Maryland Charges Opioid Maker with Major MisconductTop Stories

September 07, 2018 12:14
Maryland Charges Opioid Maker with Major Misconduct

(Image source from: NBC Boston)

Attorney General of Maryland on Thursday charged that opioid maker Insys Therapeutics and local healthcare providers gave a powerful opioid to patients who did not need it, and exacerbated the opioid epidemic in the state.

Maryland wants Insys to pay the state over $20 million it made in revenue from its alleged conduct.

Maryland is the latest state to target an opioid maker for deceiving consumers or concealing the abuse potential of opioids.

"The allegations against Insys describe a calculated scheme employing doctors, pharmacists, and sales reps to increase profits and market share at the expensive of the health and well-being of vulnerable patients," said Attorney General Brian Frosh in a statement Thursday.

The state charges that through a speaker program, Insys paid doctors thousands of dollars with the hopes of writing more prescriptions of Subsys, an extremely potent opioid used only for treating cancer pain. If a doctor did not fill out enough prescriptions, they did not get invited to the program anymore.

While the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) only sanctioned the drug for patients with cancer pain, Maryland doctors prescribed it for lesser pain symptoms like knee or back pain, the state said in a release. A doctor can prescribe a drug for a condition that is unapproved by the FDA, which was the case with Subsys.

The state adds that Insys created a sophisticated system in which employees misrepresented diagnoses and illnesses to get reimbursement from insurers for inappropriate prescriptions.

"The charges indicate that Insys, knowing that Subsys prescriptions were very inappropriate and unsafe, instructed its representatives to mislead patients’ insurers on almost every call," the state said.

Frosh is seeking to get Insys to drop the scheme, return the revenue it got through it, and pay civil penalties for each violation of the state's Consumer Protection Act.

Insys told the Washington Examiner that it does not commend on pending legal proceedings. The company said back in February that it is complying with the state's investigation into the company.

Maryland is the latest state to target opioid makers as the opioid epidemic that federal data shows claimed more than 42,000 lives in 2016 fits of rage on.

Over 20 states have sued the drug company Purdue Pharma, maker of popular opioid painkiller Oxycontin, for deceiving the public on the abuse potential of the drug.

By Sowmya Sangam

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