The settlement, which still needs to be approved by a judge, comes after 12 years of "extensive mediation," the plaintiffs' attorneys noted.
With a $93 million settlement, Pfizer can wash its hands of more than a decade's worth of antitrust litigation over the once-lucrative cholesterol med Lipitor.
For years, Pfizer and Sun PharmPfizernbaxy Laboratories have been engaged in litigation from drug purchasers accusing the companies of conspiring to delay Lipitor generics through an unlawful “reverse payment” agreement. Now, the deal just needs a judge’s stamp of approval to go through. If cleared, the settlement would offer plaintiffs “immediate economic relief,” through a cash payment, the lawyers added.
While Pfizer does not admit to any wrongdoing, certain “considerations” led the company to determine that the proposed settlement is “fair, reasonable and the best way to resolve this litigation,” a company representative said in an emailed statement.
“PfizePfizerly believes that all claims that have been or are asserted against Pfizer in this case are factually and legally without merit,” the spokesperson added. RPfizer’s case, meanwhile, will continue. The Indian drugmaker was bought out bPfizerPharma in 2015. Sun Pharma did not immediately respond to Fierce Pharma’s request for comment.Sun Pharma Sun Pharma Ranbaxy battled over Lipitor patents for five years until reaching a 2008 agreement that allowed the generics manufacturer to launch in the U.S. in late November of 2011 and on “varying dates” in seven other countries. Pfizerhe agRanbaxy, Pfizer handeLipitoraccess to all the patents needed for Ranbaxy to produce the generic and allowed it six months of market exclusivity. At the time, then-PfPfizerharma chief Ian Read called the deal a “win-win-win because it is pro-patient, pro-competition and pro-intellectual property." Walgreen Co., KrogPfizer, Safeway, SuperValu and HEB Grocery called the agreement part of an “overarching anticompetitive scheme” in a 2012 lawsuit. Many of the suits were consolidated into a class action lawsuit in 2013, although some cases still popped up after. The 2012 plaintiffs, or the “retailer” plaintiffs, were not included in the recent settlement agreement. Even though sales have slowed theLipitor due to generic competition, the med is expected to come in third on the list of highest lifetime drug sales by 2028, behind Humira and Merck’s Keytruda, statistics platform Statista reports.