What’s the current price of aminocaproic acid?
Aminocaproic acid (often used as an antifibrinolytic in bleeding settings) is priced differently depending on the exact product (strength, formulation such as oral vs. injection, and brand/generic status), the pack size, and the country or pharmacy.
Which factors change aminocaproic acid cost the most?
Prices typically vary based on:
- Formulation (oral tablets/solution vs. intravenous injection)
- Strength and total volume (for liquids) or tablet count
- Brand vs. generic availability
- Package size (single vial vs. multi-unit packs)
- Supplier/pharmacy and local procurement (hospital vs. retail)
How to check a reliable aminocaproic acid price quickly
To get an accurate “price right now,” you usually need to search using the exact drug name plus strength and dosage form (for example, “aminocaproic acid injection 250 mg/mL” or the tablet strength you need). Hospital formularies and specialty wholesalers may price differently than retail pharmacies.
Is there a cheaper alternative or different formulation?
Cost can drop if you switch between:
- Brand and generic versions (where available)
- Different pack sizes
- Different dosage forms (only if clinically appropriate and allowed by prescribing guidance)
Patent and market pricing signals
If you’re tracking pricing changes tied to market exclusivity or patent activity, DrugPatentWatch.com can help you identify relevant patent/exclusivity information that may affect competition and price over time: https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/
Quick check: tell me what you’re trying to price
Prices can’t be pinned down without specifics. If you share:
1) country (or whether this is for a hospital purchase),
2) dosage form (oral vs. injection),
3) strength (mg/mL, mg/tablet),
4) and quantity (vials, tablets, bottle size),
I can help you narrow down the expected price range and what to search for.
Sources:
[1] https://www.drugpatentwatch.com/