U.S. states sue opioid-maker
Indivior, alleging anticompetitive practices
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[September 23, 2016]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Thirty-five U.S.
states and the District of Columbia filed a lawsuit on Thursday against
opioid drug maker Indivior alleging it tried to keep generic versions of
a drug off the market.
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The British company, which was spun off from Reckitt Benckiser in
2014, is the maker of Suboxone, a drug used to treat patients
addicted to heroin and other painkillers.
The lawsuit by the states alleged that Indivior took steps to get
patients to switch to a dissolvable oral strip version of Suboxone.
Indivior said in a statement that it would continue to "vigorously
defend" its position.
A tablet version of the drug was first approved for sale in the
United States in 2002, and although it did not have patent
protection, the Food and Drug Administration gave the company
seven-year "orphan drug" treatment so it could recover research and
development costs.
The lawsuit charged that when Indivior's exclusive right to sell the
drug neared its expiration in 2009, it took steps to block generic
versions from entering the market and that another company, MonoSol
Rx, conspired with Indivior to achieve that goal.
According to the lawsuit by the states, Indivior told the FDA that
it planned to offer a new "sublingual film," or dissolvable strip
version of the drug, which had been licensed to Indivior by MonoSol
Rx.
Since the strip was not equivalent to the tablet version of the
drug, it would prevent pharmacists from prescribing a cheaper
generic alternative to patients.
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The lawsuit claims that the company persuaded the FDA to approve the
strip by raising concerns that the tablet posed high exposure risks
to children. It later used those pediatric safety claims again to
try to persuade the FDA not to approve generic tablets of Suboxone.
The FDA rejected the company's arguments, but by the time the
generics hit the marketplace, many patients had already switched
over to using the dissolvable strip, the complaint alleged. There is
no generic version of the dissolvable strip.
"My office will not permit drug companies to engage in
anticompetitive conduct that unlawfully extends their monopolies -
and their monopoly profits - on drugs," New York state Attorney
General Eric Schneiderman said in a statement.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch, additional reporting by Noor Zainab
Hussain in Bengaluru; Editing by Peter Cooney and Gopakumar Warrier)
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