What are the inactive ingredients in daptomycin tablets?
Daptomycin is an antibiotic that is formulated as an injection (powder for IV use) in the United States. There generally are no FDA-approved “daptomycin tablets,” so the inactive ingredients used in a tablet product are not applicable unless you’re referring to a different product (for example, a compounded or non-U.S. formulation).
How can I find the exact inactive ingredients list I need?
If you have a specific product in hand, the inactive ingredients are listed on the package labeling or the prescribing information:
- The “Inactive ingredients” section in the FDA label (for approved products).
- The carton/bottle label for non-prescription or compounded formulations.
To give you the exact inactive-ingredient text, share either:
- The brand name and strength (e.g., “___ mg”), and whether it’s IV or oral, or
- A photo or copy/paste of the “inactive ingredients” line(s) from your product label.
Is this possibly a different drug (or a compounded product)?
People sometimes search “daptomycin tablets” when they actually mean:
- another antibiotic (tablet form), or
- a compounded preparation, or
- an administration method mix-up (daptomycin is typically given IV).
If you tell me the exact name on the box (including manufacturer), I can help you identify the correct label and inactive ingredients list.
What if the product is actually IV daptomycin?
For IV daptomycin, inactive ingredients are part of the IV powder formulation (not tablet excipients). If you confirm the strength and whether it’s “for injection,” I can help locate the correct inactive-ingredient composition from the official product labeling.
Can you confirm the exact product you have?
Reply with the brand name (or a screenshot of the label) and the dosage form (tablet vs injection). Then I can extract the inactive ingredients precisely.
Sources:
No sources were provided or cited because the provided information doesn’t include a specific daptomycin “tablet” product or labeling text.