Feature

Drugmakers blamed for blocking generics have cost U.S. billions


 


Actelion was acquired by Johnson & Johnson’s pharmaceutical arm, Janssen, in 2017.

Actelion spokeswoman Colleen Wilson said that the company “cooperate[s]” with makers of generic drugs and “has responded to all requests it has received directly from generic manufacturers seeking access to its medications for bioequivalence testing.”

PhRMA, the trade group for makers of brand-name pharmaceuticals, said the FDA’s list was somewhat unfair because it lacked context and responses from those it represents.

“While we must continue to foster a competitive marketplace, PhRMA is concerned that FDA’s release of the ‘inquiries’ it has received lacks proper context and conflates a number of divergent scenarios,” said PhRMA spokesman Andrew Powaleny.

Pages

Recommended Reading

MDedge Daily News: Research reveals surprises in mental health and gun violence
MDedge Neurology
Zika topped Lyme in 2016
MDedge Neurology
MDedge Daily News: Do HPV vaccines really cut cancer risk?
MDedge Neurology
White House targets CHIP, CMMI for budget cuts
MDedge Neurology
New Medicare cards
MDedge Neurology
White House pushes transparency in drug price plan
MDedge Neurology
Patients who record office visits
MDedge Neurology
Two more and counting: Suicide in medical trainees
MDedge Neurology
FDA’s Gottlieb floats ideas on Medicare drug coverage
MDedge Neurology
Specialty practices hire more physician assistants and nurse practitioners
MDedge Neurology