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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CIV
MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 2009 (202) 514-2007
WWW.JUSTICE.GOV TDD (202) 514-1888
FOUR PHARMACEUTICAL COMPANIES PAY $124 MILLION
FOR SUBMISSION OF FALSE CLAIMS TO MEDICAID
WASHINGTON – Mylan Pharmaceuticals, UDL Laboratories,
AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals and Ortho McNeil Pharmaceutical have
entered into settlement agreements for a total of $124 million to
resolve claims that they violated the False Claims Act by failing
to pay appropriate rebates to state Medicaid programs for drugs
paid for by those programs, the Justice Department announced
today.
The Medicaid Prescription Drug Rebate Program was enacted by
Congress in 1990 out of concern for the costs the Medicaid was
paying for outpatient drugs. By agreeing to participate in the
Medicaid Rebate Program and signing these rebate agreements, the
four companies agreed to pay quarterly rebates to Medicaid that
were based upon the amount of money that health care program paid
for each company’s drugs. The precise amount of a rebate is
determined in part by whether a drug is considered an “innovator”
drug or a “non-innovator” drug. The rebate that must be paid for
innovator drugs is higher than the rebate for non-innovator
drugs.
Each of the companies agreed to pay a settlement to resolve
allegations that it had sold innovator drugs that were manufactured
by other companies and had classified those drugs as non-innovator
drugs for Medicaid rebate purposes. As a result of the improper
classification of these drugs, the companies underpaid their rebate
obligations under the Medicaid Rebate Program.
Mylan and UDL agreed to pay $118 million to resolve allegations
that they underpaid their rebate obligations with respect to
several Mylan drugs (nifedipine extended release tablets,
flecainide acetate, selegiline HCL, Orphenadrine Citrate Aspirin
and Caffeine tablets, Triamterene/Hydrochlorothiazide, Propoxyphene
HCL, Propoxyphene HCL/Aspirin/Caffeine, Prophyxphene
Napsylate/Acetaminophen, Ibuprofen tablets, Bumetanide, Cephalexin
and Cefactor) and several UDL drugs (nifedipine extended release
tablets, selegiline HCL, Triamterene & HCTZ, Propox Naps &
APAP, Flecainide Acetate, Trihexyphenidyl, Ranitidine HCL syrup,
Sucralfate Suspension, Selegiline HCL and Bumetanide). Because the
Medicaid program is funded by both the federal and state
governments, the federal government received $60,896,476.00, the
states $49,824,389.00 of the settlement amount and $7,279,135.00
will be paid to entities that participated in the Public Health
Service’s Drug Pricing Program.
Separately, AstraZeneca paid $2.6 million ($1.43 million to the
federal government and $1.17 million to the states) to resolve
allegations that it underpaid its rebate obligations with respect
to Albuterol. Ortho McNeil paid $3.4 million ($1.87 million to the
federal government and $1.53 million to the states) to resolve
allegations that it underpaid its rebate obligations with respect
to Dermatop.
“The Civil Division will continue to work with our state
partners to ensure that Medicaid programs, which provide health
care to more than 58 million Americans, receives the same discounts
that any larger insurer gets," Tony West, Assistant Attorney
General for the Civil Division, said. "These cases exemplify the
strong cooperation between the Department of Justice and the states
in protecting American taxpayers."
This case was brought under the False Claims Act, which allows
for private persons to file suits on behalf of the government. The
whistleblower, Ven-A-Care, a corporation located in Key West, Fla.
will receive a total of $10,787,392 as its share of today’s
recovery.
“These settlements are the culmination of several years of hard
work on the part of the government’s investigators and attorneys,”
said John P. Kacavas, U.S. Attorney for the District of New
Hampshire. “ The settlement with Mylan and UDL is the largest
health care fraud recovery that the U.S. Attorney’s Office in New
Hampshire has ever obtained. The settlements show that the
government is committed to identifying health care fraud and
ensuring that companies that benefit from doing business with the
government agree to play by the rules.”
This case was handled by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the
District of New Hampshire and the Commercial Litigation Branch of
the Justice Department’s Civil Division with assistance from the
Medicaid Fraud section within the New Hampshire Attorney General’s
Office, as well as the National Association of Medicaid Fraud
Control Units. The case was investigated by members of the Office
of Investigations of the Office of Inspector General of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services.
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