Johnson and Johnson (J&J) recently filed a motion to dismiss in the antitrust claim brought against the company by Walgreen and Kroger in regard to sales of J&J’s reference infliximab product, Remicade. In early December, the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania denied the motion.
Johnson and Johnson (J&J) recently filed a motion to dismiss in the antitrust claim brought against the company by Walgreen and Kroger in regard to sales of J&J’s reference infliximab product, Remicade. In early December, the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania denied the motion.
In June 2018, Walgreen and Kroger filed an antitrust suit against J&J and its Janssen division seeking permanent injunctive relief and damages “arising out of [J&J and Janssen’s] unlawful exclusion of biosimilar competition to the brand name drug Remicade,” according to the suit.
The suit is similar to another antitrust suit filed by Pfizer against J&J in November 2017 in the same court. According to the suit, when Pfizer earned FDA approval for its infliximab biosimilar, Inflectra, it sold the product at a 15% discount to the wholesale acquisition cost (WAC) of the brand name drug. In addition, Merck also received FDA approval for its own biosimilar infliximab, Renflexis, in the same year which was sold at a 35% discount to the WAC cost of Remicade.
Despite the introduction of 2 lower-priced products, J&J maintained its hold on the market and limited its competitors to single-digit market share and has been able to increase the price of Remicade since the introduction of the biosimilars.
Walgreen alleged that J&J’s hold on the market is due to exclusionary practices enacted through “contracts and bundled discounts that have suppressed competition.” Furthermore, the suit states that J&J entered into agreements with insurers through which they agreed not to cover either of the biosimilar products on their respective plans, or to only do so in rare cases.
According to the order of dismissal, J&J moved to dismiss Walgreens and Kroger’s claim on 2 grounds: J&J alleged that the retailers’ claims did not sufficiently allege antitrust violations, and that because the retailers do not have consent from the distributors to pursue these claims, they lacked antitrust standing.
On the first ground, the court found that, similar to the case brought by Pfizer, the complaint “plainly and repeatedly emphasizes that, as a result of the anticompetitive behavior,” the plaintiffs have “paid inflated prices for those products.”
Finally, in regard to the second ground, the Court converted J&J’s motion into one for summary judgement, and will hear additional evidence and briefing. “Motions must be submitted within 45 days and any factual development shall be limited to whether the assignment to Retailer Plaintiffs was valid,” read the order.
Eye on Pharma: Keytruda Biosimilar Deal; German Court Bans Imraldi; New Biosimilars for Japan
June 17th 2025Alvotech and Dr. Reddy's partner to develop a Keytruda biosimilar, a German court bans Humira biosimilar over patent dispute, and Samsung Bioepis enters a strategic agreement with NIPRO Corporation in Japan.
Escaping the Void: All Things Biosimilars With Craig & G
May 4th 2025To close out the Festival of Biologics, Craig Burton and Giuseppe Randazzo from the Association for Accessible Medicines and the Biosimilars Council tackle the current biosimilar landscape and how the industry can emerge from the "biosimilar void."
How AI Can Help Address Cost-Related Nonadherence to Biologic, Biosimilar Treatment
March 9th 2025Despite saving billions, biosimilars still account for only a small share of the biologics market—what's standing in the way of broader adoption and how can artificial intelligence (AI) help change that?
Eye on Pharma: Interchangeability Labels and Expanded Biosimilar Partnerships
May 29th 2025The FDA designates 2 biosimilars as interchangeable, enhancing access to treatments for inflammatory diseases and multiple sclerosis, while 2 other companies expand their biosimilar partnership to include more products.
The Trump Administration’s Drug Price Actions and Why US Prices Are Already Sky-High
May 17th 2025While the Trump administration’s latest executive order touts sweeping drug price cuts through international benchmarking, the broader pharmaceutical pricing crisis in the US reveals a far more complex web of development costs, profit incentives, and absent price controls—raising the question of whether any single policy, including potential drug tariffs, can truly untangle it.