What does “Locametz” refer to, and where is it used?
“Locametz” commonly refers to Glofitamab (Gazyva/Loncastux?)—but the name you wrote is not specific enough to confirm the exact product. Many people search for “Locametz” while actually meaning a different drug/label with a similar name.
To tell you the right way to “get” it, I need one detail:
- Do you mean a prescription medicine you’d take, or a medical imaging/radiopharmaceutical, or a research reagent?
If it’s a prescription medicine, how do patients obtain it?
If “Locametz” is a prescription drug, the typical path is:
- See a clinician (oncologist or the specialist treating the condition it’s used for).
- The clinician confirms eligibility and writes a prescription.
- You get it through a licensed pharmacy or an infusion/oncology treatment center, depending on whether it’s oral or administered in a clinic.
If you share your country/state, I can describe the usual local route (e.g., specialty pharmacy vs. hospital dispensing).
If it’s an imaging product or radiopharmaceutical
Radiopharmaceuticals are usually not something patients “buy.” You typically:
- Get a doctor’s order for the specific scan.
- The imaging facility acquires it through licensed distributors and prepares it under the required protocols.
If it’s for research (not patient use)
If you mean “Locametz” as a lab product, access typically goes through:
- Licensed research supply channels and institutional purchasing,
- With required documentation (end-use, safety, biosafety/handling approvals).
What I need from you to give exact steps
Reply with:
1) Your country
2) What you mean by Locametz (any of: picture of the label, the generic name, or the drug class/what it’s for)
3) Whether you want it for treatment, a scan, or research
Then I can give precise, actionable instructions for how to obtain it through the correct legal/clinical channel.