ABC Money
Home

FTC: Delays in generic drugs on the rise


Published :
Thu, 18 Jan 2007 07:27
By : Agencies
Print this Story


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

WASHINGTON (AFX) - Drug companies increasingly are reaching legal settlements that delay the introduction of cheaper generic medicines and cheat Americans of billions of dollars a year in savings, federal regulators on Wednesday told lawmakers seeking to ban the agreements.

The Federal Trade Commission and others allege the settlements allow brand-name pharmaceutical companies to pay off would-be generic competitors, which then agree to delay introduction of their less costly but otherwise identical versions of the original medicines.

The FTC issued a report Wednesday, to coincide with a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on the topic, that shows the settlements have become more common since two 2005 appeals court decisions upheld their legality.

In the 12-month period that ended Sept. 30, half of the 28 patent litigation settlements between brand-name and generic drug makers included such an agreement, according to the FTC. It tallied just three the previous fiscal year and none the year before that.

'Sadly, the incentive to enter in such pernicious pay-for-delay settlements are substantial,' FTC commissioner Jon Leibowitz told lawmakers.

In a typical settlement, the payment is still less than the potential loss in sales to a brand-name company once a generic competitor enters the market, said Michael Wroblewski, of Consumers Union. And the generic manufacturer makes more from the payment that it would from actually selling its version of a drug, he said.

'The losers are American consumers, who pay high drug prices for years to come,' said Sen. Herb Kohl, D-Wis. Kohl, joined by Democratic and Republican colleagues, reintroduced legislation Wednesday to ban the agreements.

The agreements settle legal challenges mounted by the generic manufacturers seeking to enter the market for a drug before its patent expires. In doing so, they thwart the intent of the 1984 law that made such challenges possible, said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt.

The pharmaceutical industry maintains the settlements avoid or cut short prolonged and costly litigation. Those costs ultimately are passed to the consumer.

'Courts and experts have stated unequivocally that settlement of litigation should be encouraged and that settlement of patent litigation can benefit consumers. Blanket prohibitions on certain types of settlements could force both sides to spend valuable resources litigating their patent dispute to judgment,' said former Rep. Billy Tauzin, R-La., president and chief executive of the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America.

One of the co-authors of the 1984 law, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, suggested reviewing the settlement agreements on a case-by-case basis and not banning them outright.

And Bruce Downey, chairman and chief executive officer of Barr Pharmaceuticals Inc., a major generic drug maker, said the proposed law could discourage generic companies from challenging patents held by pharmaceutical companies -- and settling those challenges.

Downey said settling challenges to the patents on the antidepressant Prozac and cancer drug tamoxifen allowed his company to introduce lower-price generic versions of the two medicines before they lost patent protection, saving consumers more than $1.5 billion.

Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.




Share on


 You Might Like
Barr CEO to testify on patent issues
FTC scrutinizes drug patent settlements
+
MDS customers to revalidate tests
FDA eyes drug tests done by Canadian lab

Comment on this Article
Comment:
Title:
Name:
Please Enter
 
Here
  

 Search News

 Look For
Business
Credit cards
Finance
Loans
Money
Mortgages

 
 Stock Quotes *
SYMBOL
LAST
CHANGE
DOW JONES
10340.69
-107.24 ( -1.03 %)
NASDAQ
2792.28
22.57 ( 0.81 %)
FTSE 100
5741.15
38.78 ( 0.68 %)

SYMBOL ( 2012-01-19 )
LAST
CHANGE
STANDARD CHARTERED ( 11:35am )
1559.00
70.00 ( 4.76 %)
WOLSELEY PLC ( 11:35am )
2250.00
70.00 ( 3.20 %)
CARNIVAL ( 11:35am )
2017.00
46.00 ( 2.42 %)
LAND SECURITIES GROUP ( 11:35am )
679.50
36.50 ( 5.63 %)
WHITBREAD ( 11:35am )
1662.99
33.99 ( 2.09 %)

SYMBOL ( 2012-01-19 )
LAST
CHANGE
3M COMPANY ( 12:34pm )
85.78
0.71 ( 0.83 %)
BOEING CO ( 12:34pm )
75.70
0.64 ( 0.85 %)
JP MORGAN CHASE CO ( 12:34pm )
37.03
0.49 ( 1.33 %)
WAL MART STORES ( 12:34pm )
60.44
0.43 ( 0.72 %)
IBM ( 12:34pm )
181.50
0.43 ( 0.24 %)

SYMBOL ( 2012-01-19 )
LAST
CHANGE
F5 NETWORKS INC ( 12:11pm )
122.38
13.92 ( 11.80 %)
ICO GLOBAL COMM CL A ( 8:01pm )
99999999.99
9.37 ( 366.02 %)
PRICELINECOM INC ( 12:23pm )
525.40
6.57 ( 1.26 %)
AMAZONCOM INC ( 12:04pm )
195.65
6.21 ( 3.25 %)
MILLICOM INTERNATIONAL CELLULAR SA ( 4:00pm )
110.18
4.82 ( 4.43 %)

Gainers & Losers
Dow Jones
Euro Stoxx 50
FTSE 100
FTSE 250
FTSE AIM
FTSE ALL
Nasdaq

 Portfolio Manager

You must log in to access this area of the site. If you are not a registered user click here to sign up for instant access!


 Finance Explained

Money making ideas

Save money

Money management
Savings accounts
Investing money
Share dealing
Stock broker
Forex currency trading
Pension plans
Functions of Money

(c) 2007 ABCmoney.co.uk, All Rights Reserved
*ABCMoney.co.uk does not guarantee the accuracy of any share prices or stock quotations displayed. These are not real time quotes; all are delayed by at least twenty minutes and are for information purposes only.