Pharmacy compounding primer for physicians: Prescriber beware

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Abstract

Since the development of federal standards for drug approval, the practice of medicine has historically involved the compounding of medications based on a physicians determination that a US FDA-approved product either did not exist, or could not be used for medical reasons. Today, prescriptions for non-FDA-approved compounded drugs may be driven by fanciful and largely unregulated pharmacy advertisements to physicians and patients andor payer reimbursement policies, thus placing prescribers in the backseat for clinical decision making. This article outlines essential differences between FDA-approved drugs and compounded drugs and reasserts the primary medical role of physicians for determining what medical circumstances may necessitate treatment with non-FDA-approved products. In addition, liability concerns when prescribing non-FDA-approved drugs are discussed. While representing a US perspective, underlying principles apply globally in the setting of magistral and extemporaneous formulations produced outside national regulatory frameworks. Adis. © 2012 Springer International Publishing AG. All rights reserved.

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APA

Sellers, S., & Utian, W. H. (2012). Pharmacy compounding primer for physicians: Prescriber beware. Drugs. https://doi.org/10.2165/11640850-000000000-00000

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