- Teva Pharm to pay Oklahoma $85 million to settle opioid claims (reuters.com)Teva reaches $85 million settlement on eve of opioid trial in Oklahoma (statnews.com)
Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd said...it had agreed to pay an $85 million settlement with the state of Oklahoma days before the company was set to face trial over allegations that it and other drugmakers helped fuel the U.S. opioid epidemic...Claims against Teva focused on the branded opioid products Actiq and Fentora as well as generic painkillers it produced...The trial...was set to begin on Tuesday...Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter has alleged that J&J and Teva, along with OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma LP, carried out deceptive marking campaigns that downplayed opioids’ addictive risks while overstating their benefits...READ MORE
- May 24 Pharmacy Week in Review: FDA Approves Nasal Option for Treating Seizure Clusters in Adolescents, Whale Genomics Studied for Cancer Research (pharmacytimes.com)
Laura Joszt, Managing Editor at The American Journal of Managed Care, welcome to the Pharmacy Times News Network, Pharmacy Week in Review.
- NACDS and NCPA Issue Joint Statement on Drug Pricing Rule (drugtopics.com)
The National Community Pharmacists Association and the National Association of Chain Drug Stores issued a joint statement expressing their frustration at the release of HHS’s final drug pricing rule for Medicare and Medicaid. The final version of the rule fails to reform pharmacy direct and indirect remuneration fees...READ MORE
- GSK and Novartis liniment marketing misled Australian consumers: court (reuters.com)
The Australian subsidiaries of British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline and Swiss drugmaker Novartis misled customers and broke the law by promoting identical liniments as though they could treat specific ills, an Australian court found...The court said the companies admitted marketing Voltaren Osteo Gel as a treatment for osteoarthritis-related pain when its ingredients were the same as a cheaper Voltaren product, Emulgel...Judge Bromwich is yet to set a fine but the maximum penalty is the higher of A$10 million ($7 million), triple the benefit earned from the misleading conduct or - if that cannot be determined - a tenth of the annual turnover of the company in question...READ MORE
- Big drug distributor pays $22 million to settle U.S. opioid charges (reuters.com)
Morris & Dickson Co, one of the largest U.S. wholesale drug distributors, agreed to pay $22 million in civil penalties to settle U.S. government charges that it failed to report thousands of suspicious orders of the opioids hydrocodone and oxycodone...The...Louisiana-based company will also spend millions of dollars to hire staff and upgrade oversight to help comply with federal regulations requiring that orders be properly reported...Drug Enforcement Administration...since...2014 uncovered more than 12,000 retail pharmacy orders for hydrocodone and oxycodone that Morris & Dickson should have flagged to that agency...READ MORE
- U.S. imposes sanctions on Argentina-based online pharmacies for opioids (reuters.com)
The U.S. Treasury Department...placed sanctions on Goldpharma, an Argentina-based network of online pharmacies that it said contributed to the opioid crisis by selling clandestinely produced narcotics to customers in the United States...The Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control also designated eight Argentine nationals and nine entities located in Argentina, Colombia, Canada, Britain and the Netherlands for their roles in Goldpharma...“The Goldpharma network illustrates the sophisticated tactics drug traffickers and money launderers use to capitalize on the Internet and online pharmacy sites to sell highly addictive illicit narcotics around the world,” said Sigal Mandelker, Treasury under secretary for terrorism and financial intelligence...READ MORE
- Novartis CEO calls for new drug payment model ahead of Zolgensma launch (fiercepharma.com)Novartis CEO plans gene therapy price 'far lower' than $4 million to $5 million range (reuters.com)
Novartis is looking to launch spinal muscular atrophy gene therapy Zolgensma this year. But the possibility of a price tag as high as $5 million has already sparked controversy. To prepare for the pricey rollout, CEO Vas Narasimhan is now calling for changes to the U.S. drug payment system...For chronic diseases, current healthcare systems are made in a “pay-as-you-go model,” but not for single-treatment therapies that could potentially cure them. And that makes new models for evaluating the benefits of such treatments and for payment necessary...“[W]e need new economic models to determine exactly how much value [a cure] represents” when compared with the cost and suffering saved from longtime chronic care...READ MORE
- This Week in Managed Care: May 24, 2019 (ajmc.com)
Laura Joszt, Managing Editor at The American Journal of Managed Care. Welcome to This Week in Managed Care from the Managed Markets News Network
- WHO drug pricing talks may fail to end secrecy, activists fear (reuters.com)
Governments are working on a drug pricing transparency deal at the World Health Organization’s annual assembly, but activists said...they fear crucial costs may be left out, enabling pharmaceutical firms to keep prices high...Campaigners say some drugs are exorbitantly priced, even though they are often developed with public funding, and health providers often pay far too much, since governments negotiate prices without knowing what the treatment cost to develop...A six-page draft published by the WHO on Thursday urges states to publish prices and costs of medicines, vaccines, cell and gene-based therapies and other health technologies, and improve the transparency of medical patents...Transparency campaigners said they feared that a handful of countries, including Germany and Britain, were trying to kill the resolution with “a thousand cuts”...READ MORE
- Study Finds a Lack of Deprescribing is Harmful and Expensive (drugtopics.com)Preventive drugs in the last year of life of older adults with cancer: Is there room for deprescribing? (onlinelibrary.wiley.com)
A new study from Sweden is suggesting that many older adults with cancer are being prescribed preventive medications at the end of their lives that may harm their quality of life while providing questionable clinical benefits. The problem may stem from inadequate deprescribing...The study...online in Cancer, found that deprescribing strategies need to be more widely adopted to help reduce the burden of drugs that have limited clinical benefit near the end of life...The goal of palliative care is to reduce symptoms and maximize the quality of life, but sometimes what is used as palliative treatment decreases quality of life and that’s troubling...READ MORE










