38 Attorneys General Urge FDA to Offer Protection From Fake Weight Loss Drugs

DomG305

GLP-1 Novice
Member Since
May 6, 2024
Posts
32
Likes Received
32
From
Miami

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) must act to protect Americans from fake versions of GLP-1 weight loss and diabetes drugs such as Ozempic and Mounjaro and take “decisive action” against bad actors engaged in such trade, a letter from a bipartisan coalition of attorneys general from 38 U.S. states said.

My fellow attorneys general and I are urging the FDA to protect consumers from the growing threat posed by adulterated or counterfeit versions of these drugs,” California Attorney General Rob Bonta, a signatory of the letter, said in a Feb. 20 statement.

“From inspections to enforcement actions, the FDA has several important tools at its disposal to help put an end to this unlawful and deceptive conduct. A federal response is necessary because many of the counterfeit drugs are shipped from outside of the country.”

The bilateral letter, issued a day earlier, said that demand for GLP-1 medications such as Mounjaro, Zepbound, Ozempic, and Wegovy has “skyrocketed.” The high costs of these medications and supply shortages “have created opportunities for wrongdoers to cash in and endanger consumers,” it said.

Fake GLP-1 drugs have entered the U.S. supply chain from nations such as China, Turkey, and India, the attorneys general said.

These counterfeits can contain contaminants, other unknown drugs, or dangerously high amounts of active ingredient(s). Scammers have also repackaged injectable insulin and falsely sold it as Ozempic,” they said.

Injecting counterfeit drugs “can lead to serious side effects for consumers, sometimes necessitating hospitalization,” the letter said, adding that most consumers cannot identify fake from legitimate variants.

The letter raised the issue of retailers illegally selling active ingredients of GLP-1 medications directly to consumers online without any prescriptions. These active ingredients come from unregulated sources and pose a risk of contamination, it said.

Consumers use the ingredients to formulate drugs without adequate knowledge of safely dissolving the active ingredients, drawing it into syringes, and then injecting the substance into the body, the attorneys general wrote.

There are also compounding pharmacies that produce GLP-1 medications on their own, with some choosing to “cut corners” in pursuit of profits, the letter says. Last year, Eli Lilly and Company, the manufacturer of Mounjaro and Zepbound, said it had identified compounded drugs that have “safety, sterility, and efficacy problems.”

Some have contained bacteria, high impurity levels, different colors (pink, instead of colorless), or a completely different chemical structure than Lilly’s FDA-approved medicines,” the company said.

Novo Nordisk, which manufactures Ozempic and Wegovy, has filed lawsuits against several pharmacies, weight loss clinics, and medical spas in multiple U.S. states for selling compounded drugs claiming to contain semaglutide, the active ingredient in Wegovy and Ozempic.

The letter called on the FDA to “work with federal partners like the Department of Homeland Security to intercept counterfeit GLP-1 drugs before they reach unsuspecting consumers.”

It asked the agency to send warning letters to sellers supplying active ingredients directly to people and “follow up with enforcement action if companies continue to act unlawfully.”

The FDA should also ramp up enforcement against any compounding pharmacies that may be illegally participating in this market,” the attorneys general wrote. “The FDA must work in partnership with state pharmacy boards to ensure compounded GLP-1 drugs are produced in a safe, sanitary way.”
 
Last edited:
can you summarize. i'm not signing up for that shit.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) must act to protect Americans from fake versions of GLP-1 weight loss and diabetes drugs such as Ozempic and Mounjaro and take “decisive action” against bad actors engaged in such trade, a letter from a bipartisan coalition of attorneys general from 38 U.S. states said.

My fellow attorneys general and I are urging the FDA to protect consumers from the growing threat posed by adulterated or counterfeit versions of these drugs,” California Attorney General Rob Bonta, a signatory of the letter, said in a Feb. 20 statement.

“From inspections to enforcement actions, the FDA has several important tools at its disposal to help put an end to this unlawful and deceptive conduct. A federal response is necessary because many of the counterfeit drugs are shipped from outside of the country.”

The bilateral letter, issued a day earlier, said that demand for GLP-1 medications such as Mounjaro, Zepbound, Ozempic, and Wegovy has “skyrocketed.” The high costs of these medications and supply shortages “have created opportunities for wrongdoers to cash in and endanger consumers,” it said.

Fake GLP-1 drugs have entered the U.S. supply chain from nations such as China, Turkey, and India, the attorneys general said.

These counterfeits can contain contaminants, other unknown drugs, or dangerously high amounts of active ingredient(s). Scammers have also repackaged injectable insulin and falsely sold it as Ozempic,” they said.

Injecting counterfeit drugs “can lead to serious side effects for consumers, sometimes necessitating hospitalization,” the letter said, adding that most consumers cannot identify fake from legitimate variants.

The letter raised the issue of retailers illegally selling active ingredients of GLP-1 medications directly to consumers online without any prescriptions. These active ingredients come from unregulated sources and pose a risk of contamination, it said.

Consumers use the ingredients to formulate drugs without adequate knowledge of safely dissolving the active ingredients, drawing it into syringes, and then injecting the substance into the body, the attorneys general wrote.

There are also compounding pharmacies that produce GLP-1 medications on their own, with some choosing to “cut corners” in pursuit of profits, the letter says. Last year, Eli Lilly and Company, the manufacturer of Mounjaro and Zepbound, said it had identified compounded drugs that have “safety, sterility, and efficacy problems.”

Some have contained bacteria, high impurity levels, different colors (pink, instead of colorless), or a completely different chemical structure than Lilly’s FDA-approved medicines,” the company said.

Novo Nordisk, which manufactures Ozempic and Wegovy, has filed lawsuits against several pharmacies, weight loss clinics, and medical spas in multiple U.S. states for selling compounded drugs claiming to contain semaglutide, the active ingredient in Wegovy and Ozempic.

The letter called on the FDA to “work with federal partners like the Department of Homeland Security to intercept counterfeit GLP-1 drugs before they reach unsuspecting consumers.”

It asked the agency to send warning letters to sellers supplying active ingredients directly to people and “follow up with enforcement action if companies continue to act unlawfully.”

The FDA should also ramp up enforcement against any compounding pharmacies that may be illegally participating in this market,” the attorneys general wrote. “The FDA must work in partnership with state pharmacy boards to ensure compounded GLP-1 drugs are produced in a safe, sanitary way.”
 

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) must act to protect Americans from fake versions of GLP-1 weight loss and diabetes drugs such as Ozempic and Mounjaro and take “decisive action” against bad actors engaged in such trade, a letter from a bipartisan coalition of attorneys general from 38 U.S. states said.

My fellow attorneys general and I are urging the FDA to protect consumers from the growing threat posed by adulterated or counterfeit versions of these drugs,” California Attorney General Rob Bonta, a signatory of the letter, said in a Feb. 20 statement.

“From inspections to enforcement actions, the FDA has several important tools at its disposal to help put an end to this unlawful and deceptive conduct. A federal response is necessary because many of the counterfeit drugs are shipped from outside of the country.”

The bilateral letter, issued a day earlier, said that demand for GLP-1 medications such as Mounjaro, Zepbound, Ozempic, and Wegovy has “skyrocketed.” The high costs of these medications and supply shortages “have created opportunities for wrongdoers to cash in and endanger consumers,” it said.

Fake GLP-1 drugs have entered the U.S. supply chain from nations such as China, Turkey, and India, the attorneys general said.

These counterfeits can contain contaminants, other unknown drugs, or dangerously high amounts of active ingredient(s). Scammers have also repackaged injectable insulin and falsely sold it as Ozempic,” they said.

Injecting counterfeit drugs “can lead to serious side effects for consumers, sometimes necessitating hospitalization,” the letter said, adding that most consumers cannot identify fake from legitimate variants.

The letter raised the issue of retailers illegally selling active ingredients of GLP-1 medications directly to consumers online without any prescriptions. These active ingredients come from unregulated sources and pose a risk of contamination, it said.

Consumers use the ingredients to formulate drugs without adequate knowledge of safely dissolving the active ingredients, drawing it into syringes, and then injecting the substance into the body, the attorneys general wrote.

There are also compounding pharmacies that produce GLP-1 medications on their own, with some choosing to “cut corners” in pursuit of profits, the letter says. Last year, Eli Lilly and Company, the manufacturer of Mounjaro and Zepbound, said it had identified compounded drugs that have “safety, sterility, and efficacy problems.”

Some have contained bacteria, high impurity levels, different colors (pink, instead of colorless), or a completely different chemical structure than Lilly’s FDA-approved medicines,” the company said.

Novo Nordisk, which manufactures Ozempic and Wegovy, has filed lawsuits against several pharmacies, weight loss clinics, and medical spas in multiple U.S. states for selling compounded drugs claiming to contain semaglutide, the active ingredient in Wegovy and Ozempic.

The letter called on the FDA to “work with federal partners like the Department of Homeland Security to intercept counterfeit GLP-1 drugs before they reach unsuspecting consumers.”

It asked the agency to send warning letters to sellers supplying active ingredients directly to people and “follow up with enforcement action if companies continue to act unlawfully.”

The FDA should also ramp up enforcement against any compounding pharmacies that may be illegally participating in this market,” the attorneys general wrote. “The FDA must work in partnership with state pharmacy boards to ensure compounded GLP-1 drugs are produced in a safe, sanitary way.”
Fortunately- for this situation anyways, the FDA is being disbanded bit by bit so they are not going to have the resources to “go after” any/all international GLP/1 sources. I agree , stop the scammers, importing empty vials of powder or vials w/ contaminants. But I am hoping our current high quality grey market products don’t get caught/ included in this throw out the baby with the bath water sweep. It’s definitely stinks of big pharma over reach.
 
Meh, this looks like the Pharmaceutical Companies' lawyer’s PR leveraging against compounding pharmacies. Plus, one must continuously replenish the War chests! The Epoch Times is a notorious bad actor in terms of news, anyway. But I must admit this article did trigger my Amygdala into wanting to buy more.
 
Meh, this looks like the Pharmaceutical Companies' lawyer’s PR leveraging against compounding pharmacies. Plus, one must continuously replenish the War chests! The Epoch Times is a notorious bad actor in terms of news, anyway. But I must admit this article did trigger my Amygdala into wanting to buy more.
Same. I'm like I have enough for 1.5 years, I'm gonna need a 10 year stock pile now....
 
"counterfeit" glp-1s? They're trying to group them in the knock-off handbags category (they look and function the same, but not the real deal). So counterfeit glp-1s (they look and function the same, but not the real deal). I proudly walk around in my counterfeits.
 
This is so frustrating. The strangle hold that these companies have over the production of these lifesaving medicines is ridiculous. Billions of dollars have been made. Their costs have been repaid in triplicate.

I am definitely in the boat of buying enough of everything to have for a few years.
 
I think the US sellers are the low hanging fruit and will eventually be targeted by either the states AG's or the FDA. The CN vendors will be much more difficult to stop.
I think customs will look at it from a counterfeit stand point and start using the scanners looking for vial shaped packs or chemical residue. with this comes a new breed of shipper and trying to get product over without tons of it being lost
 
I think it will be in the wording of the US vendors. As long as they make no claims about health or that it's marketed in any way shape or form for human consumption, research peptides will remain in the clear. Even though we are balls deep in this world, we are really a small portion of the population. Compounded pharmacies are toast, I believe. Then we everybody and their brother is trying to get on these meds, I see pressure from the government to step in an slap these pharmaceutical companies on the wrist and tell them tk lower the meds to what people overseas have to pay. But what do I know?
 
i think the serious CN vendors are going to have to create USA warehouses. i don't feel comfortable having my package seized whether they reship or not.
The Man would have a much easier time seizing whole USA warehouses than seizing the zillions of random incoming parcels of peptides makeup and kitty litter at Customs
 
The Man would have a much easier time seizing whole USA warehouses than seizing the zillions of random incoming parcels of peptides makeup and kitty litter at Customs
i don't give a shit. i don't want to import anything questionable with my name on it. let the vendor take the risk.

they produce this suff for like 1 buck a vial. they can afford to take some losses.
 
i don't give a shit. i don't want to import anything questionable with my name on it. let the vendor take the risk.

they produce this suff for like 1 buck a vial. they can afford to take some losses.
That's one thing I like about the vendors that ship to a package receiver, for lack of a better term, in the US and then they reship to final destination. I don't really like packages directly from CN containing contraband with my name on it.
 
So where is the support to make the stuff more affordable and accessible for the average person? Seems like the issue would resolve itself at that point.
 
That's one thing I like about the vendors that ship to a package receiver, for lack of a better term, in the US and then they reship to final destination. I don't really like packages directly from CN containing contraband with my name on it.
Turns out that your name is still on it for almost all of these. These shipping lines require the end customer details be available to hand over to customs, and many have the final shipping label for you on the box already.
 
i don't give a shit. i don't want to import anything questionable with my name on it. let the vendor take the risk.

they produce this suff for like 1 buck a vial. they can afford to take some losses.
You used to be fun….
 
I understand the need for drug companies to get a return on their huge RnD investments but they are just so cynical in pretending that this is all about safety for the patients, rather than maintaining huge margins on cheaply produced drugs. Especially in the US where official stuff costs 8x Europe.
 
I understand the need for drug companies to get a return on their huge RnD investments but they are just so cynical in pretending that this is all about safety for the patients, rather than maintaining huge margins on cheaply produced drugs. Especially in the US where official stuff costs 8x Europe.
Exactly. And just for giggles let's ask the question.... why are Americans charged so much more than the rest of the world?
 

Trending Topics

Latest Posts

Forum Statistics

Threads
3,787
Posts
57,878
Members
9,094
Newest
shangri-lodge
Top Bottom