Galantamine 4 mg/ ml Oral Solution 1. Name Of The Medicinal Product Galantamine 4 mg/ml oral solution 2. Qualitative And Quantitative Composition Excipients: 0.33 g Sorbitol/ml, 1.66 mg Methylparahydroxybenzoate/ml, 0.2 mg Propylparahydroxybenzoate/ml For a full list of excipients, see section 6.1. 3. Pharmaceutical Form Clear, colourless solution 4. Clinical Particulars 4.2 Posology And Method Of Administration Administration Galantamine oral solution should be administered twice a day, preferably with morning and evening meals. Ensure adequate fluid intake during treatment (See section 4.8). Before start of treatment The diagnosis of probable Alzheimer type of dementia should be adequately confirmed according to current clinical guidelines (see section 4.4). Starting dose The recommended starting dose is 8 mg/day (4 mg twice a day) for four weeks. Maintenance dose • The tolerance and dosing of galantamine should be reassessed on a regular basis, preferably within three months after start of treatment. Thereafter, the clinical benefit of galantamine and the patient's tolerance of treatment should be reassessed on a regular basis according to current clinical guidelines. Maintenance treatment can be continued for as long as therapeutic benefit is favourable and the patient tolerates treatment with galantamine. Discontinuation of galantamine should be considered when evidence of a therapeutic effect is no longer present or if the patient does not tolerate treatment. • The initial maintenance dose is 16 mg/day (8 mg twice a day) and patients should be maintained on 16 mg/day for at least 4 weeks. • An increase to the maintenance dose of 24 mg/day (12 mg twice a day) should be considered on an individual basis after appropriate assessment including evaluation of clinical benefit and tolerability. • In individual patients not showing an increased response or not tolerating 24 mg/day, a dose reduction to 16 mg/day should be considered. • There is no rebound effect after abrupt discontinuation of treatment (e.g. in preparation for surgery). Children Galantamine is not recommended for use in children due to lack of data on safety and efficacy. There is no relevant use of Galantamine in the paediatric population. Hepatic and renal impairment Galantamine plasma levels may be increased in patients with moderate to severe hepatic or renal impairment. In patients with moderately impaired hepatic function, based on pharmacokinetic modelling, it is recommended that dosing should begin with 4 mg once daily, preferably taken in the morning, for at least one week. Thereafter, patients should proceed with 4 mg twice daily. for at least 4 weeks. In these patients, daily doses should not exceed 8 mg twice daily. In patients with severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh score greater than 9), the use of galantamine is contraindicated (see section 4.3). No dosage adjustment is required for patients with mild hepatic impairment. For patients with a creatinine clearance greater than 9 ml/min no dosage adjustment is required. In patients with severe renal impairment (creatinine clearance less than 9 ml/min), the use of galantamine is contraindicated (see section 4.3). Concomitant treatment In patients treated with potent CYP2D6 or CYP3A4 inhibitors (e.g. ketoconazole) dose reductions can be considered (see section 4.5). 4.3 Contraindications • Since no data are available on the use of galantamine in patients with severe hepatic (Child-Pugh score greater than 9) and severe renal (creatinine clearance less than 9 ml/min) impairment, galantamine is contraindicated in these populations. Galantamine is contra-indicated in patients who have both significant renal and hepatic dysfunction. 4.4 Special Warnings And Precautions For Use A diagnosis of Alzheimer's dementia should be made according to current guidelines by an experienced physician. Therapy with galantamine should occur under the supervision of a physician and should only be initiated if a caregiver is available who will regularly monitor medicinal product intake by the patient. Patients with Alzheimer's disease lose weight. Treatment with cholinesterase inhibitors, including galantamine, has been associated with weight loss in these patients. During therapy, patient's weight should be monitored. As with other cholinomimetics, galantamine should be given with caution in the following conditions: Cardiac disorders: Because of their pharmacological action, cholinomimetics may have vagotonic effects on heart rate (e.g. bradycardia). The potential for this action may be particularly important to patients with 'sick sinus syndrome' or other supraventricular cardiac conduction disturbances or in those who use medicinal products that significantly reduce heart rate concomitantly, such as digoxin and betablockers or for patients with an uncorrected electrolyte disturbance (e.g. hyperkalaemia, hypokalaemia). Caution should therefore be exercised when administering galantamine to patients with cardiovascular diseases, e.g. immediate post- myocardial infarction period, new-onset atrial fibrillation, second degree heart block or greater, unstable angina pectoris, or congestive heart failure, especially NYHA group III – IV. In a pooled analysis of placebo-controlled studies in patients with Alzheimer dementia treated with galantamine an increased incidence of certain cardiovascular adverse events were observed (see section 4.8 Undesirable effects). Gastrointestinal disorders: Patients at increased risk of developing peptic ulcers, e.g. those with a history of ulcer disease or those predisposed to these conditions, including those receiving concurrent non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDS),should be monitored for symptoms. The use of galantamine is not recommended in patients with gastro-intestinal obstruction or recovering from gastro-intestinal surgery. Nervous system disorders: Although, cholinomimetics are believed to have some potential to cause seizures, seizure activity may also be a manifestation of Alzheimer's disease. In rare cases an increase in cholinergic tone may worsen Parkinsonian symptoms. In a pooled analysis of placebo-controlled studies in patients with Alzheimer's dementia treated with galantamine cerebrovascular events were uncommonly observed (see section 4.8 Undesirable effects). This should be considered when administering galantamine to patients with cerebrovascular disease. Respiratory, thoracic and mediastinal disorders: Cholinomimetics should be prescribed with care for patients with a history of severe asthma or obstructive pulmonary disease or active pulmonary infections (e.g. pneumonia). Renal and urinary disorders: The use of galantamine is not recommended in patients with urinary outflow obstruction or recovering from bladder surgery. Surgical and medical procedures: Galantamine, as a cholinomimetic is likely to exaggerate succinylcholinetype muscle relaxation during anaesthesia, especially in cases of pseudocholinesterase deficiency. Paediatric population There is no relevant use of Galantamine in the paediatric population Other: This product contains sorbitol. Patients with rare hereditary problems of fructose intolerance should not take this medicine. Methyl-/Propylparahydroxybenzoate may cause allergic reactions (possibly delayed). 4.5 Interaction With Other Medicinal Products And Other Forms Of Interaction Because of its mechanism of action, galantamine should not be given concomitantly with other cholinomimetics (such as ambenonium, donepezil, neostigmine, pyridostigmine, rivastigmine or systemically administered pilocarpine). Galantamine has the potential to antagonise the effect of anticholinergic medication. Should anticholinergic medication such as atropine be abruptly stopped there is a potential risk that galantamine´s effects could be exacerbated. As expected with cholinomimetics, a pharmacodynamic interaction is possible with medicinal products that significantly reduce the heart rate such as digoxin, beta blockers, certain calcium-channel blocking agents and amiodarone. Caution should be taken with medicinal products that have potential to cause torsades de pointes. In such cases an ECG should be considered. Galantamine, as a cholinomimetic, is likely to exaggerate succinylcholine-type muscle relaxation during anaesthesia, especially in cases of pseudocholinesterase deficiency. Pharmacokinetic interactions Multiple metabolic pathways and renal excretion are involved in the elimination of galantamine. The possibility of clinically relevant interactions is low. However, the occurrence of significant interactions may be clinically relevant in individual cases. Concomitant administration with food slows the absorption rate of galantamine but does not affect the extent of absorption. It is recommended that galantamine be taken with food in order to minimise cholinergic side effects. Other medicinal products affecting the metabolism of galantamine Formal drug interaction studies showed an increase in galantamine bioavailability of about 40% during co-administration of paroxetine (a potent CYP2D6 inhibitor) and of 30% and 12% during co-treatment with ketoconazole and erythromycin (both CYP3A4 inhibitors). Therefore, during initiation of treatment with potent inhibitors of CYP2D6 (e.g. quinidine, paroxetine or fluoxetine) or CYP3A4 (e.g. ketoconazole or ritonavir) patients may experience an increased incidence of cholinergic adverse reactions, predominantly nausea and vomiting. Under these circumstances, based on tolerability, a reduction of the galantamine maintenance dose can be considered (see section 4.2). Memantine, an N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist, at a dose of 10 mg once a day for 2 days followed by 10 mg twice a day for 12 days, had no effect on the pharmacokinetics of galantamine (as prolonged-release capsules 16 mg once a day) at steady state. Effect of galantamine on the metabolism of other medicinal products Therapeutic doses of galantamine 24 mg/day had no effect on the kinetics of digoxin, although pharmacodynamic interactions may occur (see also pharmacodynamic interactions). Therapeutic doses of galantamine 24 mg /day had no effect on the kinetics and prothrombine time of warfarin. 4.6 Pregnancy And Lactation For galantamine no clinical data on exposed pregnancies are available. Studies in animals have shown reproductive toxicity (see section 5.3). Caution should be exercised when prescribing to pregnant women. Lactation It is not known whether galantamine is excreted in human breast milk and there are no studies in lactating women. Therefore, women on galantamine should not breast-feed. 4.7 Effects On Ability To Drive And Use Machines 4.8 Undesirable Effects They occurred mainly during the titration periods, lasted less than a week in most cases and the majority of patients had only one episode. Prescription of anti-emetics and ensuring adequate fluid intake may be useful in these instances. Frequency estimate: Very common ( 1/10), common ( 1/100 to < 1/10), uncommon ( 1/1,000 to < 1/100), rare ( 1/10,000 to <1/1,000) and very rare (< 1/10,000). System Organ Class Frequency Anorexia Depression Hallucination auditory Dizziness Tremor Headache Somnolence Lethargy Dysguesia; Hypersomnia Atrioventricular block first degree; Sinus bradycardia; Palpitations Flushing Nausea Abdominal pain upper; Diarrhoea Dyspepsia; Stomach discomfort; Abdominal Discomfort Asthenia Malaise 4.9 Overdose There have been post-marketing reports of Torsade de Pointes, QT prolongation, bradycardia, ventricular tachycardia and brief loss of consciousness in association with an inadvertent overdose of galantamine. In one case where the dose was known, eight 4 mg tablets (32 mg total) were ingested on a single day. Two additional cases of accidental ingestion of 32 mg (nausea, vomiting, and dry mouth; nausea, vomiting, and substernal chest pain) and one of 40 mg (vomiting) resulted in brief hospitalisations for observation with full recovery. One patient, who was prescribed 24 mg/day and had a history of hallucinations over the previous two years, mistakenly received 24 mg twice daily for 34 days and developed hallucinations requiring hospitalisation. Another patient, who was prescribed 16 mg/day of oral solution, inadvertently ingested 160 mg (40 ml) and experienced sweating, vomiting, bradycardia, and near-syncope one hour later, which necessitated hospital treatment. His symptoms resolved within 24 hours. Treatment As in any case of overdose, general supportive measures should be used. In severe cases, anticholinergics such as atropine can be used as a general antidote for cholinomimetics. An initial dose of 0.5 to 1.0 mg i.v. is recommended, with subsequent doses based on the clinical response. Because strategies for the management of overdose are continually evolving, it is advisable to contact a poison control centre to determine the latest recommendations for the management of an overdose. GALANTAMINE SANDOZ Sandoz 1.0000 flacon 1 flacon 100 ml solution buvable, 4 mg/ml 5. Pharmacological Properties Galantamine, a tertiary alkaloid is a selective, competitive and reversible inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase. In addition, galantamine enhances the intrinsic action of acetylcholine on nicotinic receptors, probably through binding to an allosteric site of the receptor. As a consequence, an increased activity in the cholinergic system associated with improved cognitive function can be achieved in patients with dementia of the Alzheimer type. Clinical studies The dosages of galantamine effective in placebo-controlled clinical trials with a duration of 5 to 6 months were 16, 24 and 32 mg/day. Of these doses 16 and 24 mg/day were determined to have the best benefit/risk relationship and are the recommended maintenance doses. The efficacy of galantamine has been shown using outcome measures which evaluate the three major symptom complexes of the disease and a global scale: the ADAS-Cog (a performance based measure of cognition), DAD and ADCS-ADL-Inventory (measurements of basic and instrumental Activities of Daily Living), the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (a scale that measures behavioural disturbances) and the CIBIC-plus (a global assessment by an independent physician based on a clinical interview with the patient and caregiver). Composite responder analysis based on at least 4 points improvement in ADAS-Cog/11 compared to baseline and CIBIC-plus unchanged + improved (1-4), and DAD/ADL score unchanged + improved. See Table below. Treatment GAL-USA-1 and GAL-INT-1 (Month 6) GAL-USA-10 (Month 5) † CMH test of difference from placebo. * LOCF: Last Observation Carried Forward. The results of a 26-week double-blind placebo-controlled trial, in which patients with vascular dementia and patients with Alzheimer's disease and concomitant cerebrovascular disease (“mixed dementia”) were included, indicate that the symptomatic effect of galantamine is maintained in patients with Alzheimer's disease and concomitant cerebrovascular disease (see section 4.4 Nervous system disorders). In a post-hoc subgroup analysis, no statistically significant effect was observed in the subgroup of patients with vascular dementia alone. In a second 26-week placebo-controlled trial in patients with probable vascular dementia, no clinical benefit of galantamine treatment was demonstrated. 5.2 Pharmacokinetic Properties General characteristics of galantamine Absorption The absorption is rapid, with a tmax of about 1 hour after both tablets and oral solution. The absolute bioavailability of galantamine is high, 88.5 ± 5.4%. The presence of food delays the rate of absorption and reduces Cmax by about 25%, without affecting the extent of absorption (AUC). Distribution The mean volume of distribution is 175 L. Plasma protein binding is low, 18%. Metabolism Up to 75% of galantamine dosed is eliminated via metabolism. In vitro studies indicate that CYP2D6 is involved in the formation of O-desmethylgalantamine and CYP3A4 is involved in the formation of N-oxide-galantamine. The levels of excretion of total radioactivity in urine and faeces were not different between poor and extensive CYP2D6 metabolisers. In plasma from poor and extensive metabolisers, unchanged galantamine and its glucuronide accounted for most of the sample radioactivity. None of the active metabolites of galantamine (norgalantamine, O-desmethylgalantamine and O-desmethyl-norgalantamine) could be detected in their unconjugated form in plasma from poor and extensive metabolisers after single dosing. Norgalantamine was detectable in plasma from patients after multiple dosing, but did not represent more than 10% of the galantamine levels. In vitro studies indicated that the inhibition potential of galantamine with respect to the major forms of human cytochrome P450 is very low. Elimination Galantamine plasma concentration declines bi-exponentially, with a terminal half-life in the order of 7-8 h in healthy subjects. Typical oral clearance in the target population is about 200 ml/min with intersubject variability of 30% as derived from the population analysis. Seven days after a single oral dose of 4 mg ³H-galantamine, 90-97% of the radioactivity is recovered in urine and 2.2 - 6.3% in faeces. After i.v. infusion and oral administration, 18-22% of the dose was excreted as unchanged galantamine in the urine in 24 hours, with a renal clearance of 68.4 ± 22 ml/min, which represents 20-25% of the total plasma clearance. Dose-linearity After repeated oral dosing of 12 and 16 mg galantamine twice daily as tablets, mean trough and peak plasma concentrations fluctuated between 29 - 97 ng/ml and 42 - 137 ng/ml. The pharmacokinetics of galantamine are linear in the dose range of 4 - 16 mg twice daily. In patients taking 12 or 16 mg twice daily, no accumulation of galantamine was observed between months 2 and 6. Characteristics in patients Data from clinical trials in patients indicate that the plasma concentrations of galantamine in patients with Alzheimer's disease are 30-40% higher than in healthy young subjects. Based upon the population pharmacokinetic analysis, clearance in female subjects is 20% lower as compared to males. No major effects of age per se or race are found on the galantamine clearance. The galantamine clearance in poor metabolisers of CYP2D6 is about 25% lower than in extensive metabolisers, but no bimodality in the population is observed. Therefore, the metabolic status of the patient is not considered to be of clinical relevance in the overall population. The pharmacokinetics of galantamine in subjects with mild hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh score of 5-6) were comparable to those in healthy subjects. In patients with moderate hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh score of 7-9), AUC and half-life of galantamine were increased by about 30% (see section 4.2). Elimination of galantamine decreases with decreasing creatinine clearance as observed in a study with renally impaired subjects. Compared to Alzheimer patients, peak and trough plasma concentrations are not increased in patients with a creatinine clearance of 9 ml/min. Therefore, no increase in adverse events is expected and no dosage adjustments are needed (see section 4.2). Pharmacokinetic / pharmacodynamic relationship No apparent correlation between average plasma concentrations and efficacy parameters (i.e. Change in ADAS-Cog11 and CIBIC-plus at Month 6) were observed in the large Phase III trials with a dose-regimen of 12 and 16 mg twice daily. Plasma concentrations in patients experiencing syncope were within the same range as in the other patients at the same dose. The occurrence of nausea is shown to correlate with higher peak plasma concentrations (see section 4.5). 5.3 Preclinical Safety Data Reproduction toxicity studies showed a slight delay in development in rats and rabbits, at doses which are below the threshold of toxicity in the pregnant females. 6. Pharmaceutical Particulars Propyl parahydroxybenzoate E 216 Sorbitol solution (70%), non crystallising E 420 Purified water 6.2 Incompatibilities 6.3 Shelf Life Shelf life after first opening of the container: 3 months 6.4 Special Precautions For Storage 6.5 Nature And Contents Of Container A dosing pipette including pipette holder is enclosed. The pipette is marked with a scale. The graduation is in steps of 0.1 ml. 6.6 Special Precautions For Disposal And Other Handling The bottle comes with a child-proof cap, and should be opened as follows: - Push the plastic screw cap down while turning it counter clockwise. - Remove the unscrewed cap. Insert the pipette into the bottle. While holding the bottom ring, pull the top ring up to the mark corresponding to the number of millilitres you need to give. Holding the bottom ring, remove the entire pipette from the bottle. Empty the pipette directly into the mouth or into any non-alcoholic drink by sliding the upper ring down and drink it immediately. Close the bottle. Rinse the pipette with some water. 7. Marketing Authorisation Holder Frimley Business Park, Frimley, Camberley, Surrey, GU16 7SR United Kingdom 8. Marketing Authorisation Number(S) 9. Date Of First Authorisation/Renewal Of The Authorisation 10. Date Of Revision Of The Text 英文:REMINYL Oral Solution 有效成分 |
加兰他敏缓释混悬液(GALANTAMINE)简介:
Galantamine 4 mg/ ml Oral Solution1. Name Of The Medicinal Product Galantamine 4 mg/ml oral solution
2. Qualitative And Quantitative Composition 1 ml oral solution contains 4 mg gal ... 责任编辑:admin |
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