USFDA warns online vendors against selling unapproved weight-loss drugs

The FDA said the vendors had also violated U.S. law by selling semaglutide and tirzepatide without ensuring customers had prescriptions from licensed healthcare practitioners.

Weight Loss drugs, Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, healthcare news, pharma news,
The agency said that if the vendors did not stop selling the drugs, it might respond with legal action including seizures and injunctions.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Tuesday two online vendors to stop selling unapproved versions of semaglutide and tirzepatide.

It is the active ingredient in popular GLP-1 class medications including Novo Nordisk’s powerful weight-loss drug Wegovy.

Earlier this month, in the letters sent to Semaspace and Gorilla Healing on Oct. 2, the FDA said the only approved semaglutide products were Wegovy and Novo’s diabetes drugs Ozempic and Rybelsus. It noted that tirzepatide, the active ingredient in Eli Lilly’s Mounjaro, had only been approved for diabetes.

The agency said it was critical that the vendors cease selling the unapproved medicines to protect the public from harm.

“Unapproved new drugs do not carry the same assurances of safety and effectiveness as those drugs subject to FDA oversight. Drugs that have circumvented regulatory safeguards may be contaminated, counterfeit, contain varying amounts of active ingredients, or contain different ingredients altogether,” the FDA wrote as quoted by Reuters.

The FDA said the vendors had also violated U.S. law by selling semaglutide and tirzepatide without ensuring customers had prescriptions from licensed healthcare practitioners.

The agency said that if the vendors did not stop selling the drugs, it might respond with legal action including seizures and injunctions.

Semaspace has shut down its website but Gorilla Healing, which sells products other than obesity medications, is still operating and listing semaglutide 5mg and tirzepatide 10mg for sale at the time of publication.

Gorilla Healing said it had not seen the letter.

In another letter published on Tuesday, the FDA warned http://www.alphamedstore.com to stop selling unapproved and misbranded opioid drug products, saying opioid addiction and abuse had created an immense public health crisis.

In September, Lilly filed lawsuits against 10 U.S. medical spas, wellness centers and compounding pharmacies for selling products claiming to contain tirzepatide, two months after rival Novo Nordisk sued several similar businesses for selling compounded semaglutide.

(With inputs from Reuters)

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This article was first uploaded on October eleven, twenty twenty-three, at seven minutes past twelve in the night.