Updated: January 22, 2026
How to Find a Doctor Who Can Prescribe Lysodren Near You [2026 Guide]
Author
Peter Daggett

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Lysodren is prescribed by oncologists and endocrinologists who specialize in adrenal tumors. Here's how to find the right specialist near you in 2026.
Lysodren (mitotane) is prescribed for adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) — a rare and complex cancer that requires expert care. Because ACC affects so few patients, finding a physician who has real experience with Lysodren can itself be a challenge. This guide explains which specialists prescribe Lysodren, why it matters to see the right kind of provider, and how to locate one near you.
Who Can Prescribe Lysodren?
Lysodren is not a controlled substance, so there are no DEA scheduling restrictions on which licensed prescribers can write for it. Any physician with a valid DEA number can legally prescribe Lysodren. However, because the drug is used to treat a rare, life-threatening cancer and requires careful therapeutic monitoring, it is strongly recommended to be managed by a specialist with experience in adrenal tumors or oncology.
The specialists most likely to prescribe and manage Lysodren include:
Medical oncologists — particularly those who specialize in rare cancers, gastrointestinal tumors, or endocrine malignancies. Oncologists are the primary prescribers of Lysodren for ACC.
Endocrinologists — especially those who manage adrenal disorders, Cushing's syndrome, and neuroendocrine tumors. Endocrinologists often co-manage ACC patients alongside oncologists.
Adrenal tumor specialists — at NCI-designated cancer centers and academic medical centers, some providers specialize specifically in adrenal cancers and are the most experienced Lysodren prescribers in the country.
Why Seeing a Specialist Matters for Lysodren
Lysodren is not a set-and-forget medication. It requires:
Plasma level monitoring every 2 weeks during dose titration (target 14–20 mg/L)
Regular liver function tests, complete blood counts, and endocrine labs
Management of adrenal insufficiency with steroid replacement therapy
Complex drug interaction management (especially with CYP3A4 medications, warfarin, and spironolactone)
Contraception counseling (hormonal contraceptives are rendered ineffective by Lysodren)
Community physicians who have never managed ACC before may not be familiar with all of these requirements. Seeking care at a center with dedicated ACC expertise gives patients access to a team that manages these complexities regularly.
How to Find an ACC or Lysodren Specialist Near You
Contact an NCI-Designated Cancer Center: NCI-designated comprehensive cancer centers (cancer.gov/research/infrastructure/cancer-centers) are the most likely sites to have physicians experienced with ACC. Search by location to find the nearest center.
Ask for a Referral from Your Current Doctor: Your primary care physician or community oncologist can refer you to a specialist in endocrine oncology. Ask specifically for a referral to someone who has treated adrenocortical carcinoma.
Contact the ACC Alliance: The Adrenocortical Carcinoma Alliance (ACCAlliance.org) is a patient advocacy organization that can help connect patients with expert physicians and ACC-specialized treatment centers.
Search ClinicalTrials.gov: Active clinical trials for ACC are run at centers with the most expertise. Participating sites are often among the best places to receive Lysodren treatment.
Contact the Lysodren Support Line: Direct Success Inc. at 1-844-597-6373 may be able to direct you to prescribers familiar with Lysodren in your area.
Can I Get a Lysodren Prescription via Telehealth?
Because Lysodren is not a controlled substance, there are no federal restrictions on prescribing it via telehealth. Endocrinologists and oncologists who offer telemedicine consultations can legally prescribe Lysodren remotely. However, because the drug requires physical lab monitoring, hands-on care, and initial hospital-based titration, telehealth should supplement — not replace — in-person specialist care for ACC.
Some academic cancer centers offer telemedicine second-opinion consultations that can be valuable for patients in rural areas or those far from a major cancer center.
What to Bring to Your First Appointment
When seeing a new specialist for ACC, bring:
All recent imaging reports (CT, MRI, PET) and pathology results
Recent lab work (cortisol, ACTH, aldosterone, sex hormones, LFTs, CBC)
A complete list of all current medications, supplements, and herbal products
Your insurance card and information about any copay assistance programs you're enrolled in
Once You Have a Prescription: Finding the Pharmacy
Once you have a Lysodren prescription in hand, the next challenge is filling it. Your specialist's office should help route the prescription to a specialty pharmacy. If you run into trouble locating a pharmacy, medfinder can search pharmacies near you and identify which ones can fill it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Lysodren (mitotane) is typically prescribed by medical oncologists or endocrinologists who specialize in adrenal tumors or rare endocrine malignancies. Adrenocortical carcinoma is so rare that it is best managed by physicians at NCI-designated cancer centers or academic medical centers with dedicated expertise in this disease.
No. Lysodren (mitotane) is not a controlled substance and is not scheduled by the DEA. Any licensed physician with a valid DEA number can prescribe it, though management by an oncologist or endocrinologist with ACC experience is strongly recommended due to the complexity of the treatment.
Yes. Endocrinologists frequently prescribe and co-manage Lysodren for patients with adrenocortical carcinoma and Cushing's syndrome. Endocrinologists are particularly well-suited to managing the hormonal aspects of ACC treatment, including steroid replacement, cortisol monitoring, and managing hypercortisolism.
Start by searching for NCI-designated comprehensive cancer centers near you at cancer.gov. The ACC Alliance (ACCAlliance.org) can also connect you with expert centers. Ask your current physician for a referral to a specialist in endocrine oncology who has treated adrenocortical carcinoma.
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