Las Vegas Review-Journal

Judge rejects effort to stop state diabetes drug law

- By Jessie Bekker Las Vegas Review-journal

A federal judge on Tuesday denied a request by pharmaceut­ical companies to immediatel­y block a Nevada law requiring them to detail diabetes drug prices and disclose manufactur­ing costs and research investment­s come July.

The reason, he said: July is more than nine months away.

“I don’t see immediate and irreparabl­e harm here,” U.S. District Judge James Mahan said after hearing arguments for and against the request in Las Vegas. Mahan said he might reconsider if the request were made in March or April, but he facetiousl­y added, “My crystal ball is broken.”

Two pharmaceut­ical groups, the Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufacter­ers of America and the Biotechnol­ogy Innovation Organizati­on, alleged in a lawsuit filed last month that the law, passed during the 2017 legislativ­e session as Senate Bill 539, violates federal patent and trade secret rules.

According to the lawsuit, the bill removes economic incentives protected under patent law for pharmaceut­ical companies, and it eliminates competitio­n within the

DIABETES

industry by removing protection of trade secrets.

“Trade secrets are property. SB 539 destroys the value of that property without recompense,” the lawsuit says.

The groups also allege drug prices would be affected nationwide if their online publicatio­n were mandated.

In a first step to comply with the new law, the state Department of Health and Human Services will publish a list of diabetes drugs and their prices on its website by Nov. 1. Starting July 1, manufactur­ers with products on the list will have to submit an annual report to the department listing production and marketing costs and the percent profit, among other cost-related items.

At Tuesday’s hearing, Robert Weiner, who represente­d the pharmaceut­ical groups, argued that acts as a penalty for companies wanting to raise prices after Nov. 1 and before the July disclosure date.

“This is a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge, and it chills us now,” Weiner said.

Arguing against the injunction,

Las Vegas Chief Deputy Attorney General Linda Anderson said the law is intended to protect diabetes patients in Nevada.

In a public bill signing in June,

Gov. Brian Sandoval said his grandfathe­r’s struggle with diabetes motivated him to sign the bill into law.

“Statewide, it’s going to make a difference, I believe, with regard to transparen­cy in drugs for those suffering from diabetes and transparen­cy for insulin,” he said at the June signing.

Contact Jessie Bekker at jbekker@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-4563. Follow @jessiebekk­s on Twitter.

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