Investigation into supply of lithium-based medication for the treatment of bipolar disease
The CMA has accepted commitments offered by Essential Pharma that address the CMA’s competition concerns resulting from conduct regarding the supply of drugs used to treat bipolar disorder.
Date | Action |
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18 December 2020 | CMA commitments decision published and case closure |
December 2020 | CMA consideration of representations received in response to the consultation |
24 November to 9 December 2020 | Commitments consultation period |
24 November 2020 | Consultation opened on commitments proposed by Essential Pharma |
October and November 2020 | Initial investigation: information gathering, including issuing formal and/or informal information requests and receipt and review of parties’ responses |
5 October 2020 | Investigation opened |
Decision to accept binding commitments
On 18 December 2020, the CMA published its decision to accept commitments from Essential Pharma in relation to its conduct in the supply of lithium carbonate medicines in the UK.
Formal acceptance of commitments by the CMA brought the investigation to an end, with no decision being made as to whether or not the Competition Act 1998 (the ‘Act’) and/or the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (‘TFEU)’ have been infringed.
- (18.12.20)
- News story: CMA secures affordable supply of key bipolar drug (18.12.20)
Consultation on commitments
On 24 November 2020, the CMA published a notice of intention to accept the commitments offered by Essential Pharma and has invited representations from interested third parties on that proposed course of action.
- (24.11.20)
- News story: CMA takes swift action in bipolar drug investigation (24.11.20)
Launch of CMA investigation
On 5 October 2020, the CMA launched an investigation under Chapter II of the Competition Act 1998 into a suspected breach of competition law by Essential Pharma. The investigation relates to Essential Pharma’s intention to discontinue supply of Priadel, a lithium-based medication for the treatment of bipolar disease.
The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) had requested that the CMA impose ‘interim measures’ to pause the withdrawal of Priadel while the investigation is ongoing. However, following the opening of the CMA’s investigation, Essential Pharma informed DHSC that it will continue to supply the drug to facilitate discussions on pricing, removing the immediate threat to patients.
- Press release: CMA to investigate the supply of bipolar drug (6.10.20)
During its investigation, the CMA undertook a number of investigative steps to gather evidence from Essential Pharma and a number of third parties.
The investigation is under Chapter II of the Competition Act 1998. The CMA has not reached a view as to whether there is sufficient evidence of an infringement of competition law for it to issue a statement of objections to any of the parties under investigation. Not all cases result in the CMA issuing a statement of objections.
Contacts
Assistant Project Director: Elizabeth Sinclair (020 7386423, [email protected])
Project Director: Bethan Watts (0203 7386426, [email protected])
Senior Responsible Officer: Ann Pope (0203 7386786, [email protected])
Updates to this page
Published 6 October 2020Last updated 18 December 2020 + show all updates
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Decision to accept commitments published.
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Consultation opened on commitments proposed by Essential Pharma.
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First published.