Why the “Strength” on Your Vial Matters — and How to Measure Your Dose Safely
If you use a compounded GLP-1 medication such as semaglutide or tirzepatide, you may notice that vial labels and dosing instructions can look different from one refill to the next. Changes in concentration, ingredient order, and syringe volume can make dosing confusing — and misunderstanding these details can lead to dosing errors.
This article explains:
- What concentration means
- How to read GLP-1 vial labels
- The difference between dose and volume
- How to calculate the correct amount to inject
- When to pause and ask your provider before injecting
What “Concentration” Means
Concentration tells you how strong the medication is — how many milligrams (mg) of medication are contained in each milliliter (mL) of liquid.
It is written as:
- mg/mL (milligrams per milliliter)
Examples:
- 2.5 mg/mL = 2.5 mg in every 1 mL
- 12.5 mg/mL = 12.5 mg in every 1 mL
Key concept:
- A higher concentration means you inject less liquid
- A lower concentration means you inject more liquid
The medication itself is the same — only the volume you draw changes.
Why Vial Labels Can Look Different
Compounded GLP-1 medications may include additional ingredients, such as vitamin B12 or other stabilizing compounds. Because of this, the label may list two concentrations.
Examples:
- Tirzepatide + Hydroxocobalamin 12.5 – 2.5 mg/mL
- Hydroxocobalamin + Tirzepatide 2.5 – 12.5 mg/mL
What this means:
- One number refers to the GLP-1 medication
- One number refers to the additive
Important rules:
- Your dose is calculated only using the GLP-1 concentration
- The additive does not change how much you inject
- The order of ingredients on the label does not change dosing
If you are unsure which number represents the GLP-1 medication, pause and ask your provider or pharmacy before injecting.
Dose vs. Volume: Understanding the Difference
These terms are often confused but are not the same.
- Dose (mg)
- The amount prescribed
- Example: “Inject 2.5 mg weekly”
- Concentration (mg/mL)
- How strong the liquid is
- Example: “12.5 mg per 1 mL”
- Volume (mL)
- How much liquid you draw
- Example: “0.2 mL”
- Units
- Syringe markings
- On a U-100 syringe: 100 units = 1 mL
Simple analogy:
- Dose = how much medication you need
- Concentration = how strong it is
- Volume = how much liquid you inject
When concentration changes, volume must change, even if the dose stays the same.
Understanding Concentration With Simple Examples
Example 1: Same Dose, Different Concentrations
Your prescribed dose:
- 2.5 mg once weekly
- 2.5 mg/mL vial
- Inject 1.0 mL
- 100 units
- 5 mg/mL vial
- Inject 0.5 mL
- 50 units
- 12.5 mg/mL vial
- Inject 0.2 mL
- 20 units
The dose did not change — only the volume did.
Example 2: Why Re-Using Old Units Can Be Dangerous
A common mistake:
- Old vial: 2.5 mg/mL, injected 100 units
- New vial: 12.5 mg/mL, injected 100 units again
Result:
- 100 units from the new vial = 12.5 mg
- Prescribed dose = 2.5 mg
- This is 5× the intended dose
This is why every new vial requires re-checking the concentration.
Example 3: The One Formula to Remember
Dose (mg) ÷ concentration (mg/mL) = mL to inject
mL × 100 = syringe units (U-100 syringe)
If you ever feel unsure using this formula, do not guess — ask your provider or pharmacy to confirm.
When You’re Unsure — Pause and Ask
This is the most important safety rule.
If anything about your dose, concentration, or syringe amount feels confusing, do not inject until you’ve confirmed it.
Always ask your healthcare provider or pharmacy if:
- The concentration on your vial looks different than before
- The number of units you’re drawing has changed
- The label lists multiple ingredients and you’re unsure which is the GLP-1
- You are unsure how much to inject
Asking questions is not a problem or an inconvenience. Your provider would always rather answer a quick question than risk a dosing error.
Safety Checklist Before Every Injection
Before injecting, confirm:
- You have identified the GLP-1 concentration
- You recalculated the volume if the vial changed
- You are using the correct syringe
- You know exactly how many units to draw
- You feel confident about the dose
If you feel unsure at any point:
- Stop
- Ask
- Confirm
- Then inject
Supporting Comfort and Consistency Around Dosing
While accuracy is the priority, comfort can affect consistency.
General educational considerations include:
- Eating smaller meals on dosing days
- Avoiding very high-fat meals during dose changes
- Staying well hydrated
- Addressing constipation early
- Keeping dosing days consistent each week
These strategies do not change how GLP-1 medications work but may support tolerability and adherence.
Key Takeaways
- Concentration determines how much liquid you inject
- Dose may stay the same while volume changes
- Additives do not affect dosing calculations
- Never assume a new vial uses the same units as the last one
- Never guess your dose
- When in doubt, always ask your provider or pharmacy before injecting
Final Note
This content is provided for educational purposes only and does not replace medical advice.
Always follow instructions from your prescribing clinician and pharmacy, and confirm dosing whenever your vial or concentration changes.
References
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration (2024). Dosing Errors with Compounded Injectable Semaglutide
- American Diabetes Association (2024). Safety and Efficacy Considerations for Compounded GLP-1 Products
- Institute for Safe Medication Practices (2023). Medication Errors Involving Compounded GLP-1 Formulations
- American Pharmacists Association (2023). Counseling Points for Compounded GLP-1 Agonists
- National Association of Boards of Pharmacy (2024). Compounding Safety and Labeling Guidance