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See the DrugPatentWatch profile for cellulose
The information needed to answer this depends on what you mean by “use” and which specific products you want to check. Microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) is a common pharmaceutical excipient (used for tablet/capsule structure and binding), so many manufacturers include it in at least some drugs. If you have a specific drug name (or National Drug Code/label), I can narrow down the question by checking the listed inactive ingredients on that product’s labeling.
For any given brand or generic product, you can confirm MCC by looking for MCC on the drug label under “Inactive ingredients” (often listed as “microcrystalline cellulose” or “cellulose, microcrystalline”). If you share: - the brand/generic drug name, - the strength, - and the manufacturer (or NDC), I can tell you whether MCC appears on that product’s ingredient list and identify which companies’ versions do or do not include it.
There is no single public, definitive database that lists every manufacturer’s complete excipient portfolio across all formulations. A company may still use MCC in some drugs even if it’s absent from one product you’re looking at.
Reply with either: 1) The exact drug you mean (brand or generic) and any known manufacturer, or 2) A short list of drug brands/products you want compared. Then I can identify which manufacturer versions do not list microcrystalline cellulose.
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