Abbott Laboratories is an American multinational medical devices and health care company with headquarters in Abbott Park, Illinois, in the United States. The company was founded by Chicago physician Wallace Calvin Abbott in 1888 to formulate known drugs; today, it sells medical devices, diagnostics, branded generic medicines and nutritional products. It split off its research-based pharmaceuticals business into AbbVie in 2013.[4][5]
In 1888 at the age of 30, Wallace Abbott (1857–1921), an 1885 graduate of the University of Michigan, founded the Abbott Alkaloidal Company in Ravenswood, Chicago. At the time, he was a practising physician and owned a drug store. His innovation was formulating the active part of alkaloidmedicinal plants—morphine, quinine, strychnine and codeine—as tiny "dosimetric granules", producing more consistent and effective dosages for patients than the liquid preparations previously used, which deteriorated over time.[6] In 1922, the company moved from Ravenswood to North Chicago, Illinois.[citation needed]
International expansion
Abbott's first international affiliate was in London in 1907; the company later added an affiliate in Montreal, Canada.[citation needed] Abbott India Ltd was originally incorporated on August 22, 1944, as Boots Pure Drug Company (India) Ltd. The company name was changed to The Boots Company (India) Ltd on November 1, 1971, and to Boots Pharmaceuticals Ltd on January 1, 1991. On October 31, 1995, the name was changed to Knoll Pharmaceuticals Ltd and on July 1, 2002, to their present name Abbott India Ltd. Abbott started operations in Pakistan as a marketing affiliate in 1948; the company has steadily expanded to comprise a work force of over 1500 employees. Currently, two manufacturing facilities located at Landhi and Korangi in Karachi continue to produce pharmaceutical products.[7] In 1962 Abbott entered into a joint venture with Dainippon Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., of Osaka, Japan, to manufacture radio-pharmaceuticals.[citation needed] In 1964, it merged with Ross Laboratories, making Ross a wholly owned subsidiary of Abbott, and Richard Ross gained a seat on Abbott's board of directors until his retirement in 1983.[8] The acquisition of Ross brought Similac under the Abbott umbrella. In the years following the acquisition, Pedialyte and Ensure were introduced as nutritional products by Ross Laboratories while under Abbott's leadership.[9][10][11]
In 1965, Abbott's expansion in Europe continued with offices in Italy and France.[citation needed]
According to Harvard professor Lester Grinspoon and Peter Hedblom, "In 1966 Abbott Laboratories sold the equivalent of two million doses of methamphetamine in powder form to a Long Island criminal dealer".[12]
In 2001, the company acquired Knoll, the pharmaceutical division of BASF, for $6.9 billion.[15] In 2002, it divested the Selsun Blue brand to Chattem.[16] Later in 2002, it sold Clear Eyes and Murine brands to Prestige Brands.[17] In 2004, it acquired TheraSense, a diabetes-care company, which it merged with its MediSense division to become Abbott Diabetes Care.[18][additional citation(s) needed] In 2006, Abbott assisted Boston Scientific in its purchase of Guidant Corporation purchasing the vascular device division of Guidant.[19][20]
In 2007, Abbott acquired Kos Pharmaceuticals for $3.7 billion in cash.[21] At the time of acquisition Kos marketed Niaspan (extended release niacin), and Advicor (niacin/lovastatin).
In 2007 the company was to sell two diagnostics divisions to General Electric, but the parties did not agree on the terms of the acquisition.[22]
On 8 September 2007, the company sold the UK manufacturing plant at Queenborough to UK manufacturer Aesica Pharmaceuticals.[23][24]
Abbott's Ross Products was renamed Abbott Nutrition in 2007.[25]
In February 2010, Abbott acquired the pharmaceuticals unit of Solvay S.A. for US$6.2 billion (€4.5 billion),[28] gaining many additional pharmaceutical products and an increased presence in emerging markets.[29]
In 2004, Abbott spun off its hospital products division into a new 14,000 employee company, Hospira,[34] which was acquired by Pfizer in 2015.[35]
In October 2011, Abbott planned to separate into two companies, one for research-based pharmaceuticals (AbbVie) and the other for medical devices, generic drugs sold internationally, and diagnostics, with the latter retaining the Abbott name.[36][37] Abbott Nutrition, whose products include Similac, Pedialyte, Glucerna, and Ensure, also retained the Abbott name.[36] In preparation for the reorganization, Abbott made severe budget cuts and took a $478 million charge in Q3-2012.[38] The separation was effective as of 1 January 2013, and AbbVie was listed in the New York Stock Exchange.[39]
Further developments
On 16 May 2014, it was announced that Abbott would acquire the holding company Kalo Pharma Internacional S.L. for $2.9 billion in order to secure the 73% it held of Chilean pharmaceutical company, CFR Pharmaceuticals, which the company said would more than double its branded generic drug portfolio.[40][41][42]
In December 2014, the company acquired Russian pharmaceutical manufacturer Veropharm (Voronezh) in a deal worth $410 million, which included three manufacturing facilities.[40][43] Abbott, which already employed 1,400 people in Russia, said it planned to set up a manufacturing presence in the country when the deal closed.[44]
In September 2015, the company announced it had completed its acquisition of Tendyne Holdings, Inc., a private medical device company focused on developing minimally invasive mitral valve replacement therapies.[45] Tendyne was acquired for a total transaction value of $250 million.[45] In January 2020, the Tendyne Mitral Valve became the world's first commercially available solution for Mitral Valve Replacement Technology.[citation needed] Abbott obtained CE Mark for the device which now makes it possible to implant it in Europe outside of a clinical setting. The US clinical study for federal approval is still ongoing.[46]
In February 2016, the company announced it would acquire Alere for $5.8 billion.[47][48] In January 2017, Abbott announced it would acquire St. Jude Medical for $25 billion (each share receiving $46.75 in cash & 0.8708 shares of Abbott common stock, equating to an approximate value of $85).[40][49][50] On 3 October 2017, the company closed the Alere acquisition making the surviving entity the market leader player in the $7 billion point-of-care diagnostic space within the broader $50 billion in-vitro diagnostics market with this takeover.[51] With the acquisition of Alere, the company also obtained the subsidiary Arriva Medical, which is the largest mail-order diabetic supplier.[citation needed] Arriva Medical announced business closure after Abbott acquisition effective 31 December 2017.[52]
In 2017, the FDA approved Abbott's FreeStyle Libre glucose monitoring system, which reads glucose levels through a self-applied sensor without finger pricks.[53]
In August 2018, Reuters reported that Abbott Laboratories was among the top five companies for branded generic drugs in Russia.[54]
In November 2018, Abbott received United States FDA clearance for FreeStyle LibreLink, a glucose reader smartphone app.[55]
In January 2019 purchased Cephea Valve Technologies, Inc. which is developing a less-invasive replacement heart valve for people with mitral valve disease.[56]
In March 2020, Abbott received emergency use authorization (EUA) from the US FDA for a SARS-CoV-2 test during the COVID-19 pandemic.[57] The tester is small (comparable to a small toaster), and produces results within 13 minutes.[58] Detroit received these tests on April 1, 2020.[59][60] Also in March, the firm received EUA for a molecular COVID-19 test that runs on its m2000 RealTime lab-based platform.[61] In April 2020, itt received EUA from the FDA for its third COVID-19 test, an antibody test that helps detect the IgG antibody to SARS-CoV-2 using the company's ARCHITECT laboratory instruments.[62] In May 2020, it received EUA from the FDA for another lab-based COVID-19 antibody test that helps detect the IgG antibody to SARS-CoV-2 using the company's Alinity i system.[62][63] Also in May, it received EUA from the FDA for a molecular COVID-19 test for use on the company's Alinity molecular laboratory instrument.[64][65]
In August 2020, Abbott received EUA from the FDA for its credit-card-sized $5, 15-minute, portable COVID-19 antigen test, BinaxNOW, compatible with the NAVICA mobile app.[66][67]
In October 2020, Abbott received EUA from the FDA for its lab-based COVID-19 IgM antibody blood test.[68] In December 2020, its rapid (20') antigen BinaxNOW COVID-19 test received EUA from the FDA for home use.[69][70]Forbes reported in January 2021 that the firm had delivered more than 400 million COVID-19 tests, 300 million in the fourth quarter of 2020.[71]
In September 2021, Abbott acquired Walk Vascular, LLC.[72]
In January 2022, Abbott introduced Lingo, a line of consumer biowearable sensors that collects a range of biological readings to optimize exercise and nutrition regimens.[73]
In May 2022, Abbott received 510(k) clearance from the FDA for FreeStyle Libre 3, the latest version of its continuous glucose monitor.[74]
In August 2022, Abbott received FDA approval for Proclaim Plus, a multi-use spinal cord stimulation system designed to target chronic pain. The Proclaim Plus system is capable of treating six independent pain sites and has a recharge-free battery life of up to 10 years.[75]
In October 2022, Abbott received EUA from the FDA for its real-time PCR test Alinity m MPXV; this marks the first FDA emergency authorization for commercial monkeypox testing.[76]
On July 5, 2023, Abbott received approval from the FDA for its leadless pacemaker system Aveir DR.[77] In August, the company announced it would acquire Bigfoot Biomedical.[78]
Today, Abbott operates in over 160 countries and sources from at least 62 suppliers worldwide.[79][80]
For the fiscal year 2021, Abbott Laboratories reported earnings of US$7.071 billion, with an annual revenue of US$43.075 billion, which grew 24.5% on an organic basis versus the year prior. Abbott's year-end 2021 stock price was $140.74.[81][82]
On 19 March 2019, it was reported that Abbott was a long-term user of the Double Irish tax structure, a legal but controversial Irish taxation tool used by US multinationals to reduce US corporate taxes on non-U.S profits.[83] Abbott's Irish holding company, the Bermuda-resident Abbott Laboratories Vascular Enterprises (ALVE), employed no staff in 2017, but was responsible for distributing Abbot's products and licensing its technology worldwide.[83] Newly filed accounts showed that ALVE was incorporated in 2003 and had a pre-tax profit of €2 billion in 2016 and 2017 on revenues of €5.2 billion; no taxation was paid on these profits.[83] ALVE had never filed accounts in Ireland since 2003 as it was structured as an unlimited liability company (ULC); however, new EU accounts directives required ALVE to file Irish accounts in 2018.[83] These accounts listed ALVE's registered office as the address of Ireland's largest tax-law firm, Matheson, who have been identified with Double Irish tax structures for Microsoft and Google.[83][84]
Abbott's core businesses focus on diagnostics, medical devices, branded generic medicines and nutritional products, which have been supplemented through acquisitions.
Established Pharmaceuticals:[87] branded generic drugs sold exclusively in developing markets
Management
Miles D. White
Robert B. Ford
Miles D. White joined the company in 1984, holding positions including senior vice president of diagnostic operations, executive vice president, executive chairman, and CEO.[38] In 1996, Robert B. Ford joined Abbott, holding various positions including executive vice president of the company's medical device business.[88]
In November 2019, White announced that he was stepping down as CEO after 21 years.[88] In March 2020, Robert B. Ford took over as president and CEO,[89] and later chairman.[90]
Recognition
Abbott was ranked 86th on the Fortune 500 list of largest US-based corporations in 2022.[91] Fortune also named Abbott as one of its Top 50 World's Most Admired Companies in 2021,[92] among its Blue Ribbon companies in 2021,[93] and to its Change the World list in 2020.[94] In 2022, Abbott was ranked #10 in Fast Company’s Most Innovative Companies in Sports for Libre Sense and received an Honorable Mention for the World Changing Ideas Awards.[95][96] The Galien Foundation named Abbott’s FreeStyle Libre as Best Medical Technology within the last 50 years (1970-2020).[97]
The company has been listed on the Seramount/Working Mother's "100 Best Companies" list for 21 years in a row, named a top company for executive women by Seramount, and included on Science magazine's Top 20 Employers list.[98][99][100][101] The company has also been recognized as a top company by DiversityInc for diversity within the company for 19 consecutive years (2004-2022) and has been included on the Dow Jones Sustainability Index for 18 consecutive years.[102][103]
Products
Nutrition
Pediatric nutrition products manufactured by Abbott Laboratories include:[104]
Similac
Similac Gain
Similac GainPlus
Similac GainSchool
Similac Neosure
Similac Tummicare HW
Isomil
Pedialyte
PediaSure
PediaSure Plus
PediaSure Plus 10+
Adult nutrition products manufactured by Abbott Laboratories include:
Ensure
Glucerna (Ensure Diabetes Care in India)
Juven
ZonePerfect
Diagnostics
Diagnostics products manufactured by Abbott include:[104]
i-STAT (While intended for a human audience, the point of care analyzers also demonstrate utility for the veterinary profession[105] and are marketed by Abaxis.)
Neuromodulation devices manufactured by Abbott Laboratories include:
BurstDR Technology
FlexBurst360 Technology
Proclaim DRG Neurostimulation System
Infinity Deep Brain Stimulation System
Proclaim XR Recharge-Free Spinal Cord Stimulator
NT2000IX Radiofrequency Generator
Proclaim Elite Recharge-Free SCS System
Prodigy MRI SCS System
Litigation and controversies
Leuprorelin
In October 2001, the US Department of Justice, states attorneys general, and TAP Pharmaceutical Products, a subsidiary of Abbott Laboratories, settled criminal and civil charges against TAP related to federal and state Medicare fraud and illegal marketing of the drug leuprorelin.[108] TAP paid a total of $875 million, a record high pharmaceutical settlement.[109][110] This comprised $290 million for violating the Prescription Drug Marketing Act, $559.5 million to settle federal fraud charges for overcharging Medicare, and $25.5 million reimbursement to 50 states and Washington, D.C., for filing false claims with the states' Medicaid programs.[110] The case arose under the False Claims Act with claims filed by Douglas Durand, a former TAP vice president of sales, and Joseph Gerstein, a doctor at Tufts University's HMO practice.[109] Durand, Gerstein, and Tufts shared $95 million of the settlement.[109]
There have since been various suits concerning leuprorelin use, none successful.[111][112] These lawsuits have focused on either the over-prescription of the drug or the lack of warnings about its potential side effects. Between 2010 and 2013, the FDA updated the Lupron drug label to include new safety information on the risk of thromboembolism, loss of bone density and convulsions.[113] The FDA then said that the benefits of leuprorelin outweighed its risks when used according to its approved labeling. From 2017 the FDA evaluated leuprorelin's connection to pain and discomfort in musculoskeletal and connective tissue.[114]
Humira
In March 2003, British company Cambridge Antibody Technology (CAT) stated its wish to "initiate discussions regarding the applicability of the royalty offset provisions for Humira" (Adalimumab) with Abbott Laboratories in the High Court of London. In December 2004, the judgment ruled for CAT.[115]
Abbott was required to pay CAT US$255 million in lieu of royalties the MRC, the Scripps Research Institute and Stratagene would have received on sales of Humira after December 2004. Some of this sum was to be passed to its partners in development, including US$191 million for the UK Medical Research Council (MRC), plus a further $7.5 million over five years from 2006 providing that Humira remained on the market.[116]
Operation Headwaters
In October 2003, Abbott Laboratories and two of its units agreed to pay a total of $600 million in the first combined civil settlement and criminal conviction for offering kickbacks to agents of "Operations Headwaters", an undercover investigation by the FBI.[117]
Depakote
On 2 October 2012, the company was charged with a $500 million fine and $198.5 million forfeiture for illegal marketing of Depakote for uses not approved by the FDA. The court also sentenced Abbott to a five-year term of probation and court supervision.[118] Shareholders then brought derivative suits against the company directors for breach of fiduciary duty.[119][120] Following Abbott's spinoff of its research-based pharmaceuticals business, it no longer owns the commercial rights and associated responsibilities for Humira and Depakote.[121]
Glucose monitors
In 2021, two of Abbott Laboratories' subsidiaries, Arriva Medical LLC and Alere Inc, had to pay $160m to resolve claims that they had fraudulently billed Medicare for glucose monitors. The US Department of Justice said that Arriva used free glucose monitors to induce patients to order more consumable supplies, then took kickbacks on the increased sales. The company was also accused of charging Medicare for glucose monitors given to patients who were ineligible, or even dead.[122]
In September 2024, it launched Lingo, an over-the-counter continuous glucose monitor in the United States. The sensor is manufactured for adults who do not take insulin.[123]
Plant shutdown
In February 2022, Abbott recalled baby formulas from the market and shut down their Michigan plant after complaints of illness and death in infants caused by serious bacterial infections. Following Abbotts' meeting the initial requirement of the U.S. Food & Drug Administration, the facility reopened in June 2022.[124][125][126][127]
Deep Brain Stimulation Device Recall
On July 18, 2023, Abbott recalled its Proclaim and Infinity IPGs due to complaints from patients who are unable to exit MRI mode. The use of the affected IPGs may require surgery to remove the device and replace it with a new device.
There have been 186 reported incidents and 73 reported injuries. There have been no reports of death.[128] Noted by Gita Amar, a PR representative for Abbott Laboratories on this issue. "The company has communicated this action to physicians and regulatory bodies. No products need to be returned to the company or replaced."[129]
^World Health Organization (2019). World Health Organization model list of essential medicines: 21st list 2019. Geneva: World Health Organization. hdl:10665/325771. WHO/MVP/EMP/IAU/2019.06. License: CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 IGO.
^Higginbotham, Stacey (25 January 2004). "Abbott Labs to spin off unit". The Business Journals. Archived from the original on 14 January 2016. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
^ abde La Mercedfirst2=Bruce, Michael; Japsen (19 October 2011). "Abbott Labs to Split into 2 Companies". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 17 June 2022. Retrieved 26 September 2019.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^ abcdePeter Bodkin (19 March 2019). "How the IDA's top client used Ireland to siphon billions offshore tax-free". TheJournal.ie. Archived from the original on 19 March 2019. Retrieved 19 March 2019. Meanwhile, through a myriad of subsidiaries and system of inter-company charges involving a variation on the infamous so-called 'double Irish' structure, its local operations have also legally shaved their tax bills with the Exchequer despite pulling in huge sales.
^Damian Paletta; Kate Linebaugh (15 October 2013). "Dublin Moves to Block Controversial Tax Gambit". The Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on 16 June 2018. Retrieved 19 March 2019. At least 125 major U.S. companies have registered several hundred subsidiaries or investment funds at 70 Sir John Rogerson's Quay, a seven–story building in Dublin's docklands, according to a review of government and corporate records by The Wall Street Journal. The common thread is the building's primary resident: Matheson, an Irish law firm that specializes in ways companies can use Irish tax law.
^U.S. ex rel. McCoyd v. Abbott Laboratories, 1:07-cv-00081 (W.D. Va.); U.S. ex rel. Mulcahy v. Abbott Laboratories, 1:08-cv-0054 (W.D. Va.); U.S. ex rel. Dietzler v. Abbott Laboratories, 1:09-cv-00051 (W.D. Va.); U.S. ex rel. Spetter v. Abbott Laboratories, 1:10-cv-00006 (W.D. Va.).