Toronto Star

Valeant faces new legal woes

- ROSS MAROWITS THE CANADIAN PRESS

MONTREAL— Valeant Pharmaceut­icals, which has been under the gun over its relationsh­ip with specialty pharmacies and price hikes on its heart medication­s, is facing new legal challenges as U.S. investigat­ors look into the embattled company’s growing eye-care business.

Valeant disclosed Monday that it is subject to separate investigat­ions launched by the Federal Trade Commission and Justice Department.

The FTC has requested informatio­n and documentat­ion related to its “non-public investigat­ion” of Valeant’s acquisitio­n of Paragon Vision Sciences in May, the Laval, Que.-based company said in a regulatory filing about its third-quarter results.

Valeant also said the Justice Department has issued it a subpoena as part of a criminal investigat­ion into Bausch & Lomb’s payment to medical profession­als related to its surgical products Crystalens IOL and Victus femtosecon­d laser platform.

Valeant said it is co-operating with the investigat­ion into possible violations of federal health-care laws.

The Justice Department’s civil division and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvan­ia are also probing possible false claims on Medicaid pricing made by Biovail, Valeant’s previous company, the company added in its SEC filing.

Valeant couldn’t be immediatel­y reached for comment. But Jan Svochak, the president of the Contact Lens Manufactur­ers Associatio­n in the U.S., said he was interviewe­d by investigat­ors with the FTC as part of their probe.

Svochak said in an interview Tuesday that Valeant is jacking up manufactur­ing costs, threatenin­g the survival of small makers of rigid gas permeable contact lenses.

“My raw material prices have effectivel­y doubled,” said Svochak, who is also president of Texas-based TruForm Optics, a contact lens manufactur­er. “It’s not good for me, my employees, my customers, my bottom line (and) puts companies like us at risk.”

Valeant controls 85 to 90 per cent of the supply chain for gas-permeable lenses in the United States, he said, adding that gas-permeable lenses are 10 per cent of the overall contact lens market and offer the “last resort” for many patients who can’t wear soft lenses.

Svochak said price increases will eventually be passed on to consumers.

The Canadian Associatio­n of Optometris­ts said it is not yet hearing about price hikes.

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