You are here: Home Managing Your ... Drugs 101: ... Compounding
Information about all aspects of finances affected by a serious health condition. Includes income sources such as work, investments, and private and government disability programs, and expenses such as medical bills, and how to deal with financial problems.
Information about all aspects of health care from choosing a doctor and treatment, staying safe in a hospital, to end of life care. Includes how to obtain, choose and maximize health insurance policies.
Answers to your practical questions such as how to travel safely despite your health condition, how to avoid getting infected by a pet, and what to say or not say to an insurance company.

Compounding

1/1

Compounding is an old tradition of preparing medicines specifically to meet a particular patient's individual needs. In other words, with compounding, medications can basically be personalized for you.

  • Compounding can modify a medication:to any desired dosage amount or into a different form. For example, turning a hard-to-swallow pill into a patch or an injectable drug, or making it into a lollipop.
  • All compounds are based on a doctor's prescription. Your insurance company may even pay for all or part of a compounded medication.
  • Compounding is regulated on the state level, not by the FDA - even though the drugs being compounded are approved by the FDA.  It is our understanding that the rationale for this is that compounding does not create a new drug).

If you are considering a compounded product: ask your doctor whether there is a standard FDA approved drug available in a form that is ready to be administered (even if it costs more).

If you do need a compounded prescription, consider following these guidelines recommended by Cynthia Reilly, director of the practice development division for the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists: (plus ask any other questions you think are relevant)::

  • Choose a compouding pharmacy carefully. 
    • Start with recommendations - including from your medical team.
    • Check to be sure that the pharmacy is licensed by the state and that it has not been penalized. Compounding pharmacies are regulated by state boards of pharmacy. (For contact information, see: http://www.hapnetwork.org/medicare-drug-coverage/state-boards-of-pharmacy.html offsite link)
    • Check to see whether the pharmacy is accredited by the independent Pharmacy Compounding Accreditation Board (PCAB). PCAB offers its official seal of approval to pharmacies that voluntarily pass strict inspections and other rigid requirements.  See www.pcab.org offsite link
    • Ask about the training of the pharmacist(s).
    • Ask whether the pharmacy has additional accreditation.
    • If feasible, visit the facilities for yourself and see if they seem clean and safe.
  • Ask the pharmacy whether it is familiar with your prescription and has experience preparing it in a way that satisfies your nees
  • Ask for directions about storing and using the compounded product. It may be different than the normally prescribed version..
  • Inquire about side effects, risks and contraindications.
  • Check the FDA website for warning letters about lack of compliance. (Keep in mind that the FDA only has limited authority over compounding pharmacies.) See: www.fda.gov offsite link

To find a compounder, consider the following alternatives:

  • Recommendations from your medical team
  • The web site of the International Journal of Pharmaceutical Compounding: www.ijpc.com offsite link  
  • The International Academy of Compounding Pharmacists  http://iacprx.org/  offsite link(click on Compounder Connect) or call 800.927.4227

Please share how this information is useful to you. 0 Comments

 

Post a Comment Have something to add to this topic? Contact Us.

Characters remaining:

  • Allowed markup: <a> <i> <b> <em> <u> <s> <strong> <code> <pre> <p>
    All other tags will be stripped.