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ForumsCompounding & FormulationHas anyone dealt with bacteriostatic water sourcing and sterility considerations? Page 2

Has anyone dealt with bacteriostatic water sourcing and sterility considerations?

traveltech_sara Sun, Jan 4, 2026 at 6:41 AM 27 replies 1,036 viewsPage 2 of 6
paige_pharma
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289
1,234
Sep 2024
Omaha, NE
Jan 4, 2026 at 9:31 AM#6
On the storage topic — how temperature-sensitive is reconstituted semaglutide really? I travel for work and sometimes my vial is out of the fridge for 6-8 hours in my carry-on. Should I be using a cooler bag? Also, has anyone tested stability of reconstituted sema at room temperature vs refrigerated? I've seen peptide stability studies for other compounds but nothing specific to compounded semaglutide solutions.
40 11rachel_ABQ, traveltech_sara, AttorneyGrant and 37 others
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B12Beth
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289
890
Oct 2024
Maryland
Jan 4, 2026 at 9:48 AM#7
There's actually decent data on this. Brand Ozempic (which is aqueous semaglutide at 1.34mg/mL in a pen) is labeled for up to 56 days at room temperature (up to 86°F / 30°C) or refrigerated. Novo Nordisk did formal stability studies to support that labeling. Compounded semaglutide is the same molecule but may differ in excipients, concentration, and pH buffering. Without formal stability data for each compounding pharmacy's specific formulation, we're extrapolating. General guidance based on peptide chemistry: - Refrigerated (2-8°C): Reconstituted semaglutide should be stable for at least 28-30 days, possibly longer - Room temperature (20-25°C): Probably stable for days to weeks, but degradation accelerates - Brief excursions (up to 30°C for hours): Very unlikely to cause meaningful degradation. Your carry-on scenario is fine. - Heat stress (>37°C / 98.6°F): Avoid. Hot cars in summer = bad. For travel: a small insulated pouch with a reusable ice pack is cheap insurance. You can get them on Amazon for $8-$12. Keeps the vial at 40-50°F for 8-10 hours. Worth it for peace of mind. Bottom line: semaglutide is a reasonably robust peptide. Brief temperature excursions won't ruin it. But consistent refrigeration is best practice.
42 15carl_compliance, DanielChem_CHI, marco_milano and 39 others
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LeilaHI
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167
789
Jan 2025
Honolulu, HI
Jan 4, 2026 at 10:05 AM#8
Great discussion all around. Let me summarize the key takeaways: BAC Water Sourcing: - Hospira/Pfizer from Amazon or your local pharmacy = safest bet (~$12-14) - Bacteriostaticwater.com = reliable and slightly cheaper (~$10) - Medical Supply Depot = budget option that tests well (~$8) - Avoid random sellers without verifiable USP compliance Reconstitution Best Practices: - Use 2mL BAC water per 5mg vial for 2.5mg/mL concentration - Use a larger gauge needle (25-27g) for drawing BAC water - Follow aseptic technique — alcohol swabs, clean environment, no reusing syringes - Inject slowly along the vial wall, swirl gently, don't shake - Refrigerate after reconstitution, use within 28 days, date the vial Storage: - Refrigerate when possible, but brief room-temp excursions are fine - Use an insulated pouch for travel - Discard if cloudy or particulate matter appears This stuff isn't rocket science, but doing it right protects your investment and your health. A $12 vial of good BAC water and $0.15 worth of alcohol swabs are the cheapest insurance you'll buy.
Last edited: Jan 4, 2026 at 3:05 PM
4 11mike_nyc, VendorMark, COA_Karl and 1 other
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