|      The    Supreme Court    will hear arguments on Monday over whether big drug    companies can settle patent litigation    with generic rivals by making deals to keep cheaper products off the market. U.S. and state regulators    say the practice costs consumers, insurers and government billions of dollars    annually. The Federal Trade Commission, which has dubbed these    arrangements "pay for delay," has fought them in court for more    than a decade with mixed success, culminating in the case now before the    Supreme Court. "The continuing stream    of monopoly profits is large enough to pay the generic competitors more than    they could hope to earn if they entered the market at competitive    prices," the FTC said in a brief. At the same time, the    brand-name manufacturer receives greater profits than it could earn in the    face of generic competition, the regulatory agency argued. The Justice Department,    the European Union and more than two dozen U.S. state attorneys general view    the deals as illegal, but drug companies defend them as a way to avoid potentially    lengthy patent litigation. "In every case that    we've been in involved in that resulted in a settlement, it has resulted in    years being taken off the patent life," added Paul Bisaro, chief    executive of generic drug maker Actavis, Inc.    Actavis was formerly Watson Pharmaceuticals. "It's very    unsophisticated to say 'Oh, they get paid a bunch of money to stay off the    market,'" said Bisaro. In the case before the    court, Solvay Pharmaceuticals Inc, now owned by    AbbVie, sued generic drug makers in 2003 to stop cheaper versions of    AndroGel, a gel used to treat men with low testosterone. These payments, as high    as $30 million annually, went to rivals Watson, Paddock Laboratories Inc and    Par Pharmaceutical Cos, and were intended to help Solvay preserve annual    profits estimated at $125 million. Under the deal, the three    would stay off the market until 2015. The patent expires in 2020. AbbVie was confident that    it would win. "The federal    district and appellate courts have both previously ruled that the plaintiff's    allegations lacked merit. We are confident that these decisions will be    upheld," Adelle Infante, an AbbVie spokeswoman, said in a statement. The Supreme Court is    expected to issue a decision by the end of June. AbbVie's arrangement is    similar to the 40 deals made in the 2012 fiscal year, which ended on    September 30. That was up from 28 the previous year despite FTC efforts to    stop them. The FTC said the agreements involved 31 different brand name drugs    with total U.S. sales of more than $8.3 billion annually. The FTC sued to stop the    AndroGel arrangement, arguing that it was illegal under antitrust law because    the companies divided up the market. The FTC lost at the    district court level and lost an appeal as well. But another appellate court    has said the deals were illegal, prompting the Supreme    Court to step in to resolve the split. The FTC also sued Cephalon Inc, accusing it in 2008 of blocking a    generic version of the anti-sleep drug Provigil. The case has been stayed    pending the Supreme Court's decision. In 2001 the FTC sued    Schering-Plough Corp., later bought by Merck and Co Inc, because of payments    to rivals to delay generic versions of its potassium supplement, K-Dur 20.    The FTC lost that case. But in a private case    that also involved K-Dur, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, in    New Jersey, backed the FTC position and found the deals to be illegal. BATTLES ON CAPITOL HILL,    EUROPE Opponents of    pay-for-delay deals in the United States and Europe are not waiting for a    high court decision, though. Senator Amy Klobuchar, a    Democrat from Minnesota and chairwoman of the Senate Judiciary Committee's    antitrust panel, and Senator Chuck Grassley, a Republican from Iowa,    introduced legislation in February to make the deals illegal. Previous bills have    failed in part because of opposition from the drug industry, both branded and    generic. In Brussels, EU    regulators have eight investigations under way involving more than a dozen    drugmakers. The European competition regulator says the deals violate    antitrust law. The decision will be made    by an eight-member court. Justice Samuel Alito recused himself, without    giving a reason. The case is Federal Trade    Commission v. Watson Pharmaceuticals Inc et al, U.S. Supreme Court, No.    12-416.  |    
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