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Why Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups Are Having The Best Week Ever

It’s official: Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups will never die.

Reese’s, which has been around forevah (1928 to be exact)has just morphed into two new incarnations. First, it was announced last week that Krispy Kreme would be partnering with Hershey’s to create a limited edition Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup doughnut.

“Similar to our hot, fresh doughnuts, the matchmaking of chocolate and peanut butter is a delicious combination that consumers have enjoyed for generations,” said Jackie Woodward, Chief Marketing Officer of Krispy Kreme Doughnuts. “In partnering with The Hershey Company, we’re satisfying an intense desire that Krispy Kreme and Reese’s fans never knew they had.”

Krispy Kreme introduced the Reese’s doughnut in Australia and the U.K. last year, so this isn’t exactly new territory for them. However, coffee creamer is. International Delights has released Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup creamer for when you really want to start your morning off with candy…followed by doughnuts.

https://twitter.com/LAGypsy2010/status/894775591232126976

It’s worth noting that International Delights has also ALREADY released their pumpkin spice flavored creamer. Why the eff not.

Neil DeGrasse Tyson Likes Legal Marijuana, So Will ‘Cosmos On Weed’ Become A Reality?

As one of America’s most celebrated scientists, Neil DeGrasse Tyson’s opinion can carry significant weight. And this week he announced a pro-legalization stance regarding cannabis. The astrophysicist shared his new stance as part of a Facebook Live event where viewers could ask “everything you ever wanted to know about the universe but were afraid to ask.”

One reporter took the opportunity to ask if Tyson shared the influential Carl Sagan’s opinions that cannabis should be legalized.

“There is very little I disagree with Sagan on,” Tyson said. “I think if you really analyze it, relative to other things that are legal, there is no reason for it to have ever been made illegal. Alcohol is legal and it can mess you up way more than smoking a few jays.”

This slightly backtracks Tyson’s opinion on marijuana he shared during a Reddit AMA in 2015. The question at the time regarded what impact drugs had on art over the years. “If you’re in an altered state, you can think something is good that you just created, but it really isn’t,” Tyson said.

He’d also add that he’d prefer people make decisions without mind-altering substances as it has helped his decision-making doing so.

This new stance, though, brings us one step closer to “Cosmos on Weed.” Tyson famously rebooted Sagan’s legendary show Cosmos and Tyson’s delivery style of information caused some to fantasize that the astrophysicist was just high while taping the show. YouTube channel Nacho Punch parodied the thought with hilarious accuracy. In the video Tyson rips a bong before telling you “how fucking rad space is.”

“We all were created from stars. Everything is star stuff,” says Fake Tyson. “This, this, this pizza. This cheese. And these pepperonis. Stars. They’re all…mmmm. How is that made from stars?”

So now that Tyson is pro-cannabis legalization, maybe this fantasy can become a reality?

This Guy Tried To Shoot An Armadillo—And It Shot Back

Shooting an armadillo is a jerk move. What could these armored, docile creatures possibly do to piss someone off so badly that they deserve to get shot at?

It’s a question we’re pondering again, two years after a Texas man shot an armadillo in his yard and regretted it instantly. The bullet ricocheted off the animal’s leathery armored back, and hit the man in the face—the kind of instant karma the internet thrives on.

The story’s going viral again, and as CNN noted, no one’s sure how or why this little guy’s gunfight is back in the news. A few journalists retweeted newly-published stories recapping the incident from 2015—ancient history in online years—but it’s difficult to pinpoint where, exactly, this story cropped up again after all this time.

Our gunslinging villain in this story spotted the armadillo in his yard at around 3 a.m., took out his revolver, and shot three times. One of the bullets came back, striking him in the face.

The man lived, although he had to have his jaw wired shut. The armadillo was never found. Since they can live for up to 20 years, it’s possible the little guy is still at large.

Gossip: Mariah Carey Admits She’s Opening For Lionel Ritchie; Jennifer Lopez And A-Rod Getting Married?

CONFIRMED …. After much debate, the fading Mariah Carey has admitted that she IS nothing more than an opening act on Lionel Richie’s current tour.

The singer says, “It’s his show, but I am the very special!

Guest …. My section is 60 minutes!” Poor Mariah …. How quick they fall !!!

Jennifer Lopez And A-Rod Are So In Love They Are Already Discussing Wedding Plans

Jennifer Lopez and A-Rod are so in love that the couple are ALREADY discussing wedding plans – and it is going to be a massive affair!

“Jennifer has been married three times and never had the over-the-top wedding of her dreams. With A-Rod she is planning to have the biggest celebrity wedding of all time and is talking about having ceremonies in New York, Miami and Los Angeles. Alex enjoys the spotlight as much as she does and this will be the closest thing to a Royal wedding that America has ever seen,” insiders tell Straight Shuter. “When all is good and done the couple could have spent over $10 million saying ‘I Do.”

Love the fresh dirt we bring over daily from Naughty Gossip? Let us know in the comments!

The Real Reason Kylie Jenner Didn’t Go To Her High School Prom

There are a lot of things Kylie Jenner could be sad about: the demise of her former lips, having four older annoying sisters, a demanding narcissistic momager, and being treated more like a brand than a real person.

But as her new reality show points out, it’s missing her prom that gives her an instant case of the sads.

In the KUWTK spin-off, Life of Kylie, which debuted Sunday, the youngest Kardashian-Jenner reveals the reason why she never went to prom: she was home schooled. One can only guess what her teachings consisted of and who was learnin’ her. Oh, lordy!

As crushing as that news is, there are plenty of celebrities who never made it to prom, mainly because they were busy being celebrities. Here are 9 for comparison:

Miley Cyrus

During the CMT Awards in 2008, she said wouldn’t be attending to her prom because she was shooting her move, The Last Song.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BXTAH7sBH_n

Niall Horan

If you had to choose between making millions of dollars being in One Direction and (probably) dancing to one of One Direction’s songs on a stupid dance floor, which would you choose?

https://www.instagram.com/p/BVQXOZTFsVU

Katy Perry

The closest she ever got to going to prom was crashing someone else’s. Not only did she crash a high school prom in Melbourne, she performed!

Charlie Puth

The young crooner told Teen Vogue in 2016 that: “I was basically bullied because I was unique, I was different than everybody” and that “I never went to prom or anything like that but some amazing things happened in my life.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/BWJRVREBs2a

James Franco

In a 1999 interview, Franco said his prom fell on his 18th birthday, and since his girlfriend at the time was an actress, they took a trip to Aspen, Oregon to see some plays instead.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BGNuDBTt9d2

Madonna

According to the Material Girl, she “sat home alone. Couldn’t get a date.”

But she did share a photo of her daughter’s prom nigh. (You just KNOW Madge had a killer dress in her closet, ready to wear.)

https://www.instagram.com/p/BXfuKsJhjfK

Paul Wesley

The Vampire Diaries star told Teen Vogue in 2009 that he could relate to the reclusiveness of his character Stefan, saying,”I wasn’t some weird loner in school, but I definitely wasn’t invited to any of the cool parties. Girls didn’t like me that much — I didn’t even go to my prom.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/-xYGl5yVMT

Justin Bieber

He doesn’t really seem like the the prom type, but The Biebs did end up crashing a high school prom back in 2015 (look what you started, Katy Perry!). His accomplice was Hailey Baldwin, who also missed her own prom because of work-related busy-ness.

They may not have been crowned King and Queen, but it all worked out for them in the end.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BXYoQ-YDwSU

Victoria Justice

She was too busy to attend her own prom, but she did something even better. In 2012, she donated her VMA dress to an organization that provides prom dresses to those who can’t afford them.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BWYEtSSlFgV/

 

Is Your Vape Pen Dangerous? Read This To Find Out

The vape pen is an increasingly popular item among medical marijuana patients and others because they provide a convenient, discreet, and presumably benign way to administer cannabis. But how safe are vape pens and the liquid solutions inside the cartridges that attach to these devices? Who knows what’s actually being inhaled?

It’s generally assumed that vaping is a healthier method of administration than inhaling marijuana smoke, which contains noxious substances that may irritate the lungs. Since a vaporizer heats the cannabis flower or oil concentrate without burning it, the active ingredients are inhaled but no smoke is involved. At least that’s how it’s supposed to work.

But there may be a hidden downside to vape pens, which are manufactured (typically in China), marketed, and utilized without regulatory controls. Available online and in medical marijuana dispensaries, vape pens contain a battery-operated heating mechanism, which at high temperatures can transform solvents, flavoring agents, and various vape oil additives into carcinogens and other dangerous toxins.

Of particular concern: Propylene glycol, a widely used chemical that is mixed with cannabis or hemp oil in many vape pen cartridges. A syrupy, thinning compound, propylene glycol is also the primary ingredient in a majority of nicotine-infused e-cigarette solutions. At high temperatures, propylene glycol converts into tiny polymers that can wreak havoc on lung tissue.

Scientists know a great deal about propylene glycol. It is found in a plethora of common household items—cosmetics, baby wipes, pharmaceuticals, pet food, antifreeze, etc. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration and Health Canada have deemed propylene glycol safe for human ingestion and topical application. But exposure by inhalation is another matter. Many things are safe to eat but dangerous to breathe.

A 2010 study published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health concluded that airborne propylene glycol circulating indoors can induce or exacerbate asthma, eczema, and many allergic symptoms. Children were said to be particularly sensitive to these airborne toxins. An earlier toxicology review warned that propylene glycol, ubiquitous in hairsprays, could be harmful because aerosol particles lodge deep in the lungs and are not respirable.

When propylene glycol is heated by a red-hot metal coil, the potential harm from inhalation exposure increases. High voltage heat can transform propylene glycol and other vaping additives into carbonyls. Carbonyls are a group of cancer-causing chemicals that includes formaldehyde, which has been linked to spontaneous abortions and low birth weight. A known thermal breakdown product of propylene glycol, formaldehyde is an International Agency for Research on Cancer group 1 carcinogen.

Because of low oral toxicity, propylene glycol is classified by the FDA as “generally recognized as safe” (GRAS) for use as a food additive, but this assessment was based on toxicity studies that did not involve heating and breathing propylene glycol.

Prevalent in nicotine e-cig products and present in some vape oil cartridges, FDA-approved flavoring agents pose additional risks when inhaled rather than eaten. The flavoring compounds smooth and creamy (diacetyl and acetyl propionyl) are associated with respiratory illness when inhaled in tobacco e-cigarette devices. Another hazardous-when-inhaled-but-safe-to-eat flavoring compound is cinnamon ceylon, which becomes cytotoxic when aerosolized.

Currently, there is no conclusive evidence that frequent users will develop cancer or another illness if they inhale the contents of vape oil cartridges. That’s because little is actually known about the short or long-term health effects of inhaling propylene glycol and other ingredients that are present in flavored vape pen cartridges. Many of these prefilled cartridges are poorly labeled with little or no meaningful information on their contents.

The possibility that vape pens might expose people to unknown health hazards underscores the importance of adequate safety testing for these products, which thus far has been lacking.

Scientists face several challenges as they try to gather relevant safety data. As yet, no one has determined how much e-cig vapor the typical user breathes in, so different studies assume different amounts of vapor as their standard, making it difficult to compare results. Tracing what happens to the vapor once it is inhaled is equally problematic.

The biggest variable is the device itself. The performance of each vape pen can vary greatly between different devices and sometimes there is considerable variance when comparing two devices of the same model.

Some vape pens require pressing a button to charge the heating coil; others are buttonless and one activates the battery simply by sucking on the pen. The surface area of the vape pen’s heating element and its electrical resistance play a large role in converting ingestible solvents into inhalable toxins.

Another confounding factor is the scant information on when and how long the user pushes the button or inhales on average, how long the coil heats up, or the voltage used during the heating process. A five-volt setting yielded higher levels of formaldehyde in a controlled propylene glycol study cited in the New England Journal of Medicine.

In the case of vape pens, there’s a great need for specific research on how people actually use these products in the real world in order to understand potential benefits or harms.

Such studies have been conducted using the Volcano vaporizer, a first generation vaping device that differs from a vape pen, a more recent innovation, in several ways. Utilized in clinical trials as a medical delivery device, the Volcano is not a portable contraption. The Volcano only heats raw cannabis flower, not oil extract solutions, and it doesn’t combust the bud.

Vape pen manufacturers don’t like to admit it, but when the heating element gets red hot in a vape pen, the solution inside the prefilled cartridges undergoes a process called “smoldering,” a technical term for what is tantamount to “burning.” While much of the vape oil liquid is vaporized and atomized, a portion of the vape oil blend undergoes pyrolysis or combustion. In that sense, most of the vape pens that have flooded the commercial market may not be true vaporizers.

Unlike vape pen devices, the Volcano vaporizer has been tested for safety and pharmacokinetics (a measurement of what’s in the blood and how long it stays there). Collectively, the data indicate that vaporizing whole plant cannabis exposes the user to lower amounts of carcinogens compared to smoke and decreases side effects (such as reactions to the harshness of smoke).

But nonportable vaporizers like the Volcano may still pose health concerns if the vaporized cannabis flower is below acceptable botanical safety standards. A recent article in the Journal of Analytical Methods notes that high levels of ammonia are produced from vaporizing cannabis grown incorrectly, perhaps due to the lack of flushing during hydroponic cultivation. There’s a growing body of data suggesting that the chemicals used to push the plant towards unnaturally high THC concentrations stay in the finished product.

Dr. Jahan Marcu is the chief scientist for Americans for Safe Access (ASA) and chief auditor for ASA’s Patient Focused Certification program. He serves on the board of various trade association and science organization committees, including the American Chemical Society, the International Association for Cannabis as Medicine, and the American Herbal Products Association. 

CBD Hemp Oil Vape Cartridges With Propylene Glycol

Project CBD research associate Eric Geisterfer conducted a limited survey of cannabis vape oil and CBD hemp vape oil cartridges. Several of these products were found to include propylene glycol as an additive. The list below is incomplete—vape oil products are continually being introduced and in some cases rebranded.

Hemp oil vape cartridges that contain Propylene Glycol:

  • Alternate Vape
  • Bluebird Botanicals
  • CannaVape CBD Oil
  • Cloud 9 CBD
  • Delta Liquids
  • Entourage Hemp Products also known as Cannoid LLC
  • Hemp Life Today (also known as Cannazall)
  • Hemp Pure Vape
  • Hemp Vap
  • KanaVape
  • Miracle Smoke
  • Michigan Hemp Company (also known as Bluegrass Naturals)
  • Pure CBD Vapors
  • Pure Hemp Vape
  • Tasty Hemp Oil
  • Zamnesia CBD Smart Liquid

Some cannabis vape oil cartridges also include propylene glycol or polyethylene glycol as a thinning agent. Both compounds may have adverse health effects when heated and inhaled. Neither has been safety tested by the FDA for inhalation when heated. Cannabis consumers should carefully scrutinize cannabis product labels.

Dunkin’ Is Dropping ‘Donuts’ From Its Name And Nobody Cares

Dunkin’ has a nice ring to it, especially considering Dunkin’ Donuts sells a lot more than doughnuts these days.

And that’s the whole impetus behind their potential name change. Starting with their Pasadena location, the company will be dropping the Donuts from their California stores this summer and fall to try and get customers thinking of them as a place to get more than fried breakfast rings. The company wants Dunkin’ to be a destination for coffee. Ring a bell? Starbucks dropped the “Coffee” from its name back in 2011 and look how well that turned out?

Regardless, people don’t seem to care one way or another. In fact, Dunkin’ isn’t new to the American lexicon. Remember their tagline, “America runs on Dunkin” from 2006? Yeah, a lot of people aren’t exactly having issues adjusting.

https://twitter.com/neoTGX/status/895008346104893443

https://twitter.com/tipnkc/status/894007496343306240

The doughnut chain will also upgrade their menus and redesig their stores in order to make them more branded towards coffee and not fast-food.

Fortune reports a final decision on the name change is not expected until sometime in late 2018.

Hawaii’s First Medical Marijuana Dispensary Finally Opens

For two hours on Tuesday, Maui Grown Therapies opened its doors for the first time. They had to take it slow. Though the state of Hawaii legalized medical marijuana in 2000, they didn’t legalize dispensaries until 2015 and then it took up until recently for them to establish testing labs. Naturally, by now, demand is high.

Luckily, it’s time for the roll outs! Eight medical marijuana dispensaries were distributed licenses across the islands last year and the Honolulu dispensary Aloha Green has been inspected and is set to open for the people’s wellness today.

Tuesday was historic, but the newly opened dispensary program doesn’t come without its hiccups. Dispensary prices are on the high side with a gram going for $20 and a quarter going for up to $125, less depending on strain and quality. These higher price tags are due to the high cost of electricity in Hawaii, lab testing expenses and taxes.

Patients have been waiting 17 years for a place to go and legally obtain their medicine. Growing your own or even getting your own can be more than difficult when ill and having lab tested cannabis is equally if not more important. Labs test for things like powdery mildew, mold, pesticides and other contaminants. Contaminants can be deadly for certain disorders, such as when a patient has a compromised immune system.

So far sales have been by appointment only, as dispensary owners ease into a market that’s been waiting with bated breath and is ready to roll in and start purchasing. Maui Grown Therapies pre-registered patients to come in, avoiding a flooded doorway. Patients and dispensary owners alike are very excited, however, and walk-in sales are expected to begin in about a week.

Caregivers and the people they’ve been providing for are thrilled with the lab tested aspect and are also happy simply to have a place to legally obtain clean medicinal cannabis. Hopefully as time goes by more locations will be able to open, the locations that are already licensed will have access to lab testing and patient patients will have enough access to contaminant free weed to ease what’s ailing them.

Gossip: Kris Jenner Says Caitlyn Only Had ‘$200 in the Bank’ When They Met; Usher’s Insurance Company Doesn’t Cover Herpes

Kris Jenner opened up about how she built her empire and created a successful career for her ex Caitlyn Jenner during Janet Mock’s “Never Before” podcast.

“I married Robert Kardashian when I was 22 years old. Everybody that I was surrounded by for two decades was at the top of their game in the entertainment business: the head of every studio, the best attorneys in the world, the people that were running the most incredible industries,” Jenner said in an excerpt from the conversation published in Lena Dunham’s Lenny Letter on Tuesday, August 8. “I was watching my husband be the biggest kick-ass attorney that I’d ever seen. I was so proud of him doing that. I learned a lot along the way.”

“Then, when I met and married Bruce Jenner, I became his manager instantly because he didn’t have a lot going on. I saw this incredible potential, and he wasn’t doing anything,” she said. “Nobody was booking him for speeches. Nobody was sending him out on the road. I thought, ‘Wow. You should be this incredible public speaker.’ I just figured it out to that point.”

The ‘Keeping Up With the Kardashians; star needed to put food on the table for her kids, so she figured out how capitalize on Caitlyn’s Olympic gold medals. “I told my assistant, Lisa, ‘OK, listen. We have the greatest guy here. He really knows his craft. He is really good at what he does, but he doesn’t have anybody doing anything for him. He doesn’t have a lot going on. He has $200 in the bank. What are we going to do?’” she said. “Because the kids have to eat. We have to get it together.”

Usher’s Insurance Company Doesn’t Want to Defend Him in Herpes Lawsuits, Claims He Hid His Alleged Diagnosis

Usher’s herpes fallout continues.

According to new reports, Usher’s insurance company claims he didn’t just allegedly hide his herpes diagnosis from his sexual partners, but from them as well.

They believe his omission means they shouldn’t have pay out ANYTHING on his behalf if he loses any lawsuits.

Via People:

According to court documents filed Monday in Los Angeles Superior Court — and obtained by PEOPLE — New York Marine and General Insurance Company believe they are under no obligation to defend the singer in his current lawsuits in Georgia and California or any potential lawsuits that may come down the road.

Among their list of reasons, New York Marine claims the policy between them and Usher “does not apply to ‘bodily injury’ … arising out of the transmission of any communicable diseases by insured.”

Furthermore, New York Marine claims the policy expressly states that New York Marine “does not provide coverage for an ‘insured’ who has a. intentionally concealed or misrepresented any material fact or circumstance.”

The company also says Usher never made mention of the fact he settled a prior lawsuit in 2012 for $1.1 million over the same issue.

New York Marine is asking the court to rule that they are not obligated to defend Usher in the Georgia lawsuit, the California lawsuits or any future lawsuit that may arise involving the transmission of the herpes virus.

The company has begun defending him in the Georgia case until a judge rules, and is asking to be reimbursed for any expenses they incur in the meantime, should they prevail in this case.

Love the fresh dirt we bring over daily from Naughty Gossip? Let us know in the comments!

How Big Pharma Hinders Treatment Of Opioid Epidemic

“A crippling problem.” “A total epidemic.” “A problem like nobody understands.” These are the words President Trump used to describe the opioid epidemic ravaging the country during a White House listening session in March.

The percentage of people in the U.S. dying of drug overdoses has effectively quadrupled since 1999, and drug overdoses now rank as the leading cause of death for Americans under 50.

Drugs do exist to reverse opioid overdoses or treat long-term opioid addiction. But while opioids have become easier and easier to obtain through illicit markets and sellers on the dark web, a drug that could save countless lives has become increasingly out of reach.

Consider the addiction treatment drug, Suboxone. Patents and other exclusivities on the basic version of Suboxone expired some time ago, yet the price remains sky-high, and access problems persist. Oral film strips now cost over US$500 for a 30-day supply; even simple tablets cost a whopping $600 for a 30-day supply. The cost alone puts the medication out of reach for many.

I study the pharmaceutical industry, and I see how drug companies are able to play games that keep competition out and prices high. Lack of access to addiction treatment drugs like Suboxone can be traced, in part, to the soaring prices, access problems and anti-competitive conduct that has become business as usual in the pharmaceutical industry across the board.

Patent Incentives

Pharmaceutical companies have brought tremendous advances in medicine. I believe they should be adequately compensated for the enormous amount of time and resources needed to develop a new drug. Our intellectual property system is designed to do just that, rewarding companies that bring new drugs to market with a competition-free period – 20 years from the patent application date – during which they can recoup their profits.

After this defined period, generic versions of the drug are supposed to appear on pharmacy shelves, bringing down prices to levels that can be borne more easily by consumers and the health care market generally.

Brand-name companies, however, engage in myriad games to make sure theirs is the only version of the drug on pharmacy shelves, long after generics should have joined the ranks.

Martin Shkreli, the infamous pharmaceutical industry CEO responsible for hiking the cost of his company’s lifesaving drug from $13.50 to $750 overnight, once tweeted that “Every time a drug goes generic, I grieve.”

And it is not just a case of a few bad apples. Complex schemes to hold off generic competition are widespread throughout the pharmaceutical industry, as I have found in my research.

The Games Pharma Plays, Sort Of Like Monopoly

Legislators on both sides of the aisle have decried sky-high drug prices, but it can be hard to pin down the specific behavior to address. Pharmaceutical game-playing has grown over the decades into a multi-headed monster, with a new tactic popping up as soon as the old one is cut off. My colleague and I set out to clearly identify and expose these various games in our book, “Drug Wars: How Big Pharma Raises Prices and Keeps Generics Off the Market.

One game we analyzed involved the filing of petitions at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that raise unfounded or frivolous concerns in an effort to delay generic competitors.

Some of the petitions were just stunning to us. For example, some petitions soberly ask the FDA to require, well, what it already requires, such as ensuring that the generic drug product is stable and has an appropriate shelf life. Other petitions tie the application up in knots for reasons that are hard, even for the FDA, to discuss with a straight face.

For example, the company that manufactures the blood pressure medicine Plendil filed a petition asking the FDA to delay approval of generics by citing concerns over how different types of oranges in orange juice might affect absorption of the medication and demanding additional information on the juice used in the clinical trial

Although 80 percent of these petitions are eventually denied, it takes time and resources for the FDA to review each petition.

Citing concerns over citizen petition games, Congress recently required the FDA to respond to such petitions within five months, but a five-month delay for a blockbuster drug can be worth hundreds of millions of dollars. (The Federal Trade Commission recently filed an antitrust suit against Shire ViroPharma for attempts to hold off competition related to its gastrointestinal drug Vancocin, a campaign that included 24 filings related to a single petition.) Congress also gave the FDA the ability to summarily deny petitions when appropriate, a power that the FDA has failed to use even once.

By parsing through 12 years of FDA data, we found that out of all citizen petitions filed, the percentage of petitions with the possibility of delaying generic entry doubled since 2003, rising from 10 percent to 20 percent. Thus, in some years, one in five petitions filed at the FDA on any topic, including tobacco, food and dietary supplements, had the potential to delay generic competition.

Moreover, we found that 40 percent of such petitions were filed a year or less before the FDA approved the generic, indicating that companies are using these petitions as a last-ditch effort to hold off competition.

There are plenty of other games to play, as well. For example, generic applicants need samples of the brand-name drug to show the FDA that their version is equivalent; some brand-name companies flatly refused to sell samples to generic companies.

Another common tactic involves making tiny modifications to the dosage or formulation of a drug just as the original patents are about to expire. This strategy, known as “product hopping,” allows the drug company to obtain a brand-new set of patents on their “new and improved” version of the drug.

Even if the patents are overturned – and studies show that generics convince courts to overturn the majority of patents they challenge – the process again takes time.

Much of the attention is focused on patents, but the 13 regulatory exclusivities that the FDA doles out also help create competition-free zones. These offer months or even years of additional protection, by taking steps such as carrying out pediatric studies or developing drugs for rare diseases termed “orphan drugs.” Drug companies have stretched these systems to the point at which the costs to society far outweigh the benefits.

The Crippling Cost Of Medicine

One can understand the motivation – delaying entry of a generic competitor for even a few months can translate into billions of dollars in extra revenue for the brand-name company. Thus, drug companies string out games that obstruct and delay competition, one after another. As I noted when testifying before Congress about such strategies, “A billion here, a billion there; that adds up to real money.”

In 2015, 80 percent of the profit growth of the 20 largest drug companies resulted from price hikes. And drugs are vastly more expensive in the U.S. than abroad. (The liver failure drug Syprine, for example, sells for less than $400 a year in many countries; in the U.S., the average list price is $300,000. Gilead’s hepatitis C drug, Sovaldi, sells for the equivalent of $1,000 abroad – in the U.S., it sells for $84,000.)

The industry can do this, in part, because unlike the demand for other goods, the demand for pharmaceuticals is highly inelastic. Consumers will continue to pay for the drugs that can save their lives, even if it breaks the bank.

The Impact On Addiction Treatment

Nowhere is the pain of these games more troubling than in the market for opioid addiction medicine.

In September, I testified before a House Judiciary Subcommittee at a hearing about the state of competition in the markets for addiction medicine, noting that, while “Open and vigorous competition is the backbone of U.S. markets…we are not seeing that in the market for addiction medicine.”

Pharmaceutical companies often argue that high profits are needed to fund development of new drugs, some of which don’t make it to market.

“The competitive market is structured to take maximum advantage of savings from brand competition,” testified Anne McDonald Pritchett, vice president, policy and research for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America.

However, open and vigorous competition is certainly not what the manufacturer behind the addiction treatment drug Suboxone had in mind when it combined several games to fight off generics appearing on the horizon. These games included product hopping (shifting the market to a new form of the drug just as the exclusivity expires so pharmacists cannot fill the prescription with a generic), refusing to cooperate with generic companies on safety plans, and petitioning the FDA to impose safety measures on generic versions that were never required for the brand-name version.

The ConversationThe opioid addiction epidemic is a complex problem, and there are no simple answers.One thing, however, is certain. The U.S. system should not reward companies for blocking generic competition. When we do that, the American public pays the price.

Robin Feldman, Professor of Intellectual Property, University of California, Hastings

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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