Leaked documents shed light on the defunct pharmacy that brought Valeant to its knees
Joe Papa
Joe Papa

(Joe Papa, CEO of ValeantReuters)

When Valeant Pharmaceuticals' secret relationship with a pharmacy that sold its drugs directly to consumers was exposed last year, the company first tried to downplay its importance.

It hadn't told investors about the pharmacy, called Philidor, which Valeant had an option to acquire and which accounted for at least 5% of sales. When the existence of the pharmacy and accusations that it was using fraudulent tactics to push Valeant's drugs came to light, the company was quick to break off the relationship.

We're starting to understand how much that must have hurt. You see, Valeant had big plans for Philidor.

Valeant had a sales plan dubbed the "Philidor strategy" to use the pharmacy and increase the volume of shipments for two of its drugs, Solodyn and Jublia. For Solodyn, an antibiotic to treat acne, the rebates and payments drove a recovery in flagging sales.

The strategy is detailed in an internal Valeant presentation obtained by Business Insider. Dated August 2015, two months before the relationship with Philidor was exposed by the Southern Investigative Reporting Foundation, the presentation shows that the pharmacy's aggressive sales and marketing tactics all but completely supported growth in the two drugs — with Philidor moving $46 million of Jublia, a toenail fungus treatment, and $106 million of Solodyn in the first quarter of 2015.

Valeant representative Elif McDonald would not comment on this story. The company's representatives at Sard Verbinnen, Chris Kittredge and Jared Levy, also did not respond to Business Insider's requests for comment.

Key to Philidor's approach was virtually giving away millions of dollars worth of drugs and making sure that insurers and middlemen who approve insurance payments were getting fat rebates for securing payment for the drugs. While it worked, the cost was enormous — in Solodyn's case eating up close to three quarters of any new sales.

According to the document, "the Philidor strategy drove increases for both brands."

Its effect was most dramatic with Solodyn, a drug whose sales had been declining for years. In 2011, the drug did $789 million in sales, according to Symphony Health Solutions. By 2014, after generic competition appeared, the number dropped to $480 million.

Then in the first quarter of 2015, sales of Solodyn shot up 56% from the same time a year before, according to these documents. (For Jublia, that number was 188%.) The bulk of those sales — $106 million — came from Philidor, the presentation shows. Sales through other retail pharmacies fell to $66 million, nearly half what they were a year before.