Imperial Valley Press

3 companies pay California $70 million for delaying drugs

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Three pharmaceut­ical companies collective­ly are agreeing to pay California nearly $70 million to settle allegation­s that they delayed drugs to keep prices high, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said Monday.

The bulk of the money will come from Teva Pharmaceut­ical Industries Ltd. and its affiliates for paying to delay a generic narcolepsy drug, Provigil, from entering the market for nearly six years.

Teva is paying $69 million, which Becerra says is the largest pay-for-delay settlement received by any state.

Such agreements let the developer of brand name drugs keep their monopolies over the drugs after their patents expire, thereby letting them continue to charge consumers higher prices. The drug developer pays the generic manufactur­er to keep the cheaper version of the drug from entering the marketplac­e for an agreed period of time.

Teva said the money will come from a pre-existing fund that was created in 2015 as part of the company’s settlement with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission over similar claims, and it will not make any additional payments.

Becerra said such agreements can force consumers and the health care market to pay as much as 90% more than if there were generic alternativ­es. More than $25 million of the settlement will go to a consumer fund for California residents who purchased Provigil, Nuvigil or Modafinil between 2006 and 2012.

“No one in America should be forced to skip or ration doses of medicine that they need ... and certainly not because a drug company is colluding to keep the price of your drug artificial­ly high even when cheaper options could be available. But that’s what’s happening,” Becerra said.

The second, $760,000 settlement is with Teva, Endo Pharmaceut­icals and Teikoku Pharma USA over keeping a genetic alternativ­e to the pain patch Lidoderm from entering the market for nearly two years.

Teva said it is paying $200,000 to cover the state’s legal costs after settling similar federal claims earlier this year. Neither Endo nor Teikoku responded to requests for comment.

Both settlement­s bar the companies from pay-for-delay agreements for several years. Teva is agreeing to not to enter any such agreements for 10 years, while Endo Pharmaceut­icals has an eight-year agreement and Teikoku a 20-year injunction.

Teva said the restrictio­n is identical to its federal consent decree.

Becerra also backed pending legislatio­n, AB824 by Democratic Assemblyma­n Jim Wood of Santa Rosa, that would ban such agreements.

The measure would require pharmaceut­ical companies to prove that their agreements are not anticompet­itive. It passed the Assembly 56-0 in May and is awaiting a vote in the Senate.

Pharmaceut­ical companies oppose the bill, arguing the Federal Trade Commission already does this monitoring.

 ??  ?? In this 2016 file photo, a prescripti­on is filled at Pucci’s Pharmacy in Sacramento, Calif. Four pharmaceut­ical companies are agreeing to pay California nearly $70 million to settle allegation­s that they delayed drugs to keep prices high.
AP PHOTO/RICH PEDROnCEll­I
In this 2016 file photo, a prescripti­on is filled at Pucci’s Pharmacy in Sacramento, Calif. Four pharmaceut­ical companies are agreeing to pay California nearly $70 million to settle allegation­s that they delayed drugs to keep prices high. AP PHOTO/RICH PEDROnCEll­I

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