Watson Receives Clearance for Actavis Acquisition - Pharmaceutical Technology

Latest Issue
PharmTech

Latest Issue
PharmTech Europe

Watson Receives Clearance for Actavis Acquisition


ePT--the Electronic Newsletter of Pharmaceutical Technology

Watson Pharmaceuticals has received clearance from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) for its acquisition of generic drug manufacturer Actavis. The $5.6-billion deal was first announced in April 2012, and will result in Watson becoming the third largest global generic-drug company.

The FTC identified 21 drugs either currently marketed or under development for which competition would be reduced as a result of the merger. The FTC’s consent order requires Watson or Actavis to sell assets related to 14 drugs to Par Pharmaceuticals. Watson has indicated in a press release that Par will acquire the following products:

  • Watson's morphine sulfate extended release capsules
  • Actavis' nifedipine extended release tablets
  • Actavis' metoclopramide hydrochloride tablets
  • Actavis' fentanyl transdermal film
  • Actavis' diltiazem hydrochloride extended release capsules
  • Watson's pending application for adapalene/benzoyl peroxide gel
  • Watson's pending application for oxymorphone hydrochloride ER tablets
  • Watson's pending application for amphetamine salts ER tablets
  • Actavis' pending application for rivastigmine patch
  • Actavis' pending application for glipizide extended release tablets
  • Actavis' pending application for varenicline tartrate tablets
  • Actavis' pending application for oxycodone hydrochloride extended release tablets
  • Actavis' pending application for ursodiol tablets

Sandoz, the generic pharmaceuticals division of Novartis, will acquire the following four products:

  • Actavis' bupropion hydrochloride 150-mg. extended release tablets
  • Actavis' lorazepam tablets
  • Actavis' diltiazem hydrochloride extended release capsules
  • Watson's pending application for dextromethorphan hydrobromide/quinidine sulfate

The FTC expects that Sandoz and Par will be able to replicate the competition that otherwise would have been lost through the acquisition. For the remaining three drugs, different steps have been taken to address the competition concerns. To remedy the FTC’s concerns related to one drug product, the combined firm is required to end Actavis’s existing development and manufacturing agreement with Pfizer and transfer the manufacturing rights back to Pfizer. For two other drugs, Watson and Actavis must relinquish the marketing rights to another firm.

According to the FTC press release, some products being divested have been identified by FDA as being in short supply. The FTC evaluated whether the proposed transaction would exacerbate any of those shortages, and concluded that the manufacture of those products would not likely be altered in a way that could affect their continued availability.

See related:

Watson Pharmaceuticals to Acquire Actavis for $5.6 Billion

ADVERTISEMENT

blog comments powered by Disqus
LCGC E-mail Newsletters

Subscribe: Click to learn more about the newsletter
| Weekly
| Monthly
|Monthly
| Weekly

Survey
What is the single greatest threat to maintaining manufacturing processes at your facility?
Quality issues
Facility/environment problems
Process development problems
Production equipment downtime
Raw material supply problems
Regulatory restrictions
Business decisions to limit production
Quality issues
67%
Facility/environment problems
0%
Process development problems
0%
Production equipment downtime
0%
Raw material supply problems
33%
Regulatory restrictions
0%
Business decisions to limit production
0%
View Results
UPCOMING CONFERENCES

Programs for Investigational and Pre-Launch Drugs
Philadelphia, PA
July 17-18, 2013
Request Brochure

Strategic Pipeline Planning & Portfolio Valuation
Philadelphia, PA
August 13-14, 2013
Request Brochure

MES 2013 - Forum on Manufacturing Execution Systems
Philadelphia, PA
August 14-15, 2013
Request Brochure

Mobile Innovation for the Life Sciences Industry
Philadelphia, PA
August 20-21, 2013
Request Brochure

See All Conferences >>

Eric Langer Outsourcing Outlook Eric LangerOutsourcing's Modest Role as a Cost-Containment Strategy
Patricia Van Arnum Ingredients Insider Patricia Van ArnumIntellectual Property Battles in Solid-State Chemistry
Nathan Jessop Industry Insider Nathan Jessop Campaign Against Counterfeit Drugs Continues
Lynn Torbeck Statistical Solutions Lynn D. TorbeckCompositing Samples and the Risk to Product Quality
 More
Praise and Perils for Biotechnology Patent Policy
Risk-Mitigation Strategies in Drug Manufacturing for Emerging Markets
Quality Focus: Ensuring Raw Material Transparency
Advertising of Prescription Drugs  Keeping it Honest and Balanced
Key Ways for Ensuring Global Regulatory Compliance
Source: ePT--the Electronic Newsletter of Pharmaceutical Technology,
Click here