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Novo Nordisk strikes deal for Hims to sell Wegovy and Ozempic, drops lawsuit

Novo Nordisk strikes deal for Hims to sell Wegovy and Ozempic, drops lawsuit

Reuters Mon, March 9, 2026 at 12:50 PM UTC

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COPENHAGEN, March 9 (Reuters) - Novo Nordisk has agreed to sell its blockbuster Wegovy and Ozempic drugs through U.S. telehealth company Hims & Hers' platform, the ‌Danish drugmaker said on Monday, ending a legal dispute that erupted last ‌month.

The deal marks a turnaround from February, when Novo sued Hims over a $49 compounded alternative to its ​Wegovy weight-loss pill.

Novo is grappling with telehealth firms offering cheaper compounded copycat versions of its obesity treatments.

Under the agreement, effective later this month, Hims customers will gain access to U.S. regulatory-approved Ozempic and Wegovy injectables, as well as the Wegovy pill, at Novo's ‌self-pay prices.

Novo CEO Mike Doustdar ⁠said the Wegovy pill had generated more than 600,000 prescriptions since its launch two months ago, with telehealth partnerships accelerating uptake.

COMPETITION ⁠DRIVES PRICE CUTS

Novo faces stiff U.S. competition from Eli Lilly. To boost sales, Novo has cut prices for its weight-loss drugs from about $1,000 per month to $149-$299 on its websites.

Doustdar said ​lower ​pricing was a key part of the partnership, ​telling Reuters that "authentic products are ‌now very similarly priced as the compounded ones".

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The deal follows a warning last week from U.S. regulators to 30 telehealth companies over misleading promotions of compounded drugs from the GLP-1 class that includes Wegovy and Ozempic. The Food and Drug Administration said some firms falsely equated compounded products with approved medications.

Hims CEO Andrew Dudum said the partnership ‌with Novo followed Hims' decision to shift its ​U.S. weight-loss business away from compounded GLP-1 drugs ​and towards branded, FDA-approved treatments, reflecting ​what he said was rising demand for a wider range ‌of lower-cost options.

"That's where we see growth ​in the business," Dudum ​told Reuters.

Novo said it was withdrawing the lawsuit "while reserving the right to refile".

Hims will no longer advertise compounded GLP-1 drugs, though it will continue offering ​them when providers deem ‌it clinically necessary.

Novo ended a similar agreement last year over concerns about ​compounded drug marketing and sales.

(Reporting by Stine Jacobsen in Copenhagen and Maggie ​Fick in London. Editing by Mark Potter)

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