Quick Answer
Tigi Injection — Tigecycline 50 mg (Cipla Inc). Glycylcycline broad-spectrum IV antibiotic for complicated intra-abdominal infections, complicated skin/soft tissue infections, community-acquired pneumonia. Reserved for multi-drug-resistant pathogens.
What you get with MedsBase:
- WHO-GMP certified manufacturer
- Discreet plain-envelope packaging
- Worldwide shipping
- Rated by 1,400+ customers (read reviews)
📦 Reshipment Assurance: if your order has not arrived 20 business days after dispatch, we reship it at no extra cost. Read the policy.
Why order from MedsBase
Tigi Injection ships from a WHO-GMP certified manufacturer in plain packaging, billed through a regulated payment processor (the statement descriptor reads a regulated card-payment processor — never MedsBase or any medication name). Every order carries our 20-business-day Reshipment Assurance.
⚠️ Specialist-supervised cancer therapy — this medication is started, monitored, and stopped by an oncologist or haematologist. Dosing depends on tumour type, stage, body surface area, organ function, and concomitant therapy. Self-treatment is not appropriate; the information below is educational and supports informed conversations with your specialist.
Tigecycline carries FDA black-box for increased all-cause mortality in clinical trials — reserved for situations where alternatives are not suitable. Note: this product is in the cancer category but is a broad-spectrum antibiotic for serious bacterial infections, NOT a cancer chemotherapy.
Frequently Asked Questions
When is this used?
Glycylcycline broad-spectrum IV antibiotic for complicated intra-abdominal infections, complicated skin/soft tissue infections, community-acquired pneumonia. Reserved for multi-drug-resistant pathogens.
Side effects?
Class-specific — see safety boxes above. Most supportive cancer medications are well-tolerated when used per protocol but require specialist supervision.
Drug interactions?
Always disclose all medications. Cancer supportive therapy interacts with multiple cytotoxics, chemo regimens, and concomitant medications.
Pregnancy?
Variable by molecule. Consult oncology for pregnancy planning during cancer therapy.
Monitoring?
Specialist-determined — typically FBC, electrolytes, renal/liver function, cardiac monitoring as relevant.
What if I miss a dose?
Take when you remember; do not double up. Discuss with oncology team if multiple doses missed.
When is treatment finished?
Determined by clinical response, planned regimen length, and patient tolerance.
Storage?
Per package insert — typically below 25-30°C, away from light and moisture. Pregnant household members should not handle broken tablets/capsules.
Cost?
Generic Indian biosimilars and chemical equivalents are dramatically less expensive than originator products with documented bioequivalence and clinical equivalence.
Vaccines?
Coordinate with oncology — live vaccines may be contraindicated during cancer therapy.
Other Cancer & Supportive Medications
- Xeloda — capecitabine 500 mg — oral 5-FU prodrug for breast/colorectal/gastric cancers
- Altraz — anastrozole 1 mg — aromatase inhibitor for post-menopausal breast cancer
- Xbira — abiraterone 250 mg — CYP17 inhibitor for metastatic prostate cancer
- Zoldria — zoledronic acid IV — for bone metastases and hypercalcaemia
- Actorise — darbepoetin alfa — for chemotherapy-induced anaemia

























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