How to find and check an Ozempic batch number
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[September 05, 2024]
By Patrick Wingrove
(Reuters) - Explosive demand and high prices for Novo Nordisk and Eli
Lilly's weight loss and diabetes drugs have fueled a criminal effort to
package autoinjector pens containing other substances, such as insulin,
with branding and batch numbers that make them look like Novo's Ozempic.
If patients suspect they have bought a fake version of Ozempic or
another drug, they can search the internet for the associated batch
number to see if the World Health Organization or any national health
authorities have flagged it.
Patients can typically find these batch, or lot, numbers on both
legitimate and fake versions of Ozempic or other similar pen-based drugs
like Novo's Wegovy in two places: on the outside of the box it is
packaged in and on the label of the autoinjector itself.
Novo and Lilly have also published guides to help patients identify
suspected fake versions of their drugs in other ways and report them.
The WHO this year flagged three batch numbers - LP6F832, NAR0074 and
MP5E511 - that have been linked to fake Ozempic in Brazil, the U.S. and
Austria respectively, a Reuters review of documents and regulator
announcement shows.
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A handout photo of a box of Novo Nordisk's diabetes drug Ozempic is
displayed with its LOT number or batch number, obtained by Reuters
on June 26, 2024. Novo Nordisk/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
The organization sent an alert to
health regulators in July 2023 flagging MP5B060 - which has been
found on fake Ozempic pens in at least 10 countries - as well as
MP5A370 and MP5D600, which have both been found in Guatemala,
according to an announcement from the country's health regulator.
(Reporting by Patrick Wingrove; editing by Caroline Humer and Daniel
Flynn)
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