Cyclophosphamide: generic name vs. chemical/ingredient name
Cyclophosphamide is the drug’s generic (brand-independent) name. Its chemical ingredient name is cyclophosphamide (commonly presented as “cyclophosphamide” in regulatory/labeling contexts, rather than a separate alternate “chemical name” distinct from the generic).
Fluorouracil (5-FU): generic name vs. chemical/ingredient name
Fluorouracil is the generic name. In many prescribing/ingredient contexts, the ingredient/chemical name is also given as fluorouracil (often referenced as 5-fluorouracil or 5-FU, which are naming variants of the same active ingredient).
Pirarubicin: generic name vs. chemical/ingredient name
Pirarubicin is the generic name. Its ingredient/chemical name is typically presented as pirarubicin in drug labeling and prescribing information.
Brand “ingredient and chemical names”: what you can and can’t reliably extract from the drug name alone
When people ask for “generic brand ingredient and chemical names,” they usually want:
- the active ingredient (the generic name),
- any common chemical-name variants (like “5-fluorouracil” for fluorouracil),
- and the brand names (which vary by country and manufacturer).
From the three drug names you provided (cyclophosphamide, fluorouracil, pirarubicin), the active ingredient names are clear, but brand names are not uniquely determined without a specific country/market (and you didn’t name any particular brands).
To list specific brand names, I need one detail
Which country’s brand list do you want (e.g., US, UK, India, EU, Canada)? Brand names for these active ingredients differ across markets, and that’s what determines the “brand” portion of your request.
Sources: none provided.