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Forest Labs Q1: $170 Million Fee for DOJ; Its Numbers Are Written in "Invisible Ink"

By Jim Edwards | Apr 23, 2009

Forest Labs is holding a $170 million contingency fee in case it needs to settle allegations by the Department of Justice that it bribed doctors — with such things as $1,000 gift certificates to Alain Ducasse — into  prescribing Lexapro and Celexa for children even though it was not approved for that.

The news so hurt Forest’s Q1 2009 results that in its web press release, the company appears to have published its financial tables in the smallest, grayest, least-visible typeface possible (click on image to enlarge — although it won’t help).

Using BNET’s internet microscope, we find that revenues were flat at $896.7 million; and net income was $93 million, down from $173 million. Lexapro sales declined 5 percent to $548.5 million.

Here’s the company’s statement on the DOJ probe:

The Company has provided a $170 million pretax reserve, or $0.45 per share, in connection with ongoing discussions with the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) arising out of the investigations led by the U. S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts (USAO) into marketing, promotional and other activities primarily in connection with Lexapro(R), Celexa(R) and Levothroid(R).

… there can be no assurance that the amount reserved by the Company will be sufficient and that a larger material amount will not be required.

In addition to that profit-crushing expense, Forest didn’t save money elsewhere, either. Sales and marketing expenses increased 57.3% to $515.1 million; excluding the DOJ charge SG&A expenses still rose 5.4 percent, the company said. On an annual basis, sales costs are rising 9 percent. Forest is ramping up for the launch of two drugs, a heart drug, Bystolic, and yet another fibromyalgia drug, Savella.

Forest is in the worst of all worlds: In addition to the costs it is expecting on the DOJ investigation, Savella expands its presence in the CNS category, which is already riddled with competitors. The company should look — through the cracks in its fingers — at what is happening to GlaxoSmithKline, whose CNS portfolio has been battered by pro-generic CNS trends.

Jim Edwards, a former managing editor of Adweek, has covered drug marketing at Brandweek for four years, and is a former Knight-Bagehot fellow at Columbia University's business and journalism schools. Follow him on Twitter or send him an email.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Shall we add Dr Jeffrey Bostic to the "Pscych Crew Honour Roll"?

    PharmaGossip - 262 days 22 hours 38 minutes ago

    Back stories here and here. Federal prosecutors say that a Massachusetts General Hospital psychiatrist became a "star spokesman" in helping a pharmaceutical company promote its drugs for treating depressed children, even though the medications were not approved for pediatric use by the US Food and Drug Administration. In a complaint...

  • Forest charged with kickbacks, off-label antics

    Fierce Pharma - 263 days 17 hours 54 minutes ago

    Forest Laboratories joins the perp walk. In the latest of a series of drug-marketing prosecutions, the feds are charging Forest with offering kickbacks to doctors for prescribing Celexa and Lexapro, and with marketing the antidepressants off-label for use in children. The Associated Press details the allegations: Forest allegedly bribed...

  • Doc reaped $750K as "Forest's star spokesman"

    Fierce Pharma - 262 days 16 hours 38 minutes ago

    Another Harvard Medical School psychiatrist is in the hot seat. Federal prosecutors say Dr. Jeffrey Bostic, who directs school psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital, went on the road for Forest Laboratories to promote pediatric use of their antidepressants Celexa and Lexapro, which are not approved for children. Bostic was "Forest's star...

  • The Corruption Continues: FDA Approves Antidepressants for Children, Even After Revelations of Bribery

    NaturalNews - 164 days 2 hours 30 minutes ago

    (NaturalNews) The FDA has approved Forest Laboratories' antidepressant Lexapro (escitalopram) for use in children and adolescents, even as the federal government and 11 states have filed a lawsuit against the company for illegally pushing the drug on kids. The federal government has accused Forest of bribing pediatricians to prescribe Lexapro...

  • DOJ: Forest promoted Celexa and Lexapro off-label

    Medical Marketing and Media - 270 days 21 hours 58 minutes ago

    The Department of Justice (DOJ) is suing Forest Laboratories over the alleged promotion of Celexa and Lexapro off-label, for pediatric use. Forest also paid kickbacks to physicians in return for prescribing the drugs, the DOJ said in a statement.The allegations, filed in a Massachusetts federal court yesterday, claim Forest hoodwinked physicians...

 

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