Additionally, Christi Shaw, senior vice president and president of Lilly Bio-Medicines, said she was will be leaving the company at the end of August.
Lilly shares dropped 4.6 percent in early trading, to $109.30 each.
The company said Patrik Jonsson, president and general manager of Lilly Japan, will succeed Shaw. It also said a search is underway for Harrington’s successor.
Harrington joined Lilly in 1991 after working as a litigator at Baker & Daniels in Indianapolis, the predecessor firm to Faegre Baker Daniels. He was promoted to his current position in 2012.
Harrington has been a leader at Lilly on diversity initiatives and is a champion for ensuring the legal field is a welcoming place for people of all backgrounds, having served in leadership roles with the Civil Justice Reform Group and as a board member for the National Center for State Courts and the Leadership Council for Legal Diversity.
Indiana Lawyer honored Harrington as a Distinguished Barrister in 2017.
She returned to Lilly in April 2017 to lead the Bio-Medicines division.
“During Christi’s tenure, our Bio-Medicines division launched multiple new medicines globally, such as Olumiant and Emgality, and added key development projects to our early and late-phase portfolio,†Lilly CEO David Ricks said in written remarks. “I value the external perspective and passion for patients that Christi brought to the company.â€
Jonsson joined Lilly in 1990 as a sales representative in Sweden and has held marketing leadership positions for the company throughout Europe. He has been in his current position since 2014.
“Patrik is a patient-focused, inclusive leader who has a long track record of delivering results in numerous markets around the world,†Ricks said. “With a portfolio of newly launched medicines and a robust pipeline in both immunology and pain, he is the right person to lead our Bio-Medicines business.â€