Pharmaceutical Kickbacks

Right now the pharmaceutical industry is in the middle of its biggest challenge in history. Whistleblowers have exposed and continue to expose fraudulent practices ranging from pricing issues to sales and marketing practices at a rate never anticipated by either the pharmaceutical industry or the Department of Justice. Settlements and jury verdicts have been headline grabbing and large, attracting the attention of pharma, regulators, Congress and taxpayers. The qui tam pharmaceutical fraud cases settled since 2000 alone have amounted to over 3.5 billion dollars, representing various patterns of fraud. We expect to see some new patterns as time goes by, especially with the new Medicare prescription drug benefit. Pharmaceutical fraud is still abundant and this blog is intended to keep readers up to date with all pharmaceutical fraud related news and to provide commentary when warranted. This blog also contains an array of laws and regulations concerning the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act set out in an easy to read format.

FDA’s Postmarketing Studies and Clinical Trials Draft Guidance Gets Supported By Public Citizen

by Nolan and Auerbach on November 2, 2009

In an October 13 letter to the FDA, the well respected consumer advocacy organization Public Citizen, gave a strong endorsement to the FDA Draft Guidance on Postmarketing Studies and Clinical Trials. In letter, Public Citizen’s Deputy Director Peter Lurie MD, MPH, and Sidney M. Wolfe, MD, wrote: “Public Citizen has reviewed the draft guidance in detail and supports its purpose and approach. The guidance makes a sensible distinction between studies that are for efficacy purposes only (“postmarketing commitments….”) and those that have any significant safety element (“postmarketing requirements….”). The categories of studies that can fall under postmarketing requirements (observational studies, clinical trials, animal studies, in vitro studies, pharmacokinetic studies, and interaction/bioavailability studies) are appropriately broad. We urge you to resist any efforts to weaken the draft guidance.” (Emphasis supplied)

To review the draft guidance, go to: http://www.regulations.gov/search/Regs/home.html#documentDetail?R=09000064809f1ed1.

For more information about qui tam law and health care fraud, contact Nolan and Auerbach, PA.

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