Many "quick-fix" age-defying methods can place patients in danger ... and BOTOX® is no exception. Yet what many unsuspecting patients don't know about BOTOX® is that the toxin being injected into their bodies may not be BOTOX® at all, but rather a deadly knockoff.
In an investigation into sales of $1.5 million worth of the unapproved BOTOX® fraud, three doctors are looking at license suspension and hundreds more are expecting visits from federal regulators.
Where Did the Knockoff Come From?
An Arizona-based company and its affiliates promoted their own version of botulinum toxin--which is one of the most deadly known to man--to doctors nationwide as a cheaper alternative to BOTOX®. According to investigators, more than 200 doctors purchased the toxin from Toxin Research International (TRI).
The unapproved treatment was sold by the firm for $1,250 a vial, which contained about five doses, compared to the real BOTOX®, which has an average wholesale price of $560 for a single-dose vial. TRI supposedly purchased the toxin for a mere $9.67 a vial.
Moreover, regardless of package labels warning that the toxin was not for human use, patients from the following states were given doses anyway:
While no injuries were reported among these patients, the BOTOX® knockoff hit four unlucky patients hard: A Florida doctor and three others were hospitalized in November 2004 with botulism, a potentially fatal condition that paralyzes muscles. Even though all four victims survived, they all suffered critical complications.
The Florida doctor (who suffered from botulism) is facing criminal charges of conspiring to defraud the U.S. government and mislabeling drugs. Two additional doctors, who ran TRI in Tucson, are also facing charges.
USA Today February 22, 2005
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