On March 11, 2016, a federal judge in Chicago sentenced Dr.
Michael Reinstein to nine months in prison for taking kickbacks from the makers
of the antipsychotic drug clozapine, for which he was the nation’s top
prescriber. He was also ordered to pay a fine and serve community service, the
Chicago Tribune reported.
Illinois medical regulators have indefinitely suspended the
medical license of psychiatrist Michael Reinstein, who prescribed more of the
most powerful and riskiest antipsychotic drug clozapine than any other doctor
in the country.
The decision by Illinois' Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation, signed Friday, suspends Reinstein's license for a
minimum of three years, at which time he can apply to have it reinstated.
The state's medical disciplinary board recommended the
sanction in May after determining that Reinstein, 71, received "illegal
direct and indirect remuneration" from the maker of generic clozapine; did
not consider alternative treatments for his patients; and disregarded patients'
well-being because of potentially life-threatening side effects of the drug.
Reinstein's motion for a rehearing was denied Friday, making the matter public.
Clozapine is approved to treat patients who don't respond to
other medications. But it can have dangerous side effects, including seizures,
inflammation of the heart muscle, and a drop in white blood cells. The drug is
considered particularly dangerous for elderly patients.
Reinstein's prescribing patterns have been explored in two
ProPublica reports.
In 2009, ProPublica and the Chicago Tribune detailed how he
had prescribed more of the antipsychotic clozapine to patients in Medicaid's
Illinois program in 2007 than all doctors in the Medicaid programs of Texas,
Florida and North Carolina combined. Autopsy and court records showed that, by
2009, at least three patients under Reinstein's care had died of clozapine
intoxication. At that time, Reinstein defended his prescription record, arguing
that clozapine is effective and underprescribed.
Last year, as part of an investigation into Medicare's
failure to monitor problem prescribers, ProPublica reported that Reinstein
prescribed even more clozapine in Medicare's prescription drug program for
seniors and the disabled. We found that the program continued to let him
prescribe even after the U.S. Department of Justice accused him of fraud and
Illinois' Medicaid program suspended payments to him…
The federal fraud lawsuit against Reinstein is pending in
U.S. District Court in Chicago. In a November 2012 news release announcing the
case, the government said that Reinstein "received illegal kickbacks from
pharmaceutical companies and submitted at least 140,000 false claims to
Medicare and Medicaid for antipsychotic medications he prescribed for thousands
of mentally ill patients in area nursing homes."
Prosecutors allege that Reinstein's prescribing decisions
were motivated by money and perks from pharmaceutical companies. He allegedly
switched patients from one brand of clozapine to another based on money and
other enticements he received from a drugmaker.
In March, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd., the maker of
generic clozapine, agreed to pay more than $27.6 million to settle state and
federal allegations that it induced Reinstein to prescribe the drug.
Reinstein's prescribing of clozapine appears to have
declined after the 2009 articles about him. From 2007 to 2009, he wrote an
average of 20,000 Medicare prescriptions annually for clozapine and a
brand-name version, FazaClo. That figure dropped to about 8,000 in 2012,
according to data obtained by ProPublica.
https://www.propublica.org/article/illinois-suspends-medical-license-of-leading-prescriber-of-antipsychotic-dr
Courtesy of a colleague
No comments:
Post a Comment