
FDA says natural thyroid medicine
is a biologic and pharmacies
can no longer compound it.
The implications are serious for patients
who rely on that therapy.
FDA has arbitrarily reclassified Desiccated Thyroid Extract (DTE) as a biologic, prohibiting it from use in compounding and clearing the field for a drugmaker to have a monopoly on the therapy (and surely raise the price).
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Real Patients. Real Impact.

“I spent years on synthetic thyroid medications and still felt exhausted every single day. Switching to DTE gave me my energy back. If the FDA takes this away, I don’t know what I’ll do.”
Sarah M.
Hypothyroidism Patient [Sample]

“My blood work looked fine on synthetics, but I felt awful. My doctor switched me to DTE, and within weeks, I felt like myself again. This treatment saved my quality of life.”
James P.
Patient Advocate [Sample]

“For some of us, synthetic medications are not enough. Patients deserve the right to choose the treatment that works best for their bodies.”
Dr. Karen L.
Endocrinologist [Sample]
Do you currently take DTE?
Tell us how this prohibition impacts you.
Real Patients. Real Impact.
Select a testimonial below to read why this matters.


freaking out.”
Central Compounding
Durham, NC


patients to extremes.”
Town & Country Compounding
Ramsey, NJ


Montana Apothecary
Great Falls, MT

FDA:
Reality:

Ensuring the continuation of patient care in times of drug shortage
Four compounding pharmacists talk about the uncertainty FDA’s abrupt resolution of the shortage is creating for their patients – and how the continuing unavailability of the FDA-approved version is putting those patients at risk.
Select a video below to hear what's really happening.
"I've gone from a pharmacist to a therapist"
Scott Welch
PharmD
Prestons Pharmacy
Arlington, VA
"Everyone is freaking out"
Jennifer Burch
PharmD, Rph, CDCES, FNC
Central Compounding
Durham, NC
"This is driving patients to extremes"
John Hurr
FAPC
Town & Country Pharmacy
NJ/Manhatten
"Rural folks are out of options"
Shelbi Witt
AE-C
Montana Apothecary
PharmD
"I've gone from a pharmacist to a therapist"
Scott Welch
PharmD
Prestons Pharmacy
Arlington, VA
"Everyone is freaking out"
Jennifer Burch
PharmD, Rph, CDCES, FNC
Central Compounding
Durham, NC
"This is driving patients to extremes"
John Hurr
FAPC
Town & Country Pharmacy
NJ/Manhatten
"Rural folks are out of options"
Shelbi Witt
AE-C
Montana Apothecary
PharmD
on “America on the Docket”


Bad science that contradicts FDA's own policy
- The FDA’s rationale hinges on the presence of thyroglobulin, a protein in pig thyroid glands. But thyroglobulin is an inactive ingredient — it’s broken down in the stomach and does not treat hypothyroidism.
- The active ingredients in DTE are levothyroxine (T4) and liothyronine (T3), well-studied small molecules that have been used in thyroid care for generations.
- No precedent exists for reclassifying a drug solely because it contains an inactive protein.
- FDA’s reclassification violates its own guidance document, which states that a drug product that contains a protein only as an inactive ingredient is not considered to be a “protein” for purposes of the statutory definition of “biological product.”
- FDA has acted unilaterally, with no rulemaking and no public comment period, via an unorthodox series of letters to NABP and to DTE suppliers. This is not how such decisions should be made.

Drugmakers asked FDA to prohibit compounded GLP-1s. Now FDA needs to hear from you.
Know what else is in short supply?
Pharmacists and prescribers are now working together to transition patients to the FDA-approved drugs but they need time, to say the least. An extraordinary number of patients risk going without their vital medicine for weeks if not months, putting their health at risk.
The shortage of this blockbuster drug is unlike other drug shortages. The need still vastly exceeds supply, no matter FDA’s declaration.
“I’ve gone from a pharmacist to a therapist. As a hybrid pharmacy, I attempted to order Zepbound® and my pharmacy had zero allocation on day one of the drug coming off shortage. Since then, I’m lucky to get one allocation a day.”
Owner of Preston’s Pharmacy

Patient impact:
Impeded access to an essential therapy + likely higher cost
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Do you currently take DTE?
Tell us how this prohibition impacts you.
Monopoly by corporate petition
- This push came not as a result of a scientific evaluation of DTE by FDA, but from a petition by drugmaker AbbVie, manufacturer of commercial DTE product Armour® Thyroid. They asked FDA to prohibit other manufacturers from selling unlicensed DTE products unless they had an investigational new drug application and a clinical development program aimed at eventual approval. AbbVie has these things in place and is working towards a Biologics License Application (BLA).
- If FDA’s decision stands, AbbVie likely will be the only company with a Biologics License for DTE, effectively giving it a monopoly.
- That would eliminate competition, undermine prescriber and patient choice, and increase costs to patients.


Do you currently take DTE? Tell us how this prohibition impacts you.
FDA’s reclassification of DTE as a biologic is unnecessary, scientifically flawed, and demonstrably harmful to patients. It strips away choice, likely increases prices, and hands control of a critical therapy to a single drugmaker.

Help us do something about it.We must push back against this unnecessary overreach by FDA so that patients like you are not collateral damage in a policy change that in effect clears the field to create a monopoly for one drugmaker.
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We’ve made it easy for you. The letter is written. All you have to do is add your name. It takes about two minutes. Thank you for your help in preserving patient access to DTE. Every letter sent, every story, and every voice matters. Act now before the 12-month enforcement window closes. In the meantime, talk to your prescriber about what your other options may be if FDA keeps pushing this forward. FDA has said it’s giving patients 12 months to transition to an FDA-approved medication before it removes all DTE products from the market. |

Drugmakers asked FDA to prohibit compounded GLP-1s. Now FDA needs to hear from you.
What can you do?The GLP-1 shortage is not like other shortages. The therapies of millions of patients risk interruption by the FDA’s abrupt October action. Ending those therapies without a plan or time to transition patients to the FDA-approved versions is simply unconscionable.
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Policymakers:Please reach out to FDA Drug Shortage Staff and urge the agency to reconsider its action. Patients:Let FDA know if you still can’t get Mounjaro® or Zepbound® from your pharmacy by using the drug shortage public notification portal. |