Pfizer
epilepsy drug prices were 'unfairly high,' UK review finds
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[August 05, 2021]
By Pushkala Aripaka
(Reuters) -Britain's competition watchdog
is sticking with its view that Pfizer and Flynn Pharma broke the law by
charging the country's public health service "unfairly high" prices for
an epilepsy drug, after being asked to reassess a previous fine.
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The drugmakers made use of a loophole so that the capsules, called
Epanutin before September 2012, were not subject to price regulation
for branded drugs, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) found
in its provisional review
https://www.gov.uk/government/
news/cma-accuses-pharma-firms-of-illegal-pricing disclosed on
Thursday.
In 2016, the CMA fined
https://www.reuters.com/
article/us-pfizer-britain-fine-idUSKBN13W0VT Pfizer and Flynn
roughly 90 million pounds ($125 million) for hiking prices by as
much as 2,600% to 67.50 pounds for a 100mg pack.
However, the companies in 2018 won an appeal https://www.reuters.com/article/uk-pfizer-britain-fine-idUKKCN1J327D
against the penalty, and the Competition Appeal Tribunal referred
the matter back to the CMA.
The watchdog said that spending by Britain's National Health Service
(NHS) on the capsules, containing phenytoin sodium, jumped to
roughly 50 million pounds in 2013 from about 2 million pounds just a
year earlier.
The CMA has been cracking down on drug price hikes in Britain. Last
month, it fined more than 10 drug firms
https://www.reuters.com/
world/uk/britain-fines-
drugmakers-360-million-overcharging-nhs-2021-07-15 a record 260
million pounds in total for a 10,000% surge in prices of a
life-saving steroid.
[to top of second column] |
"As Pfizer and Flynn were the
dominant suppliers of the drug in the UK, the
NHS had no choice but to pay unfairly high
prices for this vital medicine," the CMA said in
a statement after it gathered more evidence and
reviewed its previous case.
Pfizer said it was co-operating with the
regulator. Flynn did not immediately respond to
Reuters' request for comment.
"Ensuring a sustainable supply of our products
to UK patients is of paramount importance to
Pfizer and was at the heart of our decision to
divest the product in 2012," U.S. based Pfizer
said in an e-mailed statement.
In September 2012, Pfizer sold the UK
distribution rights for Epanutin to Flynn.
Before that, Pfizer was selling phenytoin sodium
capsules to UK wholesalers and pharmacies, the
CMA said.
The regulator added that Pfizer and Flynn can
respond to its findings before a formal decision
is reached.
($1 = 0.7205 pounds)
(Reporting by Pushkala Aripaka in Bengaluru
Editing by Rashmi Aich and Mark Potter)
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