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1354  days in business since  challenge
3057  days dispensing drugs to  the us
Don't let drug companies like Pfizer put me Daren Jorgenson out of business by continuing to cut off supply to our pharmacies around the world if we sell their products to Americans. I want you to put me out of business by forcing these drug companies to sell their products to American Pharmacies at fair and reasonable prices.Daren Jorgenson Bsc PharmI want Americans to put me out of business the right way!
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Is Legalizing the purchase of prescription drugs from Canada the Answer?
 

Huge Court Win for Pfizer

Posted At The Street.com

BY : Chris Nichols

India's Ranbaxy Laboratories after a judge upheld two of the New York-based company's U.S. patents on Lipitor, the top-selling prescription drug in the world.

The Delaware federal court decision sent shares of Pfizer higher by $2.69, or 11.9%, to $25.27 in after-hours trading Friday. Lipitor, a cholesterol drug, had sales of $10.9 billion last year, accounting for roughly 24% of Pfizer's overall sales. Pfizer sold more than $4 billion worth of Lipitor in foreign markets and about $6.6 billion in the U.S. in 2004.

Pfizer said Judge Joseph J. Farnan's ruling will entitle it to a permanent injunction prohibiting Ranbaxy from obtaining approval for or marketing its generic version of atorvastatin, the active ingredient in Lipitor, until 2011.

"Today marks a major victory for medical innovators and the patients who depend on them for important new therapies," Pfizer Chairman and Chief Executive Hank McKinnell said in a press release. "We will continue to defend against any and all patent challenges that seek to undermine our mission of finding new therapeutic innovations for the patients we serve."

Ranbaxy, a maker of generic drugs, has filed to contest Lipitor patents in several countries. In a case decided in October, a British court upheld the main Lipitor patent but declared a minor patent invalid. The main U.S. Lipitor patent doesn't expire until 2011.

Pfizer said it would appeal the loss on the minor patent, which expires in July 2010. Ranbaxy was joined by another generic company, Arrow Generics, in challenging the 2010 patent. Ranbaxy has said it plans to appeal the decision on the main patent.

Last March, Austria's patent office ruled in favor of Ranbaxy in a Lipitor lawsuit, a decision that Pfizer has said it will try to have overturned. Wall Street didn't seem too bothered by the Austrian ruling, but analysts in the past said that losses of the U.S. patents on Lipitor could be devastating for Pfizer and perhaps the larger pharmaceutical sector, making the Delaware ruling a tremendous victory for the company.

Since Lipitor's introduction in 1997, more than 18 million people in the U.S. have been prescribed the drug. Lipitor is cleared in more than 70 countries. Recently, the Food and Drug Administration approved a new indication for Lipitor to reduce the risk of stroke, including in people who have diabetes.


ARTICLES OF THE DAY

Bill to allow pharmacies to reimport drugs passes Senate

The Oklahoma Senate backs a drug reimportation plan that would permit state pharmacies to obtain U-S-made prescription drugs from Canada and elsewhere for sale here.The Federal Drug Administration has opposed drug reimportation bills, claiming they violate the Interstate Commerce Clause of the U-S Constitution. Those measures mainly deal with allowing individuals to obtain reimported drugs. Tulsa state Senator Tom Adelson says his legislation avoids that legal question because it would require pharmacies to sell reimported medicines only to Oklahomans in intrastate, not interstate, commerce. Most programs are geared to allowing individuals obtain such drugs by crossing the border into Canada or buying drugs online.

March 08, 2006

Democrats allege bad deal on drugs

Bay Area seniors are not saving significant money under Medicare's new prescription drug program, according to a report released Monday by most of the Bay Area's House Democrats. The report says Bay Area prices for 2004's 10 best-selling prescription drugs among seniors are 75 percent higher under the new Medicare Part D prescription drug benefit than under deals negotiated by the federal government at other agencies such as the Department of Veterans Affairs. Medicare Part D's prices also are 60 percent higher than those paid by consumers in Canada; almost 5 percent higher than prices on Drugstore.com; and almost 2 percent higher than prices at Costco, the report found. But Republicans who shepherded the bill through Congress rejected a proposal to let Medicare negotiate with drug companies for lower prices. The report proves "what we've been saying since the debate on the Republican Medicare drug bill began," said Rep. Pete Stark, D-Fremont, in a news release. "If you create a privatized drug benefit and refuse to let the government negotiate lower prices, senior citizens and people with disabilities will pay the price," said Stark, who as ranking Democrat on the House Ways and Means Committee's Health Subcommittee is particularly outspoken on the issue. "Instead of attempting to set Medicare on the road to privatization, Republicans in Congress should have worked with Democrats to establish a real prescription benefit within Medicare."

March 08, 2006