The patch was granted a license from the
European Medicines Agency in July, and is available on
Britain's
National Health Service from March 2007. However, in December 2004 the
United States the 14-member
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) advisory committee, plus voting consultants, for Reproductive Health Drugs unanimously rejected Procter and Gamble's fast-track request for Intrinsa citing concerns about
off-label use. In Canada, post-menopausal women have been able to obtain government-approved testosterone treatment since 2002. In Australia, post-menopausal women can use
Organon testosterone implants which have to be surgically inserted and last from three to six months. ==See also==