The government's involvement was disclosed in a filing made public
on Monday. It adds firepower to the civil litigation as Insys tries
to resolve a federal probe into its marketing of Subsys, a spray
form of fentanyl.
Six U.S. states - California, Colorado, Indiana, New York, North
Carolina and Virginia - also joined whistleblower litigation against
Insys, according to the filing in U.S. District Court in Los
Angeles.
The litigation comes amid a wave of related criminal cases against
medical practitioners, and former executives and sales
representatives employed by Insys, including its billionaire founder
John Kapoor.
In a separate filing, the Justice Department asked that the
litigation be put on hold until the criminal cases were resolved.
Chandler, Arizona-based Insys had no immediate comment. Its shares
closed up 7.6 percent at $7.36 on the Nasdaq.
Subsys is an under-the-tongue spray approved to treat severe pain in
cancer patients who are already receiving and tolerant to
around-the-clock opioid therapy.
The U.S. government accused Insys of having since 2012 offered
"sham" speaking fees and lavish meals to induce doctors to prescribe
Subsys.
It also said Insys knowingly caused Medicare and other federal
health care programs to pay for Subsys by encouraging doctors to
prescribe it when it was not medically necessary, or by
misrepresenting patients' diagnoses.
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Opioids, including prescription painkillers and heroin, played a
role in a record 42,249 U.S. deaths in 2016, according to the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
In March, President Donald Trump called for litigation against
companies over their roles in what he has called a nationwide
epidemic.
Federal prosecutors in Boston have said Kapoor and six other former
Insys executives and managers schemed to bribe doctors to prescribe
Subsys and to defraud insurers into paying for it.
Insys has estimated it might cost at least $150 million to resolve
the Justice Department probe.
The litigation that the U.S. government joined included a 2013
lawsuit by Maria Guzman, a former Insys sales representative who
said doctors improperly prescribed Subsys for off-label uses such as
treating back pain.
She sued under the False Claims Act, which lets private
whistleblowers sue on the government's behalf and share in
recoveries.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston and Jonathan Stempel in New
York; Editing by Tom Brown and Leslie Adler)
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