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Alabama warns healthcare providers against use of non-FDA-approved peptides

By Thomson Reuters May 26, 2026 | 5:27 PM

May 26 (Reuters) – Alabama’s medical regulator on Tuesday warned healthcare providers against prescribing or using so-called research-grade peptides, saying the substances ​are not approved by the U.S. FDA ‌and may pose safety risks.

Here are a few details:

• The Alabama Board of Medical Examiners said the peptides have not been tested or reviewed by the U.S. ‌Food ​and Drug Administration and are ⁠not subject to oversight ⁠on safety, effectiveness or manufacturing standards, making it difficult to verify their contents or assess potential risks.

• Peptides are short chains of ​amino acids that act as building blocks of proteins and perform essential biological functions in ⁠the body.

• In an ⁠official notice, the board said physicians ​must only prescribe and dispense drugs obtained from licensed ​sources and meeting prescription-grade standards, and cannot ‌use or supply non-FDA-approved peptides under any circumstances.

• The restriction also applies to certified nurse midwives, nurse practitioners and physician assistants, who are limited ⁠to prescribing drugs on approved formularies.

• Healthcare providers cannot avoid liability by labeling products as “research-grade” or relying ⁠on patient consent ‌forms, the board said, adding ⁠that any involvement in recommending, prescribing ​or ‌administering such substances would violate professional ​and legal ⁠obligations.

• Separately, the FDA is set to convene an advisory panel in July to consider whether licensed compounding pharmacies should be allowed to manufacture certain peptides.

(Reporting by Siddhi Mahatole in Bengaluru; Editing by ​Shilpi Majumdar)