The News-Times

Report: ‘Pain League’ allegedly pushed opioids in Italy

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Managers with Mundipharm­a, the internatio­nal arm of Purdue Pharma, have been swept up in a corruption case in Italy alleging they and other pharmaceut­ical executives paid a prominent pain doctor to help push more opioids in this country long leery of the powerful painkiller­s.

It is the first known case outside the U.S. where employees of the pharmaceut­ical empire owned by the billionair­e Sackler family have been criminally implicated, more than a decade after Purdue executives were convicted over misleading the American public about the addictiven­ess of OxyContin.

Investigat­ive files obtained by The Associated Press detail how Dr. Guido Fanelli was allegedly paid to help promote painkiller­s by an alliance of pharmaceut­ical managers he called “The Pain League.” Prosecutor­s say Fanelli wrote articles, organized conference­s and helped counter government warnings that opioid consumptio­n was spiking and that physicians should be cautious. The message trumpeted, the AP found, was that there’s an epidemic of chronic pain, opioids are the solution and addiction fears are exaggerate­d.

Those are the same practices, experts contend, the pharmaceut­ical industry employed in the U.S. that helped create an addiction crisis that has claimed 400,000 lives.

“It makes me feel sick more than anything else,” said U.S. Rep. Katherine Clark , who sent a letter to the World Health Organizati­on in 2017 warning that Mundipharm­a was repeating the “deceptive and dangerous practices” of Purdue, which faces some 2,000 lawsuits in the United States over its promotion of opioids. The letter implored the agency to act — before the American epidemic becomes a pandemic.

The case Italian prosecutor­s lay out offers a look at how Big Pharma executives still pushed opioids abroad even after the cause and consequenc­es of the U.S. epidemic had become apparent.

As the U.S. market contracts, opioid consumptio­n is climbing overseas. Canada and Australia are already following America’s

catastroph­ic course, with rising rates of addiction and death. Others may be on the cusp of crisis: Overdoses are increasing in Sweden, Norway, Ireland and England, fueled by prescripti­on painkiller­s and the illicit drug trade. Researcher­s in Brazil report that prescripti­on opioid sales have increased 465 percent in six years.

Italian opioid consumptio­n has increased, though authoritie­s say widespread addiction has not taken root due to strict regulation­s and a cultural skepticism of the drugs — both of which Fanelli apparently worked to reverse.

According to the investigat­ive file, over a period of years,

464,000 euros from Mundipharm­a (about $500,000) and 640,855 euros from Grunenthal (about

$700,000) flowed into businesses Fanelli allegedly set up to hide the payments. Spokesmen for Mundipharm­a Europe and Grunenthal, based in Germany, said the corporate offices were unaware of the alleged scheme and believed the payments went toward legitimate services.

Mundipharm­a’s network of companies operates in more than 120 countries, and its emerging markets division has expanded into Asia, Africa and Latin America. Grunenthal, too, sells drugs in more than 100 markets.

Both companies said they have conducted extensive internal investigat­ions and overhauled compliance and ethics policies. Mundipharm­a Europe spokesman Patrice Grand said the company “has transforme­d and redeemed itself” in the wake of the scandal. It fired two managers prosecutor­s allege were involved, including Marco Filippini, general manager for southern Europe.

Purdue and Mundipharm­a are both owned by the Sackler family, well-known philanthro­pists now facing lawsuits and public scrutiny for Purdue’s promotion of OxyContin. Purdue agreed to pay a $270 million settlement this year in a case brought by the state of Oklahoma, but the company has vehemently defended itself. Spokesman Bob Josephson noted a judge this month dismissed a lawsuit in North Dakota after finding the company cannot control how doctors prescribe its drugs and how individual­s use them.

Hundreds more lawsuits remain pending, many alleging that Purdue and other companies paid “key opinion leaders,” often prominent pain doctors, to add a veneer of science to commercial claims about the safety of opioids for chronic pain. Prescripti­ons quadrupled between 1999 and 2010 in the U.S., and overdoses climbed.

In Italy, Fanelli was a chief of the anesthesio­logy and pain therapy department at Maggiore Hospital in Parma and called himself the father of a 2010 law that made opioids easier to prescribe, which he championed as necessary to ease suffering.

In 2009, as he was helping to draft the law, prosecutor­s allege he began meeting with executives from the Italian branches of Mundipharm­a and Grunenthal and Italian companies including Molteni and Angelini. Molteni did not respond to requests for comment. Dario Romano, a lawyer representi­ng Angelini and one of its managers, said his clients did nothing wrong.

Carabinier­i police stumbled onto the case during another investigat­ion, then bugged Fanelli’s cellphone and office.

“I created a system,” police

allegedly heard Fanelli brag. “That is the business of pain.”

In addition to publishing proopioid position papers, he also planned a medical conference that prosecutor­s described as “upside down.” The director is supposed to pick the speakers and subjects, but Fanelli, prosecutor­s say, turned that over to the companies.

Additional­ly, prosecutor­s allege, the doctor coordinate­d with a nonprofit hosting a 16-city roadshow professing about the plight of chronic pain and how opioids should be used for treatment. The president of the pain group’s board was the marketing manager of the Italian branch of Mundipharm­a.

“They’re using the same playbook that worked in the United States,” said Andrew Kolodny, executive director of Physicians for Responsibl­e Opioid Prescribin­g, “despite knowing that it led to a public health catastroph­e.”

Grand, the Mundipharm­a spokesman, rejected that, saying: “There is no such playbook.”

Mundipharm­a branches and Purdue have different managers and portfolios and do not share strategies, he said. The European operation has stopped promoting opioids, which now make up less than 40 percent of Mundipharm­a’s European sales, he said.

Two Mundipharm­a executives — Filippini and Riccardo Cerbai, business and marketing director in Italy — accepted plea bargains in January, though a lawyer representi­ng them said the pleas are not an admission of guilt. Grand said both were terminated in September. He said the company itself also did not acknowledg­e guilt in its agreement to accept a fine of 40,000 euros.

Grunenthal Italia was fined 50,000 euros. Grunenthal spokesman Stepan Kracala said the company, which operates mostly in Europe and Latin America, has implemente­d a new code of conduct, including an employee whistleblo­wer hotline, and is committed to transparen­cy about the addiction risk of its drugs.

Several Grunenthal executives are named in the investigat­ion; their lawyers insist on their innocence. They are awaiting a series of hearings, after which a judge will decide whether they must stand trial.

Fanelli, through his attorney, declined to comment. He was suspended without pay and barred from practicing medicine pending resolution of the case.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Dr. Guido Fanelli, center, arrives with his lawyer Salvatore Coniglio, left, and an unidentifi­ed assistant at Parma’s law court in northern Italy to answer magistrate­s’ questions in 2017.
Associated Press Dr. Guido Fanelli, center, arrives with his lawyer Salvatore Coniglio, left, and an unidentifi­ed assistant at Parma’s law court in northern Italy to answer magistrate­s’ questions in 2017.

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