After four years of legal wrangling, this morning, Purdue Pharma--one of the biggest private drug companies in the US--and three top executives pled guilty in Virginia court to mishandling the pre-2001 promotion of Oxycontin, the company's blockbuster pain drug. The punishment: $600 million.
Purdue can afford the settlement; it won't lay off anyone, apparently. Except its own top management--the company's president Michael Friedman, one of the executives pleading guilty--is getting the boot and, according to the New York Times, an $18 million fine; likely to follow is chief legal officer Howard Udell, who also pleaded guilty (and, says the Times, is on the hook for $9 million). The final misdemean-er--former research head Paul Goldenheim--left Purdue in 2004 for Transform Pharmaceuticals, which was sold soon after. He'll owe $7.5 million.
The settlement is bad news--potentially really bad news--for other companies in the pain space, in particular Cephalon and Endo. Both of these public companies are being investigated for over-aggressive promotion. If those two companies end up with a settlement anything like Purdue's--and federal and state attorneys are likely to feel pretty good about their chances, given the success of the Virginia US attorney--the picture won't be pretty.
Purdue itself, leaderless now, will drift. The company's hired Russell Reynolds to do a CEO search, but no one's looking forward to that one. Friedman, the first non-Sackler to run Purdue, had spent 20 years building up the trust of the family, hardly an easy group to work for. Indeed, talk about an insider board: Purdue's has members: the 90-plus year old founding brothers, Mortimer and Raymond Sackler; their wives; and the founders' four adult children.
They could bring in an internal candidate--like Ed Mahony, the current CFO, a savvy finance guy who's managed to keep enough cash to pay the fines. Or they could bring on someone from one of the international affiliates. Possibles: John Stewart, a long-time employee who manages the Canadian, New Zealand and Australian businesses, or--less likely given his shorter tenure--Ake Wikstrom, the GM of Munidpharma in Europe.
They could bring in an internal candidate--like Ed Mahony, the current CFO, a savvy finance guy who's managed to keep enough cash to pay the fines. Or they could bring on someone from one of the international affiliates. Possibles: John Stewart, a long-time employee who manages the Canadian, New Zealand and Australian businesses, or--less likely given his shorter tenure--Ake Wikstrom, the GM of Munidpharma in Europe.
But no Sackler is likely to step in and settle all this hash. None of the 2nd generation Sacklers have ever managed the company. When times were good, the family rejected many offers to buy the business, or take it public. Now that times are really bad--and now that the family doesn't have a CEO they can depend on--they may just decide enough is enough.
In fact, the whole scandal could really be laid at the doors to the family's often empty offices at Purdue's headquarters: though they approve decisions, they let others watch what is a deceptively simple business. In selling addictive pain drugs, there are lots of complex details to follow. For too long, Purdue's management didn't recognize them; neither did its board.
That complexity colors the benefits of the whole pain strategy. Purdue, like Cephalon and Endo, are in the pain business because they can minimize R&D risk with high-margin reformulations of old and effective pain drugs. But there's no free lunch: the risk they avoid in development they run in the marketplace selling opiates.
Already, many pharma companies--AstraZeneca and Pfizer being two recent examples-- are being roasted for promotional improprieties. With Purdue's blood in the water, the legal sharks aren't likely to grow any less hungry.
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