Rapamycin Cost
Let me clear some things up for people considering rapamycin (generic sirolimus). I am taking it and so are my dogs!! (I have a very open-minded vet who trusts my judgement.)
Dr. Green, a very impressive individual, gave me my personal prescription for sirolimus. I have a very good PPO (Blue Cross/Blue Shield). I took it to CVS, the affiliated pharmacy, and got a great price of about $2.90/mg. (Remember, you are only going to take about 3-6 mg/week.) With a PPO you can probably do this also. CVS wants to meter it to you with a month's worth of doses at a time, but that's just how they do things. You still have access to the full quantity prescribed.
With the prescription from my vet for my dogs, I was forced to take to the open sea. Armed with only a prescription and no insurance, the picture is quite different, but you can still get a good price. Cutting to the chase, I ended up at Walmart. The prescription was for 90 mg - price $1440. But wait! after presenting a coupon downloaded from GoodRX (that's right, just anonymously downloaded and printed) - price $396!!!! As my vet remarked, that's a hell of a charge for not looking around first! ($4.40/mg is better than taking a risk buying online, in my opinion.) Costco is pretty close to that price. At CVS/RiteAid, etc., you will pay vastly more.
You can't touch the original drug rapamune (Pfizer) unless you are wealthy or go to Canada. The problem with the online pharmacies is that a lot of them are scams. Just because they have a website doesn't mean anything. At least check to see if they have a brick and mortar location. Example: At one point I was excited by the online infomercials and wanted to take NMN instead of NR; however, when I looked up the reputations of the suppliers only one was unsullied, and on further investigation their brick and mortar location turned out to be a residential dwelling!
FYI, more than one company makes sirolimus. From CVS the sirolimus was made by Greenstone, LLC, apparently a wholly owned subsidiary of Pfizer.
Hope that helps some people who are considering rapamycin but think it might be out of their reach. If you know a doctor, great, but if you don't a visit to Dr. Green is worth the trip, and I live in CA! (round trip less than $300) Do your homework first and you will learn a great deal.
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Just an update. I received a full refund from the AAS yesterday. They seemed unable to wire $ to Canada, but worked hard on a solution. I received a registered letter... with a cash refund in the mail. Above and beyond. I am pleased that I was part of the process that led to them identifying problems with their Rapa-pro product, but they dealt with it appropriately.
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I have been on hGH therapy with metformin, DHEA, and low dose statins for over 10 years. I'm now 80, exercise, and am in good health other than BPH. I was alarmed by Blagosklonny's and Dr Green's adamant opposition to hGH. Dr Fahy's thymus regeneration study leads me to believe that the years of growth hormone may have been useful after all, but now I dont know whether to continue. I plan to begin rapamycin therapy soon and would really appreciate the thoughts of the scientists on this forum whether some form of alternating between rapamycin and hGH makes any sense.
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Just starting my canine on rapamycin. He has periodontal disease so on a whim I checked if rapa had any affect. Unbelievably it is the only drug to ever show improvement and regrowth of bone in rodent age related periodontal disease. Is there an age related malady that this drug does not effect?
Rapamycin rejuvenates oral health in aging mice
Jonathan Y. An, Kristopher A. Kerns, Andrew Ouellette, Laura Robinson, Doug Morris, Catherine Kaczorowski, So-Il Park, Title Mekvanich, Alex Kang, Jeffrey S. McLean, Timothy C. Cox, View ORCID ProfileMatt Kaeberlein