Ad firm Publicis, drugmaker Hikma settle US opioid cases for $500 million

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By Nate Raymond

BOSTON, Feb 1 (Reuters) - A division of French advertising company Publicis Groupe SA and drug company Hikma Pharmaceuticals have reached separate settlements worth a collective $500 million to resolve claims that they helped fuel the deadly U.S. opioid epidemic.

The settlements announced by U.S. state attorneys general on Thursday add to the more than $50 billion that drug manufacturers, distributors, pharmacy operators and consultants have agreed to pay to resolve lawsuits and investigations over their roles in the drug addiction crisis.

Publicis Health, a subsidiary of Publicis Groupe, agreed to pay $350 million to resolve claims by all U.S. states and territories that it helped OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma devise marketing strategies to boost sales of its prescription opioid painkiller.

Massachusetts, which sued Publicis in 2021 alleging it collected more than $50 million to help Purdue get doctors to prescribe its opioids to more patients, for longer periods of time, and at higher doses, helped lead the multistate investigation.

Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell in a statement said the settlement would "bolster accountability and transparency for this ongoing crisis" and provide $8 million that the state can use to fund treatment and services.

Publicis denied wrongdoing, and had called Massachusetts' case an unprecedented attempt to sue an advertising agency over a manufacturer's marketing of its products. But a state court judge declined to throw the case out in October 2021.

London-listed Hikma separately reached an agreement in principle to resolve claims by states and localities for $150 million, consisting of $115 million in cash and $35 million worth of opioid addiction treatment medication, Campbell's office said.

The deal resolves claims that the generic drugmaker from 2006 to 2021 failed to monitor suspicious orders of opioids from potentially illegal distributors.

The company had been facing more than 900 lawsuits stemming from the epidemic, according to a lawsuit Hikma filed in September against an insurer.

States that do not accept the addiction treatment medication under the settlement will receive cash instead, according to Campbell's office.

The U.S. Supreme Court in December heard a challenge by President Joe Biden's administration to Purdue Pharma's multi-billion-dollar bankruptcy settlement resolving related claims against the drugmaker. A ruling is expected by June. (Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston, Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Jan Harvey)

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