Scottish Daily Mail

Drug giants ‘colluded to double the price of lifesaving NHS pills’

Who’s that girl? Paris Jackson does a Madge

- From Daniel Bates in New York By Sophie Borland Health Editor

TWO pharmaceut­ical giants have been accused of striking an illegal deal to double the price of a lifesaving NHS drug.

The competitio­n watchdog said that Actavis and Concordia had agreed to fix a price for hydrocorti­sone tablets, used to treat hormone deficienci­es.

This led to a pack of tablets almost doubling in price – from £49 to £88 – between 2013 and 2016 when the deal was struck.

The accusation­s were made by the Competitio­ns and Markets Authority and at this stage they are provisiona­l, as it will need to consider representa­tions made by the firms.

But both companies will face hefty fines if the CMA concludes they broke competitio­n law.

The watchdog alleges that the firms struck a deal in 2013, in which Concordia agreed not to launch its own version of the tablets.

Actavis UK – the only manufactur­er – then supplied Concordia with its own tablets at a very low price.

Concordia then resold these on to the NHS at a profit, the CMA alleges.

The CMA also accused Actavis in December of raising the price of packs of 10mg hydrocorti­sone tablets by 12,000 per cent in eight years, from 70p to £88.

Around a million prescripti­ons of hydrocorti­sone were distribute­d last year. The drug is prescribed to patients whose adrenal glands do not produce enough steroid hormones, such as those suffering from Addison’s disease, which affects around 8,400 UK patients.

The investigat­ion is part of a wider probe by the watchdog into the deals of the pharmaceut­ical industry. In December, it fined Pfizer a record £84.2million after finding it had raised charges to the NHS for an epilepsy drug by 2,600 per cent overnight.

Andrew Groves, the CMA’s senior responsibl­e officer for the investigat­ion, said: ‘Anticompet­itive agreements can cost the NHS, and ultimately the taxpayer, by stopping competitio­n bringing down the cost of lifesaving drugs like hydrocorti­sone tablets.

‘We allege these agreements were intended to keep Actavis UK as the sole supplier of a drug relied on by thousands of patients – and in a position which could allow it to dictate and prolong high prices.’

Yesterday it was revealed that pharmaceut­ical firms have lowered the prices of 14 cancer medicines after the NHS threatened to stop paying for them.

The treatments faced being withdrawn from use after a review of the Cancer Drugs Fund found that they cost too much.

But because of the discount they can now be employed in routine NHS use.

Both Actavis and Concordia declined to comment on the ongoing investigat­ion.

‘Relied upon by thousands’

 ??  ?? Street style: Paris Jackson Inspiratio­n: Madonna in 1987 IT could easily be mistaken for a Madonna album cover from the 1980s. But this is Michael Jackson’s 18-year-old daughter Paris, launching her modelling career.
Announcing the deal on...
Street style: Paris Jackson Inspiratio­n: Madonna in 1987 IT could easily be mistaken for a Madonna album cover from the 1980s. But this is Michael Jackson’s 18-year-old daughter Paris, launching her modelling career. Announcing the deal on...

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