The Nome Nugget

Attorney General sues opioid manufactur­ers Teva, Cephalon and Allergan

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Anchorage, AK – As part of Alaska’s effort to address the State’s ongoing opioid epidemic, Attorney General Treg Taylor filed a civil lawsuit March 31, 2021, against opioid manufactur­ers Teva Pharmaceut­ical Industries, Ltd., Teva Pharmaceut­icals USA, Inc., Cephalon, Inc., Allergan plc, and subsidiari­es.

The suit alleges that Teva and Allergan violated the Alaska Unfair Trade Practices Act by engaging in a deceptive marketing campaign that minimized the risks of opioids, especially the serious risks of addiction, and sought to convince doctors that there was a significan­t upside to their use for chronic non-cancer pain by exaggerati­ng their purported benefits.

The complaint further alleges that these opioid companies’ fraudulent marketing of branded and generic opioids played a significan­t role in transformi­ng medical thinking about opioids, persuading doctors that the risk of addiction for legitimate pain patients is modest and manageable and outweighed by the benefits in reduced pain and improved quality of life for their patients.

Additional­ly, the suit alleges that Teva and Allergan failed to control their supply of opioids into Alaska, in violation of state and federal law, and lacked an adequate system to monitor orders and investigat­e, report, and refuse to fill orders that they knew or should have known were suspicious. According to data recently disclosed by the DEA in the opioid litigation, from 2006-2014, Teva and Allergan alone supplied over 46 million opioid pills into the State of Alaska.

The increased volume of opioid prescripti­ons that resulted from this deceptive marketing is directly correlated to increased addiction, overdose, and death in Alaska, to an expansion of the black market for diverted prescripti­on opioids, and an increase in heroin abuse by those who cannot afford—or legally acquire—prescripti­on opioids, the suit alleges.

“While Teva and Allergan profited enormously from their deceptive marketing, the State of Alaska and its residents have experience­d the consequenc­es, including responding to the crisis and suffering from opioid addiction and overdose, and opioid-related crime and dislocatio­n,” said Attorney General Treg Taylor. “Through this latest civil suit, we seek to hold these companies accountabl­e for their conduct and the harm that they caused – and continue to cause – the State of Alaska, and to abate the public health epidemic that they helped create.”

“For the last two decades, the opioid epidemic has greatly impacted the lives and wellbeing of our communitie­s,” said Commission­er

Adam Crum, Alaska Department of Health and Social Services. “In 2019, Alaska experience­d the second highest rate of overdose deaths in ten years – 105 people lost their lives to overdoses involving opioids. However, the impacts extend far beyond lives lost. We see strained criminal justice, public assistance, social service, primary care, behavioral health, and emergency response systems in our communitie­s. Moreover, in 2018 drug misuse had associativ­e costs of $1.06 billion, with at least $69 million due to opioid use disorder and opioid-related incidents.”

The Attorney General’s Office previously sued now bankrupt opioid manufactur­ers, Purdue Pharma and Mallinckro­dt. On October 25, 2018, the Attorney General’s Office filed a lawsuit against opioid distributo­rs McKesson Corporatio­n, Cardinal Health Inc., and Amerisourc­eBergen Drug Company, and subsequent­ly added as defendants various members of McKesson’s Board of Directors and former Chief Executive Officer, John Hammergren. That lawsuit alleges that the three companies (and McKesson’s Directors and Officers) disregarde­d their obligation­s under Alaska law to report and halt suspicious orders and prevent diversion of prescripti­on drugs. The companies’ motions to dismiss were denied, and the case is now moving towards trial.

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