U.S. watchdog told
Medicare, Medicaid that EpiPen was misclassified in
2009: senator
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[November 09, 2016]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The internal
watchdog at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services warned the
office tasked with administering federal health insurance programs that
Mylan NV's EpiPen was improperly classified as a generic drug in 2009,
Senator Charles Grassley said on Tuesday.
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In a press release, Grassley's office said the HHS Inspector General
confirmed in discussions with Senate aides that the watchdog office
notified the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services about the
problematic classification, which was highlighted in a report.
Mylan said last month it intends to pay $465 million to settle with
the U.S. Justice Department over charges it misclassified the EpiPen
as a generic instead of a branded drug, thereby underpaying rebates
owed to state and federal Medicaid programs.
A Justice Department spokeswoman declined to comment to Reuters on
the purported settlement, though a Senate aide said Grassley's
office was previously told by the department that no deal with Mylan
had been finalized.
A settlement will be the subject of a Nov. 30 hearing before the
Senate Judiciary Committee, which Grassley chairs.
HHS Inspector General Daniel Levinson, as well as officials from the
Justice Department, the Centers and Mylan have all been invited to
testify.
The timing of the watchdog's disclosure to the Centers is
significant.
It raises questions about why it has taken so long for Mylan to
correct the error, how promptly the government told Mylan of its
concerns, and, if Mylan knew of the problem, why it never told its
investors.
U.S. securities regulators have since subpoenaed the company for its
communications with the Centers.
“The taxpayers deserve answers on what happened between 2009 and
now,” Grassley said in a statement. “It appears the EpiPen was
misclassified for years, and CMS was notified of the problem. If no
one did anything about the misclassification, why not?"
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Representatives from Mylan did not respond to requests for comment.
A spokesman for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services
reiterated that "on multiple occasions," it advised Mylan about the
proper classification of drugs and "expressly advised" Mylan about
the EpiPen misclassification.
Mylan has come under fire in recent months for hiking the price of
the lifesaving allergy treatment to more than $600 for a package of
two in less than a decade.
Earlier this month, West Virginia's attorney general sent a letter
to the Justice Department urging the government to reject the
purported $465 million settlement, calling it "woefully deficient."
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Dan Grebler)
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