Yesterday Teva announced they received FDA approval to produce a generic version of Risperdal. We all knew this was coming. Teva was ready with product to ship and JNJ was ready with their own in-house generic version in hopes of cannibalizing some Teva sales at the expense of their former cash cow.
What does this mean for the common man?
Well if you're schizophrenic, bipolar, autistic, or an off-label user, it means that the price you pay just got a whole lot cheaper AND after Teva's 180 days of exclusivity as the sole competitor allowed to sell risperidone, the price will drop even lower as more competition enters the market.
If you're a sale rep. for Invega (the bastard child of Risperdal), your sales goals just got a wee bit more difficult now didn't they because who wants to buy Risperdal-lite when you can get the original for pennies on the dollar. Wonder what that already stellar *saracasm* Invega uptake curve is gonna look like now.
And what if you're Abilify, Geodon, Seroquel or Zyprexa? Well, you hope and pray that your marketing and sales folks have done a good job differentiating their product from the competition because the price differential between you and the generic just went exponential.
And what of the insurers you may ask. Can you say fail first? I'm sure it's already begun.
Ooh, exciting times in the Atypical Antipsychotic Market!
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
First Generic Atypical Antipsychotic (Risperdal becomes risperidone)
Labels:
Abilify,
antipsychotic,
atypical,
bipolar,
FDA,
formulary,
generic,
Geodon,
Invega,
Janssen,
Johnson and Johnson,
Risperdal,
risperidone,
sales reps,
schizophrenia,
Seroquel,
Zyprexa
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