In the pharmaceutical industry, Stavudine is a nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) that was a mainstay in early HIV-1 treatment regimens. As a pharmacist and manufacturer at Healthy Life Pharma, I recognize this molecule by several names depending on the context (clinical, chemical, or commercial).
Here are the other names for Stavudine for your Healthy Inc technical dossiers:
1. Common Clinical Abbreviation
d4T: This is the most widely used technical shorthand in clinical settings and medical literature. It stands for the structural relationship to thymidine (didehydro-deoxy-thymidine).
2. Global Brand Names
Zerit: This was the original innovator brand name by Bristol-Myers Squibb. While many generic versions exist in the 2026 market, “Zerit” remains the most recognized commercial name globally.
Stavir: A common generic brand name in India (manufactured by Cipla).
3. Technical & Chemical Names
For your manufacturing and quality control (QC) documentation, you will see it listed as:
2′,3′-didehydro-3′-deoxythymidine: This is the formal chemical name used in Drug Master Files (DMF) and Certificates of Analysis (CoA).
D4-Thymidine: Another structural variation used in organic chemistry synthesis.
BMY-27857: The original laboratory code name used during its early research and development phase.
Technical Manufacturer’s Note for 2026
From the CEO’s desk at Healthy Life Pharma:
Market Shift: As of 2026, the use of Stavudine has significantly declined in favor of “Tenofovir-based” regimens (like TLE or TLD) because Stavudine is technically high-risk for mitochondrial toxicity (leading to lipoatrophy and lactic acidosis).
B2B Strategy: On your digital marketplace, if you are trading Stavudine, position it for “Salvage Therapy” or specific niche markets where newer NRTIs are unavailable or contraindicated.
Packaging: At our Mumbai plant, we maintain the highest stability standards. Stavudine is moisture-sensitive; ensure your Healthy Inc exports use Alu-Alu or high-density polyethylene (HDPE) bottles with desiccant to prevent degradation into the inactive thymine base.