Skip to content
Trending
July 3, 2025UK’s popular sausage roll seller plunges 15% as heatwave hurts sales June 30, 2025Bulgaria is set to join the euro zone. But its citizens aren’t convinced July 2, 2025Modelo owner Constellation Brands misses on earnings as aluminum tariffs hit profitability June 30, 2025โ€‹Here’s how the luxury real estate market is splitting up July 2, 2025Drone maker AeroVironment shares pop 21% on earnings beat June 30, 2025Bank investors bet on looser regulation under Trump. They are starting to see it July 2, 2025Inflation fears receded in May as Trump eased some tariff threats, New York Fed survey shows June 30, 2025H&M shares jump as it flags summer shopping pick-up, says considering tariff price hikes July 3, 2025Trump’s deportations are hurting Constellation Brands’ beer sales
EverydayRead
  • HOME
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
  • Lifestyle
EverydayRead
EverydayRead
  • HOME
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
  • Lifestyle
EverydayRead
  Business  Zepbound copycats remain online despite FDA ban
Business

Zepbound copycats remain online despite FDA ban

AdminAdmin—March 22, 20250

This week was supposed to mark the end of compounding pharmacies

making copycat versions of Eli Lilly‘s weight-loss drug Zepbound and its diabetes drug Mounjaro. Online, it doesn’t look like much has changed. 

Popular websites like Amble, EllieMD, Willow and Mochi Health are all still advertising versions of tirzepatide, the active ingredient in Zepbound. Some, like Ivim, have stopped taking new patients.

Mochi Health has no plans to stop, and neither do the four pharmacies it uses to supply patients with the medications, said Mochi CEO Myra Ahmad. The company uses a network of about 500 providers to write prescriptions for weight-loss drugs, including compounded versions. It’s betting that offering personalized versions of the drugs will keep the company out of the crosshairs. 

“It can be different dosing schedules โ€ฆ some patients prefer to go up in dosage much more slowly,” Ahmad said. “Some patients like to mix a number of other medications into their compounded formulations, depending on the side effects that they’re having. Some patients have side effects with any additives and brand name formulations. Compounding really opens up the door for so much personalization.” 

Amble, EllieMD and Willow didn’t respond to CNBC’s request for comment. 

Compounding is where pharmacies mix ingredients of a drug to create a specialized version for specific patients. Say someone is allergic to a dye in a branded medication or needs a liquid form and the main manufacturer only sells capsules. In that case, the patient can turn to a compounded version.

When drugs are in shortage, they can be compounded in larger quantities to help fill the gap. 

Copycat versions of Lilly’s Mounjaro and Zepbound and Novo Nordisk‘s Wegovy and Ozempic have been widely available in recent years because the U.S. Food and Drug Administration listed the brand versions as being in short supply. 

That created a booming business for pharmacies compounding the highly popular class of weight loss and diabetes medications called GLP-1s.

More stories

Shares of scandal-plagued Brazilian meat giant JBS rise 3% in U.S. public debut

June 14, 2025

JPMorgan Chase is giving its employees an AI assistant powered by ChatGPT maker OpenAI

August 10, 2024

CVS replaces CEO Karen Lynch with exec David Joyner as profits, share price suffer

October 19, 2024

Comcast is exploring separation of cable networks business

November 1, 2024

But late last year, the FDA said all doses of Mounjaro and Zepbound were readily available and took the drug off its shortage list, spelling the end for mass compounding of the drug. After months of legal challenges, the FDA gave smaller pharmacies until early March to stop and larger pharmacies until this week before it started enforcing its rules.

The larger facilities aren’t allowed to compound tirzepatide at all anymore. Smaller ones aren’t supposed to make products that are essentially copies of a commercially available drug, a moniker with some wiggle room. The FDA sees essential copies as those that have a dosage within 10% of the commercially available drug or combine two or more commercially available drugs.

Mochi insists all of its prescriptions are personalized, including doses that differ from the standard Zepbound strengths. Other websites like EllieMD are advertising tirzepatide mixed with vitamin B12. 

Scott Brunner, CEO of the Alliance for Pharmacy Compounding, said formulations or dosage strengths that aren’t commercially available aren’t considered a copy. However, combining two drugs into one โ€” like adding vitamin B6 or B12 โ€” would be considered a copy under a strict reading of FDA guidance. 

“FDA guidance are pretty clear about what is and is not a copy,” Brunner said. “And I would say any compounding pharmacy or outsourcing facility that continues to prepare copies of tirzepatide injection after today are putting themselves in a certain amount of legal risks.” 

John Herr, pharmacist and owner of Town & Country Compounding Pharmacy, stopped compounding tirzepatide earlier this month. He didn’t want to take the risk even though his 300 to 400 patients on it have been calling nonstop to complain about losing access.

Town & Country, based in Ramsey, New Jersey, was charging patients about $200 a month โ€” about one-fifth the list price for Zepbound and less than half the price Lilly charges self-paying patients. 

What happens next is an open question. Enforcing the ban on mass compounding of tirzepatide mostly falls to the FDA. The agency didn’t immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

Lilly can try to sue companies that continue, but it hasn’t had much luck in the past. A Florida judge last year dismissed one of Lilly’s cases, saying the company was trying to enforce a law that only the FDA can. 

Ahmad, the CEO of Mochi, said she isn’t worried about Lilly taking legal action against her providers. The way she sees it, they have established patient-physician relationships with the autonomy to decide how best to manage their patients.

The next two months will be informative. Mass compounding of semaglutide โ€” the active ingredient in Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic and Wegovy โ€” needs to stop by the end of May, according to the FDA.

Hims & Hers Health has already said it will stop selling commercially available doses of semaglutide when the time comes. Customers who have a personalized dosing regimen will be able to continue without any change, the company added. 

-CNBC’s Leanne Miller contributed to this report

Stagflation? Fed sees higher inflation and an economy growing by less than 2% this year
Micron shares jump on earnings beat, rosy guidance as data center revenue triples
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
Business

Trump’s deportations are hurting Constellation Brands’ beer sales

July 3, 20250
Business

Modelo owner Constellation Brands misses on earnings as aluminum tariffs hit profitability

July 2, 20250
Business

โ€‹Here’s how the luxury real estate market is splitting up

June 30, 20250
Load more
Read also
Earnings

UK’s popular sausage roll seller plunges 15% as heatwave hurts sales

July 3, 20250
Business

Trump’s deportations are hurting Constellation Brands’ beer sales

July 3, 20250
Economy

Inflation fears receded in May as Trump eased some tariff threats, New York Fed survey shows

July 2, 20250
Earnings

Drone maker AeroVironment shares pop 21% on earnings beat

July 2, 20250
Business

Modelo owner Constellation Brands misses on earnings as aluminum tariffs hit profitability

July 2, 20250
Finance

Bank investors bet on looser regulation under Trump. They are starting to see it

June 30, 20250
Load more
ยฉ 2023, All Rights Reserved.
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Cookie Law
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions