Posts Tagged ‘off-label marketing’

Big Pharma executives facing legal threat; including potential fines and prison time

Sunday, October 31st, 2010

The Philadelphia Inquirer, October 31, 2010

by Christopher K. Hepp

Rats that infested a Philadelphia warehouse 40 years ago have found their way into the legal nightmares of the nation’s drug companies.Frustrated that even billion-dollar fines seem to have little effect on pharmaceutical firms, the Food and Drug Administration has increasingly signaled its intent to use a legal doctrine spawned by those long-gone rodents to bring criminal charges against top executives, even those who might have been unaware of company misdeeds.

Earlier this month, Eric Blumberg, FDA litigation chief, told an industry audience that his agency was looking for cases to use what is known as the Park Doctrine as a tool to “change the corporate culture” of firms that have thus far shrugged off other penalties.

In one area the FDA is targeting are companies that have illegally promoted products for unapproved uses, a practice know as off-label marketing.

“I don’t know when, where, or how many cases will be brought,” Blumberg told a gathering of the Food and Drug Law Institute, “but if you are a corporate executive – or counsel advising such a client – I would not wait for the first case to decide now is the time to comply with the law. They won’t get a mulligan on their conduct.”

In an interview Thursday, Blumberg was pointed.

“They need to take this seriously and find out what is going on in the marketing and sales divisions of their companies,” he said of pharmaceutical executives. “In my view, one thing that will get executives’ attention is a few cases in which we have convicted two-legged defendants.”

He singled out firms, including Pfizer Inc. and Eli Lilly & Co., that have paid multiple penalties in recent years.

Eli Lilly, for instance, was hit with a $1.4 billion fine last year for illegally marketing Zyprexa, a antipsychotic drug. The same year, Pfizer was fined $2.3 billion for illegally marketing the pain reliever Bextra. Neither company’s stock price suffered significantly, leading some to conclude that even massive fines are viewed by investors and executives as simply the cost of doing business. Neither firm responded to calls for comment.

“It is clear that fines are not working here,” Blumberg said. “We need to put something else on the scale to make people think twice, three times, before they promote drugs for unapproved uses.”

That something is the threat of prison and industry debarment, which could result from a successful prosecution using the Park Doctrine.

Under the Park Doctrine, a corporate officer is liable for illegal corporate actions the officer should have known about or was responsible for preventing.

It stems from a case involving John Park, president of Acme Markets Inc. in 1970, when the company was cited for rodent infestations at a warehouse here.

The FDA charged Park personally with violating sanitation laws after other rodent infestations were discovered despite a number of agency warnings.

Park argued that as company president he was too far removed from warehouse supervision to be held responsible.

The U.S. Supreme Court ultimately agreed with the FDA that Park, as president, was responsible for ensuring rodent-free warehouses.

Park got off relatively easy: a $250 fine.

Prosecutors now hope to extract stiffer penalties under the doctrine, including up to a year in prison and $100,000 fines.

Those are the possible punishments facing four executives of Synthes Inc., a West Chester firm that pleaded guilty early this month in connection with illegal clinical trials of a bone cement. Charged under the Park Doctrine by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Philadelphia, the executives have also pleaded guilty.

The Park Doctrine can be “a very powerful tool,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney John Pease, who supervises criminal prosecutions involving pharmaceutical-industry fraud cases in eastern Pennsylvania. But it also presents prosecutors with a number of hurdles, he said.

The crimes under scrutiny have a five-year statute of limitations, for instance. Often, prosecutors are not even alerted to them for several years, he said.

“And with multinational pharmaceutical companies with billions in revenue, you find responsibility is very diffuse,” Pease said. “The real challenge is finding a person who was in a position to know about and prevent the conduct that occurred.”

Scott Gottlieb, a former FDA commissioner who is now a partner with Arcoda Capital in New York, said another challenge would be assuring that an off-label case would hold up in court, particularly if it involved executives several layers above the departments that committed the illegal acts.

“There are clearly cases where the management is so far removed from the activity, they have no direct knowledge of the issue,” he said. “To hold them criminally liable is a significant policy step that needs to be done with great care.”

He agreed, however, that bringing criminal charges against executives “would be a significant deterrent.”

read the rest of the article: http://www.philly.com/inquirer/business/20101031_Big_Pharma_executives_facing_legal_threat.html?viewAll=y

« Return to news items


Share

Pharmaceutical Company AstraZeneca Settles Allegations of Off-Label Marketing and Paying Kickbacks, Pays $520M

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010
ASC REVIEW
By Jaimie Oh
September 29, 2010
Pharmaceutical manufacturer AstraZeneca, based in Wilmington, Del., has agreed to pay $520 million to settle allegations that it had illegally marketed its antipsychotic drug Seroquel, according to an AZ Central news report.

Under the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, a company is required to specify each intended use of a product in its application to the Food and Drug Administration. After the FDA approves the product for its specified uses, any promotion by the manufacturer for other uses, or “off-label” uses, renders the product misbranded. AstraZeneca had been accused of marketing Seroquel as off-label treatment for insomnia and psychiatric conditions, according to the report.

The company had also been accused of paying kickbacks to physicians. The physicians allegedly agreed to be authors of articles written by the company and its agents about the off-label uses of Seroquel. Additionally, physicians were allegedly paid to travel to resort locations to advise AstraZeneca about marketing the off-label use of the drug, according to the report.

Although it has agreed to settle the allegations, AstraZeneca is denying any wrongdoing. State Medicaid programs, including Kansas, will receive a portion of the pharmaceutical company’s settlement.

Read the AZ Central news report about AstraZeneca’s settlement.
Read other coverage about pharmaceutical company fraud.

- New Jersey-Based Pharmaceutical Company to Pay More Than $41M to Settle Allegations of Kickback Violations, Off-Label Marketing

- Omnicare Pays $21M to Settle Allegations of Medicaid Fraud

- Justice Department Files to Intervene in Whistleblower Kickback Case Against Pfizer

Read rest of this article here http://www.beckersasc.com/stark-act-and-fraud-abuse-issues/pharmaceutical-company-astrazeneca-settles-allegations-of-off-label-marketing-and-paying-kickbacks-pays-520m.html

« Return to news items


Share

J&J pleads guilty to illegal marketing of psychiatric drugs

Monday, September 20th, 2010

Natural News
By David Gutierrez
September 20, 2010

(NaturalNews) A subsidiary of pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson (J&J) has pleaded guilty in federal court to misdemeanor charges of marketing a drug for unapproved uses.

The guilty plea comes as part of a larger, $81-million settlement signed by J&J to settle government allegations that it illegally marketed its anti-seizure drug Topamax for the treatment of conditions including bipolar disorder and drug and alcohol addiction.

U.S. law allows doctors to prescribe drugs for any use they see fit, but prohibits drug makers from actively promoting drugs for any use not specifically approved by the FDA.

According to prosecutors, J&J sought to get around this restriction through a program it called “Doctor-for-a-Day,” in which doctors would accompany sales representatives on marketing visits. These doctors would then promote Topamax for unapproved uses, allowing company employees to keep their hands clean. According to internal documents, sales representatives told doctors that the Doctor-for-a-Day could “talk to you about things I can’t talk to you about.”

Participating doctors were paid up to $3,000 per day plus expenses, with one neurologist making half a million dollars for 200 appearances.

Read entire article here:  http://www.naturalnews.com/029790_Johnson_&_guilty.html

« Return to news items


Share

People & Power—Drug Money

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

A 23 minute TV expose on Big Pharma by ALJAZEERA (see video at bottom of this page)

This piece pulls no punches exposing the rampant fraud, fatal drug side effects, off label marketing, criminal practices  and “absolutely jaw dropping” payouts Pharma makes to psychiatrists/doctors.

  • “There is so much money to be made in stealing from the United States Healthcare system,” says Patrick Byrnes, Taxpayers Against Fraud.
  • Lewis Morris, US Department of Health states, “One of the things we are now looking at is going after the executives in these companies and holding them personally accountable.”
  • Sharon Ormsky, FBI Financial Crimes Unit states, “Pharmaceutical fraud is one of our top three threats — everybody is touched by these frauds in the extent that when you look at the billions of dollars that go into healthcare for the United States, a good percent,  3-10% of that is believed to be siphoned off into fraud—that’s  money that  could be going to very needy patients.”

Now the U.S. government is fighting back.  In the last two years alone, the  government has fined six of America’s  top ten pharmaceutical companies for fraud.  Investigations are ongoing against another three.  In this period the industry has had to pay out over 5 billion dollars in fines, and topping the list is drug giant Pfizer, having recently settled civil & criminal charges resulting in $2.3 billion dollars —the biggest fraud case, the biggest criminal case, the biggest false claims act in U.S. history.   ALJAZEERA also exposes Pfizer’s “interesting way of doing business.  Witnesses in the case revealed just how the company persuaded doctors to prescribe its drugs. It entertained them in strip clubs, it told them that the blues teenagers feel when they don’t make the football team was signs of treatable depression and it paid them to endorse Pfizer drugs. One doctor received $150,000 in a year.

Also highlighted is the current scandal regarding antipsychotic drugs, including state law suits, dangerous documented side effects and how federal investigators are now looking into claims drug company Johnson & Johnson illegally marketed their antipsychotic drug Risperdal to children, paying “some of the most influential doctors in the field” in order to accomplish this.  And leading that pack sits none other than the  [now] infamous psychiatrist Joseph Biederman, who has been “credited” with the huge increase of children prescribed psychiatry’s most powerful/dangerous drugs, antipsychotics, while receiving millions in Pharma kickbacks that he failed to disclose.   Biederman is shown on tape being questioned under oath, and when asked “What rank are you?” Biederman responds, “Full Professor.” When asked “What comes after that?” Biederman responds, “GOD.”

This is a 23 minute expose well worth watching.

This is one of the best exposé’s on Big Pharma we’ve seen:

People & Power —Drug Money, produced by ALJAZEERA.  This piece pulls no punches exposing the rampant fraud, fatal drug side effects, off label marketing, criminal practices  and “absolutely jaw dropping” payouts Pharma makes to psychiatrists/doctors.

* “There is so much money to be made in stealing from the United States Healthcare system,” says Patrick Byrnes, Taxpayers Against Fraud.

* Louis Morris, US Department of Health states, “One of the things we are now looking at is going after the executives in these companies and holding them personally accountable.”

*Sharon Ormsky, FBI Financial Crimes Unit states,  ”Pharmaceutical fraud is one of our top three threats — everybody is touched by these frauds in the extent that when you look at the billions of dollars that go into healthcare for the United States, a good percent,  3-10% is believed to be siphoned off into fraud that’s  money that  could be going to very needy patients.”

Now the U.S. government is fighting back.  In the last two years alone, the  government has fined six of America’s 10 pharmaceutical companies for fraud.  Investigations are ongoing into another three.  In this period the industry has had to pay out over 5 billion dollars in fines, and topping the list is drug giant Pfizer, having recently settled civil & criminal charges resulting in $2.3 billion dollars —the biggest fraud case, the biggest criminal case, the biggest false claims act in U.S. history.   ALJAZEERA also exposes Pfizer’s “interesting way of doing business.  Witnesses in the case revealed just how the company persuaded doctors to prescribe its drugs. It entertained them in strip clubs, it told them that the blues teenagers feel when they don’t make the football team was signs of treatable depression and it paid them to endorse Pfizer drugs. One doctor received $150,000 in a year.

Also highlighted is the current scandal regarding antipsychotic drugs, including state law suits, dangerous documented side effects and how federal investigators are now looking into claims drug company Johnson & Johnson illegally marketed their antipsychotic drug Risperdal to children, paying “some of the most influential doctors in the field” in order to accomplish this.  And leading that pack sits none other than the  [now] infamous psychiatrist Joseph Biederman, who has been “credited” with the huge increase of children prescribed psychiatry’s most powerful/dangerous drugs, antipsychotics, while receiving millions in Pharma kickbacks that he failed to disclose.   Biederman is shown on tape being questioned under oath, and when asked “What rank are you?” Biederman responds, “Full Professor.” When asked “What comes after that?” Biederman responds, “GOD.”

This is a 23 minute expose well worth watching.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1TwdsYVHjGA&feature=player_embedded#!

This is one of the best exposé’s on Big Pharma we’ve seen:

People & Power —Drug Money, produced by ALJAZEERA.  This piece pulls no punches exposing the rampant fraud, fatal drug side effects, off label marketing, criminal practices  and “absolutely jaw dropping” payouts Pharma makes to psychiatrists/doctors.

* “There is so much money to be made in stealing from the United States Healthcare system,” says Patrick Byrnes, Taxpayers Against Fraud.

* Louis Morris, US Department of Health states, “One of the things we are now looking at is going after the executives in these companies and holding them personally accountable.”

*Sharon Ormsky, FBI Financial Crimes Unit states,  ”Pharmaceutical fraud is one of our top three threats — everybody is touched by these frauds in the extent that when you look at the billions of dollars that go into healthcare for the United States, a good percent,  3-10% is believed to be siphoned off into fraud that’s  money that  could be going to very needy patients.”

Now the U.S. government is fighting back.  In the last two years alone, the  government has fined six of America’s 10 pharmaceutical companies for fraud.  Investigations are ongoing into another three.  In this period the industry has had to pay out over 5 billion dollars in fines, and topping the list is drug giant Pfizer, having recently settled civil & criminal charges resulting in $2.3 billion dollars —the biggest fraud case, the biggest criminal case, the biggest false claims act in U.S. history.   ALJAZEERA also exposes Pfizer’s “interesting way of doing business.  Witnesses in the case revealed just how the company persuaded doctors to prescribe its drugs. It entertained them in strip clubs, it told them that the blues teenagers feel when they don’t make the football team was signs of treatable depression and it paid them to endorse Pfizer drugs. One doctor received $150,000 in a year.

Also highlighted is the current scandal regarding antipsychotic drugs, including state law suits, dangerous documented side effects and how federal investigators are now looking into claims drug company Johnson & Johnson illegally marketed their antipsychotic drug Risperdal to children, paying “some of the most influential doctors in the field” in order to accomplish this.  And leading that pack sits none other than the  [now] infamous psychiatrist Joseph Biederman, who has been “credited” with the huge increase of children prescribed psychiatry’s most powerful/dangerous drugs, antipsychotics, while receiving millions in Pharma kickbacks that he failed to disclose.   Biederman is shown on tape being questioned under oath, and when asked “What rank are you?” Biederman responds, “Full Professor.” When asked “What comes after that?” Biederman responds, “GOD.”

This is a 23 minute expose well worth watching.

« Return to news items


Share

Pfizer Makes Bank from DrugsThat Can Kill You—To say Pfizers been accused of wrongdoing is like saying BP had an oil spill

Monday, July 12th, 2010

AlterNet
By Martha Rosenberg
July 10, 2010

The drug company Pfizer is best known for Lipitor, a drug that brings cholesterol down and Viagra, a drug that brings other things up.

But the “world’s largest research-based pharmaceutical company” which sits between Goldman Sachs and Marathon Oil on the Fortune 500, is also closely associated with a seemingly never-ending series of scandals.

To say Pfizer’s been accused of wrongdoing is like saying BP had an oil spill. Other drug companies have a portfolio of products, Pfizer has a portfolio of scandals including, but not limited to, Chantix, Lipitor, Viagra, Geodon, Trovan, Bextra, Celebrex, Lyrica, Zoloft, Halcion and drugs for osteoarthritis, Parkinson’s disease, kidney transplants and leukemia.

During one week in June Pfizer 1) agreed to pull its 10-year-old leukemia drug Mylotarg from the market because it caused more, not less patient deaths 2) Suspended pediatric trials of Geodon two months after the FDA said children were being overdosed 3) Suspended trials of tanezumab, an osteoarthritis pain drug, because patients got worse not better, some needing joint replacements (pattern, anyone?) 4) Was investigated by the House for off-label marketing of kidney transplant drug Rapamune and targeting African-Americans 5) Saw a researcher who helped established its Bextra, Celebrex and Lyrica as effective pain meds, Scott S Reuben, MD, trotted off to prison for research fraud 6) was sued by Blue Cross Blue Shield to recoup money it overpaid for Bextra and other drugs 7) received a letter from Sen. Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) requesting its whistleblower policy and 8 ) had its appeal to end lawsuits by Nigerian families who accuse it of illegal trials of the antibiotic Trovan in which 11 children died, rejected by the Supreme Court. And how was your week?

Nor does Pfizer back down when faced with legal troubles.

Even as it was under the probation of a 5-year Corporate Integrity Agreement (CIA) with Health and Human Services for withholding $20 million in Lipitor rebates owed to Medicaid in 2002, it off-label marketed its seizure drug Neurontin and entered into another CIA in 2004.

Read entire article:  http://www.alternet.org/story/147467/

« Return to news items


Share

BNET – “Kid Overdoses in Antipsychotic Trial Caps a History of Screwups at Pfizer”

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

BNET
By Jim Edwards
April 21, 2010

The FDA’s letter to Pfizer (PFE) describing overdoses of the antipsychotic Geodon  given to 13 children in clinical trials is merely the latest in a long history of controversies that have dogged the drug at virtually every stage of its existence. Among those controversies: Discredited doctors allegedly prepared research on Geodon for the FDA; Pfizer allegedly promoted the drug for unapproved uses in kids; and the company allegedly paid a non-profit mental health advocacy group to promote Geodon for kids.

Taken together, the string of incidents suggests a lack of management accountability. Like many large companies, Pfizer operates as a series of silos or divisions, with different managers for sales, marketing, R&D, and regulatory compliance. The fact that screwups have occurred across all these divisions illustrates the value of having one manager, or management team, with accountability for the entire product, from soup to nuts.

The FDA warned Pfizer that its trials of Geodon in children were improperly monitored, and that children got too much drug by mistake:

… dosing errors occurred and overdosing extended over several days for all seven pediatric subjects; in one case for as long as 22 days.

…a Pfizer internal document dated October 3, 2007 and entitled “Safety Information on Affected Subjects” refers to the overdosing of an additional six pediatric subjects in study (b)(4) at two different sites…

Read entire article:  http://industry.bnet.com/pharma/10007813/kid-overdoses-in-antipsychotic-trial-caps-a-history-of-screwups-at-pfizer/

« Return to news items


Share

Drugging Kids For Profit: Powerful & dangerous antipsychotic drugs being used on kids more and more often

Monday, January 4th, 2010

Ed Silverman
Portfolio.com
January 4, 2010

If elderly people with dementia are so vulnerable to the risks posed by antipsychotics, why are so many nursing-home residents regularly prescribed the medications?

The answer can be found in a controversy with its roots in aggressive marketing and lackadaisical supervision. Known in the medical community as atypical antipsychotics, this group of drugs was originally approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat adults suffering from schizophrenia. They go by snazzy names such as Zyprexa, Geodon, Abilify, and Seroquel. Later, regulators allowed doctors to prescribe them for treating bipolar disorder. Over the past decade, the pills have become a veritable goldmine; in 2008 alone, sales in the U.S. reached $14.6 billion.

But critics say those big sales are actually due, in part, to an epidemic of off-label marketing, which is promoting a drug for unapproved uses, although doctors are free to write a prescription regardless. And so drugmakers encouraged doctors to prescribe these meds for children before the FDA sanctioned their use for youngsters. This was particularly troubling, given that the drugs can cause diabetes and weight gain, side effects that prompted thousands of lawsuits claiming that drugmakers tried to hide evidence of these problems.

Read entire article: http://www.portfolio.com/industry-news/health-care/2010/01/04/drugging-kids-for-profit/

« Return to news items


Share

In wake of Pfizer scandal Congresswoman introduces bill: Deny federal funds to drug companies with felony convictions

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Ed Silverman
Pharmalot
October 19, 2009

Now that Pfizer agreed to pay $2.3 billion for illegally marketing several drugs, including Bextra, Zyvox, Geodon and Lyrica, over several years, one Congresswoman wants to punish stop such behavior – at least among those that do business with the federal government.

And so Betty McCollum, a Democrat from Minnesota, has introduced a bill that prohibits companies with a felony conviction from receiving any federal funding for five years after a conviction; prohibits corporate felons from making federal campaign contributions for five years, and limits the lobbying the corporation can do during that period to $1 million.

She calls her legislation the ACORN Act, or Against Corporations Organizing to Rip-off the Nation Act of 2009. Why? A significant target of recent Congressional action is the better-known ACORN, a non-profit that trains and advocates for poor and working-class Americans. Over the past 15 years, ACORN has received $53 million in federal funds. By contrast, Pfizer won $73 million in federal contracts in 2007, as The Nation notes, but has largely escaped Congressional wrath.

Read entire article: http://www.pharmalot.com/2009/10/congresswoman-deny-pfizer-any-federal-funding/

« Return to news items


Share