Advertisement

Makers of Blood-Pressure Treatment Sued

Share
<i> Times Staff and Wire Reports</i>

Drug makers Hoechst and Andrx Corp. were accused in a lawsuit of conspiring to block sales of generic drugs that would have competed with Hoechst’s popular blood-pressure medication, Cardizem CD. In the lawsuit, filed Thursday in Superior Court in San Francisco, Tustin resident Betty Morris, a user of the drug, and Reliable Drug Center, also in Tustin, claimed that Andrx agreed to hold off marketing its own generic competitor to Cardizem CD in exchange for a “bribe” of $40 million a year from Hoechst. The suit contends the drug companies collaborated to preserve Hoechst’s near monopoly in a market with annual sales of nearly $1 billion and to allow Hoechst to set an artificially high price for Cardizem. They also charge that as a result of the high price, some consumers forego treatment of high blood pressure and angina. The suit, which seeks class-action status, asks for unspecified damages and a court order requiring the companies to return “any amounts by which they have been unjustly enriched.” German drug giant Hoechst denied the allegations. Andrx officials couldn’t be reached for comment.

Advertisement