LDN Video Interviews and Presentations

Radio Show interviews, and Presentations from the LDN 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019 Conferences

They are also on our    Vimeo Channel    and    YouTube Channel

 

Pain Specialist Dr Asher Goldstein Feb 2020 Pain Seminar (LDN, low dose naltrexone)

 

 

Jo - England: Behçet's Disease and Multiple Sclerosis (LDN; low dose naltrexone)

 

 

John Herr, RPh of Town and Country Compounding Pharmacy Talks about the Many Forms of Low Dose Naltrexone and more

 

 

Linda Bluestein, MD - MCAS Documentary Fundraiser; August 2023 (LDN; low dose naltrexone)

 

 

Tania Dempsey, MD - MCAS Documentary Fundraiser; August 2023 (LDN; low dose naltrexone)

 

 

Madi Wend - MCAS Documentary Fundraiser; August 2023 (LDN; low dose naltrexone)

 

 

Leonard Weinstock, MD - MCAS Documentary Fundraiser (LDN; low dose naltrexone)

 

 

Linda Elsegood: Welcome to the LDN Radio show brought to you by the LDN Research Trust. I'm your host Linda Elsegood. Today we're joined by pharmacist Mark Filosi from Family Care Compounding Pharmacy in Florida. Thank you for joining us today, Mark. We'd like to find out more about who is Mark Filosi. 

Mark Filosi: I grew up in pharmacy. My very first job was in a pharmacy when I was 14 years old. I began compounding even back then. This is before computerization, typing on a manual typewriter, filling capsules, one at a time on a torsion balance on Saturdays in support of compounding. Fast forwarding to 2023 where we've got really a state-of-the-art very high-tech pharmacy this is very very different. 

Linda Elsegood: So are you the manager? The owner? What's your role? 

Mark Filosi: I own two pharmacies. I own Family Care Compounding. I also own Live and Learn Pharmacy. I've done a brief stint as a PCAP ACHC Surveyor or accreditation and compounding both sterile and non-sterile. I also sit on the board of directors for the Alliance for Pharmacy Compounding. It's really the only advocacy group that I know of in the United States in support of what we do and allows us to be able to compound things like low dose naltrexone and bioidentical hormones. I'm a preceptor for four different universities in America. I'm a career coach for young pharmacists. I also teach educational programs for continuing education for pharmacists through the parent company that's sponsoring me on Medisca and LP3 Network. I'm a senior facilitator for them. I've worked teaching sterile and non-sterile, advanced non-sterile business for pharmacists for the last 15 years. 

I've taken on a very new role on basically off the bench now as a pharmacist, even though I still work in my stores. I'm a success partner with Medisca Pharmacy Compounding Coaching Services. That is something that's very new. When my son was younger, I was a Boy Scout leader for him and horseback riding with my daughter and all kinds of fun stuff with my wife. Now we have a a lot of hobbies and projects. 

Linda Elsegood: You are a very busy man obviously. Please tell us about your pharmacies. 

Mark Filosi: We've been in business for 27 years. I started way back when there really wasn't much support for compounding pharmacies, back when there was just a publication called the Secundum Artem. 

I would learn everything then that Mark Erickson talked about in that particular publication. I learned how to compound a progesterone suppository. Then I would go out land market that one thing to physicians and practitioners in Florida. I became so impassioned with that that I wanted to learn more. I've taken flagship programs from Medisca Sterile Compounding, non-sterile and I've really expanded the scope of what we do to the point where I would say compounding has really eclipsed all the other things that I do in pharmacy, but I've probably done just about everything you could think of as a pharmacist. My most passionate and exciting thing that I do at my pharmacy is non-sterile compounding. I just love it. 

Linda Elsegood: What forms do you compound LDN into? 

Mark Filosi: Right now we compound rapid dissolve tablets, trochees, which are just basically lozenges that you dissolve in your mouth. Capsules of course are probably our number one, but one of the exciting things that you might not know about is something called Nova film from Medisca. It can bypass down the hatch, into the stomach, then to the liver, then to the blood, then to the biological side of action. We've got a new product called Nova film which is sublingual but the unique thing about it is it's also mucoadhesive so it gives your body much more opportunity for absorption in the tiny blood vessels inside your mouth. It is similar to a Listerine strip or some of the commercial products that are like that right now. The mucosal lining is kind of a moving target. There's a turnover rate with it and this really makes it bind to that and we're really looking forward to using low dose naltrexone in that type of delivery system. It is very novel, very unique. 

Linda Elsegood: Do you make low dose naltrexone (LDN) in a nasal spray? 

Mark Filosi: It's my feeling and the feeling that the folks that support me at Medisca and LP3 that that should probably start as a sterile compounded preparation as it doesn't have direct access to the body like an injection or intramuscular, but it's still something that you wouldn't want to introduce a pathogen into somebody's body. I don't really focus on sterile compounding anymore. That's not something that I do. 

Linda Elsegood: You mentioned two pharmacies. Are they run very similar? 

Mark Filosi: Yes they are. Live and Learn Pharmacy, a pharmacy I just purchased a few months ago, was nothing but compounding, and my pharmacy was a hybrid of just about everything; DNA, retail and of course compounding.

Linda Elsegood: What kind of doctors do you deal with in Florida? I know West Coast is mainly naturopathic doctors. Do you have MDs and DOs and physician assistants, etc. 

Mark Filosi: NDs would not be the primary here because they don't have prescriptive authority in Florida. It is interesting, I could take a prescription from an ND in California because they do legally have prescriptive authority and the right to prescribe low dose naltrexone in California, so if one called to here I could fill it, but an ND in Florida, I would not be able to. It is very interesting but I would say the primary prescribers that I see here in Florida would be MDs and probably nurse practitioners. Especially because nurse practitioners here in Florida can be autonomous. They can open up their own practices and this is really kind of a niche market that's very well supported with nurse practitioners. It's something that's really within their power to do that. 

Linda Elsegood: We find that there are many nurse practitioners who seem to have more time to spend with patients than a doctor. 

Mark Filosi: Although I've got some really wonderful prescribing MDs I will say that in my experience nurse practitioners do give you more of their time and because of that it can be a very powerful experience for a lot of people 

Linda Elsegood: Now in Scotland, and we're going to start having them in England – Pharmacy Consultant Prescribers. Something so new in Scotland, I think they had it before COVID. It will mean you can go to your doctor or your pharmacist with minor things. In Scotland they could prescribe LDN as well. In England I think it's going to be minor things to begin with. Do you have that already in place? 

Mark Filosi: It depends on the state because each state is run like a small country. We have different rules within the state versus Federal law standards and guidelines. In Florida we've got two programs. We've got something called Test To Treat where a pharmacist could do a CLIA approved test and then from that we would be able to prescribe certain limited things like you're describing in Scotland. We also have something called a Collaborative Practice Model where we could create a collaborative practice agreement with a practitioner and then prescribe things within that agreement. I would think that prescribing LDN could be one of those collaborative things that we could do moving forward. 

Linda Elsegood: It is really exciting. 

Mark Filosi: I am excited for that and I think that the world has recognized that pharmacists have a great place within healthcare and that we should be recognized as practitioners and we're probably one of the best suited professions, and that we would be able to prescribe because we know the drug. 

Linda Elsegood: Doctors only do a certain amount of drug interactions because that's not their wheel house that's yours. It's the pharmacy, that's the nurse, prescribers are like doctors to a point you know. Why wouldn't you have a pharmacist prescribing like you have a nurse prescriber? I don’t see what the difference is. 

Mark Filosi: That's very true and it's funny that the lobbying groups and the association surrounding nurses and doctors are strong but historically those types of groups surrounding pharmacists have been weak. We haven't been a cohesive body. That's one of the reasons why I sit on the board of directors for APC is to give that voice 

Linda Elsegood: Because in England there's a crisis that we are short of medical professionals, doctors, nurses, etc and I'm sure it must be similar to the US. It would be so much easier for patients who have access to medical care if all those pharmacists that were ready and willing and able to become prescribers. Surely that would take a lot of pressure off your health system. 

Mark Filosi: Yeah, and I think that it's a partnership with those people. It's not like we're taking power away from a practitioner. We're sharing the process. I think we make them more effective. If a physician only has five or ten minutes to meet with a patient we can work behind the scenes and write suggested prescriptions. We can measure outcomes with prescribers and patients and it's that triad. It's the relationship between a pharmacist, a patient and a practitioner that really rounds out that whole process. 

Linda Elsegood: It is all for the good of the patient. 

Mark Filosi: Of course, it works best if you have that kind of time. That's something that APC, an independent group, they have a new product called Outcomes MD. It is a platform available to both pharmacists and providers. It interfaces with electronic healthcare records and they have a very new platform specific to naltrexone that I can text a survey to my patient. Once they receive their prescription it will establish a baseline of symptoms with that patient associated with naltrexone and then I can start to measure and monitor outcomes. The measures are to prove that it's either working or if there's some sort of gap in therapy, or is there something that I can go back and now recognize because the beauty of compounding is it something that we can modulate, fix and make better, because it's personalized medicine.

Linda Elsegood: It is always good to start with a baseline. For people sitting in that survey initially before they take the first pill, capsule, whatever it may be, you then got the baseline which makes such a big difference. 

Mark Filosi: I would say to the pharmacist in the United States that might hear this that the data that's being collected by Outcomes MD will become redacted and shared back to the Alliance for Pharmacy Compounding. This is something that we can show evidence to the FDA that compounding is valid and that the works of pharmacy are true. We've been doing this as a privilege for thousands of years. With a stroke of a pen the Federal regulatory bodies could take that away from us. I think it's important if we want to preserve really valuable and powerful things like LDN and BHRT and all those things that go with it then we have to be proactive. 

Linda Elsegood: I believe you are quite big in the hormone community. 

Mark Filosi: With the community of everything that's possible within non-sterile compounding and sterile compounding. Yes, I've got a new role. In addition to being a facilitator for educational programs I also teach. I have been teaching compounding for 15 years. I've been advocating for colleges of pharmacy and so on. When you take a program like that then people don't know what to do on Monday morning after the program, after they get home. They've taken a course, they've gone to college but they still need somebody to hold their hand through the process and Medisca, now the parent company, the global leader in compounding, really has allowed me to open this channel and I become what's called a success partner. I have two other people that are working with me. I've got another coach that's working as a coach and remote patient monitoring and clinical services. I have another coach that's specializing in pharmacy operations, CEO mindset leadership. When somebody wants to open the niche market of non-sterile compounding or maybe they already are a fantastic non-sterile compounder but they want to open the niche market of LDN I can walk them through that process and really this whole team would guide them on that effort. Something that's very new and this is what we're going to kind of splash at the LDN conference.

Linda Elsegood: Third party testing is very important and pharmacists hold that in very high regard because as a pharmacist you can say there is definitely 4.5 milligrams in my capsule.

Mark Filosi: You know I have what I affectionately call pharmacists that behave more like bartenders. They're dabblers in non-sterile compounding. Then I have pharmacists that are truly professional, personalized compounding pharmacists and they're very different. It's different than just crushing a 50 milligram tablet and dividing it in some way to make a capsule or some other preparation. If you used an FDA grade, USP grade, active pharmaceutical ingredient from somebody like Medisca and you learn how to manipulate that. 

If I have five milligrams of Naltrexone, and 50 milligrams of Naltrexone it is very difficult for somebody to weigh that precisely. You have to learn how to weigh the unweighable. You need to learn how to do mixtures that if I was making a capsule, even if every one of my capsules the finished product weighed exactly 300 milligrams but the finished powders in there. If I make a hundred capsules at a time, if they all just by chance weigh 300 milligrams, my theoretical weight, how would I really know 4.5 milligrams or 1.5 milligrams on the titration was really in those capsules? That predicates itself on homogeneity and content uniformity when we make that mixture powder blend to start with. We would need devices like the Mazerustar, that's an inverse planetary mixer. We would need testing facilities to confirm and validate repeatedly that when I make a mixture in service of making a 1.5 milligram capsule or a 3 or 4.5 or what have you that I do have a homogeneous blend. When I make those capsules and they weigh the correct amount the finished preparation is correct. I believe that all pharmacists should operate by the family rule. If I was making that for my mom, I was making that for my wife, if it's not good enough to dispense to any of those people then I shouldn't be doing this. If you're just dropping a tablet into a glass of water, are you thinking about the fact that naltrexone is the salt of a strong acid and it could be either more dissociated or less dissociated in the presence of an acid or a base. It could undergo hydrolysis in water. It's not stable. What happens if a lot of the excipient ingredients have grabbed onto that drug and it's at the bottom of the glass and you're supposed to drink one tenth of this glass to give you the five milligrams which is going to be nearly impossible. At the beginning of that glass maybe you get a light dose, at the bottom of the glass maybe get a heavy dose and you're looking at a narrow therapeutic index drug where we're telling people that 1.5 milligrams in increments is what you need to do. If we're giving people instructions that are that precise. If we're doing very low low dose naltrexone, an ultra low dose naltrexone how is that possible without this committed validated process? 

Linda Elsegood: Please share your website so that people can go and find out more. 

Mark Filosi: Yes uh I would tell them to go on to Medisca.com and they can look at pharmacy success partners. They can look at our services. They can look at formulation development. We have everything. Really a need from LP3 education it's a one stop shop really to get somebody up to speed and able to do something like this. Which really is something that you really need to pay close attention to. If you don't do it right we can cause patient harm instead of patient good. I think that if you really want to do things correctly you want to work with somebody like this company Medisca. 

Linda Elsegood: Any questions or comments you may have please email me Linda@ldnrt.org. I look forward to hearing from you. 

 

 

Linda Elsegood: Today we're joined by pharmacist Dr Dawn Ipsen who's the owner of two pharmacies in Washington state. Kuslers Pharmacy and Clark Pharmacy. Could you tell us what it was that inspired you to become a pharmacist? 

Dawn Ipsen: I knew early on as a high schooler that I wanted to have a doctorate degree in something and was sort of a little bit torn between pharmacy and optometry and with long heartfelt discussions and soul-searching I became a pharmacist and very early on in my career not only was I trending towards being a pharmacist but I had an opportunity to intern at a compounding pharmacy and just absolutely completely fell in love. It was the art and the science and the way of being able to help individual patients in manner of which no other pharmacist in my area was able to do so, of providing very personalized therapies. I was able to really listen to patient needs and work with their doctors, to formulate the exact therapeutic tool that they needed to improve their quality of life. That is really what has driven me in my career. 

Linda Elsegood: When did you open your first pharmacy? 

Dawn Ipsen: I had been a pharmacy compounding lab manager for about 10 years for the Kusler family. When they were ready to go do other things in their life I was given the opportunity to purchase Kusler's Compounding Pharmacy. It had been a pharmacy I had worked at as a staff member for 10 years and took over as the owner and I've now owned that pharmacy for almost 10 years. In January it will be 10 years. That was my first pharmacy. 

I was doing all my good work up at my Snohomish Pharmacy and suddenly had a random phone call on a Friday afternoon in which the Clark family was looking for a new owner for their pharmacy. They were ready to retire and go do other things as well. I've also owned Clark's compounding pharmacy down in Bellevue Washington for six years. I've been an owner for almost 10 years total and have had multiple locations now for about six years. We service not only the entire state of Washington but we also work within nine other states as well. Our boundaries go quite deep and it's a really great way to help all types of patients all over the nation. 

Linda Elsegood: What would you say is the most popular form of LDN that you use the most? 

Dawn Ipsen: I would say primarily we use the most customized strengths of capsule formulations of low dose naltrexone (LDN). It gives patients really great consistency yet opportunity to get the doses titrated in appropriately where they need it to be. What's really great about how we approach our making of capsules is we use hypoallergenic fillers. We're also able to work specifically with patients who have sensitivities. We can customize what that filler might be and I think that's really what sets our pharmacies apart and why doctors and patients choose to work with us. 

We are experts in autoimmune and chronic inflammatory diseases and therefore we're very used to working with patients where the normal just isn't what they need and isn't what's best for them. We can customize that to be appropriate for them. Along with capsules of course, we are able to do transdermals. That's really popular in pediatrics, especially for patients with an autism spectrum disorder. We are able to make flavored liquid tinctures of it so patients are able to use various small doses to titrate up doses. We also make sublinguals. I would say capsules are pretty popular for us. 

Linda Elsegood: What kind of fillers are you asked to use? 

Dawn Ipsen: Most of the time I will steer a patient towards microcrystalline cellulose (which is a tree based cellulose). It is very hypoallergenic for a lot of patients. However, some patients know they have tree allergies and those patients primarily prefer rice flour. I do have a couple of patients, but very very rare that actually do better on lactose filler. They tend to not be my autoimmune patients. They tend to be patients in the chronic pain spectrum area. 

We have also worked with other fillers, like tapioca flour. We can be very customized into our approach of how patients need it. I've got one patient that comes to mind that loves magnesium as their filler and that's very relaxing for their muscles. I've also seen probiotics being used. There is not one right answer to how we do things. We are that pharmacy that is able to have a conversation with a patient. We talk about what their needs are and customize it based on that approach. 

Linda Elsegood: From the prescribers that you work with, do you have many consultants that you fill scripts for? 

Dawn Ipsen: We definitely do. What's also kind of a little side thing that I do. I've always been very passionate about teaching. I'm on faculty at University of Washington School of Pharmacy and also Bastyr University which is one of the top naturopathic doctor schools in the nation. I teach there during summer quarter. I teach nationally to providers continuing ed-based content that is often LDN in nature or ties into LDN. Especially with autoimmune and chronic pain and chronic inflammatory conditions. We consult a lot with doctors. I probably work with three or four hundred functional med type providers on any monthly basis even on being able to customize therapies for their patients. We are really big in the post COVID syndrome arena of helping patients that are really struggling and LDN. We're finding it pairing quite nicely in that condition as it's very inflammatory based. 

We work quite heavily within the MCAS arena for patients who have a lot of mast cell instability and need other therapies. LDN is one of the tools that is used quite frequently by those types of providers and for those specific kinds of patients. 

Linda Elsegood: Do you work with any pain specialists, dermatologists, rheumatologists, gastroenterologists? 

Dawn Ipsen: We do. Honestly, I'm quite proud of our little Seattle area of Washington because we do have MDs that are pain specialists that are now really turning towards using LDN in their toolbox of things they have available for patients. They're getting quite savvy at it. They're doing a really great job. It is super exciting. I have some dermatologists. I consult a lot with my functional med providers that are seeing dermatology conditions like psoriasis. I have an email I need to work with a doctor on after this to help them with this patient with a psoriasis case. We are seeing it in the GI world as well for Crohn's and irritable bowel disorder. Those chronic inflammatory conditions. I would say the MD pain specialists are really turning around over here. Obviously with the opiate crisis that has occurred in our nation I think most doctors of any type of credentialing or medical training or experience are quite interested in what LDN is doing for their communities and what opportunities it affords for patients who are trying to make sure they aren’t addicted to opiates but yet have something to improve quality of life and their day-to-day living. Low dose naltrexone (LDN) has been an amazing tool for that. 

Linda Elsegood: I'm always excited to meet different LDN prescribers and nurse practitioners who are providing lots of scripts. When you get an MD or a DO that is prescribing LDN and it is completely out of their comfort zone, I always think yes, you know we've got another one on board. We're making it right. We're getting it. MDs are already working outside of the box. That is normal for them to look into LDN it's not normal for MDs to look at LDN but as you know I've interviewed so many people and so many MDs when they have a patient that they can't help and fix their issues. They've tried everything and they feel as if they've failed this patient and then they try LDN. Once they have had amazing results with the first person it's then so easy for them to look into prescribing not only for other patients with that condition but for any autoimmune disease, chronic pain, mental health, etc. I mean it's really amazing and this is where people like yourself come into play. The hand-holding with doctors because a lot of them haven't got time to do the homework. They're very busy and they need somebody to tell them exactly what it is, how to prescribe it, what to look for, what to do and have somebody on hand to say, like you said, I've got a patient with psoriasis. What do I do? Can you help me? That is the way to get more doctors involved is the pharmacist doing the hand holding. 

Dawn Ipsen: There is a local psychiatrist in our area that works with younger adults with substance abuse disorders and teenagers that are having a lot of trouble with mental health. I had an opportunity to get him thinking about LDN and his patient population. I love when I get to reconnect with him every few months because he just raves He finally has a tool that actually does something. He felt the antidepressants and all these other things were not really fixing any of the issues or fixing the symptomatology. We still have the same abuse issues, we still have the same addiction issues and we still have the same levels of depression and suicide risk. But with LDN he's finding that he's actually causing positive change in his patient population and that's the only thing he really changed within his practice. 

We're really affecting the health of our community in a very positive manner with something that's really safe and low risk and not expensive. It doesn't get any better than that. It's the best compliment I could ever have. 

Linda Elsegood: It's really nice when patients take all their information to the doctor. Once you've got a doctor really hooked on prescribing LDN they can change the lives of hundreds of patients. Dr Phil Boyle uses LDN in his fertility clinic He also uses it in women's health for things like endometriosis, polycystic ovary, painful periods, heavy periods. Right across the board he uses LDN. He gets patients coming to see him with women's health problems who also have Hashimoto's or long COVID etc. 

Dawn Ipsen: I refer to his work all the time. I get questions a lot from local providers such as we have somebody who wants to become pregnant or they did become pregnant and they're on LDN and they want to know what the standard of care is and can we continue, and what's the risk and benefit are. It is so great to have providers like him out there that have been doing this work for so long that we can very confidently share those case experiences and history of using the medication long term for those patients. 

Linda Elsegood: There have been so many of our members who were skeptical about using LDN during pregnancy. Doctor Boyle is always very generous with his time. I will send him details and he will answer the patient and share his experience. You know we used it once up until birth rather and breastfeeding, etc. We have those people who have done two or three pregnancies using LDN who are happy to talk to other people. This is my experience with 20 years as the charity next year, which is totally amazing, but I’ve found that word of mouth and with the education it is just spreading. 

Dawn Ipsen: Linda, you've done an amazing job with the LDN Research Trust and I thank you for that. You have made the Research Trust, its website, resources and its books into a trusted referral point that I can use with our doctors and our patients who are wanting that next level of information beyond what I'm able to say to them. They want to go see those studies themselves. They want to go read the book themselves and I know that without a doubt I can send them to your resources for them to receive complete in-depth and correct information. Thank you, Linda. You're doing amazing things and this is all because of you. 

Linda Elsegood: How can people contact you? 

Dawn Ipsen: We have two locations in Washington State. We have Kusler's Compounding Pharmacy in Snohomish Washington and the website there is www.Kuslers.com; and then we have Clarks Compounding Pharmacy in Bellevue Washington. That website is www.clarkspharmacywa.com. The WA stands for Washington. We are happy to help patients all over and talk with doctors that need guidance and assistance in learning more. I love being an educator and I love being here to support my community. 

Linda Elsegood: Any questions or comments you may have please email me Linda linda@ldnrt.org. I look forward to hearing from you. Thank you for joining us today. We really appreciated your company. Until next time stay safe and keep well.

 

 


Linda Elsegood: Welcome to the LDN Radio Show brought to you by the LDN Research Trust. I'm your host Linda Elsegood. Today I'd like to welcome our guest Pharmacist Suzanne Rosenberg from Community Compounding Pharmacy in Oregon. 

So could you tell us what made you decide to become a pharmacist? 

Suzanne Rosenberg: When I was in undergraduate school at Temple University in Philadelphia, which is my hometown, I worked at a pharmacy and I loved it. I loved working with people. I just loved everything about it and so when I graduated with my degree in psychology I applied to Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts and started pharmacy school two months later. I received my pharmacy degree from Northeastern. 

Linda Elsegood: Have you always stayed in the Oregon area? 

Suzanne Rosenberg: After I graduated pharmacy school I got in my car and drove to Portland, Oregon to visit some friends. I never left. That was 27 years ago. I've been practicing as a pharmacist exclusively in the Portland, Oregon area. 

Linda Elsegood: When did you buy the pharmacy? 

Suzanne Rosenberg: I moved to Portland and I worked for small independent pharmacies. I got really interested in herbal medicine. There was a company called Wild Oats that opened a large store and they had an idea where they put a pharmacy with naturopathic medicine in this grocery store with a yoga studio. They asked me to manage it. I did for six and a half years. I managed this pharmacy and turned it into a compounding pharmacy. Then another local chain recruited me and I did that for four and a half years. Then I decided that I had all these ideas of things that I wanted to do. Fifteen years ago I started Community Compounding Pharmacy in Lake Oswego, which is a suburb of Portland. It's a compounding only pharmacy. We predominantly work with integrative practitioners which I've been working with for over 23 years. I work with naturopaths, functional medicine doctors, integrative practitioners all over the West Coast. We started mainly in Portland, in the Northwest, but now we work with integrative practitioners up and down the West Coast.

Linda Elsegood: Please tell us about your pharmacy. How big is it? Do you do sterile and/or non-sterile compounding? 

Suzanne Rosenberg: We're fortunate that we only do non-sterile compounding. We're about 10,000 square feet. We have about 45 employees. We're open six days a week and we ship all over the nation, predominantly on the west coast and certain states on the east coast. Mostly on the west coast; Colorado, Arizona, Alaska, Hawaii. On the east coast: New York, Maine, Vermont, Connecticut. We are pretty much licensed mainly on the east and the west coast. We have been fortunate to have an extremely amazing staff that really supports our patients and our doctors and one of our focuses at Community Compounding is education. If you go to our website what you'll find is that we really focus a lot on education. We do that in two ways. One is we actually offer continuing education twice a year for the naturopathic community, although nurse practitioners are able to get the Continuing Education Credits as well. We actually just had one on Saturday and LDN was a big topic because it is for most ailments. One of our topics uh was PANS and PANDAS which is predominantly a childhood situation where they get inflammation. Low dose naltrexone (LDN) is a treatment for that and one of our doctors, Dr. Sarah McAllister spoke on Saturday at this conference and brought up LDN. In addition to that we also make it a priority to offer education for our patients. Patients have access to our pharmacist. We have four pharmacists on staff each day. One of the things that we really pride ourselves on is making sure that if a patient calls and has a question that their questions are answered in real time. In addition to that, every prescription, before it goes out, gets a personal phone call from one of our pharmacists to counsel them and make sure that they understand what this medication is used for, how to properly take it and just ask any questions that they may have before that prescription goes out to them. 

Linda Elsegood: Education is key. I would say pharmacists, even though they’re busy people have more time to do the research than doctors do. You are the people that educate the doctors and do the hand-holding and explaining to the doctors. They are not experts in drug interactions. That's the job of the pharmacist. We find the pharmacies that spend the time on educating their doctors help so many patients because you get a new doctor on board. How many patients does that new doctor prescribe LDN for? Then that doctor meets up with other doctor friends and they invariably end up talking about problem cases. Then LDN comes up and it's easier for the pharmacist who deals with that doctor to mention LDN because of a light bulb moment. I was talking to a colleague who talked about LDN but I don't know much about it, I don't know how to prescribe it. Without the pharmacist being so well educated themselves about LDN they wouldn't be able to convert the doctors into LDN prescribers. 

Suzanne Rosenberg: I’m trying to convert doctors in Oregon. Oregon is kind of one of the meccas of alternative medicine. In Portland and in Oregon in general we have a lot of information. We have a really tight integrative community here and it's really neat to see. They teach each other, they're supportive of each other. It's a really neat place. I feel very fortunate that I get to practice in Portland, Oregon and in the northwest. It's a really special place. Especially as an integrative pharmacist. My entire pharmacy is an integrative pharmacy. Our model is different from some of the other compounding pharmacies in the city who I have a ton of respect for. Ours is different in the sense that a lot of the other compounding pharmacies will market to doctors who are more focused on allopathic. We do work with allopathic practitioners. We are the main compounding pharmacy for OHSU. Alll of their LDN from Oregon Health and Science University or at least most of it they have a tight relationship with us. Our model is different in the sense that we really only market and seek to educate alternative practitioners at this point. 

We are licensed all over the nation and I personally will travel. I have another woman, Holly, who also helps me. And we meet with naturopaths, functional medicine doctors, integrative practitioners, doctors who are interested in learning alternate ways of treatment. What we see as our role is to go out throughout the nation and meet with these doctors. That's really our focus. We work with doctors all over the nation. We actually will travel and we do what we call a lunch and learn. On our website you can actually go onto our website and there's a doctor portal on there. In that doctor portal you can actually request lunch and learn. We go and we sit and we meet with these doctors. We go over integrative products that we have. A lot of them have never heard of these formulas. Because we work so closely with the integrative practitioner group in the northwest we're actually creating formulas, including using LDN. We've been using a lot of LDN topically at Community Compounding. We have a formula now that we're really proud of that is a topical LDN for lichen sclerosis with some herbs in it, as well as, some hormones. We also use LDN topically when it comes to psoriasis and eczema. We use that in conjunction with a product called Ketotifen which is a mast cell stabilizer. What we do is we use LDN orally but we've also been utilizing a lot in our topical preparations. And we use a lot of integrative treatments for hair loss, skin conditions, gut, gut health and will intake different products and combine them for these new products that a lot of doctors haven't heard of because they're predominantly products that we've created with doctors in the northwest. It's really neat to go out and share these products with our doctors. All of this stuff actually is available in this doctor portal on our Community Compounding Pharmacy website; you'll find it. You will need to ask for access. My assistant will send you a code within 24 business hours. You'll have access to all of our prescription pads, all of our research articles that we have in there, and recommendations for treatments. 

I have a pamphlet about a talk that I had done in January in Hawaii for some naturopaths. It is is a little pamphlet of our top 20 formulas that our pharmacists love. Not all of them are things that we do every day but they're things that patients have come back to us and said, “Wow this really works.” Or they say, “A doctor says that formula is amazing.” Then they start telling their colleagues. That's a new thing that we just came out with a couple months ago. It was serendipitous. We didn't intentionally plan to put this together but I did it for a talk and handed it out to some doctors and they loved it. So now we have a list of the top 20 formulas that we wanted to share and we'll be adding to that regularly as things come up. A place to get a lot of information is on the doctor portal. 

Linda Elsegood: You mentioned Dr. Sarah McAllister, (you can put her name in YouTube you will see that I interviewed her many years ago. Maybe even as many as 15 years ago.) It's been a long time since I have spoken with her. She is a very nice young lady. 

Suzanne Rosenberg: She's amazing. Her talk was amazing. If anyone's interested in learning more about our talks you can go online. This one we just had recently, so in about two weeks the lecture will be available. If you're interested in learning or you know can't attend any of our webinars they are in person and they are also webinar based. You're more than welcome to visit our website. You don't need to log into the doctor portal and you can get access to these conferences. We do two conferences a year. Some of our other topics that we cover are women's health, Ehlers Danlos, mold, PANS and PANDAS. We had mitochondrial health on this last one. I would say at least 60 percent of our talks have LDN in those talks because it's so prevalent now in treating so many things. We've done a lot with the gut. We've had a lot of gut talks at these conferences. Another phenomenal naturopath in Portland, but you will see that in a lot of these treatments LDN is indicated for a lot of these patients. It is a hot topic not only in terms of autoimmune which is kind of what traditionally I would think of it being used for but now we're seeing it in so many other ways to support our immune system that is pretty much in every conference whether it's at every talk maybe sometimes women health not so much. It's a hot topic at our talks. 

Linda Elsegood: What about chronic pain and opioid addictions and people off of opioids? 

Suzanne Rosenberg: We have an amazing doctor in Portland who is a naturopath. She works at the pain clinic at OHSU. She's an amazing doctor, amazing naturopath, an amazing human being. We worked very closely with her and she prescribes two things. Well, several things through us. One of the main things she prescribes through us is LDN. She does a lot of our topical pain creams as well. We also do topical pain creams for patients who are in chronic pain and the goal is to get them off of their narcotics and switch them over to LDN. I just had a patient yesterday who actually this was this was an unusual patient this was a patient who was not seeing one of these doctors, but has done her own research and is starting on a really low dose of LDN and is working with a doctor who has basically been brought in through the patient request of prescribing LDN. So here's a doctor who knew very little about LDN and here's a patient who's educating their doctor on their own. These two came together and I was counseling the patient and she was really up on her LDN. There's a lot of information out there. It was really neat to see and she was telling me, “Yeah my doctor doesn't know a lot about it so she's going to help me you know. We're gonna do this together.” That is an unusual situation but we see that too. It was a really neat conversation. 

Linda Elsegood: Regarding women's health: Dr. Phil Boyle has been using LDN in his Fertility Clinic for 20 plus years now with great success. He also uses it for endometriosis, polycystic ovaries, painful periods, heavy periods, all these things that women have to endure is found to be very very helpful. 

Suzanne Rosenberg: This is also a phone call I had yesterday with a nurse practitioner. I was on the phone all day long as are my pharmacists. They are answering questions, coming up with formulas. We had a nurse practitioner call me yesterday. Again, someone I've known for 20 years and she has a patient who has severe pelvic floor pain. What we're doing for this patient is a formula. This particular patient had actually some inflammation. They had burning pain. We were doing a suppository for her. She has mast cell and we're doing cromolyn and she had already been on diphenhydramine and ketotifen which are antihistamines. I suggested that she adds some naltrexone to it. So we'll see what happens. These are the kind of formulas we're always thinking when we're having a situation where a patient is in pain and we're trying to oh wait, and put some lidocaine in there as well, um but when a patient is in pain and we're putting things together naltrexone is always something that I'm starting to incorporate into these products because I'm finding that we're getting great results. I mean the Lichen sclerosis formula has been a huge success for us and this was a formula that we had been playing around with for years. We've been working with glycyrrhiza which is licorice root, which is a common treatment for lichen sclerosis. There was a product on the market for many years that contained licorice root. This new formula that we've created is a combination of estriol, glyceriza, aloe and naltrexone and some vitamin E. It's a steroid free cream and we have been working and trying to find something that is steroid free for lichen sclerosis and this is really the first time that we're getting feedback from our doctors and our patients, our doctors primarily because you can see it. You know they try it on one patient, they try it again and they're calling me and saying what was that formula that I called in for lichen sclerosis? I need it for this patient because it works so well. That's kind of how we get our feedback. We're really excited to have that and I'm finding that when I'm creating formulas now I'm thinking a lot more of putting naltrexone in these formulas even if they're not for other areas of the body. 

Linda Elsegood: Your patients that use it for a dermatological condition, how long do you normally find it takes before they experience any improvement? 

Suzanne Rosenberg: We are at a disadvantage because we don’t have a lot of patient follow-up. Usually pharmacists hear really amazing things or we hear things when there's an issue. We don't get to see patients all the time so it's hard for me to say but I know there's a research study that PCCA did specifically on naltrexone in their zematop product for eczema. It is something that you can Google and it has some dates and some time frames. 

What we do for our eczema and psoriasis cream is we actually add ketotifen to it as well. So it's a combination of naltrexone, ketotifen in their zematop product. Typically if patients don't get results after a month they usually stop. Most of our patients are getting results within a couple weeks. I have spoken to lots of patients with skin conditions. They seem to be the people that take the longest to respond, to notice improvement. Some of them may take six months. They stick with it and it takes that long. A lot of these patients are on LDN orally so they'll be on LDN orally for a while and then we'll start the cream. They've already had the advantage of being on LDN. 

One of the things that I did want to share with you guys is that one of the things that we decided to do as a compounding pharmacy, especially post COVID, is our focus was really on becoming efficient. By that I mean having patients wait for their medications is no longer an option. We really wanted to make sure that efficiency was a priority of Community Compounding. One of the things that we did because we work very closely with the mast cell activation community in the northwest is we decided to start finding ways to have our turnaround time shortened. We really value our employees. They are making large batches of capsules and it is actually physically challenging. It's a lot of work. About six months ago, one of the things that we decided to do is we decided to invest in a tablet press and we are now pressing two drugs at Community Compounding. One of them being naltrexone. We are one of the few compounding pharmacies in the United States that is making low dose naltrexone tablets. Our low dose naltrexone tablets are a little different from some of the other compounding pharmacies because we work so closely with the mast cell activation community. We're very aware of allergens and food sensitivities and potential allergens for these patients. When you make a tablet you have to put a binder in there. A binder is something that holds it together and most binders are pretty inert unless you have mast cell activation or severe allergens. These patients can't tolerate many things including such things that you and I could tolerate easily. What we decided to do is we decided to not use any binders in our tablets. Our tablets only contain two ingredients. They contain a cellulose that we specifically use that is GMO free and allergen free. It's kosher. It's made from organic materials. The only other ingredient in our product is the drug. It is a GMO organic material, cellulose, called flow cell and naltrexone. If a patient is a vegan, if a patient is allergic to silicon dioxide (which is a very commonly used for most tablets), there's no issues with taking these tablets. The best part about these tablets is that they are scored. What happens with these tablets is they can be cut very easily. As you know most compounding pharmacies, including us, make naltrexone capsules which are great and we've been making them for 15 years. Of course capsules can't be accurately split. You can open one up and kind of guesstimate which we don't typically recommend as a pharmacist but it can be done. With these tablets you can use a pill cutter and we do recommend using a pill cutter because we use no binders. We press them really hard. So they're very hard. We do tell all of our patients that they will need a pill cutter. They can cut them right down the center so they know that they are getting 50 percent of that tablet. As an example, we only make three strands. We don't make a 1.5 because we make a one, a 3 and a 4.5. The one we make because we have so many patients who are super sensitive to medications, a lot of our patients will start on the 0.5 dose. It's not the most common but it's definitely common enough that it was something that we wanted to be able to offer this option. For the super sensitive patient you would use the one milligram tablet. You will have them cut that in half and start with a 0.5 and ramp up slowly to the desired 4.5 milligram dose or three milligram. Wherever they land. The three milligram tablet we made because that can be cut in half and they start with the 1.5 milligram tablet, half of that which is the 1.5. Half of the three and slowly ramp up to the 4.5 and then we do the 4.5 as the maintenance dose. What's really nice about it is that this saves patients a significant amount of money when they're using these tablets because as you know compounding pharmacies are very labor intensive. Any time that you can decrease labor in a compounding pharmacy what you're doing is you're significantly decreasing the labor dollars and then the goal is to be able to save the patient's money. The only way to do that as a compounding pharmacy is to decrease labor. What is important about it is that we have the same staff that we had here a year ago but people are working better not harder now. 

We now have an R&D team, which is a research and development team, that helps us when we have new products that we want to create and there's an issue with something, if we want to bring in a new base and we want to play with it, we have an entire team now who works on all these products. We have an IT team now. We just came up with a new IT team, where my staff in each department has their own IT specialist. The point that I'm trying to make is that as a result of the tablet machine and other ways that we've become more efficient we're actually a better compounding pharmacy. We are offering better customer service than ever. Our turnaround time is now one to two business days. I now have more time to go out and meet with doctors, educate, network and learn. The tablets are great for so many reasons. For the patients, for the pharmacy and for our ability to educate and really reach out to more people. We are really excited about these tablets and they've been a huge success for us. They've really been a great relationship builder, too. Doctors are able to use my local pharmacy for my estriol vaginal cream but also use Community Compounding for tablets and then we create these relationships. 

Now they have more pharmacies to network with if they have issues that come up with their patients. It could be that their compounding pharmacy doesn't carry a product that we carry and that happens often. Some things are expensive to carry and that creates new networks We work with other compounding pharmacies and share formulas and that has been a really nice way to network with doctors and our patients. 

Linda Elsegood: Can you tell people your website so that they can go and find out more about you. 

Suzanne Rosenberg: It is www.communitycmpd.com Or you can also type in Community Compounding Pharmacy in Oregon and you will find us. We are licensed in the whole west coast, most of the east coast.