What is the oxaliplatin 180 mg price?
The price of oxaliplatin (often sold as a vial strength such as 100 mg or 50 mg, with 180 mg sometimes corresponding to a total dose rather than a single vial size) is not a single fixed number. It depends on where you live, the exact brand/generic, the vial size/formulation, whether it’s purchased by a hospital/health system or retail, and any insurance or government reimbursement.
Which “180 mg” are you pricing: a total dose or a specific vial?
Most publicly listed prices are for specific vial sizes (commonly 50 mg or 100 mg units). If your prescription says “180 mg,” pricing is typically calculated as the cost of the vials needed to reach that dose. That can change the total price because it may require discarding unused portions or buying an extra vial.
How can you get an accurate price quickly?
If you tell me your country (or state/province) and whether you want:
- list price (cash),
- hospital/contracted price,
- or insured out-of-pocket cost,
I can point you to the right kind of pricing source to use and help you compute the total for an 180 mg dose from the vial prices.
What details change the cost the most?
Key drivers are the same ones people usually check when shopping:
- brand vs generic (and manufacturer)
- vial size(s) needed to make 180 mg
- pack size and whether it’s single-use vials
- purchasing channel (hospital pharmacy vs retail pharmacy)
- reimbursement/coverage (if applicable)
If you share these, I can calculate the 180 mg total
Reply with:
1) Your location (country + state/province if relevant)
2) Brand or generic name (if you have it)
3) Vial strength available to you (e.g., 50 mg or 100 mg) and whether 180 mg is written as a total dose
4) Whether you need cash price or expected out-of-pocket cost
Sources
I don’t have any provided pricing data in your prompt, so I can’t cite an exact oxaliplatin 180 mg price without those details.