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Compounded Drugs in Veterinary Care

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Compounded Drugs in Veterinary Care

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Compounded Drugs in Veterinary Care: When They’re Needed and What to Watch For

By Dr Duncan Houston

Compounded medications are an important part of veterinary medicine, especially when standard drugs do not fit the patient.

But they are also one of the most misunderstood areas of treatment.

In some cases, compounding is the only way to treat a pet properly. In others, it introduces unnecessary risk. The key is knowing when it is appropriate and when it is not.


Quick Answer

Compounded drugs are custom-made medications prepared when no suitable approved product exists. They are useful for specific dosing, formulations, or discontinued drugs, but carry risks including inconsistent dosing, contamination, and lack of regulatory oversight. They should only be used when approved options are not appropriate.


What Are Compounded Drugs?

Compounded medications are created by a pharmacist to meet a specific need.

This may involve:

  • Changing the dose

  • Changing the form (tablet to liquid)

  • Combining medications

  • Recreating discontinued drugs

Why this matters

Approved drugs are tested for:

  • Safety

  • Effectiveness

  • Consistency

Compounded drugs are not held to the same standard.

Clinical insight:
Compounding fills important gaps, but it removes the safety net of standardised manufacturing.


The Medication Hierarchy: What Should Be Used First?

In veterinary medicine, there is a clear order of preference:

  1. FDA-approved veterinary drugs

  2. FDA-approved human drugs

  3. Generic veterinary drugs

  4. Generic human drugs

  5. Compounded medications

Compounded drugs should be used only when the other options are not suitable.


When Is Compounding Appropriate?

No approved drug exists

  • Rare conditions

  • Unavailable formulations

Dose is not commercially available

  • Very small or very large patients

Administration is not possible

  • Pets that cannot take tablets

  • Need for flavored or liquid forms

Drug has been discontinued

  • No commercial supply available

Clinical insight:
Compounding is justified when it solves a real problem that cannot be solved another way.


When Should Compounding Be Avoided?

When an approved product exists

  • Using compounded versions instead increases risk unnecessarily

For convenience alone

  • Not a sufficient reason

For cost savings

  • Lower cost does not outweigh safety concerns

Decision checkpoint:
If there is an approved drug available and appropriate, it should almost always be used instead.


Benefits of Compounded Medications

When used correctly, compounding can:

  • Enable treatment in very small or exotic animals

  • Improve compliance with easier formulations

  • Allow precise dosing

  • Provide access to otherwise unavailable medications

Without compounding, some patients would have no treatment options at all.


The Real Risks You Need to Understand

Inconsistent dosing

The biggest concern.

  • Too little drug → treatment failure

  • Too much drug → toxicity

Lack of regulation

  • No guaranteed batch consistency

  • No formal approval process

Contamination risk

  • Particularly in sterile or injectable products

Legal and ethical concerns

  • Compounding when an approved drug exists is not appropriate

Clinical insight:
With compounded drugs, you are relying heavily on the quality of the pharmacy, not a regulated system.


Real-World Problem: Variable Potency

Studies have shown significant variation in compounded drugs.

Examples include:

  • Equine medications with large dosing variation

  • Thyroid medications with inconsistent strength

These variations can lead to:

  • Underdosing

  • Overdosing

  • Unpredictable clinical outcomes


Severity Framework

Low risk

  • Non-critical medications

  • Wide safety margin

Moderate

  • Chronic conditions requiring precise dosing

High risk

  • Narrow therapeutic index drugs

  • Hormones or cardiac medications

Critical

  • Life-threatening conditions

  • Injectable or sterile compounded drugs

These require extreme caution and careful pharmacy selection.


Monitoring: What Actually Matters

Clinical response

  • Is the condition improving as expected?

Consistency

  • Any sudden change may indicate variability

Follow-up testing

  • Blood levels or clinical markers when relevant

Clinical insight:
When using compounded drugs, monitoring becomes even more important because you cannot assume consistency.


Questions You Should Always Ask

If your pet is prescribed a compounded medication:

  • Why is compounding necessary?

  • Is there an approved alternative?

  • Which pharmacy is being used?

  • How is quality controlled?

  • What risks should I watch for?


When Is This an Emergency?

Seek veterinary care if:

  • Your pet worsens unexpectedly

  • Signs of toxicity appear

  • The response is inconsistent or unpredictable

This may indicate dosing variation or drug instability.


What Should You Do Next?

If your pet is prescribed a compounded medication:

  1. Confirm that no suitable approved option exists

  2. Use a reputable, trusted pharmacy

  3. Follow dosing instructions exactly

  4. Monitor closely for response and side effects

  5. Reassess if results are not as expected


Common Mistakes

  • Choosing compounded drugs for convenience

  • Prioritising cost over safety

  • Not questioning why compounding is needed

  • Not monitoring response closely

  • Using low-quality or unverified pharmacies


Can This Be Prevented?

Risks can be reduced by:

  • Using approved drugs whenever possible

  • Working with experienced veterinarians

  • Choosing reputable compounding pharmacies

  • Monitoring carefully


FAQs

Are compounded drugs safe?

They can be, but they carry more risk than approved medications.

Why not always use compounded drugs?

They lack the consistency and testing of approved products.

Are they cheaper?

Often yes, but cost should not be the main decision factor.

Can all medications be compounded?

Not all, and not always appropriately.

Should I trust compounded medications?

Only when they are necessary and sourced from a reliable pharmacy.


Final Thoughts

Compounded medications are an important tool in veterinary medicine, but they are not a default option.

The goal is always to use the most reliable, tested, and appropriate medication available.

Compounding should be used when needed, not when convenient.


If you are unsure whether a compounded medication is appropriate for your pet, or you want help weighing the risks and alternatives, ASK A VET™ can guide you with clear, practical advice tailored to your situation.

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Approuvé par les chiens
Conçu pour durer
Facile à nettoyer
Conçu et testé par des vétérinaires
Prêt pour l'aventure
Testé et Fiable