Generic Drug Distributor Sues Suboxone Maker for Monopolizing Treatment Market
The generic drug distributor Rochester Drug Co-Operative
Inc. has sued the maker of the opioid addiction treatment Suboxone for
allegedly monopolizing the opioid treatment market, Bloomberg reports.
The maker of Suboxone (buprenorphine and naloxone), Reckitt Benckiser
Group, developed a film version of Suboxone that is placed under the
tongue, to replace the tablet form of the drug. According to the
lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Wilmington, Delaware, this
prevented competition, because pharmacists cannot substitute the cheaper
generic version.
“Reckitt concocted a multifaceted anticompetitive scheme, executed
over the course of several years, to maintain and extend its monopoly
power,” Rochester Drug stated in its complaint. The article notes
Suboxone is used to help control opioid withdrawal symptoms.
In September, 2012, Reckitt notified the Food and Drug Administration it was voluntarily discontinuing the supply
of Suboxone tablets in the United States, due to increasing concerns
with children’s exposure and risk for accidental poisonings. The U.S.
Poison Control Centers found consistently and significantly higher rates
of accidental unsupervised pediatric exposure with Suboxone tablets,
compared with the film.
yeah
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