- · U.S. state attorneys general will seek to expand a lawsuit alleging price fixing of generic drugs to 18 companies and 15 medicines on Tuesday, sources say.
- · Big players in the generic drug industry stand accused of conspiring to boost prices in a marketplace in which consumers think they're buying lower-priced versions of drugs.
Published
11:12 AM ET Tue, 31 Oct 2017 Updated 12:20 PM ET Tue, 31 Oct 2017 Reuters
Forty-six U.S. state attorneys general will seek to expand a
lawsuit alleging price fixing of generic drugs to 18 companies and 15 medicines
on Tuesday, including Novartis AG's
generic unit Sandoz and India-based Sun Pharmaceutical Industries,
people familiar with the matter said.
The original complaint, being litigated in federal court in
Pennsylvania, describes an industry-wide conspiracy in which companies divide
up the market as a way to push up prices.
In the amended complaint, the number of generic drug
manufacturers named goes from six to 18, including Endo International's unit Par Pharmaceutical, Dr.
Reddy's Laboratories, Apotex, Glenmark Genericsand Lannett, the sources said.
Big players in the multi-billion dollar generic drug industry
stand accused of conspiring to boost prices in a marketplace in which consumers
assume they are buying lower-priced versions of widely used drugs.
Two senior executives from drug companies alleged to have
engaged in the illegal conduct are also being sued, the sources said.
Connecticut Attorney General George Jepsen is leading the
coalition of states. A news conference announcing the expanded lawsuit has been
scheduled for 11 a.m. (1500 GMT) in Connecticut.
The new complaint will address the relationships between such
parties as wholesalers, distributors, large pharmacies and supermarkets, the
sources said, adding that it will also cover the agreements with manufacturers
to keep prices high.
The previous lawsuit, filed in December, had focused on Mylan, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries and four other
companies. It had centered on just two medicines: a delayed-release version of
a common antibiotic, doxycycline hyclate; and glyburide, an older drug used to
treat diabetes.
The amended complaint expands the number of drugs to include
glipizide-metformin and glyburide-metformin, which are among the most commonly
used diabetes treatments, the sources said.
Others include: acetazolamide, which is used to treat glaucoma
and epilepsy; the antibiotic doxycycline monohydrate; and the blood pressure
medicine fosinopril. Others are the anxiety medicine meprobamate and the
calcium channel blocking agent nimodipine, the sources said.
https://www.cnbc.com/2017/10/31/us-states-to-expand-generic-drug-price-fixing-suit.html?itx[idio]=8812325&ito=792&itq=1cbf7c82-7252-4cbe-a6e9-8be2e66c0e19
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