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Monday, August 12, 2019

Humana calls Mallinckrodt Acthar a ‘$1B golden goose’ in $700M fraud lawsuit

Mallinckrodt is getting burned on all sides as federal prosecutors scope out the drugmaker’s controversial H.P. Acthar Gel marketing and price hikes. Now, one of the largest U.S. insurers is looking to pile on.
Humana overpaid for Acthar by $700 million because of Mallinckrodt’s widespread campaign to stifle competition and pay doctors and patients to choose the pricey med, the insurer said in a new federal lawsuit in California.
Humana accused Mallinckrodt of a “complex, multipart scheme involving monopoly, bribery, racketeering, fraud, and other deceptive and unfair practices” to fuel the drug’s skyrocketing price increases and induce physicians to boost prescriptions. Mallinckrodt acquired Acthar in 2014 as part of a $5.6 billion purchase of Questcor, which has landed the U.K. drugmaker in a raft of legal problems since its buyout.
Humana did not provide a statement on the lawsuit, citing a “longstanding policy not to comment on pending litigation.”
A Mallinckrodt spokesman could not be reached for comment by press time.

Mallinckrodt has maintained that most of Acthar’s price hikes—which amounted to an 85,000% increase from 2001 to 2017—occurred before the Questcor purchase. However, the drugmaker has continued routine price hikes since it acquired Acthar, which a Mallinckrodt spokesman previously described as “modest price adjustments in the mid-single digit percentage range.”
Humana said price increases for “billion-dollar golden goose” Achtar were purposefully instituted to counteract the drug’s flagging sales and limited market.
Those price hikes were only the tip of the iceberg for Mallinckrodt, which recently inked a $15.4 million settlement with the Justice Department on kickback charges stemming from two whistleblower lawsuits. In early June, the drugmaker closed the book on those charges but immediately faced a new set of accusations from the feds that it funneled money through front funds to illegally subsidize Medicare copays and jack up the drug’s list price.

The drugmaker has also been under fire for its generic opioids marketing, one of a slew of opioid makers facing nationwide litigation.
Last week, Mallinckrodt announced it would delay a spinoff of its specialty generics business as potential settlements in numerous opioid lawsuits against the company have created uncertainty about the to-be-independent unit’s future cash flow.
Mallinckrodt’s spinoff plan, announced in December, would create a new company under the Mallinckrodt name consisting of its specialty generics products including oxycodone, active pharmaceutical ingredients and the constipation drug Amitiza.
What’s left over—the company’s specialty brands, including H.P. Acthar Gel—would operate under a new, as-yet-undetermined name and without the burden of potentially hefty opioid liabilities.

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