NDC 70842-225 Kimyrsa
Oritavancin Diphosphate Injection, Powder, Lyophilized, For Solution Intravenous - View Dosage, Usage, Ingredients, Routes, UNII
Product Information
Product Characteristics
Code Structure Chart
Product Details
What is NDC 70842-225?
What are the uses for Kimyrsa?
What are Kimyrsa Active Ingredients?
Which are Kimyrsa UNII Codes?
The UNII codes for the active ingredients in this product are:
- ORITAVANCIN DIPHOSPHATE (UNII: VL1P93MKZN)
- ORITAVANCIN (UNII: PUG62FRZ2E) (Active Moiety)
Which are Kimyrsa Inactive Ingredients 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:
- HYDROXYPROPYL BETADEX (UNII: 1I96OHX6EK)
- MANNITOL (UNII: 3OWL53L36A)
- PHOSPHORIC ACID (UNII: E4GA8884NN)
- SODIUM HYDROXIDE (UNII: 55X04QC32I)
What is the NDC to RxNorm Crosswalk for Kimyrsa?
- RxCUI: 2532361 - oritavancin 1200 MG Injection
- RxCUI: 2532361 - oritavancin 1200 MG (as oritavancin diphosphate 1331.16 MG) Injection
- RxCUI: 2532366 - Kimyrsa 1200 MG Injection
- RxCUI: 2532366 - oritavancin 1200 MG Injection [Kimyrsa]
- RxCUI: 2532366 - Kimyrsa 1200 MG (as oritavancin diphosphate 1331.16 MG) Injection
Which are the Pharmacologic Classes for Kimyrsa?
- Cytochrome P450 2C19 Inhibitors - [MoA] (Mechanism of Action)
- Cytochrome P450 2C9 Inhibitors - [MoA] (Mechanism of Action)
- Cytochrome P450 2D6 Inducers - [MoA] (Mechanism of Action)
- Cytochrome P450 3A4 Inducers - [MoA] (Mechanism of Action)
- Lipoglycopeptide Antibacterial - [EPC] (Established Pharmacologic Class)
- Lipoglycopeptides - [CS]
* Please review the disclaimer below.
Patient Education
Oritavancin Injection
Oritavancin injection is used to treat skin infections caused by certain types of bacteria. Oritavancin is in a class of medications called lipoglycopeptide antibiotics. It works by killing bacteria. Antibiotics such as oritavancin will not work for colds, flu, and other viral infections. Using antibiotics when they are not needed increases your risk of getting an infection later that resists antibiotic treatment.
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* Please review the disclaimer below.
[1] What is the Non-Proprietary Name? - The non-proprietary name is sometimes called the generic name. The generic name usually includes the active ingredient(s) of the product.
[2] What is the Substance Name? - An active ingredient is the substance responsible for the medicinal effects of a product specified by the substance's molecular structure or if the molecular structure is not known, defined by an unambiguous definition that identifies the substance. Each active ingredient name is the preferred term of the UNII code submitted.
[3] What kind of product is this? - Indicates the type of product, such as Human Prescription Drug or Human Over the Counter Drug. This data element matches the “Document Type” field of the Structured Product Listing.
[4] What are the Administration Routes? - The translation of the route code submitted by the firm, indicating route of administration.
[5] What is the Labeler Name? - Name of Company corresponding to the labeler code segment of the Product NDC.
[6] What is the FDA Application Number? - This corresponds to the NDA, ANDA, or BLA number reported by the labeler for products which have the corresponding Marketing Category designated. If the designated Marketing Category is OTC Monograph Final or OTC Monograph Not Final, then the Application number will be the CFR citation corresponding to the appropriate Monograph (e.g. “part 341”). For unapproved drugs, this field will be null.
[8] What is the Marketing Category? - Product types are broken down into several potential Marketing Categories, such as NDA/ANDA/BLA, OTC Monograph, or Unapproved Drug. One and only one Marketing Category may be chosen for a product, not all marketing categories are available to all product types. Currently, only final marketed product categories are included. The complete list of codes and translations can be found at www.fda.gov/edrls under Structured Product Labeling Resources.
[9] What is the Start Marketing Date? - This is the date that the labeler indicates was the start of its marketing of the drug product.
[11] What is the Listing Expiration Date? - This is the date when the listing record will expire if not updated or certified by the product labeler.
[12] What is the NDC Exclude Flag? - This field indicates whether the product has been removed/excluded from the NDC Directory for failure to respond to FDA"s requests for correction to deficient or non-compliant submissions ("Y"), or because the listing certification is expired ("E"), or because the listing data was inactivated by FDA ("I"). Values = "Y", "N", "E", or "I".