Purdue Pharma, Executives Plead Guilty To Misbranding OxyContin, Fined $634.5M
Main Category: Pharma Industry / Biotech IndustryAlso Included In: Litigation / Medical Malpractice
Article Date: 15 May 2007 - 14:00 PDT
'Purdue Pharma, Executives Plead Guilty To Misbranding OxyContin, Fined $634.5M'
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Purdue Pharma and three of the company's current and former executives on Thursday pleaded guilty to misleading the public about the safety of its painkiller OxyContin and agreed to pay $634.5 million in fines, the Los Angeles Times reports. The settlement is one of the largest financial penalties ever imposed on a drug company, according to the Times. The office of the Western District of Virginia, which filed the case against Purdue for practices that occurred between 1996 and mid-2001, said the company made claims that OxyContin was less addictive than other painkillers and less subject to abuse, "despite warnings to the contrary from doctors, the media and members of its own sales force," the Times reports (Zimmerman, Los Angeles Times, 5/11). The company also claimed that OxyContin could be discontinued without feeling symptoms of withdrawal (Appleby/Davis, USA Today, 5/11). "Purdue trained its sales representatives to make false representations to health care providers about the difficulty of exacting oxycodone, the active ingredient, from the OxyContin tablet," according to FDA (Lopes, Washington Times, 5/11).
Purdue said the illegal acts occurred before July 2001, and the company has since changed its marketing practices and increased warnings about the drug. The company in a statement said, "We accept responsibility for those past misstatements and regret that they were made" (USA Today, 5/11). The settlement comes two days after Purdue agreed to pay $19.5 million in fines to 26 states and Washington, D.C., to settle claims that the company promoted the drug for off-label uses (Won Tesoriero, Wall Street Journal, 5/11).
Potential for Abuse
When OxyContin received approval, FDA said that the time-release aspect of OxyContin "is believed to reduce" the drug's potential for abuse. Sales representatives then falsely told doctors that the drug was less addictive and less likely to be abused than other painkillers, even though FDA's statement was not conclusive. Sales representatives also were allowed to draw their own fake scientific charts, which they distributed to physicians to show the safety of the drug, according to federal officials (Meier, New York Times, 5/11). In addition, the company in 1995 learned from focus groups that physicians were concerned about the drug's potential for abuse and, as a result, gave false information to sales representatives to pass on to physicians, U.S. Attorney John Brownlee said (AP/Baltimore Sun, 5/11).
Settlement
Under the settlement, Purdue pleaded guilty to one felony count of fraudulently misbranding a drug. The company will pay $600 million in fines, including $160 million to state and federal health care programs and $130 million to resolve private lawsuits now pending (Los Angeles Times, 5/11). Purdue CEO Michael Friedman, general counsel Howard Udell and former Chief Scientific Officer Paul Goldenheim each will pay a fine ranging from $7.5 million to $19 million. Friedman, Udell and Goldenheim will not serve jail time (Wall Street Journal, 5/11). Purdue in a statement said that the three executives "neither engaged in nor tolerated the misconduct at issue in this investigation" and that they admitted guilt under a legal principle that holds high-level officials accountable for illegal acts by others that occur at their drug companies. The statement continues, "To the contrary, they took steps to prevent any misstatements in the marketing or promotion of OxyContin and to correct any such misstatements of which they became aware" (Johnson, Washington Post, 5/11).
Broadcast Coverage
Several broadcast programs reported on the settlement. Summaries appear below.
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ABC's "World News": The segment includes comments from Brownlee; pharmacist Greg Stewart; Sidney Wolfe, director of Public Citizen's Health Research Group; and OxyContin users (Ross, "World News," ABC, 5/10). Video of the segment and expanded ABC News coverage are available online. ABC's "Brian Ross Investigates" webcast also reported on the case. The webcast is available online. "Brian Ross Investigates" also reported on work by Rudy Giuliani's consulting business, Giuliani Partners, for Purdue Pharma and other pharmaceutical companies. The coverage is available online.
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American Public Media's "Marketplace": The segment includes comments from Brownlee and Alex Sugarman-Brozan of Prescription Access Litigation (Palmer, "Marketplace," American Public Media, 5/10). Audio and a transcript of the segment are available online.
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CBS' "Evening News": The segment includes comments from Kim Rice of FDA; former HHS Secretary Joseph Califano; and family members of OxyContin users (Orr, "Evening News," CBS, 5/10). Video of the segment and expanded CBS News coverage are available online.
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NBC's "Nightly News": The segment includes a discussion with Pete Williams, NBC News justice correspondent, about the case (Williams, "Nightly News," NBC, 5/10). Video of the segment is available online.
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NPR's "All Things Considered": The segment includes comments from Brownlee and William Masello, assistant chief medical examiner for West Virginia (Zarroli, "All Things Considered," NPR, 5/10). Audio and a partial transcript of the segment are available online.
"Reprinted with permission from http://www.kaisernetwork.org. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, search the archives, or sign up for email delivery at http://www.kaisernetwork.org/dailyreports/healthpolicy. The Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report is published for kaisernetwork.org, a free service of The Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation . © 2005 Advisory Board Company and Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.
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MLA
26 May. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/70753.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/70753.php.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)
Where did the settlement money go?
posted by Bob on 27 Dec 2011 at 5:01 amSeveral weeks ago, I learned of the Purdue Pharma settlement and inquired of my US Rep as to what the disposition of the settlement funds was. I suggested that it should have been used to help those addicted to get "clean" although I still don't know what was done with the money and exactly who collected it. I see this as similar to the Big Tobacco settlement several years ago and would like to know. I have a personal interest in this as a family member is still in recovery after several years from her addiction.
Bob
Lock Pills Up
posted by Mark on 3 Apr 2011 at 8:24 pmIts almost funny how every not for profit agency continues to burn taxpayer and donated money on useless and ineffective educational materials when something as simple as locking up medications can prevent over 90% of all toddler and teen overdoses. Thats why I bought an RXDRUGSAFE.
just the facts
posted by Nicole on 2 Jan 2011 at 5:15 pmI agree Greg that people who truly need the drug should have axcess to it. Here is the thing though when Perdue made oxycontin it was supposed to be for people suffering severe pain. It was basically made for cancer patients in severe pain that no other medication on the market at the time was helping. But Perdue did not market the drug that way they marketed the drug for every type of pain from a pulled tooth to a broken arm. Not only that they falsely marketed the drug to doctors telling them that the pills were less addictive then the current pills on the market and other false statements that they new to be untrue. By putting this drug into the hands of anyone who claimed to have a headache it caused wide spread addiction. Had the pills properly been marketed which would mean that they were only written for people in severe pain such as cancer and lukemia patients the epidemic that we see today would not be here at least not to this extent.
IN PAIN WITH NO HELP
posted by greg cureton on 12 Nov 2010 at 10:23 amI myself, hate that any kids get hurt, but does this mean that people in pain have to suffer? I have been takeing Oxycontin for over 10 years and it is the only medication that has helped me. They have tried them all on me. For me it is the only medication that helps and gives me life. But, now I and many others, that suffer from pain have to go without our medication because of what kids do? To me and many others this is very immoral and not right. Kids are kids, watch all of your medications and talk to your kids about these things. But dont take it out on Purdue and pain suffers like myself. THANK YOU PURDUE FOR MAKING OXYCONTIN. IT HAS HELPED ME SO MUCH. GREG
Oxycontin/ Script Abuse By Teens LOCK UP YOUR MEDS!
posted by Parent of a Teenage prescription addict on 27 Mar 2008 at 6:33 pmI am not alone in this! Please read if you care about your children!
Do any of you realize how many teens today are addicted to Oxycontin or Percocet (and many other prescription medications?) Do you know your children may be and ARE raiding our medicine cabinets to take ANYTHING to give them a high. Oxycontin or Percocet are almost the same as using heroin!
We are having a country/world wide issue with prescription medications being stolen and abused by teens but some remain clueless so I am writing here to try to help, if one child is saved it's worth my time..
ANY narcotic (Oxycontin, Oxycodone, Percocet, Hydrocodone, Vicoden and many others) or benzodiazepams (Xanax, Klonopin, Ativan and Valium) can be abused and used by yours or my children! They can die from withdrawal from these drugs and/or alcohol. They will grind them up and snort/sniff them to get a faster high. The drink beer with high dose Xanax "logs or sticks" as they call them (2 mg.)
LOCK UP YOUR MEDICATIONS if you LOVE your children and don't want them to be addicted or DIE from an overdose. These drugs are also sold to our children by dealers for a high price.
Please lock up your medications always. I found out the hard way. :*( My child still go through the locking devices so get a SAFE and don't leave the combo out ever! Memorize it and destroy the initial combo as that can never be changed!
Home or labratory drug test your teens please and caution, there are things they can take to come up clean including DIURETICS so lock those up too. GNC sells things too and plain old aspirin is used to try to block the readings of these tests.
As some use diuretics to come up clean on a drug screening lock up Lasix or blood pressure diuretics.
There are programs you can use to monitor your childs computer use (keystrokes are recorded.) You might be shocked by what you find, the perfect child may not be so perfect after all.
Do any of you realize how many teens today are using and/or addicted to Oxycontin or Percocet today (and many other prescription medications?) Do you know your children may be and ARE raiding our medicine cabinets to take ANYTHING to give them a high. Oxycontin or Percocet are almost the same as using heroin!
We are having a country/world wide issue with prescription medications being stolen and abused by teens but some remain clueless. ANY narcotic (Oxycontin, Percocet, Hydrocodone, Vicoden and many others) or benzodiazepams (Xanax, Klonopin, Ativan and Valium) can be abused and used by yours or my children! They can die from withdrawl from these drugs and/or alcohol. They will grind them up and snort/sniff them to get a faster high.
LOCK UP YOUR MEDICATIONS if you LOVE your children and don't want them to be addicted or DIE from an overdose. These drugs are also sold to our children by dealers for a high price.
Please lock up your medications always. I found out the hard way. :*(
Home or labratory drug test your teens and caution, there are things they can take to come up clean including DIURETICS so lock those up too.
Also, some use diuretics to come up clean on a drug screening so lock up Lasix or blood pressure diuretics.
There are programs you can use to monitor your child's computer use (keystrokes are recorded.) You might be shocked by what you find, the perfect child may not be so perfect after all. I found this out about my own child at age 15. He is still battling addictive tendencies. 12 step programs are the way to go, NA, AA etc.
Please watch out for your children, if you don't who will?
Sad parent of a teenage addict.
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