Prednisolon-Moxiflox-Bromfenac
Prednisolon-Moxiflox-Bromfenac
What is Prednisolon-Moxiflox-Bromfenac?
Prednisolone / Moxifloxacin / Bromfenac is a compounded ophthalmic medication that combines a corticosteroid, an antibiotic, and a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) into a single eye drop. It is commonly prescribed after cataract surgery and other ophthalmic procedures to help reduce inflammation, prevent infection, and relieve pain during recovery.
Side Effects
- Increased risk of infection
- Mood swings or psychological effects
- Stomach ulcers or bleeding
Warnings
- Not recommended for use in patients with known allergies to prednisolone, moxifloxacin, or bromfenac
- Should be used with caution in patients with a history of liver, kidney, or heart diseases
- Use with caution in patients with gastrointestinal problems, such as peptic ulcers
- Prolonged use of corticosteroids may lead to osteoporosis or bone density loss
- May lower the body’s ability to fight infections; avoid exposure to contagious diseases
Prescription savings · · · ·
What is Prednisolon-Moxiflox-Bromfenac ?
Prednisolone / Moxifloxacin / Bromfenac is a compounded ophthalmic medication that combines a corticosteroid, an antibiotic, and a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) into a single eye drop. It is commonly prescribed after cataract surgery and other ophthalmic procedures to help reduce inflammation, prevent infection, and relieve pain during recovery.
- Increased risk of infection
- Mood swings or psychological effects
- Stomach ulcers or bleeding
- Elevated blood sugar levels
- Cataract or glaucoma
- Muscle weakness
- Tendon rupture
- Nausea or vomiting
- Headache
- Dizziness
- Diarrhea
- Not recommended for use in patients with known allergies to prednisolone, moxifloxacin, or bromfenac
- Should be used with caution in patients with a history of liver, kidney, or heart diseases
- Use with caution in patients with gastrointestinal problems, such as peptic ulcers
- Prolonged use of corticosteroids may lead to osteoporosis or bone density loss
- May lower the body’s ability to fight infections; avoid exposure to contagious diseases
- Should not be used during pregnancy or breastfeeding without medical advice
- Avoid alcohol as it may increase the risk of gastrointestinal bleeding
- Monitor blood sugar levels regularly in diabetic patients
- Patients wearing contact lenses should be cautious as moxifloxacin may cause eye irritation
- Regular monitoring of eye pressure in patients using bromfenac for ocular inflammation
Prednisolon-Moxiflox-Bromfenac Coupons & Prices
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Looking for a prednisolon-moxiflox-bromfenac coupon? Pred-Moxi-Brom is a compounded ophthalmic combination eye drop that puts a steroid (prednisolone), an antibiotic (moxifloxacin), and an NSAID (bromfenac) into one bottle, often prescribed after cataract surgery instead of three separate drops. Because it is compounded rather than sold as a single FDA-approved brand, there is no manufacturer savings card for it. Enter your ZIP above to see today's cash price at pharmacies near you and print or text yourself a free Rx.com coupon to use at the counter.
What is Pred-Moxi-Brom and how does it work?
Pred-Moxi-Brom is a compounded sterile ophthalmic solution that typically combines prednisolone sodium phosphate 1%, moxifloxacin HCl 0.5%, and bromfenac 0.075% in a single "dropless-style" bottle. Each ingredient does a different job after eye surgery: the prednisolone corticosteroid calms postoperative inflammation, the moxifloxacin is a broad-spectrum antibiotic that helps reduce infection risk, and the bromfenac NSAID helps control inflammation and eye pain. Eye surgeons often prescribe it after cataract surgery and other ocular procedures so patients manage one bottle instead of three.
The individual components are FDA-approved separately — prednisolone for ocular inflammation, moxifloxacin as an antibiotic, and bromfenac (marketed as Prolensa and BromSite) for post-cataract-surgery inflammation and pain. However, this specific fixed combination is compounded by 503B/503A pharmacies such as ImprimisRx and OSRX and has not been reviewed by the FDA for safety or efficacy as a combination product.
Manufacturer savings card vs. Rx.com cash coupon
Because Pred-Moxi-Brom is a compounded medication and not a single FDA-approved brand-name drug, there is no manufacturer savings card or copay coupon for it, and no separate patient-assistance program tied to the combination. That is different from many brand eye drops, where a manufacturer card exists but is generally limited to people with commercial insurance and cannot be used by the uninsured, Medicare, or Medicaid patients.
An Rx.com cash coupon is a straightforward alternative: it is a cash-price discount, so it works whether you are uninsured, on Medicare, or simply want to compare against your plan. Compounded drops are often billed as cash anyway, so pricing can vary widely by pharmacy. Enter your ZIP above to see today's price near you and bring the coupon to the counter. This is general cost information, not medical or insurance advice — confirm coverage details with your pharmacy and plan.
Alternatives and related eye drops
Depending on your surgeon's preference and what your pharmacy stocks, you may be prescribed the separate FDA-approved components or a different compounded blend. Related options to discuss with your eye doctor include:
- Prednisolone — the corticosteroid used alone for ocular inflammation.
- Moxifloxacin — the broad-spectrum antibiotic component on its own.
- Bromfenac and Prolensa — the NSAID component, FDA-approved for post-cataract inflammation and pain.
- Prednisolone-moxifloxacin and Pred-Moxi — a two-drug steroid-plus-antibiotic compounded drop.
- Prednisolone-moxifloxacin-ketorolac — a similar three-in-one compound that uses ketorolac as the NSAID instead of bromfenac.
Only your prescriber can decide which formulation is right for your surgery and eyes. Use the ZIP tool above to compare cash prices on whichever version you are prescribed.
Safety and side effects to know
This is a compounded product, so it has not been FDA-reviewed for safety and efficacy as a combination. A few key points to review with your eye doctor: prolonged use of the prednisolone (steroid) component can raise eye pressure — a risk for glaucoma and optic nerve damage — and cause certain cataracts, so your doctor may check your intraocular pressure if you use it 10 or more days, especially if you have glaucoma. Corticosteroids can also mask or worsen an active eye infection and slow wound healing.
The bromfenac (NSAID) component may slow corneal healing, and people with dry eye, rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes, corneal nerve problems, or repeat eye surgeries can face a higher risk of corneal thinning, erosion, or perforation. Avoid this drop if you are allergic to NSAIDs, aspirin, or sulfites, remove contact lenses before using it, and use it only in the eye. This is not a complete list — it is for information only, not medical advice, so follow the directions from your surgeon and report any eye pain, redness, or vision changes promptly.
This Prednisolon-Moxiflox-Bromfenac information was written and reviewed against authoritative U.S. medical sources — MedlinePlus (U.S. National Library of Medicine), DailyMed, and FDA prescribing information — and checked for accuracy. It is provided for education and is not a substitute for professional medical advice.
Verify the official label: Prednisolon-Moxiflox-Bromfenac on DailyMed (FDA)
Reviewed against FDA labeling · Last reviewed July 2026
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Medical disclaimer: This information is provided for general educational purposes only and is not medical advice. It is not a substitute for professional diagnosis or treatment. Always consult a licensed physician, pharmacist, or other qualified healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any medication or treatment. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you read here. If you think you may have a medical emergency, call your doctor or 911 immediately.