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The semaglutide shortage has officially ended in the US—which means the GLP-1 drug industry is about to undergo massive changes.
The US Food and Drug Administration has determined that semaglutide is no longer in shortage, a move that will have implications for patients taking cheaper, compounded versions of the drug.
Semaglutide, the active ingredient in Novo Nordisk’s blockbuster diabetes and weight-loss medications Ozempic and Wegovy, has been on the FDA’s shortage list since March 2022. Supply could not keep pace with fervent demand for the drug, which reached such dizzying levels of popularity that it transformed Novo Nordisk into one of the world’s most valuable companies, with a market capitalization larger than the rest of the economy of its home nation of Denmark.
In the intervening years, a lucrative industry of telehealth companies, medical spas, and pharmacies making and selling “compounded” copies of the medications has arisen. These off-brand copies are sold at a steep discount—sometimes under $100 a vial—compared to the name-brand medications, which can be over $1,000 a month without insurance.
10 sats \ 8 replies \ @freetx 23h
Great! Blindness for everyone!
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? Did we miss something?
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30 sats \ 6 replies \ @gmd 19h
Just standard fear mongering.
I've never prescribed these drugs in my life but on the inpatient side I've seen very few side effects but so many cases of patients who have told me they have lost 50+ pounds and gotten off of multiple other drugs as a result of their weight loss.
Healthy young people and fitness professionals love to virtue signal on social media about the right way to do things but in the real world people have 3 kids, back and knee problems, job stress etc and 90% of people gain the weight back and more after 3 years regardless of fad diet.
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96 sats \ 4 replies \ @freetx 19h
In July 2024, a study published in the journal JAMA Ophthalmology found a potential link between semaglutide — the active ingredient in Wegovy and Ozempic — and a rare eye condition called nonarteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (NAION).
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30 sats \ 1 reply \ @gmd 17h
yeah i saw that study floating around twitter a few months ago (but admittedly did not read).
Would be curious to see if that association holds with the newer meds. My gut (lowest tier of evidence) from seeing patients who would never give up these and talking to docs who prescribe thinks there is 4-5x or greater benefit over any risks from cardiovascular risks from eliminating being a fatty and controlling diabetes.
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gut (lowest tier of evidence) This is great, will start using it! 🙂
Interesting. The question is if the blindness was really caused by the drug, I mean it is known that obesity may lead to diabetes and diabetes to blindness. It could just be that the drugs didn’t really work, the patients developed diabetes…
I can also imagine that some people at Novo Nordisk got nervous by this news 😬
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40 sats \ 0 replies \ @gmd 16h
Even if there is a higher association of NAION caused by these drugs, I would want to know how that compares to the greater risk of diabetic retinopathy. I have seen NAION less than a handful of times, whereas I see diabetic retinopathy and other complications of diabetes every day.
Too lazy to look up actual numbers with cited sources but O1 vibe check says:
NAION: Often cited around 2–10 per 100,000 persons per year (for individuals over 50). Diabetic Retinopathy : Multiple large-scale studies (e.g., NHANES in the United States) have reported that anywhere from 20% to 40% (or more) of people with diabetes show some level of retinopathy Putting It All Together:
  • NAION in diabetics: Elevated risk vs. non-diabetics, but still a relatively uncommon event.
  • Diabetic Retinopathy (and its advanced stages) is very common in long-standing diabetes—often cited as the leading cause of new cases of blindness among working-age adults in many countries.
Totally. I even read somewhere that once someone starts with Ozempic / other peptides, they have to take it for good. Once the treatment is stopped, people will gain the weight back. It was about a year or so for Ozempic.
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I think this is setting the stage for there to be restrictions on the (much cheaper) compounding of semaglutide.
A quote:
Lilly said in an open letter that it was “deeply concerned” about growing online sales and social media posts involving phony or compounded versions of tirzepatide, the active ingredient behind its drugs Mounjaro and Zepbound.
Note how they're connecting "compounding" with "phony".
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