Great question, and one that doesn't get explained well enough. Here's the short version:
503A pharmacies are your traditional compounding pharmacies. They operate under state pharmacy boards, require a patient-specific prescription, and compound medications on a per-patient basis. Think of your local compounding pharmacy down the street.
503B outsourcing facilities were created by the Drug Quality and Security Act of 2013 (after the NECC meningitis disaster that killed 76 people). They're registered with the FDA, can produce larger batches without patient-specific prescriptions, and are subject to FDA cGMP inspections.
Key differences:
- 503B facilities must report adverse events to FDA
- 503B must comply with cGMP (current Good Manufacturing Practice)
- 503A are state-regulated; 503B are federally regulated
- 503B can ship across state lines more freely
Neither is automatically "safer." A well-run 503A can be excellent. A sloppy 503B can be dangerous. But the regulatory framework around 503B is more rigorous on paper.
Last edited: Nov 27, 2024 at 10:31 AM