New Haven wants to recover Vytorin money
October 20th, 2008 by Kurt Niland
Should municipalities be allowed to reclaim the money it spent on expensive prescriptions if the prescribed drug turns out to be a dud? For the city of New Haven, CT, the answer is yes. According to a report in the New Haven Independent , the city’s top lawyer, John Ward, wants more than $400,000 back from Vytorin manufacturers Merck and Schering-Plough.
New Haven City Hall spent more than $400,000 on Vytorin and Zetia (ezetimibe) prescriptions for members of the city’s healthcare plan when it could have spent a fraction of that amount for cheaper generic statins that have proven to be as or more effective and less risky.
Zetia is Merck’s anti-cholesterol drug that works by blocking absorption of cholesterol in the digestive tract. It is combined with Schering-Plough’s statin drug Zocor, which targets cholesterol produced by the liver, to form Vytorin – a drug that works to diminish cholesterol on both hereditary and dietary fronts. Studies have shown, however, that cheaper generic statins are in some cases more effective and safer than the Vytorin cocktail.
“This drug doesn’t work. Period. It just doesn’t work,” Steven Nissen, head of cardiology at the Cleveland Clinic, told Forbes magazine.
Merck and Schering-Plough are under Congressional inquiry for possibly withholding study data that indicated Vytorin was a flop while collecting billions in sales from the drug. The companies collected windfall profits knowing that cheaper and possibly more effective drugs were on the market.
Growing controversy over Vytorin’s performance and the way its makers have handled both past and ongoing studies have spawned a number of class action lawsuits. New Haven wasn’t able to find a suit that it could join, so it’s striking out on its own.
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