Montreal Gazette

BIG PHARMA ON HOT SEAT

Congress takes aim at pricing

- MATTHEW PERRONE AND TOM MURPHY

Two drugmakers have made a practice of buying and then dramatical­ly hiking the prices of low-cost drugs given to patients with life-threatenin­g conditions including heart disease, AIDS and cancer, according to excerpts from thousands of documents released by federal legislator­s.

A congressio­nal review of more than 300,000 pages from Turing Pharmaceut­icals and Valeant Pharmaceut­icals reveals how executives planned to maximize profits while fending off negative publicity over the price hikes.

Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Maryland, released the informatio­n Tuesday ahead of a hearing Thursday to examine exorbitant price spikes. Cummings has used his position atop the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform to investigat­e several companies that have bought previously low-cost drugs and jacked up their prices many times over.

The Democrats aid in a statement that the documents show “that many drug companies are lining their pocket sat the expense of some of the most vulnerable families in our nation.”

When reached Tuesday, Valeant and Turing said they’re committed to ensuring that cost isn’t a deterrent for patients.

At the centre of the investigat­ion is Turing’s former CEO Martin Shkreli, who became the poster child of pharmaceut­ical-industry greed last fall for hiking the price of a life-saving drug by more than 5,000 per cent. That drug, Daraprim, is the only approved medication for a parasitic infection which mainly strikes patients with weakened immunesyst­ems, including those with cancer and AIDS. The patent on the drug expired decades ago.

Company presentati­ons released Tuesday show that as early as last May, Turing planned to turn Daraprim into a US $200- million-a year drug by dramatical­ly increasing its price. Turing purchased the sixdecade-old drug from Impax Laboratori­es in August for US $55 million and promptly raised its price.

Shkreli said in an email to one contact: “We raised the price from $1,700 per bottle to $75,000. Should be a very handsome investment for all of us.”

The price increase left some patients with co-pays as high as US$16,000, according to the committee’s review of more than 250,000 pages of documents from New York-based Turing.

In addition, the House committee reviewed more than 75,000 pages of documents from Canadian drugmaker Valeant. A memo summarizin­g the documents said the paperwork shows that CEO Michael Pearson decided to buy two life-saving heart drugs, Nitropress and Isuprel, to dramatical­ly hike prices and drive up his company’s revenue and profit.

The drugs treat abnormal heart rhythms, congestive heart failure and high blood pressure. Laval-based Valeant Pharmaceut­icals Internatio­nal Inc. bought the drugs for US$350 million from Marathon Pharmaceut­icals about a year ago and then tripled the price for one and increased the other six-fold. Theme mo to members of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform from staff members noted that this came a couple years after Marathon imposed its own, steep price hikes.

The memo also said Valeant identified revenue goals first and then used drug prices to reach those goals, with the drugmaker believing it could repeatedly hike the prices of Isuprel and Nitropress without repercussi­ons because those drugs are administer­ed by hospitals, which are less sensitive to prices than consumers

The drugs generated US $547 million in revenue and around US $351 million in profits last year alone. The memo said the drug maker also more than tripled the prices on over 20 additional U.S. products in 2014 and 2015.

When asked about the congressio­nal report, Vale ant said it expected that its future growth will be driven more by sales volume than pricing. The drugmaker said it now offers a 30-per cent, volume-based discount on the prices of Nitropress and Isuprel. It didn’t say how much customers had to buy to trigger the discount.

On Thursday, the House Committee is scheduled to hear testimony from Turing’s chief commercial officer, Nancy Retzlaff, and Valeant Pharmaceut­ical’s interim CEO, Howard Schiller. Schiller was appointed to the position last month after Pearson was hospitaliz­ed with severe pneumonia.

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 ?? RICHARD DREW/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former Turing Pharmaceut­icals CEO Martin Shkreli became the poster child of pharmaceut­ical-industry greed for hiking the price of a life-saving drug by more than 5,000 per cent.
RICHARD DREW/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former Turing Pharmaceut­icals CEO Martin Shkreli became the poster child of pharmaceut­ical-industry greed for hiking the price of a life-saving drug by more than 5,000 per cent.

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