How to check whether your quetiapine is made by Aurobindo (or Pfizer)
Quetiapine is a generic medicine, and different manufacturers can make different “brands” or “strengths” sold under the same name. Whether you’re getting a Pfizer-made product depends on the specific marketed product and the manufacturer listed on the package/label—not on the active ingredient name alone.
What the label will tell you
To determine who manufactures your quetiapine, look for one of these on the box or blister:
- “Manufactured by” (or “Manufactured for”) a specific company
- The company name under “Manufacturer” or “Marketing Authorization Holder”
- The generic product name plus the manufacturer’s name (often tied to the product strength)
If the package lists Aurobindo under “Manufactured by,” then it’s Aurobindo-manufactured quetiapine. If it lists Pfizer (or a Pfizer entity) under “Manufactured by,” then it’s Pfizer-manufactured.
Why “Quetiapine Pfizer” can still be confusing
“Quetiapine Pfizer” may refer to the marketing company/brand rather than the factory that produced the tablets. In some cases, a brand owner (like Pfizer) may sell a product that is manufactured by a contract manufacturer, or vice versa. The only reliable way to confirm is the manufacturer information printed on your specific product.
Quick next step
If you tell me the exact country and the strength (e.g., 25 mg, 100 mg, extended-release vs immediate-release) and what the label says under “Manufacturer,” I can help you interpret whether it’s Aurobindo-made or Pfizer-made.
Sources
No sources were provided in the prompt.