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Tuesday, Dec 16 2014

Full Issue

Drug Co. Ordered To Continue Making Alzheimer's Medicine

A federal judge ordered an Irish manufacturer to halt plans to discontinue its widely used medication, Namenda, allegedly to drive patients to a newer drug. The Dublin-based Actavis PLC plans to appeal.

A federal judge on Monday ordered an Irish drug manufacturer to halt its plans to discontinue its widely used Alzheimer's medication, allegedly in an effort to drive patients to a newer patented drug. U.S. District Judge Robert Sweet told Dublin-based Actavis PLC to continue making the drug Namenda available for 30 days after generic alternatives become available on July 11 "in order to allow for an orderly transition." His injunction orders the company to inform doctors and pharmacists of the decision and tells Actavis not to impose any hurdles for filling prescriptions of the drug. (Virtanen, 12/15)

A federal court judge issued an injunction Monday that prevents Actavis PLC from pulling an older version of its Namenda medication for Alzheimer’s disease from pharmacy shelves in favor of a newer version of the drug. The case involves a controversial tactic in the pharmaceutical industry to manage a product’s life cycle. (Silverman, 12/15)

Meanwhile, hedge fund founder Daniel Loeb gives $15 million to create a research center devoted to studying Alzheimer’s disease -

Daniel S. Loeb is making an investment into Alzheimer’s research that he hopes will have maximum impact. On Tuesday, Mount Sinai Hospital and the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai will announce a $15 million gift from Mr. Loeb—founder and chief executive of hedge fund firm Third Point LLC—to fund the Ronald M. Loeb Center for Alzheimer’s disease. (West, 12/15)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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