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United States Department of Justice U.S. Attorney, District of New Jersey 970 Broad Street, Seventh Floor Newark, New Jersey 07102
Ralph J. Marra, Jr., Acting U.S. Attorney More Information? Call the Assistant U.S. Attorney or other contact listed below to see if more information is available. News on the Internet: News Releases and related documents are posted at our website, along with links to our archived releases for other years. Go to: www.usdoj.gov/usao/nj/publicaffairs
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Monitoring and Deferred Prosecution Agreements Terminated with Companies in Hip and Knee Replacement Industry |
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NEWARK—Eighteen-month Deferred Prosecution Agreements (DPAs) with four companies in the lucrative hip and knee surgical implant industry expired today upon satisfactory completion of terms designed to reform industry practices involving payment of financial inducements to surgeons who use their products, Acting U.S. Attorney Ralph J. Marra, Jr., announced. Also today, criminal conspiracy complaints filed on Sept. 27, 2007, at the time the DPAs were entered were dismissed against the companies – Zimmer, Inc., Depuy Orthopaedics, Inc., Biomet Inc., and Smith & Nephew, Inc. – at the request of the United States. The complaints alleged criminal violations of the federal anti-kickback statute, but were dismissed as a result of the companies’ successful completion of the DPAs. A fifth company, Stryker Orthopedics, Inc., had cooperated in the criminal investigation and was not the subject of a criminal complaint or DPA. Stryker, however, entered into a non-prosecution agreement (NPA) in which it was subject to the same reform requirements as the other companies. Stryker too has satisfactorily completed terms of its agreement with the United States. Monitors who enforced and oversaw compliance with the DPAs and NPA recently issued their final recommendations to the U.S. Attorney’s Office on the status of the companies’ progress and compliance. They are now released as monitors of the companies. As a result of the government’s intervention and the DPAs and NPA, consulting payments to surgeons by all of the companies combined for ongoing consulting activity went from $272 million in 2007 to $105 million in 2008 – a 61 percent reduction. The total number of physicians receiving payments from the companies went from 1,693 in 2007 to 628 in 2008, a drop of 63 percent. “We are confident that the industry, which had been engaged in illegal kickback practices to secure market share, has made significant changes in their practices to strengthen compliance programs, increase compliance staffs, and enhance internal compliance policies and procedures,” said Marra. “We expect they will continue these measures beyond the expiration of the agreements and commit to a continued culture of openness, accountability and compliance.” “The monitors engaged by the companies were a critical driving force in fully integrating the goals and requirements of the agreements into the companies’ business practices,” Marra said. “These changes will ensure that physician consultants are retained not for the volume of their business but for the legitimate consulting services they can provide. All of these changes were achieved at no cost to taxpayers. Finally, and most importantly, patients will be better served, knowing that their doctors will be making decisions in the patients’ best interests rather than in the doctors’ financial self-interest.” The five companies account for nearly 95 percent of the market in hip and knee surgical implants, which had annual combined sales in 2008 of $6.5 billion. More than 700,000 total hip and knee replacement surgeries are performed in the U.S. each year, with approximately two-thirds of those surgeries performed on patients who are covered by the federal Medicare program. On Sept. 27, 2007, the government accused the companies of using consulting agreements with orthopedic surgeons as inducements to use a particular company’s artificial hip and knee reconstruction and replacement products. The investigation revealed that this was a common practice by the companies from at least 2002 through 2006. Surgeons who had agreements with the companies were typically paid tens to hundreds of thousands of dollars per year for consulting contracts and were often lavished with trips and other expensive perquisites. The investigation revealed instances in which physicians performed work of little or no value for the financial inducements they received but did agree to exclusively use the paying company’s products. The physician consultants also failed to disclose the existence of these relationships with the hospitals where the surgeries were performed and, more importantly, to the patients that they treated. At the time the DPAs began and the criminal complaints were filed, Zimmer, Depuy Biomet Inc., and Smith & Nephew entered into civil settlements with the Department of Justice and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG), and paid a total of $311 million to settle government claims under the antikickback statute and the civil federal False Claims Act. They also entered into five-year Corporate Integrity Agreements (CIAs) with HHS-OIG. Those agreements remain in effect and require additional reforms and oversight under the supervision of HHS-OIG. The financial settlements and CIAs released the four companies from civil liability and prevented them from being excluded from the Medicare reimbursement program by HHS based on the conduct revealed in the investigation. Stryker did not enter into any civil settlement with the Department of Justice or HHS and was not released from civil liability. Among the notable achievements and reforms:
Marra credited Special Agents of the Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General, New York Regional Office, under the direction of Acting Special Agent in Charge Anna Coschignano; Special Agents of the United States Postal Inspection Service, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge David C. Collins; and Special Agents of the FBI, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Weysan Dun, for their tireless work in the investigation of the hips and knees orthopedic industry. The criminal case was investigated and prosecuted by First Assistant U.S. Attorney Michele Brown and Assistant U.S. Attorney Kevin O’Dowd. Brown and O’Dowd were assisted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Marc Ferzan and Grace Park. |