Biotech and Pharma

US sues drugmakers $1 billion for upping prices

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission seeks a settlement of $1 billion or more from pharmaceutical companies it has sued for delaying the sale of cheaper medicines after patents on brand-name drugs may have expired, an FTC official told a legal conference on Friday.

Steve Cole Images | E+ | Getty Images

The antitrust agency alleges that the way drugmakers settle patent-related lawsuits hurts consumers by making drugs more expensive. In the settlements, makers of brand-name drugs pay millions of dollars to generics companies while they delay putting their products on the U.S. market.

In June, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the FTC may challenge the deals in federal courts.

Read More

A panel moderator at the American Bar Association's spring antitrust meeting asked Deborah Feinstein, the director of the FTC's Bureau of Competition, what developments to expect in the coming year.

"My hope is that we get a billion-dollar settlement in one of the patent-settlement, pay-for-delay cases,'' Feinstein responded, giving no indication that any settlement was imminent. The FTC's long-running lawsuits are not close to going to trial.

Why drugs cost less outside the US
VIDEO1:5101:51
Why drugs cost less outside the US

"In all truth, that is one of the biggest priorities we have,'' she said. "The consumer harm there is extremely significant, and so we have a tremendous amount of resources there and hope to come out with a victory one way or another in those cases.''

Defendants in the lawsuits include Solvay Pharmaceuticals, owned by AbbVie; Actavis, previously Watson Pharmaceuticals; Paddock Laboratories, part of Perrigo; ; and Cephalon, owned by Teva.

Generic drugmakers like the "pay for delay'' arrangements because if they bring out their products before patent-infringement litigation is over, they run the risk of paying triple damages on sales if they are found to have infringed.

Read MoreBiotech CEO looks down the pipeline for growth

The FTC shares antitrust authority in the United States with the U.S. Justice Department.

—By Reuters