MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL is a brand name for Mycophenolate Mofetil, supplied as a capsule. The medicine, its uses, side effects and dosage are the same regardless of brand.
Used for: MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL is indicated for: Adults The prophylaxis of organ rejection in patients receiving allogeneic renal, cardiac or hepatic transplants. MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL should be used concomitantly with cyclosporine and corticosteroids. 1.1 Pediatrics (2-18 years of age) MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL is indicated for…
Verbatim from this product's HC label. Tap a section to expand.
1 Dosing Considerations MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL should be used concomitantly with standard cyclosporine and corticosteroid therapy. MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL Capsules and Tablets The initial oral dose of MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL should be given as soon as possible following renal, cardiac or hepatic transplantation.
Food had no effect on MPA AUC, but has been shown to decrease MPA Cmax by 40%. It is recommended that MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL be administered on an empty stomach. 2 Recommended Dose and Dosage Adjustment Adults Renal Transplantation A dose of 1 g administered orally twice a day (daily dose of 2 g) is recommended for use in renal transplant patients.
5 g administered twice daily (daily dose of 3 g) was used in clinical trials and was shown to be safe and effective, no efficacy advantage could be established for renal transplant patients. Patients receiving 2 g per day of mycophenolate mofetil in these trials demonstrated an overall better safety profile than did patients receiving 3 g per day of mycophenolate mofetil.
5 g twice daily oral (daily dose of 3 g) is recommended for use in adult cardiac transplant patients. 5 g twice daily oral (daily dose of 3 g) is recommended for use in adult hepatic transplant patients. 5 g daily dose). 5 m2 may be dosed with MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL capsules or tablets at a dose of 1 g twice daily (2 g daily dose).
73m2) outside the immediate post-transplant period, doses of MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL greater than 1 g administered twice a day should be avoided. These patients should also be carefully observed. ) No data are available for cardiac or hepatic transplant patients with severe chronic renal impairment.
MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL should be used for cardiac or hepatic transplant patients with severe chronic renal impairment if the potential benefits outweigh the potential risks. 3 x 103/mcL), dosing with MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL should be interrupted or the dose reduced, appropriate diagnostic tests performed, and the patient managed appropriately.
(See 7 WARNINGS and PRECAUTIONS: Immune, Monitoring and Laboratory Tests and 8 ADVERSE REACTIONS) Delayed Renal Graft Function Post-Transplant: No dose adjustment is recommended for these patients, however, they should be carefully observed.
3 Pharmacokinetics Absorption).
) Delayed Renal Graft Function Post-Transplant: No dose adjustment is recommended for these patients, however, they should be carefully observed. 3 Pharmacokinetics Absorption). 5 OVERDOSAGE For management of a suspected drug overdose, contact your regional poison control centre.
Reports of overdoses with mycophenolate mofetil have been received from clinical trials and during post-marketing experience. In many of these cases no adverse events were reported. In those overdose cases in which adverse events were reported, the events fall within the known safety profile of the drug.
It is expected that an overdose of mycophenolate mofetil could possibly result in oversuppression of the immune system and increase susceptibility to infections and bone marrow suppression (See 7 WARNINGS and PRECAUTIONS: Immune). If neutropenia develops, dosing with MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL should be interrupted or the dose reduced (see 7 WARNINGS and PRECAUTIONS: Immune).
MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL Page 7 of 68 The highest dose administered to renal transplant patients in clinical trials has been 4 g per day. In limited experience with cardiac and hepatic transplant patients in clinical trials, the highest doses used were 4 g or 5 g per day.
At doses of 4 g or 5 g per day, there appears to be a higher rate, compared to the use of 3 g per day or less, of gastrointestinal intolerance (nausea, vomiting, and/or diarrhea), and occasional hematologic abnormalities, principally neutropenia, leading to a need to reduce or discontinue dosing.
At clinically encountered concentrations, MPA and MPAG are not removed by hemodialysis. However, at high MPAG plasma concentrations (>100 mcg/mL), small amounts of MPAG are removed. By interfering with enterohepatic recirculation of the drug, bile acid sequestrants, such as cholestyramine reduce the MPA AUC.
, Immune 07/2022 TABLE OF CONTENTS Sections or subsections that are not applicable at the time of authorization are not listed. RECENT MAJOR LABEL CHANGES ........................................................................................................
2 TABLE OF CONTENTS .............................................................................................................................. 2 PART I: HEALTH PROFESSIONAL INFORMATION ................................................................................
4 1 INDICATIONS ....................................................................................................................................... 1 Pediatrics ...................................................................................................................................
2 Geriatrics .................................................................................................................................... 4 2 CONTRAINDICATIONS ........................................................................................................................
4 3 SERIOUS WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS BOX ............................................................................ 4 4 DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION ......................................................................................................
1 Dosing Considerations ............................................................................................................... 2 Recommended Dose and Dosage Adjustment..........................................................................
4 Administration ............................................................................................................................ 6 5 OVERDOSAGE .....................................................................................................................................
MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL is contraindicated in patients with a known hypersensitivity to mycophenolate mofetil, mycophenolic acid or any component of the drug product (see 6 DOSAGE FORMS, STRENGTHS, COMPOSITION AND PACKAGING). MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL is contraindicated during pregnancy due to its mutagenic and teratogenic potential (see 7 WARNINGS and PRECAUTIONS).
MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL is contraindicated in women of childbearing potential not using highly effective contraceptive methods and without providing a pregnancy test result. (see 7 WARNINGS and PRECAUTIONS). MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL is contraindicated in women who are breastfeeding (see 7 WARNINGS and PRECAUTIONS).
Not medical advice. Always read the patient information leaflet and follow your prescriber or pharmacist.
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6 DOSAGE FORMS, STRENGTHS, COMPOSITION AND PACKAGING Table 1 Dosage Forms, Strengths, Composition and Packaging Description Capsules Composition: MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL is available for oral administration as capsules containing 250 mg of MMF.
Inactive ingredients include croscarmellose sodium, starch, magnesium stearate, povidone. The capsule shell contains: red iron oxide, yellow iron oxide, titanium dioxide, gelatin, indigo carmine (FD&C blue #2).
Availability:
MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL capsules are oblong, blue/orange, imprinted with “SZ” in black colour on cap and “250” in black colour on body, two-piece hard gelatin capsules containing a white to off-white powder. They are provided in unit dose of 10 capsules in blister packs, 5 packs per box.
Tablets Composition:
MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL is available for oral administration as tablets containing 500 mg of MMF. Inactive ingredients include, microcrystalline cellulose, povidone K 90, talc, croscarmellose sodium, magnesium stearate, opadry purple.
Route of Administration Dosage Form / Strength/Composition Non-medicinal Ingredients Oral Capsules/250 mg Croscarmellose sodium, gelatin, indigo carmine (FD&C blue #2), magnesium stearate, povidone, red iron oxide, starch, titanium dioxide, yellow iron oxide Oral Tablets/500 mg Croscarmellose sodium, magnesium stearate, microcrystalline cellulose, opadry purple, povidone K 90, talc MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL Page 8 of 68 Availability: MYCOPHENOLATE MOFETIL tablets are lavender coloured, caplet-shaped, film- coated tablets, engraved with “SZ” on one side and “327” on the other.
They are provided in unit dose of 10 tablets in blister packs, 5 packs per box. 7 WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS Please see 3 SERIOUS WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS BOX. g. g. tacrolimus, sirolimus, belatacept, or vice versa, as this might result in changes of MPA exposure (see
6 6 DOSAGE FORMS, STRENGTHS, COMPOSITION AND PACKAGING ............................................. 7 7 WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS ......................................................................................................
1 Special Populations ................................................................................................................. 1 Pregnant Women ................................................................................................................
2 Breast-feeding ..................................................................................................................... 3 Pediatrics ............................................................................................................................
4 Geriatrics ............................................................................................................................. 12 8 ADVERSE REACTIONS .....................................................................................................................
1 Adverse Reaction Overview..................................................................................................... 2 Clinical Trial Adverse Reactions ..............................................................................................
1 Clinical Trial Adverse Reactions – Pediatrics ..................................................................... 3 Less Common Clinical Trial Adverse Reactions ......................................................................
5 Post-Market Adverse Reactions .............................................................................................. 20 9 DRUG INTERACTIONS ......................................................................................................................
2 Drug Interactions Overview...................................................................................................... 3 Drug-Behavioural Interactions .................................................................................................
4 Drug-Drug Interactions ............................................................................................................. 5 Drug-Food Interactions ............................................................................................................
6 Drug-Herb Interactions ............................................................................................................. 7 Drug-Laboratory Test Interactions ...........................................................................................
26 10 CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY ........................................................................................................... 1 Mechanism Of Action ...............................................................................................................
2 Pharmacodynamics ................................................................................................................. 3 Pharmacokinetics .....................................................................................................................
27 11 STORAGE, STABILITY AND DISPOSAL .......................................................................................... 32 12 SPECIAL HANDLING INSTRUCTIONS .............................................................................................
33 PART II: SCIENTIFIC INFORMATION ..................................................................................................... 34 13 PHARMACEUTICAL INFORMATION ................................................................................................
34 14 CLINICAL TRIALS .............................................................................................................................. 1 Trial Design And Study Demographics […]