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BioWorld - Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Home » courts

Articles Tagged with ''courts''

US senators to HHS: Enforce 340B Rx discounts

Oct. 3, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) needs to do more and act faster to crack down on drug manufacturers that restrict 340B prescription drug discounts to contract pharmacies, two senators said in a letter to HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra.
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Biogen to pay $900M to end whistleblower suit

Sep. 27, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
While it continues to deny all kickback allegations raised in a whistleblower suit filed seven years ago, Biogen Inc. agreed Sept. 26 to pay $900 million to resolve claims that it paid doctors in the U.S. to prescribe its multiple sclerosis drugs from 2009 through March 2014.
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Drift aside, US Fed Circuit lets Eagle soar above infringement claims

Aug. 18, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
It pays to read the details of patent specifications. By keeping the pH range of its generic vasopressin injection at least 0.01 below that specified for Vasostrict, Eagle Pharmaceuticals Inc. cleared itself from claims that it had infringed two key patents protecting the brand drug.
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Attempt to hijack shelved weight loss drug ends in guilty plea

Aug. 16, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
Alain Bouaziz, a French citizen and resident of the United Arab Emirates, pleaded guilty Aug. 12 to one count of lying to the U.S. FDA in an attempt to steal a discontinued Novartis AG weight loss drug. The charge carries a maximum prison term of five years and a fine of up to $250,000, or twice the gain or loss caused by the offense, whichever is greatest.
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Nothing misleading here, US First Circuit tells Karyopharm investors

Aug. 9, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
An investor’s wish to know more about the total landscape of a drug candidate is not enough, on its own, to make a company’s disclosures about the drug and its development materially misleading. So said the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in affirming the dismissal of a shareholder suit against Karyopharm Therapeutics Inc. and its executive officers.
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US court: When it comes to patents, numbers don’t count

Aug. 2, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
How many patents does it take to violate U.S. antitrust law? That question isn’t a lead-in to a lame joke. Neither is it a valid question for a patent challenge, according to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, which Aug. 1 affirmed the dismissal of a payer suit against Abbvie Inc. that claimed the North Chicago drug company violated the Sherman Antitrust Act when it obtained 132 patents on Humira (adalimumab) and then invoked them against biosimilars.
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Oxycodone pills and bottle

Teva’s cost of ending US opioid suits could add up to $4.35B

July 27, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
It’s not a done deal yet, but Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. has agreed in principle to pay up to $4.25 billion, plus about $100 million to Native American tribes, to end most of the lawsuits it’s facing across the U.S. over its opioid sales. The figure includes settlements the company already has made with some state and local governments, as well as the supply of up to $1.2 billion worth of Teva’s generic naloxone nasal spray.
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US appeals court denies copay help for only treatment for rare heart disease

July 26, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
Although Pfizer Inc. has the only drugs approved in the U.S. to treat a rare, progressive heart disease, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit agreed this week with the Department of Health and Human Services, and a lower court, that Pfizer’s proposed copay assistance program for middle-income Americans covered by Medicare would violate the federal Anti-Kickback Statute – even if the company has no “corrupt” intent.
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More guilty pleas in clinical trial fraud

July 21, 2022
Two study coordinators at the Miami-based Tellus Clinical Research Inc. pleaded guilty July 20 in connection with a conspiracy to falsify data in trials evaluating treatments for medical conditions including opioid dependency, irritable bowel syndrome and diabetic nephropathy.
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U.S. Supreme Court

Future of skinny-label generics rests with US Supreme Court

July 14, 2022
By Mari Serebrov
As a last-ditch effort to preserve skinny labeling for generics, Teva Pharmaceuticals USA Inc. is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to review a Federal Circuit split opinion in Glaxosmithkline plc v. Teva Pharmaceuticals that upset the status quo of the generic marketplace.
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