The Office of the Attorney General's Medicaid Fraud Control Unit has secured more than $2.6 million in two recent actions.
The first is a multistate action from pharmaceutical company Pfizer on behalf of its wholly-owned subsidiary Biohaven Pharmaceutical Holding Company Ltd. The action comes after allegations Biohaven knowingly submitted or caused false claims to be submitted to the Medicaid program by paying kickbacks to health care providers to induce them to prescribe Biohaven’s product, Nurtec ODT — a prescription medication for the treatment of migraine headaches.
As part of this action, Pfizer agreed to pay $2,300,449 to the Florida Medicaid program.
“I’m incredibly proud of our Medicaid Fraud Control Unit for leading the way in holding Biohaven accountable. Actions, like those alleged here, must be stopped to prevent health care fraud,” acting Florida AG John Guard said.
The multistate action resolves allegations Biohaven paid kickbacks to providers to present at speaker programs which were held virtually, in providers’ offices, or at offsite venues, such as high-end restaurants, to persuade them to prescribe Nurtec for Medicaid and other federal health care beneficiaries, in violation of the Anti-Kickback Statute.
Biohaven paid some providers tens of thousands of dollars and in some cases more than $100,000 for these speaker programs. Speaker programs were also attended by individuals with no educational need to attend, such as the speaker’s spouse or family members, friends and colleagues from the speaker’s own practice.
Additionally, some providers attended multiple programs on the same topic and received expensive meals and drinks paid for by Biohaven and received no educational benefit from attending the programs. Rather, Biohaven intended that the purchase of meals and drinks influence the providers to prescribe Nurtec.
A National Association of Medicaid Fraud Control Units team investigated the allegations and participated in settlement negotiations in conjunction with the United States Department of Justice and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of New York. Florida OAG MFCU Attorney Rebecca Sirkle led the NAMFCU team that included representatives from the attorneys general offices of California, New York and Virginia.
Due to the multistate action, Pfizer will pay millions of dollars, plus interest, collectively to Florida, the U.S., Puerto Rico and 37 other states to resolve the allegations set forth in lawsuits filed by a whistleblower under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act, which allow private parties to bring suit on behalf of the government and to share in any recovery.
In the second action, the office along with 17 other states and the United States government, secured funds from pharmaceutical manufacturer QOL Medical and Frederick E. Cooper, the company’s CEO, following allegations of a kickback scheme.
QOL sells therapies, including its principal product, Sucraid, for patients with rare diseases. The agreement resolves allegations that QOL paid remuneration to induce the purchase of Sucraid in violation of the Anti-Kickback Statute, the federal False Claims Act and state law False Claims Act corollary statutes. As part of this multistate action, QOL and Cooper agreed to pay more than $350,000 to the Florida Medicaid program.
“This pharmaceutical manufacturer misled patients on its test kits and caused the submission of false claims to Medicaid,” Guard said. “However, thanks to the superb and diligent work of our Medicaid Fraud Control Unit and partners in this case, the company and CEO are paying up now hundreds of thousands of dollars.”
As part of the multistate action, QOL admitted that beginning in 2018, it distributed free Carbon-13 breath test kits to health care providers to give to patients with common gastrointestinal symptoms. QOL claimed that the C13 test could “rule in or rule out” Congenital Sucrase Isomaltase Deficiency, a rare genetic condition for which Sucraid is the only approved therapy by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
However, the C13 test does not specifically diagnose CSID. Conditions other than CSID can cause a patient to test positive for low sucrase activity on a C13 test. Nonetheless, QOL paid a clinical laboratory to analyze patients’ C13 tests – at no cost to health care providers or patients. QOL received aggregate weekly results, and its commercial team used this data to find potential Sucraid patients. Between 2018 and 2022, QOL paid the laboratory for more than 75,000 C13 tests and disseminated the results to the sales force to make Sucraid sales calls to health care providers whose patients had positive C13 breath test results.
From May 1, 2018, to June 30, 2022, QOL and Cooper caused the submission of false claims to Medicaid and other government health care programs by paying remuneration to the clinical laboratory and to beneficiaries.
QOL induced the lab to provide the C13 results data which referred QOL employees to health care providers for the furnishing, or arranging for the furnishing, of Sucraid reimbursed by Medicaid and other government health care programs.
As for the beneficiaries, QOL covered the costs of the C13 breath testing services to induce the beneficiaries’ purchase of Sucraid to also be reimbursed by Medicaid and other government health care programs.
This agreement results from a whistleblower lawsuit originally filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts. A team from the National Association of Medicaid Fraud Control Units participated in the negotiations on behalf of the states and included representatives from the offices of the attorneys general for the states of Florida, California, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York and Ohio.