Avanir Pharmaceuticals Agrees to Pay More than $108 Million
in Criminal Penalties and Forfeiture and Civil Damages and Agrees to Cooperate
with Indictments against Four Individuals
Avanir Pharmaceuticals (Avanir), a pharmaceutical
manufacturer based in Aliso Viejo, California, was charged for paying kickbacks
to a physician to induce prescriptions of its drug Nuedexta, the Department of
Justice announced today. The Northern
District of Ohio also announced indictments of four individuals, including
former Avanir employees and one of the top prescribers of Nuedexta in the
country, who were involved in the kickback scheme. Avanir has also agreed to pay over $95
million to resolve civil False Claims Act allegations of kickbacks as well as
its false and misleading marketing of Nuedexta to providers in long term care
facilities to induce them to prescribe it for behaviors commonly associated
with dementia patients, which is not an approved use of the drug.
“Kickbacks have the power to corrupt a provider’s medical
judgment,” said Assistant Attorney Jody Hunt of the Department of Justice’s
Civil Division. “And it is particularly
concerning when a pharmaceutical company uses kickbacks to drive up sales in
connection with a vulnerable population, such as elderly patients in nursing
care facilities.”
As alleged in a one-count Information filed today in the
United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, Avanir
violated the Anti-Kickback Statute by paying a doctor to induce him to become a
high prescriber of Nuedexta to beneficiaries of federal healthcare programs,
offering him financial incentives to write additional Nuedexta prescriptions
for beneficiaries of federal healthcare programs, and inducing him to recommend
that other physicians prescribe Nuedexta to beneficiaries of federal healthcare
programs. Nuedexta is approved by the
Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of pseudobulbar affect (PBA),
which is characterized by involuntary, sudden, and frequent episodes of
laughing or crying, and occurs secondary to a neurologic disease or brain
injury.
The Northern District of Georgia also announced a deferred
prosecution agreement resolving the charge, under which Avanir admits that it
paid the doctor to induce him to not only maintain, but increase his
prescription volume. Under the
agreement’s terms, Avanir will pay a monetary penalty in the amount of
$7,800,000, and a forfeiture in the amount of $5,074,895. The United States will defer prosecuting
Avanir for a period of three years to allow the company to comply with the
agreement’s terms. The agreement will
not be final until accepted by the court.
“When a drug company pays kickbacks to physicians, it can
affect their medical decision making and undermine the proper treatment of
their patients,” said Byung J. “BJay” Pak, U.S. Attorney for the Northern
District of Georgia. “This is
particularly troublesome when it affects our vulnerable elderly population.”
The Northern District of Georgia entered into the deferred
prosecution agreement with Avanir based on the individual facts and
circumstances of this case. Among those
facts and circumstances, the agreement specifically identifies the company’s
substantial and ongoing cooperation with the investigation to date, including
capturing and producing text messages from employee cell phones, the extensive
remedial measures taken by the company, including terminating, or permitting to
resign in lieu of termination, multiple employees, at various levels of the
organization, including senior executives, and its enhanced compliance program. Other facts and circumstances include: Avanir
has agreed to resolve all civil claims relating to federal health care programs
arising from its conduct; and a conviction (including a guilty plea) would
likely result in the Office of the Inspector General of the Department of
Health and Human Services imposing mandatory exclusion of Avanir from all
federal health care programs under 42 U.S.C. § 1320a-7 for a period of at least
five years, which would result in substantial consequences, including to
American consumers. The agreement can
ensure that integrity has been restored to Avanir’s operations and preserve its
financial viability while preserving the United States’ ability to prosecute it
should material breaches occur.
The Northern District of Ohio also announced indictments of
four individuals who paid or received kickbacks from Avanir. Named in the 83-count indictment are: Deepak
Raheja, 63, of Hudson; Gregory Hayslette, 43, of Aurora; Frank Mazzucco, 41, of
Dublin, and Bhupinder Sawhny, 70, of Gates Mills. All four are charged with conspiracy to
solicit, receive, offer and pay health care kickbacks. Avanir has agreed to
cooperate in the prosecution of these individuals.
“Doctors should prescribe medicine based on what is best for
their patients, not on which drug company is paying for their travel and
meals,” said U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio Justin Herdman.
In a separate civil resolution, Avanir has agreed to pay
$95,972,017 to the United States to resolve allegations under the False Claims
Act related to its marketing of Nuedexta.
The government alleged that between October 29, 2010, and December 31,
2016, Avanir provided remuneration in the form of money, honoraria, travel, and
food to certain physicians and other health care professionals to induce them
to write prescriptions for Nuedexta. One
form of remuneration included Avanir’s payment to certain health care
professionals to give talks (commonly known as “speaker’s programs”) about
Nuedexta based on their willingness to prescribe Nuedexta. These events were primarily social, with no
educational value.
The government further alleged that Avanir implemented a
strategy to market Nuedexta in long-term care (LTC) facilities for uses other
than PBA that had not been approved by the FDA and were not medically accepted
indications as defined by the statutes and regulations governing the Federal
health care programs. In particular,
Avanir sought to capitalize on efforts by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
Services to reduce the use of anti-psychotics on dementia patients in LTC
facilities, based in part on CMS’s concern that anti-psychotics can be and have
been used as a form of chemical restraint for residents. Avanir did so by instructing its sales force
to initiate discussions in LTCs regarding anti-psychotic use and how Nuedexta
could be used to reduce a LTC facility’s reliance on anti-psychotics even
though Avanir’s own studies demonstrated that the actual population of patients
with PBA is limited. In order to counter
the objection by certain physicians that they had few, if any, patients that
exhibited signs of PBA in their facilities, Avanir instructed sales
representatives to provide false and misleading information that PBA patients
could be exhibiting a wide variety of “behaviors” such as crying without tears,
moaning, or making other inarticulate sounds, when, in fact, those symptoms are
commonly observed in patients who have dementia but do not have a diagnosis of
PBA. This strategy worked, and Nuedexta
utilization in LTC facilities increased.
In one example of the impact of these strategies, the
government alleged that an Avanir employee reported that one doctor, who was
also a paid speaker for Nuedexta, had “entire units” of patients on Nuedexta at
the LTC facility where he worked, which contained a large number of dementia
patients with behavioral issues. And
while another doctor, a geriatrician, who also worked in the same LTC facility
routinely discontinued Nuedexta for patients, the doctor paid by Avanir
“constantly re-initiat[ed]” the treatment.
Contemporaneous with the civil settlement, Avanir entered
into a Corporate Integrity Agreement (CIA) with the Department of Health and
Human Services Office of Inspector General.
The CIA requires, among other things, that Avanir implement additional
controls around its interactions with physicians and conduct internal and
external monitoring of promotional and other activities. It also increases individual accountability
by requiring compliance-related certifications from its Board and key
executives.
“Paying kickbacks to medical providers in an effort to
increase profits is illegal and diminishes the trust and credibility of drug
companies who engage in these activities,” said Derrick L. Jackson, Special
Agent in Charge for the Office of Inspector General of the Department of Health
and Human Services. My agency’s
five-year compliance agreement with Avanir has been tailored to ensure such
alleged behavior will not be repeated.”
The civil settlement resolves lawsuits filed by Kevin
Manieri, Duane Arnold, and Mark Shipman, all former employees of Avanir, under
the qui tam or whistleblower provisions of the False Claims Act, which permit
private individuals, known as relators, to sue on behalf of the government for
false claims and to share in any recovery.
The qui tam suits were filed in the Northern District of Ohio and the
Northern District of Georgia and are captioned United States ex rel. Kevin
Manieri v. Avanir Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and Deepak Raheja, Action No. 5:15-cv-611
(N.D. Ohio), and United States ex rel. Duane Arnold and Mark Shipman v. Avanir
Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Action No. 1:15-cv-01250 (N.D. Ga.). Manieri will receive $12,389,823 of the civil
settlement, and Arnold and Shipman will receive $5,365,000 of the civil
settlement. In addition to the
$95,972,017 being paid to resolve the United States’ civil claims, Avanir will
pay an additional $7,027,983 to resolve state Medicaid claims.
The government is represented in the criminal case against
Avanir by Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher J. Huber, Deputy Chief Complex
Frauds Section, U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Georgia,
and against the individuals by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Michael Collyer and
Megan Miller, U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Ohio. The civil settlement was the result of the
coordinated efforts of Assistant U.S. Attorneys Patricia Fitzgerald and Brendan
Barker of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Ohio,
Assistant U.S. Attorney Neeli Ben-David of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the
Northern District of Georgia, and Senior Counsel Natalie Waites of the Civil
Division’s Commercial Litigation Branch.
The investigation was conducted by the FBI, HHS-OIG, the Department of
Defense Criminal Investigative Services, the Office of Personnel Management
Office of Inspector General, the Department of Veteran’s Affair Office of
Inspector General, and the Ohio Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. Assistance was also provided by the Consumer
Protection Branch of the Department of Justice, HHS Office of Counsel to the
Inspector General and the National Association of Medicaid Fraud Control
Units.
Since President Trump signed the bipartisan Elder Abuse
Prevention and Prosecution Act (EAPPA) into law, the Department of Justice has
participated in hundreds of enforcement actions in criminal and civil cases
that targeted or disproportionately affected seniors. In particular, this past March the Department
announced the largest elder fraud enforcement action in American history,
charging more than 260 defendants in a nationwide elder fraud sweep. The Department has likewise conducted
hundreds of trainings and outreach sessions across the country since the
passage of the Act.
Except as to conduct admitted as part of the deferred
prosecution agreement and its Statement of Facts, the claims resolved by the
civil settlement are allegations only and there has been no determination of
liability.
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