Dosage forms (also called
unit doses) are essentially
pharmaceutical drug products in the form in which they are marketed for use, typically involving a mixture of active drug components and nondrug components (excipients), along with other non-reusable material that may not be considered either ingredient or packaging (such as a capsule shell, for example). The term
unit dose can also sometimes encompass non-reusable
packaging as well (especially when each drug product is individually packaged), although the FDA distinguishes that by
unit-dose "packaging" or "dispensing". Depending on the context,
multi(ple) unit dose can refer to distinct drug products
packaged together, or to a
single drug product containing multiple drugs and/or doses. The term
dosage form can also sometimes refer
only to the
pharmaceutical formulation of a drug product's constituent drug substance(s) and any blends involved, without considering matters beyond that (like how it is ultimately configured as a consumable product such as a capsule, patch, etc.). Because of the somewhat vague boundaries and unclear overlap of these terms and certain variants and qualifiers thereof within the pharmaceutical industry, caution is often advisable when conversing with someone who may be unfamiliar with another person's use of the term.