Anne Bucher  |  April 5, 2017

Category: Legal News

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EpiPen-2-pakMylan Specialty LP has been hit with another class action lawsuit over the pricing of its EpiPen prescription auto-injector device, the price of which has reportedly increased 574 percent since Mylan acquired the rights to market and distribute the EpiPen in 2007.

The EpiPen is an important prescription medication that is used to treat people suffering from anaphylaxis, a life-threatening allergic reaction that causes a person’s airways to swell, affecting the person’s ability to breathe.

According to the EpiPen class action lawsuit, it costs about $20 to $30 for the components of an EpiPen. In addition, epinephrine has been widely available for more than a century.

However, since Mylan acquired the rights to market and distribute the EpiPen in 2007, it has reportedly increased the list prices for the drug 17 times. As a result of this pricing, the list price of EpiPen has increased from $90.28 to $608.62.

“Mylan’s price increases for EpiPen have been so dramatic that some patients have resorted to carrying expired EpiPens, or using syringes to manually inject epinephrine,” the EpiPen class action lawsuit asserts.

Plaintiffs Amber Rainey, Christina Kollmeyer and Lisa Vogel filed the EpiPen class action lawsuit this week in Washington federal court, claiming that they all overpaid for EpiPen as a result of Mylan’s pricing scheme.

The plaintiffs allege that the price of the EpiPen skyrocketed because Mylan pays pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs), which negotiate prices with drug makers on behalf of health plans.

According to the EpiPen pricing class action lawsuit, the three biggest PBMs are Express Scripts, CVS Health and OptumRx. These PBMs reportedly make around $200 billion in revenue each year and control more than 80 percent of the PBM market.

The plaintiffs claim that these PBMs set up a tiered system for health insurers, based in part on the prices they are able to secure for the drugs. “Preferred” brand drugs are generally placed into tiers that require a lower co-payment from a patient than non-preferred brand-drugs. This system encourages patients to choose the preferred drugs over alternatives.

The PBMs also sometimes exclude certain drugs from its tiered system so that health insurers will not reimburse members who purchase those drugs, the Mylan class action lawsuit states.

“As a result, PBMs have enormous control over drug purchasing behavior because they can push patients toward certain brand drugs over others,” the EpiPen class action lawsuit alleges.

The plaintiffs assert that drug companies set the list prices for brand drugs at a high cost so that they can offer substantial “rebates” to PBMs, which get paid in part based on the difference between the list price set by drug companies and the actual price paid by the PBMs.

“Thus, while in a competitive world competition would drive drug manufacturers to lower their prices, because high list prices benefit both drug manufacturers and PBMs, in the world of branded prescription drugs, the opposite occurs,” the EpiPen class action lawsuit states.

The rebates offered to PBMs are reportedly not disclosed by drug companies or the PBMs and are labeled as trade secrets. The plaintiffs allege that the companies fail to disclose the amount of rebates offered in order to hide the fact that the list prices have nothing to do with supply or demand of the drug. As a result, consumers were unaware that the skyrocketing cost of EpiPen was due to the PBM rebate payments until 2016, when there was public outcry about the drastic increase in EpiPen pricing.

According to the EpiPen class action lawsuit, Mylan representatives tried to paint the company as a victim of the system. However, the plaintiffs disagree and maintain that the company could have notified regulators or refused to participate in the scheme.

The EpiPen class action lawsuit asserts claims under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act and consumer protection laws under several states. The plaintiffs seek to represent a nationwide Class of consumers who have purchased EpiPens.

In October 2016, Mylan reportedly reached a settlement for $465 million with the U.S. Department of Justice over EpiPen pricing. A separate EpiPen pricing class action lawsuit was filed in Kansas in December 2016.

The plaintiffs are represented by Steve W. Berman and Jennifer Fountain Connolly of Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP and Craig L. Briskin of Mehri & Skalet PLLC.

The EpiPen Pricing Class Action Lawsuit is Amber Rainey, et al. v. Mylan Specialty LP, Case No. 3:17-cv-05244, in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington, Seattle.

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94 thoughts onEpiPen Class Action Says Mylan Engaged in Anticompetitive Pricing Scheme

  1. Desiree Dolores says:

    I would like to join this as well.

  2. Corinne Arnold says:

    Oh this one hits home with me. I am FURIOUS at the exhorbetant pricing on these and have had to resort to desperate measures to get pens for my toddler.

  3. Tiera says:

    I would like to be included too. I’ve been buying EpiPens for 12 years.

  4. PATRICIA DOMINGUEZ-ORTIZ says:

    Please include me in this action.

  5. Linda Dektas says:

    I would also like to be informed of the proceedings of the EpiPen lawsuit.

  6. Lamonica Vazquez says:

    I have been pitching Epipens for 7 years please include me

    1. Lamonica Vazquez says:

      Typo purchasing

  7. Susan Houppert says:

    Include me in this law suit as I have purchased many Epipen’s as well as carried around expired ones.

  8. Melinda Goodale says:

    I would like to be included. I am carrying around an expired one.

  9. Christy Berntzen says:

    How do I get in on this? My son has a severe peanut allergy and I have to buy two twin packs every year because one has to be at school and one has to be at home and they will not let him enroll in school if I don’t have one.

    1. Christy Berntzen says:

      And now they’re recalling EpiPen’s because they’re not injecting properly!!!

  10. Sarah says:

    Please include my son and I.

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