Everything about Hoffmann La Roche totally explained
F. Hoffmann–La Roche, Ltd. is a
Swiss global health-care company which operates world-wide under two divisions:
Pharmaceuticals and
Diagnostics.
It belongs to the
Roche Holding AG.
The headquarters are in
Basel and the company has many sites around the world - including:
Nutley,
Palo Alto,
Pleasanton,
Branchburg,
Indianapolis, and
Florence in the
US,
Welwyn Garden City and
Burgess Hill in the
UK,
Mannheim and
Penzberg in
Germany, and
Shanghai in
China.
The company also owns a majority of the American biotechnology company
Genentech and the Japanese biotechnology company Chugai Pharmaceuticals.
Roche Holding AG (ticker ROC.S) is listed on the London-based
virt-x stock exchange (virt-x is a company of the
SWX Swiss Exchange). Roche's revenues during fiscal year
2005 were $28.6 billion (2005, 35.5bn
CHF). Descendants of the founding Hoffmann and Oeri families own half of the company. Swiss pharma company
Novartis owns 33% of the company (as of 2005).
History
Founded in
1896 by
Fritz Hoffmann-La Roche, the company was early on known for producing various
vitamin preparations and derivatives. In
1934, it became the first company to mass produce synthetic vitamin C, under the brand name
Redoxon. In
1957 it introduced the class of
tranquilizers known as
benzodiazepines (with
Valium and
Rohypnol being the best known members). Its
acne drug
isotretinoin, marketed as Accutane and Roaccutane, has also been used as a form of
chemotherapy for some cancers, has been linked with a number of very severe side effects and remains highly controversial. Roche has also produced various
HIV tests and
antiretroviral drugs. It bought the
patents for the
polymerase chain reaction technique in
1992. It manufactures and sells several
cancer drugs.
In
1976, an accident at a chemical factory in
Seveso,
Italy owned by a subsidiary of Roche caused a large
dioxin contamination; see
Seveso disaster.
In 1982, the United States arm of the company acquired
Biomedical Reference Laboratories for US$163.5 million. That company dated from the late 1960s, and was located in
Burlington, North Carolina. That year Hoffmann-La Roche then merged it with all of its laboratories, and incorporated the merged company as Roche Biomedical Laboratories, Inc. in Burlington. By the early 1990s, Roche Biomedical became one of the largest clinical laboratory networks in the United States, with 20 major laboratories and US$600 million in sales.
On
April 28,
1995 Hoffmann-La Roche sold Roche Biomedical Laboratories, Inc. to National Health Laboratories Holdings Inc. (formerly ), which then changed its name to
Laboratory Corporation of America Holdings .
In 1994, Roche acquired
Syntex.
Creation of the first anti-depressant
In
1956,
Iproniazid was accidentally created during an experiment while synthesizing
Isoniazid. Originally, it had been intended to create a more efficient drug at combatting
Tuberculosis.
Iproniazid, however, revealed to have its own benefits; some people felt it made them feel happier. It was withdrawn from the market in the early 1960s due to toxic side-effects.
Vitamin price fixing
Stanley Adams, Roche's World Product Manager in Basel, contacted the
European Economic Community in 1973 with evidence that Roche had been breaking antitrust laws, engaging in price fixing and market sharing for vitamins with its competitors. Roche was fined accordingly, but a bungle on the part of the EEC allowed the company to discover that it was Adams who had blown the whistle. He was arrested for unauthorised disclosure — an offence under Swiss law — and imprisoned. His wife, having learnt that he might face decades in jail, committed suicide. Adams was released soon after but arrested again more than once before eventually fleeing to Britain, where he wrote a book about the affair,
Roche Versus Adams (London, 1984, ISBN 022402180X).
In 1999 Roche was the worldwide market leader in vitamins, with a market share of 40%. Between 1990 and 1999, the company continued to participate in an illegal price fixing cartel for vitamins, which also included
BASF and
Rhone-Poulenc SA. In 1999, Roche pleaded guilty in the
United States and paid a
US$500 million fine, then the largest fine ever secured in the U.S. The
European Commission fined Roche
€462 million for the same infraction in 2001, also a record fine at the time.
The Philippine health secretary complained that the supply of the said drug is only concentrated in
First World countries even if the disease is ravaging bird and poultry populations in Southeast Asia as of this time. Dr. Duque proposed that even if Roche is the only one who has the patent for the drug, special patents or licenses should be granted to other drug companies to manufacture the drug and make it more accessible to avian flu-vulnerable countries in
Southeast Asia such as
Vietnam,
Indonesia,
Cambodia and the
Philippines. Duque and Philippine president
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo have already communicated with the representative of the
World Health Organization in the Philippines asking for assistance in calling for greater production and distribution of Oseltamivir.
World leaders, such as former
UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, have expressed a desire to have more generic versions of Tamiflu made, especially for
Third World countries too poor to buy the brand name drug.
On
October 20 2005, Hoffmann-La Roche decided to license other companies to manufacture Oseltamivir.
Additional key persons
In addition to corporate executive committee members mentioned in the summary information box
- Chief Financial Officer Dr Erich Hunziker (1953)
- Corporate Services and Human Resources Dr Gottlieb Keller (1954)
Enlarged Corporate Executive Committee
Head Global Pharma Development Eduard E. Holdener (1945)
Head Pharma Partnering Peter Hug (1958)
Head of Roche Diagnostics' business area Diabetes Care Burkhard G. Piper (1961)
Head Global Corporate Communications Rolf D. Schläpfer (1956)
Head of Commercial Operations Pharma Pascal Soriot (1959)
President and CEO, Chugai Osamu Nagayama (1947)
Company profiles
Roche Group
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Hoffmann-La Roche Inc.
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