The acai berry product firm resolves allegations it used Oprah Winfrey's and Dr. Mehmet Oz's names and images to promote acai products. An August 2009 suit named South Jordan, Utah-based MonaVie because of "unapproved distributor Web sites and social networking sites - all of which are now non-operational or shut down" (1"The Tan Sheet" Aug. 24, 2009, In Brief). The settlement requires the firm to not use Winfrey's or Oz's names, images or trademarks without permission. MonaVie distributors in violation will face "steep penalties," the company said. MonaVie avoids popular weight-loss claims for acai and focuses on science (2"The Tan Sheet" April 26, 2010)
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Advanz Pharma would have had to show that the European Commission’s decision to revoke Ocaliva’s conditional marketing approval risked causing serious and irreparable harm, according to lawyers from Van Bael & Bellis.
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While the first six months of the year saw eight new drugs targeting a range of diseases enter the European Medicines Agency’s priority medicines scheme, and three PRIME-designated treatments go on to win EU marketing approval, use of the accelerated assessment mechanism appears to be limited.
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