AIDS Healthcare Foundation Lauds Brazil for Negotiating 30% Price Cut on Abbott's Kaletra


LOS ANGELES, July 5 /PRNewswire/ --

AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), the US' largest HIV/AIDS healthcare,
prevention and education provider, which operates free AIDS treatment clinics
in the US, Africa, Latin America/Caribbean and Asia, today lauded the
government of Brazil for successfully negotiating a price cut of 30% on
Abbott Laboratories' lifesaving medication, Kaletra (its two drug AIDS drug
combination including lopinavir and ritonavir).

According to Bloomberg News Service, Brazil has pressed for discount
prices on AIDS drugs to limit the cost of its program providing free
treatment to all 200,000 people infected with AIDS and the HIV virus. The
agreement extends to Brazil the same price structure Abbott has offered 44
other countries considered low and low-middle income, and it replaces a deal
signed in 2005 when it lowered the price of the previous version of Kaletra
by 46 percent in Brazil after the government threatened to break its patent.

"We commend the Government of Brazil for successfully negotiating this
additional and significant price cut on a more patient-friendly version of
Abbott's AIDS combination treatment, Kaletra," said Michael Weinstein, AIDS
Healthcare Foundation's President. "However, this 30% price reduction on top
of Brazil's previously-negotiated 46% price discount underscores to anyone who
understands the most basic of mathematics just how random and arbitrary AIDS
drug pricing by multi-national drug companies can be. Abbott has been the
pharmaceutical industry's poster child for bad behavior of late -- they've
blacklisted Thailand from any of its new drugs, sued the advocacy group, ACT
Up Paris, and run rampant over a number of other recent drug access issues
put forth by a number of advocacy groups. A 76% reduction on this lifesaving
combination may seem significant for Brazil, but we still believe Abbott --
like most pharmaceutical companies -- can do far, far more to improve pricing
and access to their lifesaving AIDS drugs around the world."

According to Bloomberg, "Kaletra is a protease inhibitor that blocks an
enzyme involved in the virus's replication, slowing its progression to AIDS.
It's often used in combination with other drugs. It's the second most-used
drug on Brazil's AIDS cocktail. About 31,000 adults and 1,200 children ingest
it daily in Brazil."

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