rkl123
Registered
Completely and utterly predictable. All compounding is on borrowed time. Gray or bust are only strategies
I think side eye is the problem, or depth perception. I've got wonky vision and have stuck myself replacing syringe caps as well (the needle will stick right through the orange cap). Hitting the plunger at the same time is beyond me. I have a good time sewing my hand to all my mending and hemming projects.I'm still gonna give you side eye. At least until I do it myself, then I promise to DM you and apologize.
It's probably an anxiety thing. I'm so afraid of sticking myself that I'm extra careful.I think side eye is the problem, or depth perception. I've got wonky vision and have stuck myself replacing syringe caps as well (the needle will stick right through the orange cap). Hitting the plunger at the same time is beyond me. I have a good time sewing my hand to all my mending and hemming projects.![]()
Yeah, that doesn't work for me. Anxiety makes my hands tremor turning a singular syringe into a micro needler.It's probably an anxiety thing. I'm so afraid of sticking myself that I'm extra careful.
It doesn't really hurt at all so I'm not being particularly careful. And what am I gonna do, infect myself with my own bodily fluids?It's probably an anxiety thing. I'm so afraid of sticking myself that I'm extra careful.
Recapping has jabbed me too. I gave blood this week and one of the screening questions is "have you had an accidental needle stick"....well..It doesn't really hurt at all so I'm not being particularly careful. And what am I gonna do, infect myself with my own bodily fluids?
Thumb injector here ! Racing out the door late for work, removed the cap, wasn't looking and thought the pen was the correct direction pressing on my thigh and boop --- holy hell the painIt's probably an anxiety thing. I'm so afraid of sticking myself that I'm extra careful.
Does this include the tirz with added this and that I wonder ?Because the 503B pharmacies are envisioned as compounding beforehand to meet a need. The 503As are only supposed to compound for specific patients. Strictly speaking, it's not size that counts, but the provision that of law that authorizes the compounding that makes a difference.
Happened to me once with a cheap insulin syringe. Putting the cap back on, the needle came through the cap and nicked my thumb.It's probably an anxiety thing. I'm so afraid of sticking myself that I'm extra careful.
The 503B pharmacies clearly cannot get around compounding restrictions simply by adding something for a specific patient. The 503A pharmacies may do so. Section 503A bars them generally from compounding what is "essentially a copy of a commercially available drug product" except when done irregularly and only manufactured in small amounts.Does this include the tirz with added this and that I wonder ?
AFAIK the compounding pharmacies have been adding one or another B vitamin for that very reason, even during the FDA-declared shortage.The 503B pharmacies clearly cannot get around compounding restrictions simply by adding something for a specific patient. The 503A pharmacies may do so. Section 503A bars them generally from compounding what is "essentially a copy of a commercially available drug product" except when done irregularly and only manufactured in small amounts.
However, the term “ 'essentially a copy of a commercially available drug product' does not include a drug product in which there is a change, made for an identified individual patient, which produces for that patient a significant difference, as determined by the prescribing practitioner, between the compounded drug and the comparable commercially available drug product." Food, Drug & Cosmetic Act, sec. 503A(b)(2). The attorneys for compounding pharmacies will try to make this exception as big as possible and argue that the language of the Food Drug & Cosmetic Act makes the prescribing physician the only person that can decide. That interpretation seems to create such a big loophole that it swallows the rule: A doctor can always ask the compounding pharmacy to tweak the drug in some way. I won't venture an opinion as to what the outcome will be because (1) as far as I can tell, no one really knows right now and (2) this is far outside my area of expertise. However, if a compounding pharmacy is selling tirzepatide with some special additive that supposedly makes it work better, there is a good chance that whatever was added is an attempt to get around compounding restrictions.
Some compounding pharmacies are already doing so.AFAIK the compounding pharmacies have been adding one or another B vitamin for that very reason, even during the FDA-declared shortage.
I wonder, though, in a more truly legitimate way, what a patient's recourse is when a doctor wants her to take a dosage of something that's between the offered dosages. For example, starting tirz titration at 1mg instead of 2.5. Or knocking the dosage down a bit for a T2 diabetic who's hit intolerable side effects, but might not get adequate benefit by dropping down a full 2.5mg. I assume compounding is the only solution. So we might see a lot of 2/4/6/8/9.5 mg tirz prescriptions soon...?
The 503B pharmacies clearly cannot get around compounding restrictions simply by adding something for a specific patient. The 503A pharmacies may do so. Section 503A bars them generally from compounding what is "essentially a copy of a commercially available drug product" except when done irregularly and only manufactured in small amounts.
However, the term “ 'essentially a copy of a commercially available drug product' does not include a drug product in which there is a change, made for an identified individual patient, which produces for that patient a significant difference, as determined by the prescribing practitioner, between the compounded drug and the comparable commercially available drug product." Food, Drug & Cosmetic Act, sec. 503A(b)(2). The attorneys for compounding pharmacies will try to make this exception as big as possible and argue that the language of the Food Drug & Cosmetic Act makes the prescribing physician the only person that can decide. That interpretation seems to create such a big loophole that it swallows the rule: A doctor can always ask the compounding pharmacy to tweak the drug in some way. I won't venture an opinion as to what the outcome will be because (1) as far as I can tell, no one really knows right now and (2) this is far outside my area of expertise. However, if a compounding pharmacy is selling tirzepatide with some special additive that supposedly makes it work better, there is a good chance that whatever was added is an attempt to get around compounding restrictions.
Kong, I’m a lawyer too and, while I find all of this quite interesting, I am certainly far from an expert. This all makes me ruminate. If EL and the FDA want to hold hands while skipping into the compounding patent enforcement battleground, I think many of the compounding pharmacies will have problems. It would be hard to argue that a peptide formulation is made by a pharmacy pursuant to a doctor’s prescription for a specific patient’s needs when nearly all the compounded tirzepatide for a particular telehealth provider has the same formulation: i.e. tirzepatide plus B-12 or L- carnitine, or niacinamide. If they litigated then successfully obtained patient records in discovery, it would be hard to claim a specific patient formulation when all patients are receiving the same formulation without supportive clinical documentation. I used Henry, then Mochi, back in my beginning peptide hobby and I imagine the Tirz included B12 or some other additive but there was no documented need for it.The 503B pharmacies clearly cannot get around compounding restrictions simply by adding something for a specific patient. The 503A pharmacies may do so. Section 503A bars them generally from compounding what is "essentially a copy of a commercially available drug product" except when done irregularly and only manufactured in small amounts.
However, the term “ 'essentially a copy of a commercially available drug product' does not include a drug product in which there is a change, made for an identified individual patient, which produces for that patient a significant difference, as determined by the prescribing practitioner, between the compounded drug and the comparable commercially available drug product." Food, Drug & Cosmetic Act, sec. 503A(b)(2). The attorneys for compounding pharmacies will try to make this exception as big as possible and argue that the language of the Food Drug & Cosmetic Act makes the prescribing physician the only person that can decide. That interpretation seems to create such a big loophole that it swallows the rule: A doctor can always ask the compounding pharmacy to tweak the drug in some way. I won't venture an opinion as to what the outcome will be because (1) as far as I can tell, no one really knows right now and (2) this is far outside my area of expertise. However, if a compounding pharmacy is selling tirzepatide with some special additive that supposedly makes it work better, there is a good chance that whatever was added is an attempt to get around compounding restrictions.
What you wrote make sense. I do note that the text of the US code makes the prescriber the person who determines the medical need. I wonder if Eli Lilly or the FDA can override these determinations based upon them being obvious subterfuges. Also, I wonder whether state medical boards would get involved and seek to discipline doctors. These are just thoughts. As a legal research geek, this is enormously interesting for me. I’ve tried to avoid writing about this issue much because I worry my lack of any practical experience in this field would cause me to make uninformed statements. I also wonder whether state regulatory boards, which actually conduct most 503A pharmacy regulation, would simply tell compounding pharmacies that these are subterfuges and must stop. I believe lay people overestimate the considerable power of huge corporations and underestimate the authority of state regulatory bodies, such as those that regulate pharmacies and physicians.Kong, I’m a lawyer too and, while I find all of this quite interesting, I am certainly far from an expert. This all makes me ruminate. If EL and the FDA want to hold hands while skipping into the compounding patent enforcement battleground, I think many of the compounding pharmacies will have problems. It would be hard to argue that a peptide formulation is made by a pharmacy pursuant to a doctor’s prescription for a specific patient’s needs when nearly all the compounded tirzepatide for a particular telehealth provider has the same formulation: i.e. tirzepatide plus B-12 or L- carnitine, or niacinamide. If they litigated then successfully obtained patient records in discovery, it would be hard to claim a specific patient formulation when all patients are receiving the same formulation without supportive clinical documentation. I used Henry, then Mochi, back in my beginning peptide hobby and I imagine the Tirz included B12 or some other additive but there was no documented need for it.
The FDA usually doesn’t normally take enforcement actions against 503A pharmacies even though the FDA is legally empowered to do so. The FDA leave that to state regulators. If state regulators tell your pharmacy that it can’t do something, it takes an enormously brave person to defy them."Use one weird trick to keep your compounding pharmacy open! FDA regulators hate this!"
You are right about that.The FDA usually doesn’t take enforcement actions against 503A pharmacies even though the FDA is legally empowered to do so. The FDA leave that to state regulators. If state regulators tell your pharmacy that it can’t do something, it takes an enormously brave person to defy them.
I don’t have much practical experience with state pharmacy regs either, although I do also have an MHA and work in healthcare. You have raised some excellent points. I will enjoy following the legal path of peptide patents.What you wrote make sense. I do note that the text of the US code makes the prescriber the person who determines the medical need. I wonder if Eli Lilly or the FDA can override these determinations based upon them being obvious subterfuges. Also, I wonder whether state medical boards would get involved and seek to discipline doctors. These are just thoughts. As a legal research geek, this is enormously interesting for me. I’ve tried to avoid writing about this issue much because I worry my lack of any practical experience in this field would cause me to make uninformed statements. I also wonder whether state regulatory boards, which actually conduct most 503A pharmacy regulation, would simply tell compounding pharmacies that these are subterfuges and must stop. I believe lay people overestimate the considerable power of huge corporations and underestimate the authority of state regulatory bodies, such as those that regulate pharmacies and physicians.