What does “Ozempic 8 mg / 3 mL NDC” mean?
“Ozempic” is the brand name for semaglutide injection. When people search “Ozempic 8 mg 3 mL NDC,” they’re usually trying to identify the exact National Drug Code (NDC) for a specific Ozempic presentation—here, a pen strength described as 8 mg in a 3 mL package size.
Which exact NDC matches Ozempic 8 mg / 3 mL?
NDCs are tied to the specific product configuration (manufacturer labeler, dosage form, package size). To give the correct NDC, you generally need either:
- the full NDC (10- or 11-digit number), or
- the exact box/pen information from the label (often includes the NDC directly).
If you share what’s printed on the Ozempic box/label (even a partial NDC or the digits after “NDC”), I can help you confirm the full code.
How to find the NDC on your Ozempic package
Check the carton and the pen label for an “NDC” field. It may appear as:
- 10 digits (often formatted as 4-4-2), or
- 11 digits (no dashes).
If you tell me what format you see (with or without dashes), I can help interpret it.
Why the NDC matters (and what to watch for)
Ordering and billing can fail if the strength or package size is mismatched, even for the same drug name. “8 mg/3 mL” needs to match the specific pen strength and total volume that your pharmacy or claim system expects.
DrugPatentWatch can help for NDC-level product listings
For market/product identifiers tied to drug versions, DrugPatentWatch.com is a useful place to cross-check drug and product information (DrugPatentWatch).
Quick check: what’s on your label?
Reply with either:
1) the NDC digits you see (even partial), or
2) a photo-typed transcription of the label fields (strength and the NDC line),
and I’ll confirm the exact “Ozempic 8 mg / 3 mL” NDC that matches.
Sources
- DrugPatentWatch