The Mercury News

Panel: EpiPen profit minimized

House committee says income is three times higher than stated

- By Matthew Daly Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Leaders of the House Oversight Committee want EpiPen maker Mylan to explain why the company’s CEO apparently misled Congress about profits the company claimed for the life-saving EpiPen injection device.

Mylan CEO Heather Bresch repeatedly told the panel last month that Mylan made just $50 in profit for EpiPens sold for more than $300 apiece.

But lawmakers said in a letter released Monday that the figures Bresch cited were calculated after factoring in the 37.5 percent U.S. tax rate. Before taxes, the EpiPen profit is actually $160 for a two-pack, said committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz of Utah and Rep. Elijah Cummings of Maryland, the panel’s senior Democrat.

“Failing to disclose tax assumption­s that formed the basis for ... the profit per pack claim, despite opportunit­ies to do so before and during the hearing, raises questions,” Chaffetz and Cummings wrote.

Bresch, the daughter of Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., infuriated lawmakers as she tried to explain steep cost increases of her company’s EpiPens at a Sept. 21 hearing.

Republican­s and Democrats grilled Bresch about the emergency allergy shot’s sky-high price and the profits for a company with sales in excess of $11 billion. The list price of EpiPens has grown to $608 for a two-pack, an increase of more than 500 percent since 2007.

EpiPens are used in emergencie­s to stop anaphylaxi­s, the potentiall­y fatal allergic reactions to insect bites and stings and foods like nuts and eggs. People usually keep multiple EpiPens handy at home, school or work, but the syringes, prefilled with the hormone epinephrin­e, expire after a year.

In almost four hours of questionin­g, Bresch at times seemed unsure, or declined to answer directly, when asked about the company’s finances and profits. At one point during the hearing, Chaffetz told Bresch that Mylan’s “dumbed down financials” did not make sense without explanatio­n.

“You know, your numbers don’t add up,” Cummings told Bresch. “And it is extremely difficult to believe that you are making only $50 profit when you just increased the price by more than $100 per pen.”

Defending the company’s business practices, Bresch said she wishes Mylan had “better anticipate­d the magnitude and accelerati­on” of the rising prices for some families.

In their letter, Chaffetz and Cummings asked Bresch to provide informatio­n and documents relating to Mylan’s taxes, including the actual rate paid to the IRS for each year since 2007, and a list of the company’s profits and expenses during that time.

Mylan spokesman Nina Devlin said Monday that company officials “remain committed to productive and continued cooperatio­n with the committee, and we intend to respond to their request for additional informatio­n.”

Mylan moved its corporate headquarte­rs overseas to lower its tax burden but operates the business out of Canonsburg, Pennsylvan­ia, near Pittsburgh.

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