A large group of U.S. state attorneys general on Tuesday sought to expand a lawsuit alleging price fixing of generic drugs to 18 companies and 15 medicines on Tuesday, including Novartis AG`s generic unit Sandoz and India-based Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd.

COMMERCIAL BREAK
SCROLL TO CONTINUE READING

The lawsuit, brought by the attorneys general of 45 states and the District of Columbia, describes an industry-wide conspiracy in which companies divide up the market as a way to push up prices.

"It is our belief that price-fixing is systematic, it is pervasive, and that a culture of collusion exists in the industry," Connecticut Attorney General George Jepsen, who is leading the case, said at a news conference on Tuesday.

The original complaint, filed in December, targeted Emcure Pharmaceuticals` unit Heritage Pharmaceuticals Inc, Aurobindo Pharma USA Inc, Citron Pharma LLC, Mayne Pharma USA Inc, Mylan Pharmaceuticals Inc and Teva Pharmaceuticals USA Inc.

The states are now seeking to file a new complaint that would add Sandoz, Sun, Endo International PLC`s unit Par Pharmaceutical, Dr. Reddy`s Laboratories, Apotex Corp, Glenmark Generics Ltd, Lannett Company Inc, Alkem Laboratories Ltd`s unit Ascend Laboratories and Cadila Healthcare Ltd`s unit Zydus Pharmaceuticals Inc.

The new complaint would also sue Rajiv Malik, president and executive director of Mylan, and Satish Mehta, chief executive officer and managing director of Emcure.

Big players in the multi-billion dollar generic drug industry stand accused of conspiring to boost prices in a marketplace intended to deliver lower prices to consumers.

The original lawsuit centered on just two medicines: a delayed-release version of a common antibiotic, doxycycline hyclate; and glyburide, an older drug used to treat diabetes.

According to Jepsen`s office, the amended complaint expands the number of drugs to include glipizide-metformin and glyburide-metformin, which are among the most commonly used diabetes treatments.

Others include: acetazolamide, which is used to treat glaucoma and epilepsy; the antibiotic doxycycline monohydrate; the blood pressure medicine fosinopril; the anti-anxiety medicine meprobamate; and the calcium channel blocking agent nimodipine.

The U.S. Department of Justice is conducting a parallel criminal investigation. On Friday, the department asked the Pennsylvania court presiding over the lawsuit to put the lawsuit`s discovery process on hold, saying it could interfere with the criminal probe.

Connecticut Assistant Attorney General Joseph Nielsen said Tuesday that the states would likely oppose that request, which could slow the lawsuit.

(This article has not been edited by Zeebiz editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)