Dumb question -- what was the exact issue the doctor took with your compounded pharma approach? It is approved by the FDA. What was the 'argument' there? (I have my own experience, ergo the question)
I have an official prescription for Zepbound/Tirz. For a while I was getting paper scripts and using a compounding pharmacy while sorting out insurance. My doctor was fine with it.
Recently I went in for a refill and saw an Eli Lilly rep in the waiting room. After she left, I asked the doctor why she was there. Got no real answer. By the end of the day, instead of giving me a paper script like usual, they had already sent the prescription straight to Eli Lilly’s own pharmacy.
It was pretty obvious what happened. The rep shows up, and suddenly the doctor stops writing paper scripts and routes everything to Lilly’s pharmacy instead. I don’t think it’s a coincidence.
Eli Lilly has been working to shut down compounding of GLP-1 medications. The FDA proposed excluding semaglutide, tirzepatide, and liraglutide from the 503B bulks list on April 30th, finding no clinical need for outsourcing facilities to compound them. That proposal is now in the 60-day public comment period, which ends June 29, 2026. Once finalized, it will effectively block large-scale compounding of these drugs.
This isn’t subtle. They’re moving to close off the lower-cost compounded options that many people have been using.
I feel a rebellious streak in me