THORPE ROAD — All Prescriptions & Medications — Page 9

Practice Code: D81615 | PETERBOROUGH, PE3 6AP

Showing results 401-450 of 640

MedicationItems (12m) ↓QuantityCostvs National
341,934£5.3K+0.7% vs avg
34330£10.0K-4.8% ▼
342,980£362+52.0% ▲
Erythromycin332,224£798-4.7% ▼
Cinacalcet hydrochloride331,218£697+42.3% ▲
Tube feed 1.5 kcal/ml peptide based (0914032)33883.0K£18.5K+244.1% ▲
Betamethasone sodium phosphate33330£73+27.4% ▲
Azelaic acid331,200£214+38.0% ▲
Alverine citrate322,440£94-22.7% ▼
Lacosamide322,186£239-40.5% ▼
Metformin hydrochloride/sitagliptin322,184£379-14.5% ▼
Tirzepatide3232£3.2K-83.5% ▼
Colchicine32908£19-59.0% ▼
Ketorolac trometamol32215£149+244.9% ▲
Dimeticone (Barrier)3212.6K£121+117.5% ▲
Fludrocortisone acetate312,210£301-70.6% ▼
Specialist food replacer desserts (0913261)3118.9K£652+240.8% ▲
Specialist food replacer sweet biscuits (0913261)313,743£285+116.1% ▲
Celecoxib312,258£103-53.1% ▼
Etoricoxib31728£163-61.5% ▼
Leflunomide31930£58-18.1% ▼
Glycopyrronium bromide31165£283+30.1% ▲
3183£959+11.4% ▲
311,093£278-37.3% ▼
31960£916+80.0% ▲
Sennosides307,670£146-2.9% ▼
Primidone302,796£2.1K-15.7% ▼
Rifaximin301,480£6.9K+11.7% ▲
Tacrolimus303,800£5.0K+12.2% ▲
Specialist food replacer pasta (0913261)3025.8K£563+103.7% ▲
307,500£1.0K-23.7% ▼
Sodium citrate (Rectal)29428£280+110.2% ▲
Erythromycin ethylsuccinate295,100£324+24.2% ▲
Alogliptin/metformin291,624£733-30.5% ▼
29710£441+11.3% ▲
Prasugrel28784£425-10.9% ▼
Levodopa/carbidopa/entacapone284,066£2.7K+0.1% vs avg
Light liquid paraffin286,450£177-17.7% ▼
28370£109-3.3% ▼
Aclidinium bromide/formoterol2727£834-23.2% ▼
Denosumab2727£4.9K-0.8% vs avg
Miconazole nitrate271,110£176-61.8% ▼
Typhoid2727£281-70.0% ▼
273,250£7.3K-44.6% ▼
271,556£635+39.7% ▲
Olmesartan medoxomil26728£28-62.3% ▼
Pimozide261,365£526+436.3% ▲
Rizatriptan26159£475-56.3% ▼
Rufinamide262,184£1.9K+51.5% ▲
Medroxyprogesterone acetate261,860£343-32.1% ▼
← Back to THORPE ROAD
Data sourced from NHSBSA English Prescribing Dataset, CQC, and GP Patient Survey. Prescribing data does not indicate quality of care. Higher prescribing rates may reflect patient demographics. Always consult your GP for medical advice.