“The fresh demand of a little over Rs 105 crore is calculated on the basis of the amount overcharged by the company during a specific period, along with the interest on that,” the official told Business Standard.
An email query sent to Cipla for this story did not elicit a response. On Monday, shares of the company ended at Rs 406.65 on the BSE exchange, up 3.15 per cent from their previous close.
According to the official, NPPA has raised a demand of Rs 24 crore for overpricing of Cipro injections and another Rs 81 crore for Ciplox.
The government, through NPPA, caps prices of various medicines deemed as essential. Under the latest law, the regulator allows an annual price increase, based on the average wholesale price index. Companies are required to seek approval from the regulator for any out of-the- way rise in prices.
According to the NPPA website, during 2013-14, the regulator initiated action against overcharging in 89 cases and imposed a penalty of a little over Rs 384 crore. However, it managed to recover only Rs 40 crore from companies during the year. Currently, the total overcharging amount pending against various drug makers is a little over Rs 3,000 crore as many have taken the matter to court.
Ciplox and Cipro are brands based on the ciprofloxacin formulation. This is an antibiotic belonging to the quinolone family of medicines, used to treat infections caused by certain bacteria. Most commonly, for infections of the skin, sinuses, bone, lung, ear, abdomen, kidney, prostate and bladder. The drug can also be used to treat some sexually transmitted infections, some forms of infectious diarrhea and typhoid fever. The extended release form of ciprofloxacin is used to treat bladder and kidney infections.