Low dose naltrexone (LDN) is prescribed off-label at strengths well below the commercially manufactured tablet. Use this page to find compounding pharmacies that prepare LDN in capsule strengths and forms specified by a prescriber.
Low dose naltrexone (LDN) is typically prescribed at strengths much lower than the commercial 50 mg naltrexone tablet, which means the prescription must be compounded. Compounding pharmacies prepare LDN in custom capsule strengths, sometimes in liquid form, on a per-prescription basis.
LDN is prescribed off-label for a variety of conditions. The pharmacy does not make a clinical decision about whether LDN is appropriate; that is the prescriber's role. The pharmacy's role is to prepare the prescription as written.
Confirm with the pharmacy that they regularly prepare LDN and that they can match the strength, capsule fill, and dosage form on the prescription before transferring or sending a new prescription.
No pharmacies in the directory are auto-tagged for Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) at this time. You can still call any compounding pharmacy listed in the directory and ask whether they can prepare a low dose naltrexone (ldn) prescription written by your prescriber. Many pharmacies handle this work without a specialty designation in their name.
No states currently show highlighted coverage for this specialty.
Commercial naltrexone tablets are 50 mg. LDN is typically prescribed at much lower strengths that are not commercially manufactured, so the prescription has to be compounded.
No. That is the prescriber's clinical decision. The compounding pharmacy prepares the prescription as written.
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