As mentioned in the article they are very effective at preventing smaller companies from producing generic versions based on expired patents. Then they just stop manufacturing the old drugs so there is no supply.
That's not the issue. As long as a brand drug is listed by the FDA -- whether or not it's actually being manufactured -- physicians can write prescriptions for generic equivalents.
However, if a brand manufacturer has an old product delisted, then physicians can no longer prescribe generic equivalents. That's become more and more common.
However, there is a workaround: compounding pharmacies. To my knowledge, accredited compounding pharmacies can make, on a customer-by-customer basis, any product that the FDA has ever approved. And many of them are mail-order pharmacies. In my experience, prices are comparable to mass-market generics, or lower.
>As long as a brand drug is listed by the FDA -- whether or not it's actually being manufactured -- physicians can write prescriptions for generic equivalents.
>However, if a brand manufacturer has an old product delisted, then physicians can no longer prescribe generic equivalents. That's become more and more common.
Why is the ability to prescribe a drug tied to whether the branded version in still "listed"?
Physicians can only prescribe FDA-approved drugs. Only brand drugs are approved on their own. Generic drugs are approved, with much less documentation required. There's no need to demonstrate effectiveness, safety, etc. Applicants must only demonstrate that products are therapeutically equivalent to approved brand drugs. That's mainly about chemical identity, purity, and rate and degree of absorption.
At Drugs@FDA, search for a brand name. If there are generics, you'll see "Therapeutic Equivalents for NDA ...". Clicking that will display links to them.
If there's no listed brand drug, there's nothing for a generic to be equivalent to.
I'm not sure what the requirements for delisting products are. It might be as simple as "this is old, and we don't want to be associated with it". Or as specific as "we've learned that it's not as safe and/or effective as it should be, and should be delisted for health and safety reasons."
But the real reason is almost always that they have a new version, which costs much more, and they don't want competition from inexpensive generics to their old product.
There have been some antitrust suits over that. I don't know how they turned out.
Compounding pharmacies are brilliant. In the course of my treatment, my doctor and I worked with a compounding pharmacist to prescribe me lower dosage amounts of buprenorphine than the major drug companies have ever produced -- which allowed my taper to go smoother than expected.
However, if a brand manufacturer has an old product delisted, then physicians can no longer prescribe generic equivalents. That's become more and more common.
However, there is a workaround: compounding pharmacies. To my knowledge, accredited compounding pharmacies can make, on a customer-by-customer basis, any product that the FDA has ever approved. And many of them are mail-order pharmacies. In my experience, prices are comparable to mass-market generics, or lower.