by Sam P.K. Collins
Amid outrage about sudden price hikes of specialty drugs, a company has reneged on its recent acquisition
of a tuberculosis medication, a deal that would have increased the cost
of the treatment more than 20-fold. Just three weeks after purchasing
the rights to the drug, Rodelis Therapeutics has agreed to return the
medication to the nonprofit that previously owned it.The medicine, named Cycloserine, treats a form of tuberculosis that’s resistant to multiple drugs usually used to treat it — in other words, a serious form of the ailment. There are nearly 90 cases of drug-resistant tuberculosis annually in the United States.
Last week, Rodelis Therapeutics, the company at the center of the controversy, defended its decision to increase the price of the tuberculosis drug, saying it needed to invest and ensure the drug maintained its effectiveness. But the Purdue Research Foundation, the Indiana nonprofit that sold the drug to Rodelis, remained unconvinced, taking back Cycloserine on Monday.
“We discovered literally on Thursday the strategy that had been undertaken [by Rodelis],” Dan Hasler, president of the Purdue Research Foundation, told the New York Times. “We said this was not what we had intended.”
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