- Joint Effort Needed to Unwind Stimulus: APEC Leaders
- Obama to Outline Strategy to Boost US Exports to Asia
- Friday May See 'Risk Trade' Stalling; Dollar in Focus
- Former Bankers Look to Buy Failing Banks: Report
- Job Market Politics to Keep Interest Rates Low
- AIG, Symbol of Crisis, Watches Its Stock Zoom Back
- Cities With the Most Home Price Reductions
- JAP Posts $1.5 Billion Loss, No Guidance
- Disney Profit, Sales Top Street Forecasts; Shares Jump
- EXCERPTS and IMAGES: Warren Buffett & Bill Gates - Keeping America Great
- Microsoft's Bill Gates Praises Apple's Steve Jobs For 'Saving the Company'
- Gold Is a Bad Inflation Hedge—Like Oil: Stock Picker
- Intel's Andy Bryant Offers An Explanation
- US 'Actively Working' on Weaker Dollar: Fund Manager
- Options Boil on Biotech Buyout Rumors
- Warren Buffett's $100,000 Offer and $500,000 Advice for Columbia Business School Students
- Activision Blizzard's "Modern Warfare 2" Sales Break Records
- 5-Star Manager's 5 Stocks for Changing Markets
- US commerce secretary: Trade pacts must wait
- French economy expands 0.3 pct in Q3
- Iberia reports euro16.4 million Q3 loss
- Chesapeake crabbers not going for Va.'s buyout
- UK's Balfour Beatty acquires SpawMaxwell of Texas
- China rejects $28B in steel, chemical projects
- Boeing says first 747-8 emerges from factory
- Family hurt in Texas pipeline explosion files suit
- Vegas nightclub owners file for bankruptcy in Fla.
NEW YORK - Biotechnology giant Amgen Inc and drug wholesaler AmerisourceBergen Corp were sued on Friday by 14 U.S. states and the District of Columbia over an alleged kickback scheme designed to boost sales of Amgen's popular anemia drug, Aranesp.
New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo announced the lawsuit, which was filed in federal court in Boston.
It joins a related whistleblower lawsuit filed in the same court in 2006 and is one of many lawsuits accusing drugmakers of illegally marketing their products.
"Drugs should be prescribed to patients on the basis of need, effectiveness, and safety, not on a corporate giant's promise of an all-expense paid vacation," Cuomo said in a statement.
He said Amgen's bribing of doctors "left taxpayers footing the bill for free drug samples."
The lawsuit alleges Amgen and two AmerisourceBergen units, International Nephrology Network and ASD Healthcare, conspired to encourage doctors to bill third party payers such as Medicaid for Aranesp that was provided at no cost.
It said this resulted in "thousands of false claims to be paid by the state Medicaid programs that were ineligible for payment," causing millions of dollars of damages.
The lawsuit also alleges that kickbacks, including "sham consultancy agreements and weekend junkets," were made to medical providers to induce them to buy and prescribe Aranesp.
ARANESP SALES FALLING
Amgen spokesman David Polk said the allegations lack merit and that Thousand Oaks, California-based Amgen expects its employees to follow a code of conduct.
Michael Kilpatric, an AmerisourceBergen spokesman, said the Chesterbrook, Pennsylvania-based company is cooperating with a U.S. Department of Justice subpoena related to issues in the case. He said the company has had no contact with the state attorneys general and expects to defend itself vigorously.
A Justice Department representative was not immediately available for comment.
Worldwide sales of Aranesp, once Amgen's best-selling drug, totaled about $3.1 billion in 2008, Amgen said in its latest annual report.
Sales have fallen from $4.1 billion in 2006, when high doses of an older but similar Amgen anemia drug were linked to increased heart attack rates in kidney patients.
OTHER DRUGMAKERS SETTLE MARKETING CHARGES
Over the last several years, Bristol-Myers Squibb Co, Merck & Co Inc and Schering Plough Corp have each agreed to pay hundreds of millions of dollars to settle lawsuits or probes that in part alleged improper marketing of drugs.
And in February, federal investigators accused Forest Laboratories Inc of improperly marketing the antidepressants, Celexa and Lexapro, for use in children and paying kickbacks to doctors to do so.
Others involved in the Amgen case are California, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York, Tennessee and Virginia, as well as the District of Columbia.
Amgen shares closed 56 cents down at $53.73 and AmerisourceBergen fell 51 cents to $22.15.
The case is United States of America et al v. Amgen Inc, U.S. District Court, District of Massachusetts, No. 06-10972.
- Warren Buffett and Bill Gates spoke to Columbia students, and Buffett made the students a startling offer.
- They may have wrecked their companies or saved our economy. Tell us what you think.
- Big pharma embraces social media, but how much should a tightly regulated sector say on Facebook or Twitter?
- A European dating site finds lovelorn singles from one country to be consistently uglier. Which is it?
- Contributor David Pogue looks at two of the latest efforts to perfect the digital pocket camera.
- PepsiCo is ramping up its onsite health facilities for workers.









