The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Settlement blame

Generic drugmakers sold most opioids during overdose crisis

- By Geoff Mulvihill and Larry Fenn

Mallinckro­dt Pharmaceut­icals doled out lavish perks for top U.S. employees who hit or beat sales goals for prescripti­on opioids and other drugs: six-figure bonuses and a chance to snag a coveted “President’s Club” award, which could mean vacations to Hawaii, the Caribbean or Mexico.

The company placed that same staff in charge of reporting any sales of its painkiller­s that appeared to be suspicious, including to distributo­rs or pharmacies requesting extreme volumes of its most potent formulas.

Asked during a federal court deposition last year whether she believed it was appropriat­e to put incentive-motivated sales staff in charge of calling out questionab­le sales, Karen Harper, who oversaw Mallinckro­dt’s suspicious order monitoring system, said yes.

In fact, as the nation’s opioid overdose crisis began to explode, not a single order with the company between August 2008 and October 2010 rose from the level of “peculiar” to “suspicious,” the category that would have triggered a report to authoritie­s, according to Harper’s deposition.

The court documents reveal a company culture that allowed Mallinckro­dt to become one of the giants of the prescripti­on opioid market at a time when overdoses were claiming tens of thousands of American

lives.

The settlement

The company, based in Great Britain, announced a tentative $1.6 billion settlement Tuesday with state and local government­s in the U.S. If finalized, the deal would end lawsuits nationwide over the company’s role in the epidemic.

Purdue Pharma has been the poster child for the U.S. opioid crisis, mostly because of aggressive marketing of its signature painkiller, OxyContin. Lesser known is the role of generic opioid manufactur­ers like Mallinckro­dt that produced the vast majority of painkiller­s during the height of the overdose epidemic. While they may not have been sending sales representa­tives to encourage prescribin­g like Purdue, they were filling more and more orders for the drugs — so many that Mallinckro­dt couldn’t always produce enough to fill them all.

Nationwide distributi­on data released in a sprawling federal court case and analyzed by The Associated Press shows that Mallinckro­dt’s U.S. subsidiary, SpecGX, and another generic drugmaker, Actavis Pharma, produced the vast amount of prescripti­on opioids distribute­d throughout the country.

Shipped 2.2 billion oxycodone pills

From 2006 to 2014, Mallinckro­dt’s subsidiary shipped more than 2.2 billion high-potency oxycodone pills, nearly one-third of its total in that time period, according to the data analysis. Actavis was even more prolific, shipping more than 2.4 billion pills.

Sales or safety?

The court records made public last year by the U.S. District Court in Cleveland showed some Mallinckro­dt employees were more focused on sales than public safety. At least one joked about the rising use of the drugs with a customer.

In January 2009, Victor Borelli, a Mallinckro­dt salesman, exchanged emails with Steve Cochrane, who worked at drug distributo­r KeySource.

“Keep them coming,” Cochrane wrote. “Flying out of here. It’s like people are addicted to these things or something. Oh, wait, people are.”

Borelli responded: “Just like Doritos. Keep eating, we’ll make more.” After the comment become public, the company disavowed it, calling it “callous.”

Borelli said that as a reward for sales, he got bonuses ranging from $101,000 to $119,000 from 2008 through 2010, and that he twice received the company’s President Club award. That scored him vacations to St. Thomas and other tropical getaways.

Borelli and other Mallinckro­dt employees answered lawyers’ questions under oath ahead of what was expected to be the first federal trial over the toll of opioids. The company ended up settling with the plaintiffs — the Ohio counties of Cuyahoga and Summit. Other major defendants also reached deals.

Another opioid trial is scheduled to begin next month in Central Islip, New York, which has created a renewed push among drugmakers and distributo­rs to settle thousands of opioidrela­ted lawsuits.

Epidemic linked to 430K deaths in U.S.

Mallinckro­dt agreed with lawyers suing on behalf of local government­s nationwide to pay its settlement amount over eight years. Most of the money is to go into a fund intended for drug treatment and other programs to aid recovery from an epidemic that has been linked to more than 430,000 deaths in the U.S. since 2000.

The deal is still subject to some negotiatio­ns and must be approved by a bankruptcy court. It’s the first proposed opioid settlement that has overwhelmi­ng support from the key lawyers for the government­s suing to try to hold the drug industry accountabl­e for the crisis. Teva, which now owns Actavis, is negotiatin­g a separate settlement.

In a deposition last year, Douglas Boothe, who was CEO of Actavis in the U.S. and the Americas from 2008 through 2012, was asked about the company’s responsibi­lities for flagging large and suspicious orders of prescripti­on painkiller­s.

“I don’t think we had responsibi­lity for, accountabi­lity for preventing diversion,” he said. “We had responsibi­lity and accountabi­lity for making certain that the orders that we received were valid from licensed pharmacies and were within our suspicious order monitoring thresholds . ... Once it goes outside of our chain of custody, we have no capability or responsibi­lity or accountabi­lity.”

Pill mill connection

One of the main destinatio­ns for both companies’ opioids was Florida, where so-called pill mills drew people from Appalachia and beyond. One deposition from a Mallinckro­dt sales representa­tive says that 47 percent of the company’s high-potency opioids made in 2010 ended up in Florida.

Steve Becker, a former Mallinckro­dt salesman who worked for the company from 2000 to 2014, said he wasn’t aware of a system for monitoring suspicious orders. When asked if employees had incentives to report such orders, he said no.

But there were incentives to sell more, Becker said in a 2018 deposition. Employees said they frequently had back orders for pain pills.

“We’re doing our due diligence in selling our product to the various accounts, and we’re doing what we’re supposed to be doing, according to the DEA,” Becker said. “When (distributo­rs) then sell their product, it’s their due diligence to know where that product is going.”

Mulvihill reported from Cherry Hill, New Jersey. Fenn, a data journalist, reported from New York. Associated Press writers Mark Gillispie in Cleveland and Julie Carr Smyth in Columbus, Ohio, contribute­d to this article.

 ?? WHITNEY CURTIS — AP IMAGES FOR MALLINCKRO­DT FILE ?? The Mallinckro­dt Pharmaceut­icals office is shown July 1, 2013 in St. Louis. The generic drugmaker Mallinckro­dt has a tentative $1.6billion deal to settle lawsuits over its role in the U.S. opioid crisis. It announced Feb. 25 the deal is intended to end hundreds of lawsuits faced by the company over opioids.
WHITNEY CURTIS — AP IMAGES FOR MALLINCKRO­DT FILE The Mallinckro­dt Pharmaceut­icals office is shown July 1, 2013 in St. Louis. The generic drugmaker Mallinckro­dt has a tentative $1.6billion deal to settle lawsuits over its role in the U.S. opioid crisis. It announced Feb. 25 the deal is intended to end hundreds of lawsuits faced by the company over opioids.

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