Free Newsletter
Lilly 'ghostwrote' Zyprexa studies, documents show
Eli Lilly prodded doctors to prescribe Zyprexa for dementia patients even though it had data showing the drug didn't help those patients, Bloomberg reports, based on internal company documents made public as part of a lawsuit. Plus, the company "ghostwrote" journal articles supporting the atypical antipsychotic, then scouted for doctors to append their bylines, the documents show. Lilly also compiled a guide to hiring scientists to write favorable articles.
Aggrieved by the document release, Lilly defended itself: "Plaintiffs are releasing one-sided, cherry-picked documents obtained in discovery to selected news media in an effort to try their cases in the media," Lilly spokeswoman Marni Lemons told Bloomberg, adding that the company will fight the lawsuit. She wouldn't answer specific questions, however.
The unsealed documents were submitted as evidence in lawsuits against the drugmaker, filed by health insurance companies and pension plans that want to be repaid for their spending on Zyprexa. The plaintiffs are asking for as much as $6.8 billion in damages. Lilly already settled off-label marketing claims with the U.S. government and several states--for $1.42 billion, including a $615 million criminal penalty. The company has paid $1.2 billion to settle individual patient claims, Bloomberg reports. For comparison's sake, Zyprexa sales for 2008 amounted to $4.69 billion, down slightly from $4.76 billion in 2007.
- read the Bloomberg article
Related Articles:
Ghostwriting fuels foes of FDA rule change
Lilly balks at AG's $2B Zyprexa suit
Insurers still pressing Lilly on Zyprexa
Lilly: $1.4B ding in profits for Zyprexa charge
States settle Zyprexa claims for $62M
Paid Research Reports
- Trends in mHealth and Telemedicine
- The Global Aesthetic Dermatology Market Outlook
- Future Directions in Regenerative Medicine
- Pipeline Insight: Insulin Antidiabetics – Novel analogs show promise as alternative delivery methods prove less attractive
- Pipeline Insight: Non-insulin Antidiabetics - Rise of the weight-reducers: Once-weekly GLP-1 agonists and novel SGLT-2 inhibitor
- Forecast Insight: Antidiabetics - Diabetes market growth driven by epidemiological trends and rich pipeline


SHARE
WITH: