Rebate

$3.89 Million Settlement reached in Whistleblower lawsuit with Heart Device Manufacturer and Hospitals in Ohio & Kentucky

Settlement Amount: 
$3,898,300

A settlement has been reached in a whistleblower class action lawsuit brought against St. Jude Medical Inc, Parma Community General Hospital, and Norton Healthcare. They are accused of violating the False Claims Act in relation to certain illegal kickbacks to secure heart-device business.

Under the terms of the settlement, St. Jude, headquartered in St. Paul, Minn., will pay $3,725,000. Parma Community General Hospital, located in Parma, Ohio, will pay $40,000, and Norton Healthcare in Louisville, Ky., will pay $133,300. The government asserted that Parma and Norton were recipients of improper rebates from St. Jude.  The reward for the whistleblower will be $640,050.

The whistleblower case was originally filed in 2006. The United States alleged that St. Jude paid illegal kickbacks to two hospitals to secure heart-device business and that these kickbacks caused false claims to be submitted to federal health care programs in violation of the False Claims Act. The kickbacks included alleged rebates that were "retroactive" and paid based on a hospital’s previous purchases of St. Jude heart-device equipment and rebates that St. Jude paid for purchases of heart-device equipment sold by its competitors to induce purchases of similar equipment from St. Jude in the future.

Sort Amount: 
3898300.00

$124 Million Settlement reached in Whistleblower lawsuit with Four Pharmaceutical Companies

Settlement Amount: 
$124,000,000

A settlement has been reached in a whistleblower class action lawsuit brought against Mylan Pharmaceuticals, UDL Laboratories, AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals and Ortho McNeil Pharmaceutical.  They are accused of failing to pay appropriate rebates to state Medicaid programs for drugs paid for by those programs.

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 whistleblower will receive a $10,787,392 share of the total recovery.

Filed in 2010, the United States alleged that all four companies 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. 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.

Sort Amount: 
124000000.00

$95.5 Million Settlement reached in Whistleblower case with Aventis Pharmaceutical Inc

Settlement Amount: 
$95,500,000

A settlement has been reached in a whistleblower class action lawsuit brought against Aventis Pharmaceutical Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of sanofi-aventis U.S. LLC.  Aventis is accused of misreporting drug prices in order to reduce its Medicaid Drug Rebate obligations.

According to the settlement, the federal recovery is approximately $49 million. Aventis will also pay over $40 million to the Medicaid participating states, and over $6 million to certain public health services entities who paid inflated prices for the drugs at issue.

The United States complaint alleged that between 1995 and 2000, Aventis and its corporate predecessors knowingly misreported best prices for the steroid-based anti-inflammatory nasal sprays Azmacort, Nasacort and Nasacort AQ. Under the Medicaid Drug Rebate Statute, Aventis was required to report to Medicaid the lowest, or "best" price that it charged commercial customers, and pay quarterly rebates to the states based on those reported prices.

 

In order to avoid triggering a new best price that would obligate it to pay millions of dollars in additional drug rebates to Medicaid, Aventis entered into "private label" agreements with the HMO Kaiser Permanente that simply repackaged Aventis’s drugs under a new label. As a result, Aventis underpaid drug rebates to the Medicaid program and overcharged certain Public Health Service entities for these products.

Sort Amount: 
95500000.00
Company: 
Aventis Pharmaceutical
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