agreed to pay $213.2 million. The Taro drugs allegedly implicated in this
scheme address a wide variety of health conditions, and include etodolac, a
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug used to treat pain and arthritis, and
nystatin-triamcinolone cream and ointment, a combination of an antifungal
medicine and steroid used to treat certain kinds of skin infections.
Sandoz Inc., headquartered in New Jersey, has agreed to pay
$185 million. The Sandoz drugs at issue include benazepril HCTZ, used to treat
hypertension, and clobetasol, a corticosteroid used to treat skin conditions.
Apotex Corporation, headquartered in Florida, has agreed to
pay $49 million in connection with its sale of pravastatin, a drug used to
treat high cholesterol and triglyceride levels.
“Illegal collaboration on the price or supply of drugs
increases costs both to federal health care programs and beneficiaries,” said
Acting Assistant Attorney General Brian M. Boynton of the Justice Department’s
Civil Division. “The department will use every tool at its disposal to prevent
such conduct and to protect these taxpayer-funded programs.”
“These civil settlements are another achievement in my
office’s efforts to hold generic drug companies accountable for the consequences
arising from price-fixing schemes, including the harm to federal health care
programs,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Jennifer Arbittier Williams for the
Eastern District of Pennsylvania. “We will continue to aggressively pursue
these violations of the Anti-Kickback Statute and the False Claims Act and
obtain significant recoveries.”
“Conspiring to raise prices on generic medications is illegal
and could prevent patients from being able to afford their needed prescription
drugs. Americans have the right to purchase generic drugs set by fair and open
competition, not collusion,” said Special Agent in Charge Maureen R. Dixon of
the Philadelphia Regional Office of the Inspector General, Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS-OIG). “HHS-OIG along with our law enforcement partners
will continue to investigate allegations of companies engaging in actions that
put the public and the Medicare program at risk.”
In connection with its settlement agreement, each company
also entered a five-year corporate integrity agreement (CIA) with OIG. The CIAs
include unique internal monitoring and price transparency provisions. They also
require the companies to implement compliance measures including risk
assessment programs, executive recoupment provisions and compliance-related
certifications from company executives and board members. . . .
The Anti-Kickback Statute prohibits companies from receiving
or making payments in return for arranging the sale or purchase of items such
as drugs for which payment may be made by a federal health care program. These
provisions are designed to ensure that the supply and price of health care
items are not compromised by improper financial incentives. These settlements
reflect the important role of the False Claims Act to ensure that the United
States is fully compensated when it is the victim of kickbacks paid to further
anticompetitive conduct.
All three companies previously entered into deferred
prosecution agreements with the Antitrust Division to resolve related criminal
charges. Taro paid a criminal penalty of $205.6 million and admitted to
conspiring with two other generic drug companies to fix prices on certain
generic drugs. Sandoz paid a criminal penalty of $195 million and admitted to
conspiring with four other generic drug companies to fix prices on certain
generic drugs. Apotex paid a criminal penalty of $24.1 million and admitted to
conspiring to increase and maintain the price on pravastatin. The civil
settlement payments announced today are in addition to the criminal penalties
paid by the companies.
The press release is available,
here.
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