Transcript kamp_4

The Growing Role of
HHS-IG/DOJ,
& Whistleblowers,
In Drug Marketing
Policy
John F. Kamp
August 25, 2005
Pharmaceutical Industry Cases
Since 2000
Total fines: approx. $ 3.1 Billion
TAP - $ 885 Million
Abbott - $ 600 Million
Pfizer - $430 Million
AstraZeneca - $ 355 Million
Schering-Plough - $345 Million
Bayer A.G. - $ 257 Million
GlaxoSmithKline - $ 88 Million
Pfizer-$49 Million
Dey Laboratories - $ 19 Million
BayerA.G. $ 14 Million
OIG/DOJ/US Attorneys Offices
OIG Fraud Alert: Prescription Drug
Marketing Schemes – August 1994
False Claims Act
Qui Tam Actions (Whistle blowers)
Anti-kickback Law
FDA Act
Qui Tam Action
enables persons with evidence of fraudulent
wrong doing to sue for recovery of illgotten gains on behalf of the government
and to retain a share of the proceeds
Drug Marketing Allegations
False Claims Act prohibits the filing of a
false claim or the causing of the filing of a
false claim
Medicaid will not pay for prescription drugs
unless the use of the drug is in labeling or is
listed in specific compendia
The majority of prescriptions for some
drugs are for off-label uses.
One Example
United States of America and David Franklin,
Relator v. Parke-Davis
Alleges that Parke-Davis “engaged in fraudulent
scheme to promote sale of Rx drugs for off-label
uses
Illegal marketing campaign caused submission of
false claims to VA and to the federal government
for Medicaid benefits
Allegations in Parke-Davis
DOJ press release June 7,
2004
“Warner-Lambert promoted
Neurontin even when
scientific studies had shown
it was not effective”
Allegations in Parke-Davis
(cont'd)
DOJ press release June 7, 2004
Sponsored “independent medical
education” with extensive input from
Warner-Lambert regarding topics,
speakers, content and participants.”
The Pathway
“Parke-Davis markets Neurontin to doctors,
who prescribe it for their patients,
who take the prescriptions to their
pharmacists,
who file claims for Medicaid
reimbursement”
The Issue
The Court said: “the only issue is whether ParkeDavis ‘caused to be presented’ a false claim, and §
3729 does not require that the “cause” be fraudulent
or otherwise independently unlawful.
What it means is that: Even the dissemination of
“valid” off-label information can make you liable
under the FCA.
How would you establish the validity of off-label
information?
The Result
Pfizer pled guilty to two criminal counts of
violating the Federal Food Drug &
Cosmetic Act for misbranding the drug and
for introducing an unapproved drug into
interstate commerce
Investigations
OIG I US Attorneys
(Boston and Philadelphia in the lead)
Looking for paper trails regarding
proactive campaigns for off-label use
Position descriptions
Performance evaluations
Email I Voice mail directives
Where do drug marketing practices cross the
line?
Investigations of FCA Cases
Financial incentives for off-label use
Failure to identify the company’s funding for
CME programs about the off-label use
Health consequences
Disparate promotional activity and resources for
an approved use with a small market
May be used to open the door to broader
marketing investigation
Federal Anti-Kickback Law
The knowing and willful act of:
Offering or paying cash or any in-kind
remuneration to providers to induce the
ordering or purchasing of products that are
covered by and ultimately paid for under
federal health care programs
Anti-Kickback Law
Prohibits in the health care industry some practice that
are common in other business sectors
Criminal prohibition against payments in any form
made purposefully to induce or reward the referral or
generation of Federal health care business
If any one purpose of the remuneration may be to
induce or reward the referral or recommendation of
business payable in whole or part by a Federal health
care program
Affects Traditional Activities
Providing consulting and auditing services
to customers
Use of physician consultants and advisors
Providing trips to conferences and seminars
“Unrestricted educational grants” to MCOs,
medical practices, and hospitals
Corporate Integrity
Agreements
Not limited to conduct in plea bargain
Will evaluate policies and practices:
Physicians as speakers, consultants and as members of
advisory boards
Sponsorship of meetings, social events, etc.
Educational, clinical and research grants
Gifts
Samples
Customer assistance programs
OIG Guidance
The PhRMA Code “provides useful and
practical advice for reviewing and structuring
these relationships”
“Although compliance with the PhRMA Code
will not protect a manufacturer as a matter of
law under the anti-kickback statute, it will
substantially reduce the risk of fraud and abuse
and help demonstrate a good faith effort to
comply with the applicable federal health care
program requirements”
State Attorneys General
Multi-state investigations
Based on a variety of statutes prohibiting
false claims or unfair or deceptive
marketing practices
May affect state Medicaid programs
Seek money damages and costs
Who Else Watching?
More than 35 state Attorneys General
would like to repeat the success of the
nationwide campaign against tobacco
Class-action law suits from consumer
groups alleging false and deceptive
marketing
Serious Policy Questions
Off label use important to the public health
FDA recognizes “Safe Harbors”
Independent CME
Scientific Exchange
Reponses to Legitimate Questions
Statutory Provisions
FDA v. WLF
Serious Policy Issues
WLF Letter to Department of Justice,
March 2005
Appropriate DOJ Policy Oversight
Patient Needs v. Lowering Cost
Primacy of the FDA
Middle Ground Support
First Amendment Challenge
Coalition Public Response
Public Policy Dialogue Needed
Danger to Public Health
Professional Judgment of Doctors
Value of FDA Expertise
See Coalition Statement:
www.cohealthcom.org