Compounding pharmacist in Queensland here. I want to clarify something — the amendment doesn't ban compounding of these peptides entirely. What it does is require the compounding pharmacy to hold a TGA Manufacturing Licence (GMP) to compound Schedule 4 Appendix D substances.
Currently, compounding pharmacies operate under state pharmacy board oversight, not TGA GMP requirements. The new rules essentially require us to meet the same manufacturing standards as a pharmaceutical company. For a small compounding pharmacy, that means:
- $200k+ in cleanroom upgrades
- Full GMP documentation and validation
- Annual TGA audits
Most small compounders will fold. A few larger operations (Stenlake, National Custom Compounding) might pursue the licence. But the cost will get passed on — expect compounded semaglutide to go from $100-120 to $250+ if it survives at all.