In the rush to supply prescriptions of Novo Nordisk’s popular diabetes and weight loss meds, some pharmacies are making unauthorized versions of Ozempic and Wegovy, the FDA warned on Tuesday. Some compounding pharmacies, which are permitted to make drugs during times of shortage, are using unauthorized versions of semaglutide—the key active ingredient in the GLP-1 drugs. Compounding pharmacies are currently allowed to make Ozempic and Wegovy because they are in short supply. But they must use approved ingredients, the FDA points out. The agency has received adverse event reports after patients have used compounded semaglutide. In some cases, compounders may be using salt forms of semaglutide, called semaglutide sodium or semaglutide acetate, which have not been proven to be safe or effective. The FDA asks users of Ozempic and Wegovy to get a prescription from a licensed provider and only obtain drugs from state-licensed pharmacies or outsourcing facilities registered with ...
Tyler Patchen The FDA has warned the public that compounded versions of popular GLP-1 drugs Ozempic and Wegovy may not include the same ingredients as the prescription medications, and that has raised questions about their safety and effectiveness. The regulator said Tuesday it has received reports of adverse events related to compounded versions of semaglutide, the active ingredient in Ozempic and Wegovy. Some products being marketed as semaglutide contain the salt formation of semaglutide, which is not considered safe or effective. Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic and Wegovy, both of which contain semaglutide, are approved to treat type 2 diabetes and obesity, and demand for the drugs has soared over the last two years, given the ability of both therapies to help people lose weight. That demand has created a supply crunch, with both medications on the FDA’s shortages list. Though compounding medications is legal when drug shortages occur, the compounded versions ...
Eli Lilly has agreed to pay $13.5 million to end a six-year, class-action lawsuit that alleged the company overpriced its insulin. As part of the settlement, which was recorded (PDF) in a federal district court in New Jersey, Lilly has agreed to cap out-of-pocket costs for its insulin at $35 per month for four years. The deal comes three months after the company said it would slash price of the type 1 diabetes treatment to the same level to “make it easier to access Lilly insulin and help Americans who may have difficulty navigating a complex healthcare system.” Lilly’s initial move had come a month after President Joe Biden, in his State of the Union address, called on Congress to limit insulin costs for all patients to $35 per month. The Inflation Reduction Act already had limited insulin costs for patients on Medicare at $35 per month. The lawsuit was ...
Published in Nature Immunology and Nature Briefing, the research is the first of its kind to decisively map immune responses produced by a COVID-19 vaccination in any First Nations populations. In partnership with Menzies School of Health Research, researchers at the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity (Doherty Institute) evaluated immune responses in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples and non-Indigenous individuals after receiving the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine. Lead author of the study and PhD candidate at the Doherty Institute, University of Melbourne’s Wuji Zhang, said the research provides strong evidence that COVID-19 vaccination triggers effective immune responses against the virus in First Nations peoples. “We found excellent antibody and T cell responses against SARS-CoV-2 in Australian First Nations peoples following COVID-19 vaccination. We saw high levels of antibodies binding to the virus following two vaccine doses,” Mr Zhang said. “T cells against the spike protein, which often recognize ...
My niece is living in my home while she is attending college. I’ve invited her to eat meals with our family, but she typically declines, desiring to eat alone in her room. I’m concerned because she often seems to eat a lot of food at one time, like two sandwiches with two bags of chips or a quart of ice cream. Could this be a sign of an eating disorder? If so, what can I do to help her? ANSWER: Most people eat too much occasionally. They may fill up an extra plate with seconds at a special event, enjoy another piece of pie at a holiday gathering or eat popcorn until stuffed at the movies. There’s no reason to be concerned if this happens occasionally. But, for some people, overeating can become excessive. It is possible that your niece is suffering from a binge-eating disorder if her excessive eating ...
Using artificial intelligence, researchers say, they’ve found a new type of antibiotic that works against a particularly menacing drug-resistant bacteria. When they tested the antibiotic on the skin of mice that were experimentally infected with the superbug, it controlled the growth of the bacteria, suggesting that the method could be used to create antibiotics tailored to fight other drug-resistant pathogens. What’s more, the compound identified by AI worked in a way that stymied only the problem pathogen. It didn’t seem to kill the many other species of beneficial bacteria that live in the gut or on the skin, making it a rare narrowly targeted agent. If more antibiotics worked this precisely, the researchers said, it could prevent bacteria from becoming resistant in the first place. The study was published in the journal Nature Chemical Biology. “It’s incredibly promising,” said Dr. Cesar de la Fuente, an assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s ...
Fever was found to be the most common non-respiratory feature of infection with SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, according to research published at the ATS 2023 International Conference. The finding held true regardless of which COVID variant patients had, and whether or not they were fully vaccinated or not fully vaccinated. The researchers, who also looked at mortality risk, found that patients who were not fully vaccinated had a higher risk of dying when infected with either the Omicron or Delta variant. The study was based on the examination of the University of California Health Covid Research Data Set’s (UC CORDS) medical records of 63,454 patients who had been treated in a University of California medical center for COVID-19. The scientists applied statistical tests to determine the relationship between non-respiratory features, vaccination status and differences in mortality between infection with the Omicron and Delta variants. We determined that we ...
An oral drug made by Pfizer causes a similar amount of weight loss as rival Novo Nordisk’s blockbuster injection Ozempic, according to a peer-reviewed study of phase 2 clinical trial results released Monday. The results were presented at a medical conference late last year, and did not compare Pfizer’s drug with Ozempic or other weight loss medications. JAMA Network only now is releasing a peer-reviewed study. Pfizer’s trial followed 411 adults with Type 2 diabetes who either took the company’s pill, danuglipron, twice a day or a placebo. Body weight was “statistically significantly reduced” after patients took either 120-milligram or 80-milligram versions of danuglipron for 16 weeks, the study found. Patients who took a 120-milligram version lost around 10 pounds on average over that time period, the study found. Pfizer’s drug could offer an advantage as an oral treatment option rather than a frequent injection. The study results also suggest ...
Dive Brief: Beta Bionics said it received 510(k) clearance from the Food and Drug Administration for its automated insulin dosing (AID) system, teeing it up to challenge Insulet, Medtronic and Tandem Diabetes Care for the Type 1 diabetes market. The system, iLet Bionic Pancreas, features an insulin pump and dosing software that combine with the Dexcom G6 continuous glucose monitor to automate the calculation and delivery of insulin doses. Beta Bionics, which showed the AID system beat standard of care last year, has differentiated its device through simplification and automation, limiting the information users need to input and preventing them from modifying their insulin doses. Dive Insight: The launch of iLet Bionic Pancreas may serve as a test of whether people with Type 1 diabetes are willing to almost totally cede control of their insulin dosing to an algorithm. Users of existing hybrid closed-loop systems enter information such as basal ...
Bayer has blockbuster hopes for prostate cancer med Nubeqa, and a new endorsement from the U.K.’s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) provides another milestone toward that goal. After an approval last November to treat patients with metastatic hormone-sensitive prostate cancer (mHSPC), Bayer inked a deal with officials in England to make the drug available to certain patients under an early access program. Now, thanks to NICE’s endorsement in combination with androgen deprivation therapy and the chemotherapy docetaxel, the drug will be available to more patients in England and Wales, Bayer said in a release. Already, a “few hundred” patients with mHSPC have received the drug, according to Bayer. The drug scored its mHSPC approval in England last November thanks to late-stage data showing that the combination cut the risk of death by 32.5% compared with placebo. Previously, the drug had carried a NICE endorsement to treat patients ...
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