Retacrit Injection, Solution
NDC 0069-1306
Product Information
Retacrit (epoetin alfa-epbx) is a BLA-approved product labeled by Pfizer Laboratories Div Pfizer Inc. This medication is used to treat anemia (low red blood cell count) in people with long-term serious kidney disease (chronic kidney failure), people receiving zidovudine to treat HIV, and people receiving chemotherapy for some types of cancer (cancer that does not involve the bone marrow or blood cells). It is supplied as a injection, solution for intravenous; subcutaneous administration. This product entry covers the primary NDC 0069-1306 and its associated package configuration. This profile includes active and inactive ingredient UNII references and FDA labeling data.
Primary Identification
Clinical Specifications
- Intravenous - Administration within or into a vein or veins.
- Subcutaneous - Administration beneath the skin; hypodermic. Synonymous with the term SUBDERMAL.
Labeler & Regulatory Data
Marketing Timeline
Code Structure Chart
Product Details
What is NDC 0069-1306?
What are the uses of this product?
What are Active Ingredients of this product?
Which are the associated UNII Codes?
The UNII codes for the active ingredients in this product are:
- ERYTHROPOIETIN (UNII: 64FS3BFH5W)
- ERYTHROPOIETIN (UNII: 64FS3BFH5W) (Active Moiety)
Which are the Inactive Ingredients associated UNII Codes?
The inactive ingredients are all the component of a medicinal product OTHER than the active ingredient(s). The acronym "UNII" stands for “Unique Ingredient Identifier” and is used to identify each inactive ingredient present in a product. The UNII codes for the inactive ingredients in this product are:
- SODIUM PHOSPHATE, MONOBASIC, MONOHYDRATE (UNII: 593YOG76RN)
- SODIUM PHOSPHATE, DIBASIC, ANHYDROUS (UNII: 22ADO53M6F)
- SODIUM CHLORIDE (UNII: 451W47IQ8X)
- CALCIUM CHLORIDE (UNII: M4I0D6VV5M)
- GLYCINE (UNII: TE7660XO1C)
- LEUCINE (UNII: GMW67QNF9C)
- ISOLEUCINE (UNII: 04Y7590D77)
- THREONINE (UNII: 2ZD004190S)
- GLUTAMIC ACID (UNII: 3KX376GY7L)
- PHENYLALANINE (UNII: 47E5O17Y3R)
- POLYSORBATE 20 (UNII: 7T1F30V5YH)
- WATER (UNII: 059QF0KO0R)
- SODIUM HYDROXIDE (UNII: 55X04QC32I)
- HYDROCHLORIC ACID (UNII: QTT17582CB)
What is the NDC to RxNorm Crosswalk for this product?
- RxCUI: 2047591 - epoetin alfa-epbx 10,000 UNT in 1 ML Injection
- RxCUI: 2047591 - 1 ML epoetin alfa-epbx 10000 UNT/ML Injection
- RxCUI: 2047591 - 1 ML EPO-epbx 10000 UNT/ML Injection
- RxCUI: 2047591 - 1 ML ERYTHROPOIETIN-epbx 10000 UNT/ML Injection
- RxCUI: 2047591 - epoetin alfa-epbx 10,000 UNT per 1 ML Injection
Which are the Pharmacologic Classes of this product?
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Patient Education
Epoetin Alfa, Injection
Epoetin alfa injection products are used to treat anemia (a lower than normal number of red blood cells) in people with chronic kidney failure (condition in which the kidneys slowly and permanently stop working over a period of time). Epoetin alfa injection products are also used to treat anemia caused by chemotherapy in people with certain types of cancer or caused by zidovudine (AZT, Retrovir, in Trizivir, in Combivir), a medication used to treat human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Epoetin alfa injection products are also used before and after certain types of surgery to decrease the chance that blood transfusions (transfer of one person's blood to another person's body) will be needed because of blood loss during surgery. Epoetin alfa injection products should not be used to decrease the risk that transfusions will be needed in people who are having surgery on their hearts or blood vessels. Epoetin alfa injection products also should not be used to treat people who are able and willing to donate blood before surgery so that this blood can be replaced in their bodies during or after surgery. Epoetin alfa injection products cannot be used in place of a red blood cell transfusion to treat severe anemia and has not been shown to improve tiredness or poor well-being that may be caused by anemia. Epoetin alfa products are in a class of medications called erythropoiesis-stimulating agents (ESAs). They work by causing the bone marrow (soft tissue inside the bones where blood is made) to make more red blood cells.
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* Please review the full disclaimer at the bottom of this page.