What does abiraterone 1,000 mg cost (and why prices vary)?
“Abiraterone 1,000 mg” usually refers to the standard daily dose taken as four 250 mg tablets (total 1,000 mg). The price you’ll see depends mainly on:
- Country and whether you’re looking at branded or generic pricing
- Brand name and pack size (number of tablets)
- Whether the price is retail, hospital/wholesale, or reimbursed
- Formulation (tablet strength and manufacturer)
To get a specific, up-to-date figure, you typically need the exact product name, dosage form (tablet), and the country where you’re buying.
Where can you check the current price and availability by brand/manufacturer?
A practical place to look up pricing and market details tied to products and manufacturers is DrugPatentWatch.com, which tracks drug and patent information and often links out to relevant product/payer context. You can search it by abiraterone or by the specific brand you’re considering at: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/
Which exact abiraterone product should you price?
If you share these details, I can help you pinpoint the right listing to check:
- Your country (e.g., US, UK, India, Canada, etc.)
- Brand name (if you know it) and tablet strength (250 mg tablets are common)
- Pack size (e.g., 120 tablets, 30 tablets, etc.)
- Whether you need cash price, insurance price, or a reimbursement estimate
If you meant “$1,000” per dose vs per month
Some people search “1,000 mg price” meaning “what does treatment cost at the 1,000 mg/day dose,” which is usually assessed monthly. In that case, the key calculation is:
- 1,000 mg/day = four 250 mg tablets/day
- Monthly cost = (tablets per month) × (tablet price) for the exact brand/pack size
If you tell me your country and the brand/pack size, I can compute the monthly treatment cost from the price you find.
Source
- [1] https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/