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			 The action was the first time the regulator has moved to exclude any 
			substance from a list of ingredients that may be used to produce in 
			bulk compounded medications that do not need to go through the 
			agency's safety approval process. 
 Those substances included vasopressin, the active ingredient in Endo 
			International Plc's blood pressure drug Vasostrict, which has been 
			the subject of a lawsuit by the company targeting how the FDA 
			regulates drug compounding. Shares of Endo jumped 5 percent.
 
 The other two substances are bumetanide and nicardipine 
			hydrochloride, which the regulator said are also ingredients of one 
			or more FDA-approved drug products.
 
 On Aug. 13, Buffalo, New-York-based pharmaceutical company Athenex 
			Inc said it had begun selling a compounded formulation of 
			vasopressin that could compete with Vasostrict. Its stock price fell 
			1.43 percent to $14.45 on the news of the FDA's proposal.
 
 Endo, which reported $399.9 million in Vasostrict sales in 2017, 
			said it was "extremely pleased" with the FDA's proposal. Its stock 
			price mid-Monday was $16.33, up 5.08 percent.
 
 Athenex did not respond to requests for comment.
 
			 
			Compounded medications are custom-made medications that 
			traditionally were formulated by pharmacies for specific patients. 
			
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			By 2012, the practice had mushroomed, with some pharmacies selling 
			thousands of doses of regularly used mixtures for physicians to keep 
			for future use.
 That year, there was a fungal meningitis outbreak caused by tainted 
			steroids made by a compounding pharmacy. That prompted Congress in 
			2013 to pass a law aimed at bringing more compounding pharmacies, 
			traditionally overseen by states, under FDA oversight.
 
			
			 
			The law, the Drug Quality and Security Act, created a category of 
			"outsourcing facilities" that could register with the FDA and sell 
			products in bulk while following federal manufacturing standards.
 The FDA was also required to determine that bulk compounding using a 
			drug substance was necessary to satisfy an unmet "clinical need" and 
			include those substances on a list.
 
 Under an interim policy, it allowed use of substances with no major 
			safety issues, that compounders could nominate for eventual 
			inclusion on the list.
 
 Endo sued in October, claiming the FDA was authorizing the 
			compounding of hundreds of drugs without proper evaluation, 
			including "essentially a copy" of Vasostrict by another company.
 
 (Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by David Gregorio)
 
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