Connect with us

CBS News

FDA says this weight loss drug shortage is over, but patients worry about cost and availability

Avatar

Published

on


For many patients on tirzepatide, a transformative medication used for weight loss and diabetes, the end of the drug’s shortage was anything but welcome news.

“I had an anxiety attack,” said Maria Galindo, who has lost 60 pounds since starting the drug. “I actually was sitting there, I was in the middle of a meeting and then I read an email that our doctor sent and my face got completely numb.”

The 35-year-old mom is one of many patients taking a compounded version of tirzepatide produced by a pharmacy while Eli Lilly’s brand-name versions, Zepbound and Mounjaro, have been in short supply.

She says she’s been paying about $350 per month for compounded tirzepatide. Her insurance doesn’t cover Zepbound, and she can’t afford the list price of around $1,000 per month.

Eli Lilly holds the patent for tirzepatide, and while the FDA doesn’t enforce patents, the agency does regulate whether pharmacies are making unauthorized copies of FDA-approved drugs — a limit the agency waives if there is a shortage of the medication.

The FDA officially deemed the nearly two-year shortage of tirzepatide resolved earlier this month.

Days later, the Outsourcing Facilities Association, a trade group representing large-scale compounding pharmacies, sued the FDA over the decision, calling it “reckless and arbitrary.”

In response, the FDA voluntarily agreed to reconsider whether there is still a tirzepatide shortage and will allow those large-scale compounding pharmacies to continue producing copies of the drug for now, according to a court filing.

Neither the FDA nor Eli Lilly responded to a request for comment on the lawsuit.

“From pharmacists to therapists”

About 1 in 8 Americans have tried a GLP-1 drug for weight loss or diabetes, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation poll. The buzzworthy new class of drugs include semaglutide, sold by Novo Nordisk under brand names Ozempic and Wegovy, and tirzepatide, sold as Lilly’s Mounjaro and Zepbound.

It’s unknown exactly how many people are taking a compounded GLP-1, but one estimate puts the number at up to 2 million patients in the U.S., KFF Health News reported.

After the FDA’s decision, scores of patients on compounded tirzepatide took to online forums and social media to voice frustration and confusion over losing access to their medications.

Pharmacists from around the country said at a recent industry roundtable they have received an onslaught of calls from distraught patients and providers.

Scott Welch runs a hybrid pharmacy in Arlington, Virginia, that dispenses both compounded and commercial prescription medications.

“I knew as soon as I heard that the FDA had taken the [tirzpepatide] injection off the shortage, that there was going to be hysteria from patients and providers,” Welch said. “So the first thing I did was think about the patients and said, ‘Well, if I can’t compound this anymore, I need to get in the commercial product.'”

Welch logged into his wholesaler portal and was surprised to see “zero allocation” for Mounjaro and Zepbound, meaning he was still unable to order any amount of the medications.

“I didn’t expect that when something comes off a shortage coming from the FDA. I at least expect to be able to get product and service our patients,” Welch said.

An FDA notice states that “prescribers may still see intermittent localized supply disruptions as the products move through the supply chain.”

The FDA’s entry for tirzepatide on its online shortage list says patients might not be able to fill their prescription at a particular pharmacy right away. That’s especially true for medicines that need to be refrigerated and have multiple dose strengths — like most GLP-1 medications.

A spokesperson for Eli Lilly said in a statement that “all doses of Mounjaro and Zepbound” are available and have been “since early August.”

Meanwhile, Welch said his “team has gone from pharmacists to therapists” as they counsel patients over the sudden loss of access to the compounded medications.

When does the FDA resolve a shortage?

The FDA receives data from drugmakers about their ability to supply the market with commercial medications. If a drug’s total supply can’t meet current demand, the FDA will list it as in shortage. During this time, compounding pharmacies are permitted to make copies of the drug to help fill the gap.

Compounded medications aren’t FDA-approved, but the facilities in which they are made must comply with certain federal or state regulations, depending on their classification.

More than a month after Eli Lilly told the FDA it was able to meet demand again, the agency agreed to declare the shortage resolved, telling compounders to stop producing copies of it.

The FDA does not discuss its interactions with drugmakers as a matter of general policy, a spokesperson said, so the information exchanged between Eli Lilly and the agency before it determined the tirzepatide shortage was over is unknown.

The spokesperson also said the agency “does not manufacture drugs and cannot require a pharmaceutical company to make a drug, make more of a drug or mandate who a pharmaceutical company chooses to sell its product to.”

Eli Lilly did not respond to a CBS News inquiry about reports from some pharmacists unable to order the medications from their wholesalers.

Calls for change

Scott Brunner, CEO of the trade group Alliance for Pharmacy Compounding, says part of the problem is how the FDA determines when to resolve a shortage.

“The current statute only allows them to consider data from drugmakers, and we believe they ought to be able to pull from hospitals, from health systems, from pharmacies — certainly these folks are on the front lines,” Brunner said.

The American Society of Health-System Pharmacists still includes tirzepatide on its own list of shortages.

In contrast to the FDA, “We will often post shortages earlier and we often leave those shortages on a little bit longer, just because we’re tracking specific formulations or exact strengths,” said Dr. Erin Fox, associate chief pharmacy officer at University of Utah Health, whose team runs a drug information service that contributes to the society’s list.

Drugmakers normally “have extra capacity to prevent this” kind of shortage, she said, and the sheer amount of tirzepatide compounding is unusual.

Brunner is among compounding industry leaders who want the FDA to create a new framework for drugs like tirzepatide that have seen high rates of compounding while under shortage.

“Our primary concern is continuity of care,” the Alliance for Pharmacy Compounding wrote in an Oct. 7 letter to the FDA. “Patients who have been receiving compounded tirzepatide cannot immediately transition to the FDA-approved product due to a variety of practical ‘speedbumps.'”

Patients face hurdles like getting a new prescription and navigating insurance coverage when switching from a compounded medication to a commercial product.

“We’re talking about patients going without this medication for a substantial amount of time when they’ve had access to this,” Welch said.

Compounding pharmacists are bracing for when semaglutide, sold by Novo Nordisk as Ozempic and Wegovy, comes off the shortage list.

“The FDA needs to take these concerns seriously and build that framework right now for that moment that is coming. We don’t know when, but it is coming,” Brunner said.

Another major concern is an uptick in desperate patients attempting to get tirzepatide from unauthorized, potentially dangerous sources online once compounders have to stop producing the drug.

Compounding pharmacies, drugmakers and the FDA share concerns about fake or subpar weight loss drugs — even though regulated compounders often get lumped together with illicit sources by the manufacturers.

Affordability concerns

Drugmakers’ ability to meet demand is just one part of access to tirzepatide and similar medications. Patients also need to be able to afford them.

At the end of August, Eli Lilly announced it would sell single-use vials of Zepbound directly to patients at a significantly lower price than its injection pens.

Affordability is Galindo’s top concern. When she got word she’d be losing access to compounded tirzepatide, she says she ordered a final, three-month supply from her pharmacy on a credit card.

“I have an 8-year old and I want to chase him and I want to play with him, and I couldn’t play with him because I was so heavy that my body wasn’t pushing anymore,” Galindo said.

At her heaviest, she says she faced significant health challenges, including insulin resistance linked to polycystic ovarian syndrome, joint pain and potential autoimmune issues. Now, she’s training for a half marathon without any pain.

“It’s a very dark place when you get to being that depressed over how you look and how you feel, because I felt like my body was working against me instead of the other way,” said Galindo. “I am honestly, still to this day, very worried that I could get back to that place.”



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

Eminem, Obama on campaign trail for Harris as VP does series of interviews

Avatar

Published

on


Eminem, Obama on campaign trail for Harris as VP does series of interviews – CBS News


Watch CBS News



Vice President Kamala Harris is making her case for president through a series of interviews as former President Barack Obama and rapper Eminem headlined a rally for her in Michigan on Tuesday. In a new interview, Harris revealed she is not only thinking about election night, but what could happen in the days that follow.

Be the first to know

Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.




Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

Canadian police investigating death of Walmart employee found in store’s walk-in oven

Avatar

Published

on


Toronto — Police in eastern Canada are investigating the death of a 19-year-old woman who was found inside a walk-in oven at a Walmart store in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Authorities received a call reporting a death Saturday night, prompting the evacuation of the store. The deceased woman, a Walmart employee, was found inside the walk-in oven in the store’s bakery department. 

Halifax Regional Police did not name the woman and said the cause of her death was still being determined.

“Investigators are working closely with Occupational Health and Safety and the Nova Scotia Medical Examiner Service to determine the cause and manner of death,” the Halifax police said. “The investigation is complex and involves several partner agencies. An investigation of this nature may take a significant amount of time.”

Company Signs
The Walmart store in Halifax, Canada, is seen in a file photo.

Getty


Amanda Moss, a spokesperson for Walmart Canada, said the company was deeply saddened by the employee’s death. In a statement to CBS News, Moss said the store in question would remain closed until further notice to allow for further investigation and for employees to process the situation. 

“We are heartbroken and our deepest thoughts are with our associate and their family. Our focus remains on taking care of our associates and making sure they have the support they need,” Moss said. 

According to Canadian media, the woman was identified as a member of the Sikh community who had moved to Canada with her mother in recent years. 

“It’s a really tragic incident and everybody is deeply hurt by this, and we are waiting for the police investigation to come out,” Balbir Singh, the secretary of the Maritime Sikh Society, told CBS News’ partner network in Canada, CBC News. “We would like to know what happened to this young woman.”



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

CBS News

McDonald’s location visited by Trump attracts negative reviews, causing Yelp to disable comments

Avatar

Published

on


A McDonald’s location in Feasterville, Pennsylvania, that hosted former president Donald Trump on October 20 has had its Yelp reviews disabled after attracting a flurry of politicized comments.

Yelp told CBS MoneyWatch it decided to block new reviews for the McDonald’s location because it wants to ensure that user comments reflect “genuine, firsthand” experiences with businesses. Yelp placed an “unusual activity alert” on the Feasterville, PA-based restaurant’s page on the afternoon of October 21. 

About 145 new reviews had already been posted prior to that, although Trump only served food to pre-selected supporters in five cars on Sunday. Otherwise, the restaurant, located in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, was closed to the public that morning. 

Yelp disables reviews 

Trump’s appearance at the restaurant, where he donned an apron and worked the drive-thru, sparked some controversy, prompting McDonald’s Corp. to emphasize this was not a presidential endorsement. A sign on the door from the franchise owner and operator acknowledged they are nonpartisan, adding that they proudly serve everyone.


Trump slams retired generals from his administration, calls them “stupid”

01:33

The same cannot be said of some reviewers on Yelp, who took distinctly partisan views on Trump’s appearance at the location. 

“Senile old man working fries without proper restaurant hygiene,” one reviewer posted on October 21. 

Another wrote, “Felons working the window here with access to your credit cards and cash,” a reference to Trump having been convicted of multiple felony counts of falsifying business records in his Manhattan criminal trial earlier this year.

Others called out the negative reviews as politically motivated. “This business is being review bombed, over politics, by a bunch of hateful fools who have never been to the restaurant,” one wrote on October 21.

“It’s sad yet unsurprising that deranged liberals would degrade a small business simply because they can’t stand Donald Trump. They should get a life,” Trump spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said in an email.

Trump’s visit to the McDonald’s was spurred by his assertion, without evidence, that Vice President Kamala Harris had never worked at the restaurant. She has previously said she worked at the fast-food chain while in college.

For its part, Yelp said its decision to disable comments is due to its goal of ensuring genuine reviews for its users.

“Consumer trust is one of our top priorities, which is why Yelp makes significant investments in technology and human moderation to protect the integrity and quality of content on our platform,” it said. “When we see the activity dramatically decrease or stop, our moderators will clean up the page so reviews describing only firsthand consumer experiences are reflected.”



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2024 Breaking MN

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.