What are the inactive ingredients in Aurobindo quetiapine 300 mg (E56)?
I can’t determine the exact inactive ingredient list from the information provided in your question alone. “E56” typically refers to a specific tablet/codification used on a label, but the inactive-ingredient wording is tied to the exact product strength, dosage form (immediate-release vs extended-release), and manufacturer labeling.
How to get the exact inactive ingredients list for your specific E56 tablet
Check the “Inactive ingredients” section on your prescription label’s package insert, or look at the box/bottle information that lists “Inactive ingredients” alongside the product’s NDC (National Drug Code). If you share the NDC, I can narrow it to the correct Aurobindo quetiapine 300 mg product and provide the corresponding inactive ingredients.
What I need from you to match the right Aurobindo product
Send one of these and I can pinpoint the correct inactive ingredients:
- The NDC number from the bottle/box, or
- A photo/text of the “Inactive ingredients” line from the package insert, or
- Whether it is quetiapine immediate-release or quetiapine extended-release (XR) and any marking shown on the tablet.
Are there common inactive ingredients across quetiapine tablets?
Often, different strengths within the same manufacturer’s product line use the same excipients (fillers/binders, coating materials, and sometimes film coatings), but inactive ingredients can still differ by formulation type (IR vs XR), strength, and manufacturing site. So the only reliable way is to match your exact E56-labeled product.
Quick next step
Reply with the NDC (or the exact text around “E56” and the formulation type, IR vs XR). Then I’ll give you the inactive ingredients list for that specific Aurobindo quetiapine 300 mg product.