Guest guest Posted April 21, 2006 Report Share Posted April 21, 2006 Firm Seeks Crackdown on Custom Made Drugs By ANDREW BRIDGES Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON — Thousands of women who rely on custom-made hormone drugs for relief from menopause symptoms have flooded the government with letters opposing a drug company's effort to get health officials to crack down on pharmacies that sell them. The drug company Wyeth wants the Food and Drug Administration to rein in the market for bio-identical hormone replacement therapy drugs. The hormones are custom mixed or compounded by specialized pharmacies according to a doctor's prescription. [http://img.coxnewsweb.com/B/00/83/44/image_3344830.jpg] <http://www.ajc.com/hp/content/shared-gen/ap/Health_Medical/Custom_Made_\ Drugs-image.html> (enlarge photo) <http://www.ajc.com/hp/content/shared-gen/ap/Health_Medical/Custom_Made_\ Drugs-image.html> Donna Mabin, right, and cosmotologist Gladys Ayers, left, look over a petition that they are having signed at the Park Layne hair salon, Monday, Feb. 27, 2006 in New Carlisle, Ohio. Thousands of women who rely on tailor-prepared hormones for relief from the symptoms of menopause have flooded the federal government with letters opposing a drug company effort to get health officials to act against the pharmaces that sell the prescription preparations. (AP Photo/ Kohl) Compounding pharmacists can alter the dosages of a medicine, prepare it in creams or liquids that are easier to take than pills or eliminate preservatives or other secondary ingredients that might cause allergies in a patient. Wyeth claims that some compounding pharmacies that prepare customized hormone preparations are duping women with products that pose a serious health risk. It wants federal regulators to weigh in with seizures, injunctions and warning letters. " FDA cannot allow this practice to continue, " the Wyeth petition, signed by Washington attorney S. Krulwich, reads in part. FDA spokeswoman Cruzan declined to comment, other than to say compounded hormones are not FDA-approved. The agency recently told Wyeth it needs more than six months to review and respond to both the petition, filed in October, and the more than 27,000 comments it has elicited. Most are either form letters or messages submitted through the agency's Web site. " They can't take these away from us. Is there anything that can be done? " said Donna Mabin, 68, a retired cashier from New Carlisle, Ohio, who was among those to write. " Those drug companies want to get the money out of natural hormones and they don't care if we get sick or not. " Many women turned to the estrogen, progesterone and testosterone products sold by compounding pharmacies after a 2002 study, part of the massive Women's Health Initiative that tracked 161,000 women for 15 years, found replacement hormones made by drug companies like Wyeth raised the risk of heart attacks, breast cancer and strokes. Critics of the compounding pharmacies want to dispel the notion that the hormone replacement therapies such pharmacies make necessarily work better or are safer. " They haven't been studied for safety or effectiveness and are not produced in facilities that meet good manufacturing practices, " said Larry Sasich, a pharmacist with the Health Research Group of the consumer watchdog Public Citizen. " We suspect a majority of patients aren't aware of this. " Medical researchers concluded in 2003 that hormone replacement pills should be taken only as a brief treatment to help women weather the worst symptoms of menopause. Those findings hit Wyeth hard. Sales of the company's Prempro and Premphase, which combine estrogen and progestin, and its Premarin, an estrogen-only pill, fell to $880 million in 2004 from $2.07 billion in 2001, the year before the Women's Health Initiative released its hormone-replacement results. Compounding pharmacists and their backers allege that Wyeth seeks to stifle competition by calling in the FDA. " It seems to be an attempt to use the FDA to inappropriately to eliminate competition, " said L.D. King, executive director of the International Academy of Compounding Pharmacists, a Sugar Land, Texas, group. Wyeth counters it wants women to realize the risks of what a spokeswoman for the Madison, N.J.-based company characterized as a " growing, unlawful practice. " " We filed our petition so that we can ensure that women who received these bio-identical hormones also receive truthful information about the risks of therapy, " Wyeth spokeswoman Candace Steele said. Thousands of American women use the compounded hormones to alleviate the hot flashes, flushes, sweats, sleeplessness and other hallmarks of menopause. The hormones are derived from soy and yam but have an identical chemical structure to the substances found in the body. The products sold by Wyeth are based on the urine of pregnant mares. Women who use the bio-identical hormones, along with their doctors and pharmacists, all say the system is a throwback to when just about every medicine was made to fit both a doctor's order and a patient's need. " Every woman is different. There is blood work done to ensure where their hormone level is at, so based on those results and their symptoms, we will come up with a formula. It's sort of old-fashioned, " said Manhattan's Dr. on of the process he uses with patients like Lynn Leibowitz. The doctor-pharmacist-patient " triad " involves constant adjustments that just can't be made to the mass-produced drugs that Leibowitz, a Manhattan psychologist and psychoanalyst, used to take, said , the New Jersey compounding pharmacist she uses. " We'll keep going month after month until we find the right combination for the patients, " said of his work at s of Wyckoff, the New Jersey pharmacy his grandfather started in 1929. As for Leibowitz, she says the custom-compounded hormones have left her feeling better — and more in control — since switching a year ago. " I love knowing what my hormone levels are, " said Leibowitz, who began taking hormones eight years ago after she underwent a hysterectomy at 48. " I feel much safer and it's more compatible with my body chemistry. " That sort of anecdotal evidence doesn't sway other doctors. In November, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said there is no scientific evidence supporting claims of increased efficacy or safety for estrogen or progesterone regimens made by compounding pharmacies for women. The group said women should consider compounded hormones to have the same or even additional safety issues as FDA-approved hormone products. That same month, the FDA sent warning letters to 16 companies marketing unapproved alternative hormone therapies. The FDA said the companies were selling drugs without the agency's approval. The action mirrored in part what Wyeth requested in its petition, but was not linked to the filing of the document just weeks earlier, said Steele, the company spokeswoman. And a 2004 review that appeared in Menopause, the journal of the North American Menopause Society, found little to recommend about compounded hormones: " In the absence of a sound scientific basis, practitioners should not advocate the practice of compounding (hormones) because it is not in the patient's best interest, it is potentially harmful and it lacks a scientific underpinning, " the review concluded. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 21, 2006 Report Share Posted April 21, 2006 Wyeth is the problem. Avoid their products. They are a big fat drug company and it is all about their profit, IMO. > > Firm Seeks Crackdown on Custom Made Drugs By ANDREW BRIDGES > Associated Press Writer > WASHINGTON — Thousands of women who rely on custom-made hormone > drugs for relief from menopause symptoms have flooded the government > with letters opposing a drug company's effort to get health officials to > crack down on pharmacies that sell them. The drug company Wyeth wants > the Food and Drug Administration to rein in the market for bio- identical > hormone replacement therapy drugs. The hormones are custom mixed or > compounded by specialized pharmacies according to a doctor's > prescription. > [http://img.coxnewsweb.com/B/00/83/44/image_3344830.jpg] > <http://www.ajc.com/hp/content/shared- gen/ap/Health_Medical/Custom_Made_\ > Drugs-image.html> (enlarge photo) > <http://www.ajc.com/hp/content/shared- gen/ap/Health_Medical/Custom_Made_\ > Drugs-image.html> Donna Mabin, right, and cosmotologist Gladys Ayers, > left, look over a petition that they are having signed at the Park Layne > hair salon, Monday, Feb. 27, 2006 in New Carlisle, Ohio. Thousands of > women who rely on tailor-prepared hormones for relief from the symptoms > of menopause have flooded the federal government with letters opposing a > drug company effort to get health officials to act against the pharmaces > that sell the prescription preparations. (AP Photo/ Kohl) > Compounding pharmacists can alter the dosages of a medicine, prepare it > in creams or liquids that are easier to take than pills or eliminate > preservatives or other secondary ingredients that might cause allergies > in a patient. Wyeth claims that some compounding pharmacies that prepare > customized hormone preparations are duping women with products that pose > a serious health risk. It wants federal regulators to weigh in with > seizures, injunctions and warning letters. " FDA cannot allow this > practice to continue, " the Wyeth petition, signed by Washington attorney > S. Krulwich, reads in part. FDA spokeswoman Cruzan declined > to comment, other than to say compounded hormones are not FDA- approved. > The agency recently told Wyeth it needs more than six months to review > and respond to both the petition, filed in October, and the more than > 27,000 comments it has elicited. Most are either form letters or > messages submitted through the agency's Web site. " They can't take these > away from us. Is there anything that can be done? " said Donna Mabin, 68, > a retired cashier from New Carlisle, Ohio, who was among those to write. > " Those drug companies want to get the money out of natural hormones and > they don't care if we get sick or not. " Many women turned to the > estrogen, progesterone and testosterone products sold by compounding > pharmacies after a 2002 study, part of the massive Women's Health > Initiative that tracked 161,000 women for 15 years, found replacement > hormones made by drug companies like Wyeth raised the risk of heart > attacks, breast cancer and strokes. Critics of the compounding > pharmacies want to dispel the notion that the hormone replacement > therapies such pharmacies make necessarily work better or are safer. > " They haven't been studied for safety or effectiveness and are not > produced in facilities that meet good manufacturing practices, " said > Larry Sasich, a pharmacist with the Health Research Group of the > consumer watchdog Public Citizen. " We suspect a majority of patients > aren't aware of this. " Medical researchers concluded in 2003 that > hormone replacement pills should be taken only as a brief treatment to > help women weather the worst symptoms of menopause. Those findings hit > Wyeth hard. Sales of the company's Prempro and Premphase, which combine > estrogen and progestin, and its Premarin, an estrogen-only pill, fell to > $880 million in 2004 from $2.07 billion in 2001, the year before the > Women's Health Initiative released its hormone-replacement results. > Compounding pharmacists and their backers allege that Wyeth seeks to > stifle competition by calling in the FDA. " It seems to be an attempt to > use the FDA to inappropriately to eliminate competition, " said L.D. > King, executive director of the International Academy of Compounding > Pharmacists, a Sugar Land, Texas, group. Wyeth counters it wants women > to realize the risks of what a spokeswoman for the Madison, N.J.- based > company characterized as a " growing, unlawful practice. " " We filed our > petition so that we can ensure that women who received these > bio-identical hormones also receive truthful information about the risks > of therapy, " Wyeth spokeswoman Candace Steele said. Thousands of > American women use the compounded hormones to alleviate the hot flashes, > flushes, sweats, sleeplessness and other hallmarks of menopause. The > hormones are derived from soy and yam but have an identical chemical > structure to the substances found in the body. The products sold by > Wyeth are based on the urine of pregnant mares. Women who use the > bio-identical hormones, along with their doctors and pharmacists, all > say the system is a throwback to when just about every medicine was made > to fit both a doctor's order and a patient's need. " Every woman is > different. There is blood work done to ensure where their hormone level > is at, so based on those results and their symptoms, we will come up > with a formula. It's sort of old-fashioned, " said Manhattan's Dr. > on of the process he uses with patients like Lynn > Leibowitz. The doctor-pharmacist-patient " triad " involves constant > adjustments that just can't be made to the mass-produced drugs that > Leibowitz, a Manhattan psychologist and psychoanalyst, used to take, > said , the New Jersey compounding pharmacist she uses. > " We'll keep going month after month until we find the right combination > for the patients, " said of his work at s of Wyckoff, the > New Jersey pharmacy his grandfather started in 1929. As for Leibowitz, > she says the custom-compounded hormones have left her feeling better > — and more in control — since switching a year ago. " I love > knowing what my hormone levels are, " said Leibowitz, who began taking > hormones eight years ago after she underwent a hysterectomy at 48. " I > feel much safer and it's more compatible with my body chemistry. " That > sort of anecdotal evidence doesn't sway other doctors. In November, the > American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said there is no > scientific evidence supporting claims of increased efficacy or safety > for estrogen or progesterone regimens made by compounding pharmacies for > women. The group said women should consider compounded hormones to have > the same or even additional safety issues as FDA-approved hormone > products. That same month, the FDA sent warning letters to 16 companies > marketing unapproved alternative hormone therapies. The FDA said the > companies were selling drugs without the agency's approval. The action > mirrored in part what Wyeth requested in its petition, but was not > linked to the filing of the document just weeks earlier, said Steele, > the company spokeswoman. And a 2004 review that appeared in Menopause, > the journal of the North American Menopause Society, found little to > recommend about compounded hormones: " In the absence of a sound > scientific basis, practitioners should not advocate the practice of > compounding (hormones) because it is not in the patient's best interest, > it is potentially harmful and it lacks a scientific underpinning, " the > review concluded. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 22, 2006 Report Share Posted April 22, 2006 This is a post by Dr.nco Good news! The FDA has extended the public comment period on Wyeth's complaint until May 4, 2006! If you want to join the fight against Wyeth complaint against compounding pharmacists, and keep your rights to compounded medications and hormone replacement therapy, then write a comment to the FDA at: http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/oc/dockets/comments/commentsmain ..cfm?EC_DOCUMENT_ID=794 & SUBTYP=NEXT & CI D= & AGENCY=FDA The Women's International Pharmacy has a complete webpage to make your comments to the FDA, your US Senators, and your US Congresspersons, along with sample letters for consumers and doctors: http://www.womensinternational.com/bhrt.html I would urge everyone to send their opinion in support of compounding pharmacists and their rights to hormone replacement therapy to the FDA, their Senators and their Congresspersons. I would also urge everyone to contact their friends to also support compounding pharmacists, and fight Wyeth pharmaceuticals. __________________ Any statement I make on this site is for educational purposes only and is subject to change. It does not constitute medical advice, does not substitute for proper medical evaluation from physician, does not create a doctor/patient relationship or liability. If you want medical advice, you will have to pay for it. Thank you. > > Firm Seeks Crackdown on Custom Made Drugs By ANDREW BRIDGES > Associated Press Writer > WASHINGTON — Thousands of women who rely on custom-made hormone > drugs for relief from menopause symptoms have flooded the government > with letters opposing a drug company's effort to get health officials to > crack down on pharmacies that sell them. The drug company Wyeth wants > the Food and Drug Administration to rein in the market for bio- identical > hormone replacement therapy drugs. The hormones are custom mixed or > compounded by specialized pharmacies according to a doctor's > prescription. > [http://img.coxnewsweb.com/B/00/83/44/image_3344830.jpg] > <http://www.ajc.com/hp/content/shared- gen/ap/Health_Medical/Custom_Made_\ > Drugs-image.html> (enlarge photo) > <http://www.ajc.com/hp/content/shared- gen/ap/Health_Medical/Custom_Made_\ > Drugs-image.html> Donna Mabin, right, and cosmotologist Gladys Ayers, > left, look over a petition that they are having signed at the Park Layne > hair salon, Monday, Feb. 27, 2006 in New Carlisle, Ohio. Thousands of > women who rely on tailor-prepared hormones for relief from the symptoms > of menopause have flooded the federal government with letters opposing a > drug company effort to get health officials to act against the pharmaces > that sell the prescription preparations. (AP Photo/ Kohl) > Compounding pharmacists can alter the dosages of a medicine, prepare it > in creams or liquids that are easier to take than pills or eliminate > preservatives or other secondary ingredients that might cause allergies > in a patient. Wyeth claims that some compounding pharmacies that prepare > customized hormone preparations are duping women with products that pose > a serious health risk. It wants federal regulators to weigh in with > seizures, injunctions and warning letters. " FDA cannot allow this > practice to continue, " the Wyeth petition, signed by Washington attorney > S. Krulwich, reads in part. FDA spokeswoman Cruzan declined > to comment, other than to say compounded hormones are not FDA- approved. > The agency recently told Wyeth it needs more than six months to review > and respond to both the petition, filed in October, and the more than > 27,000 comments it has elicited. Most are either form letters or > messages submitted through the agency's Web site. " They can't take these > away from us. Is there anything that can be done? " said Donna Mabin, 68, > a retired cashier from New Carlisle, Ohio, who was among those to write. > " Those drug companies want to get the money out of natural hormones and > they don't care if we get sick or not. " Many women turned to the > estrogen, progesterone and testosterone products sold by compounding > pharmacies after a 2002 study, part of the massive Women's Health > Initiative that tracked 161,000 women for 15 years, found replacement > hormones made by drug companies like Wyeth raised the risk of heart > attacks, breast cancer and strokes. Critics of the compounding > pharmacies want to dispel the notion that the hormone replacement > therapies such pharmacies make necessarily work better or are safer. > " They haven't been studied for safety or effectiveness and are not > produced in facilities that meet good manufacturing practices, " said > Larry Sasich, a pharmacist with the Health Research Group of the > consumer watchdog Public Citizen. " We suspect a majority of patients > aren't aware of this. " Medical researchers concluded in 2003 that > hormone replacement pills should be taken only as a brief treatment to > help women weather the worst symptoms of menopause. Those findings hit > Wyeth hard. Sales of the company's Prempro and Premphase, which combine > estrogen and progestin, and its Premarin, an estrogen-only pill, fell to > $880 million in 2004 from $2.07 billion in 2001, the year before the > Women's Health Initiative released its hormone-replacement results. > Compounding pharmacists and their backers allege that Wyeth seeks to > stifle competition by calling in the FDA. " It seems to be an attempt to > use the FDA to inappropriately to eliminate competition, " said L.D. > King, executive director of the International Academy of Compounding > Pharmacists, a Sugar Land, Texas, group. Wyeth counters it wants women > to realize the risks of what a spokeswoman for the Madison, N.J.- based > company characterized as a " growing, unlawful practice. " " We filed our > petition so that we can ensure that women who received these > bio-identical hormones also receive truthful information about the risks > of therapy, " Wyeth spokeswoman Candace Steele said. Thousands of > American women use the compounded hormones to alleviate the hot flashes, > flushes, sweats, sleeplessness and other hallmarks of menopause. The > hormones are derived from soy and yam but have an identical chemical > structure to the substances found in the body. The products sold by > Wyeth are based on the urine of pregnant mares. Women who use the > bio-identical hormones, along with their doctors and pharmacists, all > say the system is a throwback to when just about every medicine was made > to fit both a doctor's order and a patient's need. " Every woman is > different. There is blood work done to ensure where their hormone level > is at, so based on those results and their symptoms, we will come up > with a formula. It's sort of old-fashioned, " said Manhattan's Dr. > on of the process he uses with patients like Lynn > Leibowitz. The doctor-pharmacist-patient " triad " involves constant > adjustments that just can't be made to the mass-produced drugs that > Leibowitz, a Manhattan psychologist and psychoanalyst, used to take, > said , the New Jersey compounding pharmacist she uses. > " We'll keep going month after month until we find the right combination > for the patients, " said of his work at s of Wyckoff, the > New Jersey pharmacy his grandfather started in 1929. As for Leibowitz, > she says the custom-compounded hormones have left her feeling better > — and more in control — since switching a year ago. " I love > knowing what my hormone levels are, " said Leibowitz, who began taking > hormones eight years ago after she underwent a hysterectomy at 48. " I > feel much safer and it's more compatible with my body chemistry. " That > sort of anecdotal evidence doesn't sway other doctors. In November, the > American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said there is no > scientific evidence supporting claims of increased efficacy or safety > for estrogen or progesterone regimens made by compounding pharmacies for > women. The group said women should consider compounded hormones to have > the same or even additional safety issues as FDA-approved hormone > products. That same month, the FDA sent warning letters to 16 companies > marketing unapproved alternative hormone therapies. The FDA said the > companies were selling drugs without the agency's approval. The action > mirrored in part what Wyeth requested in its petition, but was not > linked to the filing of the document just weeks earlier, said Steele, > the company spokeswoman. And a 2004 review that appeared in Menopause, > the journal of the North American Menopause Society, found little to > recommend about compounded hormones: " In the absence of a sound > scientific basis, practitioners should not advocate the practice of > compounding (hormones) because it is not in the patient's best interest, > it is potentially harmful and it lacks a scientific underpinning, " the > review concluded. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2006 Report Share Posted April 23, 2006 Hi All, PREMPRO was a hormone product that included daily progesterone and was responsible for the halt of the WHI or WIH study. This product caused problems because the company did not wish to hear the criticism coming from endocrinologists before they started manufacturing it and then starting the study. Daily progesterone had not been studied and the company got approval to harm women it turns out. Many women stopped hormone therapy all together and now endure unecessary discomfort. Compounding pharmacies can not produce pills but can produce compounds that pharmaceutical companies are not supposed to be able to package and sell. ernestnolan > > Firm Seeks Crackdown on Custom Made Drugs By ANDREW BRIDGES > Associated Press Writer > WASHINGTON — Thousands of women who rely on custom-made hormone > drugs for relief from menopause symptoms have flooded the government > with letters opposing a drug company's effort to get health officials to > crack down on pharmacies that sell them. The drug company Wyeth wants > the Food and Drug Administration to rein in the market for bio-identical > hormone replacement therapy drugs. The hormones are custom mixed or > compounded by specialized pharmacies according to a doctor's > prescription. > [http://img.coxnewsweb.com/B/00/83/44/image_3344830.jpg] > <http://www.ajc.com/hp/content/shared-gen/ap/Health_Medical/Custom_Made_\ > Drugs-image.html> (enlarge photo) > <http://www.ajc.com/hp/content/shared-gen/ap/Health_Medical/Custom_Made_\ > Drugs-image.html> Donna Mabin, right, and cosmotologist Gladys Ayers, > left, look over a petition that they are having signed at the Park Layne > hair salon, Monday, Feb. 27, 2006 in New Carlisle, Ohio. Thousands of > women who rely on tailor-prepared hormones for relief from the symptoms > of menopause have flooded the federal government with letters opposing a > drug company effort to get health officials to act against the pharmaces > that sell the prescription preparations. (AP Photo/ Kohl) > Compounding pharmacists can alter the dosages of a medicine, prepare it > in creams or liquids that are easier to take than pills or eliminate > preservatives or other secondary ingredients that might cause allergies > in a patient. Wyeth claims that some compounding pharmacies that prepare > customized hormone preparations are duping women with products that pose > a serious health risk. It wants federal regulators to weigh in with > seizures, injunctions and warning letters. " FDA cannot allow this > practice to continue, " the Wyeth petition, signed by Washington attorney > S. Krulwich, reads in part. FDA spokeswoman Cruzan declined > to comment, other than to say compounded hormones are not FDA-approved. > The agency recently told Wyeth it needs more than six months to review > and respond to both the petition, filed in October, and the more than > 27,000 comments it has elicited. Most are either form letters or > messages submitted through the agency's Web site. " They can't take these > away from us. Is there anything that can be done? " said Donna Mabin, 68, > a retired cashier from New Carlisle, Ohio, who was among those to write. > " Those drug companies want to get the money out of natural hormones and > they don't care if we get sick or not. " Many women turned to the > estrogen, progesterone and testosterone products sold by compounding > pharmacies after a 2002 study, part of the massive Women's Health > Initiative that tracked 161,000 women for 15 years, found replacement > hormones made by drug companies like Wyeth raised the risk of heart > attacks, breast cancer and strokes. Critics of the compounding > pharmacies want to dispel the notion that the hormone replacement > therapies such pharmacies make necessarily work better or are safer. > " They haven't been studied for safety or effectiveness and are not > produced in facilities that meet good manufacturing practices, " said > Larry Sasich, a pharmacist with the Health Research Group of the > consumer watchdog Public Citizen. " We suspect a majority of patients > aren't aware of this. " Medical researchers concluded in 2003 that > hormone replacement pills should be taken only as a brief treatment to > help women weather the worst symptoms of menopause. Those findings hit > Wyeth hard. Sales of the company's Prempro and Premphase, which combine > estrogen and progestin, and its Premarin, an estrogen-only pill, fell to > $880 million in 2004 from $2.07 billion in 2001, the year before the > Women's Health Initiative released its hormone-replacement results. > Compounding pharmacists and their backers allege that Wyeth seeks to > stifle competition by calling in the FDA. " It seems to be an attempt to > use the FDA to inappropriately to eliminate competition, " said L.D. > King, executive director of the International Academy of Compounding > Pharmacists, a Sugar Land, Texas, group. Wyeth counters it wants women > to realize the risks of what a spokeswoman for the Madison, N.J.-based > company characterized as a " growing, unlawful practice. " " We filed our > petition so that we can ensure that women who received these > bio-identical hormones also receive truthful information about the risks > of therapy, " Wyeth spokeswoman Candace Steele said. Thousands of > American women use the compounded hormones to alleviate the hot flashes, > flushes, sweats, sleeplessness and other hallmarks of menopause. The > hormones are derived from soy and yam but have an identical chemical > structure to the substances found in the body. The products sold by > Wyeth are based on the urine of pregnant mares. Women who use the > bio-identical hormones, along with their doctors and pharmacists, all > say the system is a throwback to when just about every medicine was made > to fit both a doctor's order and a patient's need. " Every woman is > different. There is blood work done to ensure where their hormone level > is at, so based on those results and their symptoms, we will come up > with a formula. It's sort of old-fashioned, " said Manhattan's Dr. > on of the process he uses with patients like Lynn > Leibowitz. The doctor-pharmacist-patient " triad " involves constant > adjustments that just can't be made to the mass-produced drugs that > Leibowitz, a Manhattan psychologist and psychoanalyst, used to take, > said , the New Jersey compounding pharmacist she uses. > " We'll keep going month after month until we find the right combination > for the patients, " said of his work at s of Wyckoff, the > New Jersey pharmacy his grandfather started in 1929. As for Leibowitz, > she says the custom-compounded hormones have left her feeling better > — and more in control — since switching a year ago. " I love > knowing what my hormone levels are, " said Leibowitz, who began taking > hormones eight years ago after she underwent a hysterectomy at 48. " I > feel much safer and it's more compatible with my body chemistry. " That > sort of anecdotal evidence doesn't sway other doctors. In November, the > American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said there is no > scientific evidence supporting claims of increased efficacy or safety > for estrogen or progesterone regimens made by compounding pharmacies for > women. The group said women should consider compounded hormones to have > the same or even additional safety issues as FDA-approved hormone > products. That same month, the FDA sent warning letters to 16 companies > marketing unapproved alternative hormone therapies. The FDA said the > companies were selling drugs without the agency's approval. The action > mirrored in part what Wyeth requested in its petition, but was not > linked to the filing of the document just weeks earlier, said Steele, > the company spokeswoman. And a 2004 review that appeared in Menopause, > the journal of the North American Menopause Society, found little to > recommend about compounded hormones: " In the absence of a sound > scientific basis, practitioners should not advocate the practice of > compounding (hormones) because it is not in the patient's best interest, > it is potentially harmful and it lacks a scientific underpinning, " the > review concluded. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 24, 2006 Report Share Posted April 24, 2006 PREMPRO was a hormone product that included daily progesterone and was responsible for the halt of the WHI or WIH study. ... Daily progesterone had not been studied and the company got approval to harm women it turns out.----- Hi Ernest, Good to see you back on-line. I've been off-line myself lately due to other interests and commitments. Just a few comments about points you bring up, as well as those of the originator of this topic... There is nothing inherently wrong with Prempro, except that it is administered as an oral pill. The digestive system breaks down hormones, rendering them largely ineffective. A small daily amount of progesterone is proven to lower the incidence of uterine cancer in women taking replacement estrogen. The WHI and other previous smaller studies reached this conclusion. This benefit was downplayed or completely ignored by the media. A VERY slim rise in the occurance of breast cancer in the progesterone & estrogen arm of the WHI study (as opposed to the estrogen only arm) can be attributed specifically to the oral means of administering progesterone. Dr. A. , Memorial Medical Center, North Adelaide, South Australia, in an interview with Reuters Health says this of the suspected increased risk when oral progestin is added to estrogen HRT: " That issue could possibly be circumvented by administering the progestin via an intrauterine device rather than orally. After all, why give progestin to the breast when all you want to do is give it to the uterus? " Perhaps the most glaring error in the WHI study was the fact that only two (estrogen & progesterone) of the three essential hormones lost at menopause were given to the test subjects. Androgens (testosterone) were completely omitted. Another quote from the source listed above: " Before menopause, the ovaries produce both testosterone and estrogen. Conventional HRT " tends to interfere with the protective effect of testosterone, thus increasing the risk of breast cancer. If testosterone had been used by subjects in the Women's Health Initiative study, it may have stopped the rise in breast cancer risk. It's possible the trial would not have needed to be stopped early. " To say nothing of the heart protective qualities of testosterone: " In other words, no matter what sort of cholesterol or other blood fat abnormalities these ladies had, the lower the testosterone, the more likely they were to have a heart attack. " .....Dr. Alan Altman, a Boston gynecologist, citing a variety of clinical findings..... Another vital aspect of the WHI study that has been under reported by some news sources and simply omitted by others is the protective effect that estrogen, with or without progesterone, has on bone density. Taking into account the phenomenal number of women over 60 who suffer permanent loss of mobility due to osteoporosis, and an accompanying higher mortality rate, this is a considerable health benefit. (With testosterone added to the mix, the benefit increases substantially.) -----Compounding pharmacies can not produce pills but can produce compounds that pharmaceutical companies are not supposed to be able to package and sell.----- Compounding pharmacies can and do produce medicines for oral use in capsule form, and some may have the facilities to produce compressed powder (pills). They can also mix powdered compounds, as well as injectible medicines. What compounded pharmacists cannot legally do is to replicate a patented medicine. In other words if Pfizer has an estradiol pill on the market that is produced in 5mg and 10mg tablets, a compounding pharmacy can mix and sell their own 7mg estradiol capsules, estradiol tablets (of a different color, size and shape than the Pfizer pills), estradiol powder with a measuring scoop, or an estradiol gel or cream formulation. Unfortunately instead of using a fact-based slogan such as " topical is more effective and safer " to promote their compounded HRT products, these pharmacies and doctors who prescribe compounded HRT use the " all-natural " and " bioidentical " sales pitch, catering to an unfounded public perception that natural is safer. (There are plenty of products in nature that are more lethal than anything produced in the lab.) The current FDA takes their orders from big pharmaceutical companies out to destroy their competition, from the DEA who seeks to expand the number of anabolic steroids on their list of controlled substances to include estrogen and progesterone, from political groups, and from the media who reports what these powers tell them to report. Science and health are no longer motivating forces within the FDA, and at least one senior official has resigned in protest. My contempt for this agency knows no limits. I applaud the effort to solicit mail to the FDA in support of compounding pharmacies, but I am very pessimistic. This FDA does not care about the opinions, health or safety of the average joe (or jane). I wish it were different and hope that a new administration will make better appointments to the agency. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 24, 2006 Report Share Posted April 24, 2006 Hi, Nice to hear from you and this is a young book but will try to respond to those items I may have heard something about. I do not do research but ask Dr. Gambrell about specifics. 1. The use of Progesterone has been used by Dr. Gambrell for decades with women being given HRT therapy. He specifically requires the use of pregesterone for 7 - 9 days out of the month to bring about a period. As I understand PrePro was a blend of P & E hormones. There was no period of time when progesterone was not to be take in a high daily dose. Dr. Gambrell insisted to the PrePro pharmaceutical company that 24/7 use of progesteropne was never studied and would be harmful as this blocks estrogen receptors of some type in the body. Some parts of the body starve for estrogen. No further details here. 2. In Dr. Gambrell's experience, Progesterone taken orally works very well and has never been a problem bringing about a period. 3. The Progesterone taken daily was to eliminate the monthly period, which women were supposed to jump at, elevating sales of the " hormone pill without a period " . Isn't this proof the digestive process does not interfere with progesterone in those women where the period happened as required. Betty could not digest oral estrogen and get her liver to metabloize it so it would appear in her blood stream. From 10% - 20% of women have trouble metabolizing oral estrogen and never get tested when they complain about no relief. 4. In pre-menopause women the progesterone level drops back to a very low level most of the month and then rises to bring aout the period. This natural amount is beneficial but the dose in PrePro was not near that as I understand it. That pill is still being marketed in a lower dose if I hear the adds right. > > A VERY slim rise in the occurance of breast cancer in the > progesterone & estrogen arm of the WHI study (as opposed to the > estrogen only arm) can be attributed specifically to the oral means > of administering progesterone. > This study has not been a big study and did not have a large percent difference in cancer did it? It is not enough to make a big case for PrePro is it? I can't comment on Dr. study as I do not have the credentials. The premenopause woman has what she needs for good health and surely the breasts are not harmed by these natural hormone levels. I agree androgen is an absolute essential hormone in HRT for women. Betty got that from Dr. Gambrell. Dr. Gambrell felt the women were being overdosed with daily progesterone causing them probable harm. 5. I stand corrected on the legal aspects of the boundry between pharmaceuticals and compounding pharmacies. Yes, you are absolutely correct. Where not patent protected any company can produce an identical product, right? Politics rules the FDA I heard from Dr. Gambrell. Insurance companies do not want to have to pay for HRT or TRT. This was why approval was very slow for pellets to be approved for andropause. If you got this far down, I owe you a cup of coffee. ernestnolan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 24, 2006 Report Share Posted April 24, 2006 1. The use of Progesterone has been used by Dr. Gambrell for decades with women being given HRT therapy. He specifically requires the use of pregesterone for 7 - 9 days out of the month to bring about a period. ---- That is one method. Another method is using *low dose* *continuous* progesterone in conjunction with estrogen to prevent buildup of the uterine lining in which case there is no need to use high doses of progesterone periodically to cause monthly shedding. Both methods have been in use over the past decade by women with no adverse effects that I'm aware of. ----As I understand PrePro was a blend of P & E hormones. There was no period of time when progesterone was not to be take in a high daily dose.----- Prempro was originally marketed as a birth control pill and if taken continously it would prevent monthly periodic bleeding. There were health problems with this method if I recall correctly, but in any case most women preferred a schedule of 3 weeks on and one week off (with a period materializing during the week off of course). At that time in history all oral contraceptives contained high doses of hormones. Later it was discovered that lower doses were equally effective and safer. Prempro was later also used as combination HRT. ---Dr. Gambrell insisted to the PrePro pharmaceutical company that 24/7 use of progesteropne was never studied and would be harmful as this blocks estrogen receptors of some type in the body. Some parts of the body starve for estrogen. ----- This may well be true if high doses of progesterone are taken continuously, hence Dr Gambrell's well founded complaint against continuous prempro use for contraception or for HRT. Continuous estrogen and progesterone should be taken in low doses. And for *lower* doses to work they need to be administered by parenteral (not oral) means. From my experience, and from comparing notes with other women on various HRT protocols, we pre-menopausal women do not require the cataclysmic fluctuations of high hormone levels that exist in women of reproductive age to maintain our health in later years. Expelling the uterine lining once a month is not necessary if the balance between estrogen and progesterone prevents the lining from gaining mass. ---- 2. In Dr. Gambrell's experience, Progesterone taken orally works very well and has never been a problem bringing about a period.--- If high dose oral progesterone is being taken only a few days out of the month probably the risk of breast cancer is slim to nil. But this is a different protocol from continuous use investigated by the WHI study. Dr Gambrell discusses a variety of HRT protocols in his book. ---- 3. The Progesterone taken daily was to eliminate the monthly period, which women were supposed to jump at, elevating sales of the " hormone pill without a period " . Isn't this proof the digestive process does not interfere with progesterone in those women where the period happened as required.----- I'm not quite sure what you mean. Are you referring to breakthrough bleeding? There are a variety of things that can cause this. Women who took prempro continously did not have periods, while those who followed the 3 wks on & 1 wk off cycled normally. Oral hormones will work if you take a high enough dose, but the health risks also increase accordingly. The oral route poses risks of its own by exposing the major organs and breast tissues in that first pass through the body. In my experience topical progesterone need only be taken at about half the ratio to estrogen that most continuous oral estrogen/progesterone replacement protocols specify. I think many compounded estrogen/progesterone creams and gels have the correct ratio. ---Betty could not digest oral estrogen and get her liver to metabloize it so it would appear in her blood stream. From 10% - 20% of women have trouble metabolizing oral estrogen------ That is a VERY LOW estimate. Oral hormones have much lower bioavailability than parenteral formulations...for all women. Most women assume they cannot hope to feel better. After all they're taking the HRT pills prescribed by the doc. They do not realize that if they took these meds topically or intravaginally the improvement would be immense. And that adding testosterone to the mix would restore them to normal. So they report that HRT works, since it does help a small bit. ---- This study has not been a big study and did not have a large percent difference in cancer did it? It is not enough to make a big case for PremPro is it?----- I lost track of which study you referred to here (the WHI study of course was immense) but I'm certainly not making a case for prempro nor is anyone else. ----The premenopause woman has what she needs for good health and surely the breasts are not harmed by these natural hormone levels.--- Premenopausal women are YOUNG. Most cancers are diseases associated with aging. The likelihood of getting cancer increases with age. Hormones do not cause cancer, but they can feed early cancerous cells and cause them to grow and multiply. ----Dr. Gambrell felt the women were being overdosed with daily progesterone causing them probable harm.--- I agree with this. The doses should have been lower and given topically. ----5. I stand corrected on the legal aspects of the boundry between pharmaceuticals and compounding pharmacies. Yes, you are absolutely correct. Where not patent protected any company can produce an identical product, right?---- Any compounding pharmacy can mix unpatented medical formulations per a physician's rx. And any pharmaceutical company can market a generic version of another drug co's patented med when the original patent has expired. To produce a new medication, a pharmaceutical company must develop and test it and then get it approved by the FDA. Supplement companies can produce amino acid, vitamin, herbal etc formulations for sale over the counter. -----Politics rules the FDA I heard from Dr. Gambrell. Insurance companies do not want to have to pay for HRT or TRT. This was why approval was very slow for pellets to be approved for andropause.--- That is an understatement and only part of the picture but very true, yes. Far more so in the past 5 yrs. FDA suffers from the FEMA syndrome. If pellets are FDA approved, then I'm surprised. Are you sure about this? Insurance cos and the DEA both would like to have andropause declared nonexistent and women's HRT declared unsafe. Insurers don't want to pay for it, and the DEA wants more work policing more illegal steroids, even if it is the 1% testosterone in a tube of testim or a jar of estradiol pills. And the media is willing to misreport research findings to serve the aims of these two interest groups. Big pharmaceutical cos don't want competition for their patented HRT products from compounding pharmacists. And then you have power-mad religious fanatics who want to dictate health matters to private persons, pharmacists, and scientists. ---If you got this far down, I owe you a cup of coffee.---- Cream and no sugar. :-) But I'm buying, since you probably read both my anti-FDA rants in their entirety. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 25, 2006 Report Share Posted April 25, 2006 Hi, I will clip and reply as the note is long. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > Both methods have been in use over the past decade by women with no > adverse effects that I'm aware of. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If you have seen these studies, It is new to me. I'm not well read on the subject. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > Prempro was originally marketed as a birth control pill and if taken > continously it would prevent monthly periodic bleeding. There were > health problems with this method if I recall correctly, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This is what I think Dr. Gambrell was concerned about. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > Expelling > the uterine lining once a month is not necessary if the balance > between estrogen and progesterone prevents the lining from gaining > mass. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I thought Dr. Gambrell felt this was fooling with Mother Nature and was against it. I did not read his book that you mentioned. Glad to hear you took the trouble to read it. Hope it was worth the expense and read. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > I'm not quite sure what you mean. Are you referring to breakthrough > bleeding? There are a variety of things that can cause this. Women > who took prempro continously did not have periods, while those who > followed the 3 wks on & 1 wk off cycled normally. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > After all they're > taking the HRT pills prescribed by the doc. They do not realize that > if they took these meds topically or intravaginally the improvement > would be immense. And that adding testosterone to the mix would > restore them to normal. So they report that HRT works, since it does > help a small bit. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Are women able to get the patches or do you mean another form like salve or ointment when you mention " topically " ? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > Insurance cos and the DEA both would like to have andropause declared > nonexistent and women's HRT declared unsafe. Insurers don't want to > pay for it, and the DEA wants more work policing more illegal > steroids, even if it is the 1% testosterone in a tube of testim or a > jar of estradiol pills. And the media is willing to misreport > research findings to serve the aims of these two interest groups. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This I know about. Pellets were approved by the FDA for men before the death of Dr. Sipi who Betty saw in NJ probably about 1998. Insurance companies do not want to pay for pellets for andropause and have been hiding from this approval. Dr. Gambrell is no small potato in GA and has been under the fingernails of the Medicare organization. There is a set of doctors that allocate how they are going to use the government funds that support Medicare. It is still not covered for women for some technical reason like the FDA did not approve pellets for women because of political pressure he says. He has gotten approval under some method for Medicare in GA like no other location in the US. Most of my expense of replacing pellets every 4 months is paid for by Medicare. The cost would be about $450 for my 20 pellets including the visit. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > Big pharmaceutical cos don't want competition for their patented HRT > products from compounding pharmacists. And then you have power-mad > religious fanatics who want to dictate health matters to private > persons, pharmacists, and scientists. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ When working for IBM it was explained you can not cut a board to a special length and claim a patent. To patent you have to develope thru research, investigation and a study that a medication is not dangerous. Mixing two safe substances together and claiming a patent is really stretching the patent concept. Tylenol PM for instance should be able to be duplicated by any company. The hormone carrier thru the skin may have been used for other medications and found effective. There are doctors who have reactions like religious objections to giving testosterone to men and women as though it were sinning to create more desire for sex. I think they see testosterone for men and women like giving poor people whiskey. ernestnolan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 25, 2006 Report Share Posted April 25, 2006 >Both methods have been in use over the past decade by women with no >adverse effects that I'm aware of. -----If you have seen these studies, It is new to me. I'm not well read on the subject.------ I'm not referring to studies. Probably few have been done, just as none have been done (to my knowledge) on Dr Gambrell's method of pelleted E & T w/ P added a few days a month. I'm simply stating that women have been using compounded estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone gels and creams for at least a decade if not longer, using a variety of protocols, including continuous daily low doses of all 3 hormones. > Prempro was originally marketed as a birth control pill and if taken > continously it would prevent monthly periodic bleeding. There were > health problems with this method if I recall correctly, ----This is what I think Dr. Gambrell was concerned about.--- This was a valid concern but it is OLD news (1950s vintage) and has nothing to do with the recent WHI hormone replacement study. > Expelling the uterine lining once a month is not necessary if the > balance between estrogen and progesterone prevents the lining from > gaining mass. ---I thought Dr. Gambrell felt this was fooling with Mother Nature and was against it.----- No, he is against pre-menopausal women using continuous oral contraceptives to suppress the menstrual cycle. (Or so I gather from what you have written, and this makes sense.) Most pre-menopausal women are/were not keen on this idea either. Any woman taking bc pills to prevent conception by fooling her body into thinking it is already pregnant is fooling with nature. As well as older men and women taking replacement hormones. Nature is not our friend when we pass reproductive age. Dr Gambrell's book is not a dissertation of his own HRT prescription preferences, but an instructional manual for other gynecologists detailing the various HRT protocols, their applications, advantages, and disadvantages. -----Are women able to get the patches or do you mean another form like salve or ointment when you mention " topically " ?---- Topical refers to patches, gels, creams. A better term is 'parenteral' (meaning outside the digestive tract) and includes rings, inserts, as well as patches etc. My website on women's HRT is far from completion, but I have a partially completed illustrated page that describes most of the available options. main page is at: http://infowoman.freewebpage.org/index.htm Click on " Your Options " If you click on " Recommended Reading " you will find Dr Gambrell's book (in good company) with ordering links to all the books listed. ---This I know about. Pellets were approved by the FDA for men before the death of Dr. Sipi who Betty saw in NJ probably about 1998. Insurance companies do not want to pay for pellets for andropause and have been hiding from this approval.---- Hmmm, that sounds like the grey zone of semi-legality where estratest (oral estrogen/testosterone pill for women) resides. ----It is still not covered for women for some technical reason like the FDA did not approve pellets for women because of political pressure he says.---- The same political pressure that sent the female testosterone patch into permanent limbo, no doubt. ----He has gotten approval under some method for Medicare in GA like no other location in the US. Most of my expense of replacing pellets every 4 months is paid for by Medicare. The cost would be about $450 for my 20 pellets including the visit.----- I'm glad you are able to get your treatments covered since they work so well for both you and Betty. I agree totally with your last 3 or 4 paragraphs (as do most of the people on this board who've had to deal with greedy pharmaceutical cos, stingy insurance cos, the FDA, the DEA, doctors who have been misled or cowed by the former, and the current sexist/anti-sex/anti- science/unhealthy political climate.) Cheers, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 26, 2006 Report Share Posted April 26, 2006 Hi I need to read you link. http://infowoman.freewebpage.org/index.htm But some thing is wrong with it add's look like they are over lapping some of the words and it is hard to read. Phil Summers <rsummers@...> wrote: >Both methods have been in use over the past decade by women with no >adverse effects that I'm aware of. -----If you have seen these studies, It is new to me. I'm not well read on the subject.------ I'm not referring to studies. Probably few have been done, just as none have been done (to my knowledge) on Dr Gambrell's method of pelleted E & T w/ P added a few days a month. I'm simply stating that women have been using compounded estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone gels and creams for at least a decade if not longer, using a variety of protocols, including continuous daily low doses of all 3 hormones. > Prempro was originally marketed as a birth control pill and if taken > continously it would prevent monthly periodic bleeding. There were > health problems with this method if I recall correctly, ----This is what I think Dr. Gambrell was concerned about.--- This was a valid concern but it is OLD news (1950s vintage) and has nothing to do with the recent WHI hormone replacement study. > Expelling the uterine lining once a month is not necessary if the > balance between estrogen and progesterone prevents the lining from > gaining mass. ---I thought Dr. Gambrell felt this was fooling with Mother Nature and was against it.----- No, he is against pre-menopausal women using continuous oral contraceptives to suppress the menstrual cycle. (Or so I gather from what you have written, and this makes sense.) Most pre-menopausal women are/were not keen on this idea either. Any woman taking bc pills to prevent conception by fooling her body into thinking it is already pregnant is fooling with nature. As well as older men and women taking replacement hormones. Nature is not our friend when we pass reproductive age. Dr Gambrell's book is not a dissertation of his own HRT prescription preferences, but an instructional manual for other gynecologists detailing the various HRT protocols, their applications, advantages, and disadvantages. -----Are women able to get the patches or do you mean another form like salve or ointment when you mention " topically " ?---- Topical refers to patches, gels, creams. A better term is 'parenteral' (meaning outside the digestive tract) and includes rings, inserts, as well as patches etc. My website on women's HRT is far from completion, but I have a partially completed illustrated page that describes most of the available options. main page is at: http://infowoman.freewebpage.org/index.htm Click on " Your Options " If you click on " Recommended Reading " you will find Dr Gambrell's book (in good company) with ordering links to all the books listed. ---This I know about. Pellets were approved by the FDA for men before the death of Dr. Sipi who Betty saw in NJ probably about 1998. Insurance companies do not want to pay for pellets for andropause and have been hiding from this approval.---- Hmmm, that sounds like the grey zone of semi-legality where estratest (oral estrogen/testosterone pill for women) resides. ----It is still not covered for women for some technical reason like the FDA did not approve pellets for women because of political pressure he says.---- The same political pressure that sent the female testosterone patch into permanent limbo, no doubt. ----He has gotten approval under some method for Medicare in GA like no other location in the US. Most of my expense of replacing pellets every 4 months is paid for by Medicare. The cost would be about $450 for my 20 pellets including the visit.----- I'm glad you are able to get your treatments covered since they work so well for both you and Betty. I agree totally with your last 3 or 4 paragraphs (as do most of the people on this board who've had to deal with greedy pharmaceutical cos, stingy insurance cos, the FDA, the DEA, doctors who have been misled or cowed by the former, and the current sexist/anti-sex/anti- science/unhealthy political climate.) Cheers, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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