What are the inactive ingredients in Aurobindo’s quetiapine 300 mg tablets?
I can answer this precisely only if we identify the exact product/strength “quetiapine 300 mg” and its formulation (for example, immediate-release vs. extended-release, and the country/label). The inactive ingredient list can differ by manufacturer, dosage form, and market.
If you share one of the following, I can extract the exact “56 inactive ingredients” list from the label data:
- a photo of the “Inactive ingredients” section of the Aurobindo packaging, or
- the NDC/GTIN number from the box/bottle, or
- the country (e.g., US/Canada/UK/India) and whether it’s “extended-release” (XR) or “immediate-release.”
Why the inactive-ingredient list can differ (and why 56 matters)
Inactive ingredients (excipients) can vary with:
- tablet type (immediate-release vs extended-release),
- dye/colorants (affecting patient-relevant allergy concerns),
- processing aids and coatings,
- packaging/market-specific regulations.
So two “quetiapine 300 mg” products may not have the same inactive ingredients, even if the active drug is the same.
What you can do right now if you need it for allergies or medical reasons
If you’re trying to avoid a specific ingredient (for example, lactose, dyes, certain binders), the safest route is to use the exact label for your specific product and strength. If you provide the NDC or a label image, I’ll list the inactive ingredients verbatim.
Source
No drug-label/source details were provided in your message (only that the product has 56 inactive ingredients), so I can’t reliably name them without the specific product identifier.
Send me the NDC or a label image and I’ll return the full inactive-ingredient list.