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Meta-Iodobenzylguanidine (131i) For Diagnostic Use 9.25 -18.5 Mbq/Ml Solution For Injection

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SUMMARY OF PRODUCT CHARACTERISTICS

1 NAME OF THE MEDICINAL PRODUCT

Meta-Iodobenzyl guanidine (131I) for Diagnostic Use 9.25 -18.5 MBq/ml solution for injection

2 QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE COMPOSITION

[131I]iobenguane: 9.25-18.5 GBq/ml (0.05-0.5 mg/ml)

Summary of the physical characteristics of the radioactive isotope in the active substance: Iodine-131: physical half-life 8.08 days.

The most important radiation emissions are as below:

Energy

level

Abundance(%)

P-247

keV

1.8

P-334

keV

7.2

P-606

keV

89.7

P-806

keV

0.7

Y-364

keV

82.0

This medicinal product contains:

•    Benzyl alcohol: 10 mg/ml

•    Sodium: 3.54 mg/ml.

For a full list of excipients, see section 6.1

3 PHARMACEUTICAL FORM

Solution for injection.

Clear, colourless solution.

4 CLINICAL PARTICULARS

4.1 Therapeutic indications

This medicinal product is for diagnostic use only.

Calculation of a therapeutic [ I]iobenguane dose from a prior tracer-dose. The sensitivity to diagnostic visualisation, and therefore also to therapeutic efficacy, is different for the listed pathologic entities. Pheochromocytomas and neuro-blastomas are sensitive in approximately 90% of patients, carcinoids in 70% and medullary carcinomas of the thyroid gland (MCT) in only 35%.

4.2    Posology and method of administration

"Tracer"-dose to acquire dosimetric information (20-40 MBq). Distribution measurement prior to administration of a therapeutic dose is recommended in order to establish the retention time of the radiopharmaceutical in organs, tumour tissue and normal structures.

These recommended dosages are identical for children (must not be given to premature babies or neonates) and adults.

The dose is administered intravenously, the duration of the injection should be 30-300 seconds.

4.3    Contraindications

Pregnancy is an absolute contraindication.

Hypersensitivity to the active substance or to any of the excipients.

Must not be given to premature babies or neonates.

4.4 Special warnings and precautions for use

This medicinal product contains benzyl alcohol. Benzyl alcohol may cause toxic reactions and anaphylactoid reactions in infants and children up to 3 years old.

Drugs that may interfere with uptake and retention of [131I]iobenguane should be stopped before treatment (see section 4.5).

Prior to administration, ensure emergency cardiac antihypertensive treatments are readily available.

The uptake of iobenguane in the chromaffin granules might, though rarely, cause rapid noradrenalin secretion which can induce a hypertensive crisis although the likelihood of such an occurrence is believed to be extremely low. Monitoring of both E.C.G. and blood pressure during administration could be indicated in some patients. This necessitates constant monitoring of the patient during administration. [131I]iobenguane must be administered slowly (take at least one minute for the administration of a patient dose).

When diagnostic administration for pheochromocytoma is planned attention is to be given to the interference with uptake of [131I]iobenguane by medication for control of

hypertension (see section 4.5). Incompatible medication should be stopped at least 2 weeks prior to the planned diagnostic administration. If necessary propranolol can be used instead.

Patients are to be well hydrated.

As with all iodine-131 containing products, a substantial proportion of the absorbed radiation dose is to the thyroid gland as a consequence of concentration of iodine by thyroid tissue. Blocking of the uptake of iodine-131 by the thyroid is therefore recommended to reduce radiation dose.

Blockade may be undertaken using non-radioactive iodine. A daily dose of approximately 100 mg iodine should be administered. This should commence 24-48 hours before the [131I]iobenguane is administered and should be continued for at least 5 days after its administration, when the estimated activity of iodine-131 in the body will have fallen to an acceptably low level.

Iodine may be administered either as potassium iodide, potassium iodate or Aqueous Iodine Oral solution (Lugol’s iodine). If further information is required, refer to literature provided with the blocking agent.

In patients where the diagnostic evaluation shows diffuse bone marrow uptake of [131I]iobenguane, bone marrow suppression may occur after administration of a therapeutic dose.

For each patient, exposure to ionising radiation must be justifiable on the basis of likely benefit. The activity administered must be such that the resulting radiation dose is as low as reasonably achievable bearing in mind the need to obtain the intended diagnostic or therapeutic result.

This medicinal product contains less than 1 mmol sodium (23 mg) per maximum recommended dose, i.e. essentially ‘sodium-free’.

4.5 Interaction with other medicinal products and other forms of interaction

The following drugs are known or may be expected to prolong or to reduce the uptake of iobenguane in neural crest tumours. There are additional drugs that may interfere, but no formal proof exists.

•    Nifedipine (a Ca-channel blocker) is reported to prolong retention of iobenguane.

Decreased uptake was observed under therapeutic regimens involving the administration of:

•    Antihypertensive drugs such as reserpine, labetalol, calcium-channel blockers (diltiazem, nifedipine, verapamil).

•    Sympathomimetic agents (present in nasal decongestants, such as phenylephrine, ephedrine or phenylpropanolamine).

•    Cocaine.

•    Tricyclic antidepressants such as amitryptiline and derivatives, imipramine and derivatives, doxepin, amoxepine and loxapine.

For the following drugs inhibition of the uptake of iobenguane is expected to occur, but no proof is yet available:

•    Antihypertensives acting through adrenergic neuron blockade (betanidine, debrisoquine, bretylium and guanethidine).

•    Antidepressants such as maprotiline and trazolone.

These drugs should be stopped before treatment (usually for four biological half-lives).

4.6    Fertility, pregnancy and lactation

Pregnancy:

The product is contraindicated during established or suspected pregnancy or when pregnancy has not been excluded (see section 4.3).

When it is necessary to administer radioactive medicinal products to women of childbearing potential, information should always be sought about pregnancy. Any woman who has missed a period should be assumed to be pregnant until proven otherwise.

Alternative techniques which do not involve ionising radiation should be considered. Breastfeeding:

Before administering a radioactive medicinal product to a mother who is breastfeeding, consideration should be given as to whether the investigation could be reasonably delayed until the mother has ceased breastfeeding.

Breastfeeding should be discontinued after administration of the product.

4.7    Effects on ability to drive and use machines

No studies on the effects on the ability to drive and use machines have been performed.

4.8    Undesirable effects

Exposure to ionising radiation is linked with cancer induction and a potential for development of hereditary defects. For diagnostic nuclear medicine investigations the current evidence suggests that these adverse effects will occur with low frequency because of the low radiation doses incurred.

When administering [131I]iobenguane in diagnostic usage, no significant undesirable effects are anticipated.

4.9. Overdose

The effect of an overdose of iobenguane is due to the release of adrenaline. This effect is of short duration and requires supportive measures aimed at lowering the blood pressure. Prompt injection of a rapid acting alpha-adrenergic blocking agent (phentolamine) followed by a beta-blocker (propranolol). Because of the renal elimination pathway maintaining the highest possible urine flow is essential to reduce the influence of radiation.

5    PHARMACOLOGICAL PROPERTIES

131

[ I]iobenguane is a radioiodinated aralkylguanidine. Its structure contains the guanidine-group from guanethidine linked to a benzyl-group into which iodine is introduced. Like guanethidine, the aralkylguanidines are adrenergic neuron blocking agents. As consequence of a functional similarity between adrenergic neurons and the chromaffin cells of the adrenal medulla, iobenguane is able to localise preferentially in the medulla of the adrenal glands. In addition localisation in the myocardium occurs.

5.1    Pharmacodynamic properties

Pharmacotherapeutic group: diagnostic radiopharmaceuticals, tumour detection, iobenguane (131I), ATC code V09I X02.

Of the various aralkylguanidines iobenguane is the preferred substance because of its low liver uptake and its best in vivo stability, resulting in the lowest achievable uptake of liberated iodide by the thyroid. Transport of iobenguane across the cell membranes of cells originating from the neural crest is an active process when the concentration of the drug is low (as in diagnostic dosages). The uptake mechanism can be inhibited by uptake of inhibitors such as cocaine or desmethylimipramine. When the drug is administered in higher concentrations (as in therapeutic dosages) passive diffusion processes also become important. The clinical implications towards dosimetry, if any, are unclear.

Subsequently, an active mechanism transfers at least part of the intracellular iobenguane into the storage granules within the cells.

5.2    Pharmacokinetic properties

Iobenguane is to a large extent excreted unaltered by the kidneys. 70 to 90% of administered doses are recovered in urine within 4 days. The following metabolic breakdown products were recovered in urine: iodide-131, [ I]metaiodohippuric acid,

131    131

[ I]hydroxy-iodobenzylguanidine and [ I]metaiodobenzoic acid. These substances account for approximately 5 to 15% of the administered dose.

The distribution pattern of iobenguane includes rapid initial uptake in liver (33% of the administered dose) and much less in lungs (3%), myocardium (0.8%), spleen (0.6%) and salivary glands (0.4%). Uptake in normal adrenals (adrenal medulla) is so low that these can not be visualised with [ I]iobenguane. Hyperplastic adrenals show a high uptake.

5.3. Pre-clinical Safety Data

In dogs 20mg/kg is a lethal dose. Lower dose levels (14mg/kg) cause transient clinical signs of toxic effect. Repeated intravenous administrations in rats of 20 to 40mg/kg induce signs of serious clinical toxicity. Repeated intravenous administrations of 5 to 20mg/kg do induce effects, including respiratory distress, but long term effects are only a slight increase in weight of liver and heart. Repeated administration in dogs of 2.5 to 10mg/kg do induce clinical effects, including increased blood pressure and abnormalities in heart rate and in cardiac pulse propagation, but all signs were of a transient nature.

The margin of safety between administered amounts of Iobenguane (notably in therapeutic doses) and the level at which unwanted secondary effects might occur is not very wide, therefore patients should be kept under close surveillance during and for at least some hours after the infusion or injection of the drug.

In the test systems used no mutagenic effect could be demonstrated. Studies of carcinogenic potential of Iobenguane have not been published.

6    PHARMACEUTICAL PARTICULARS

6.1    List of excipients

Sodium chloride Water for injections Benzyl alcohol

6.2 Incompatibilities

In the absence of compatibility studies, this medicinal product must not be mixed with other medicinal products.

6.3. Shelf Life

The shelf life is 3 days from the activity reference date stated on the label.

6.4 Special precautions for storage

Store below 25°C. Do not freeze.

Store in the original lead container or in equivalent shielding.

6.5 Nature and contents of container

The product is supplied in a clear neutral glass vial sealed with a PTFE-faced butyl rubber closure.

Pack sizes: single vials containing 18.5 MBq to 185 MBq in 18.5 MBq steps.

Not all pack sizes may be marketed.

6.6 Special precautions for disposal and other handling

Normal safety precautions for handling radioactive materials should be observed. After use, all materials associated with the preparation and administration of radiopharmaceuticals, including any unused product and its container, should be decontaminated or treated as radioactive waste and disposed of in accordance with the conditions specified by the local competent authority. Contaminated material must be disposed of as radioactive waste via an authorised route.

7.    MARKETING AUTHORISATION HOLDER

Amersham plc Amersham Place Little Chalfont Buckinghamshire HP7 9NA

8    MARKETING AUTHORISATION NUMBER(S)

PL 00221/0124

9    DATE OF FIRST AUTHORISATION/RENEWAL OF THE

AUTHORISATION

Date of first authorisation: 14 February 1997 Date of last renewal: 10 October 2001

10    DATE OF REVISION OF THE TEXT

11/11/2010

11    DOSIMETRY

The table below shows the dosimetry as calculated according to the Publication (53) of the ICRP (International Commission on Radiological Protection, Radiation Dose to Patients from Radiopharmaceuticals, Pergamon Press (1987)).

Radiation dose to specific organs, which may not be the target organ of therapy, can be influenced significantly by pathophysiological changes induced by the disease process. This should be taken into consideration when using the following information.

With the exception of "uterus" the list includes only those organs which are used in the calculation for the effective (whole body) dose equivalent. These are the seven standard organs and the additional five organs with the highest absorbed dose (marked with *).

Organ

Absorbed dost per unit activi

k

ty administered (mGy/

MBq)

Adult

15 year

10 year

5 year

1 year

Bone surfaces

6.1E-02

7.2E-02

1.1E-01

1.8E-01

3.6E-01

Breast

6.9E-02

6.9E-02

1.1E-01

1.8E-01

3.5E-01

Kidneys

1.2E-01

1.4E-01

2.1E-01

3.0E-01

5.1E-01

Lungs

Gonads

1.9E-01

2.8E-01

3.9E-01

6.0E-01

1.2E+00

Ovaries

6.6E-02

8.8E-02

1.4E-01

2.3E-01

4.2E-01

Testes

5.9E-02

7.0E-02

1.1E-02

1.9E-01

3.6E-01

Red marrow

6.7E-02

8.3E-02

1.3E-01

1.9E-01

3.5E-01

Thyroid

5.0E-02

6.5E-02

1.1E-01

1.8E-01

3.5E-01

*Adrenals

1.7E-01

2.3E-01

3.3E-01

4.5E-01

6.9E-01

Bladder wall

5.9E-01

7.3E-01

1.1E+00

1.7E+00

3.3E+00

*Liver

8.3E-01

1.1E+00

1.6E+00

2.4E+00

4.6E+00

*

Salivary glands

2.3E-01

2.8E-01

3.8E-01

5.1E-01

7.5E-01

*Spleen

4.9E-01

6.9E-01

1.1E+00

1.7E+00

3.2E+00

Uterus

8.0E-02

1.0E-01

1.6E-01

2.6E-01

4.8E-01

Effective dose

equivalent

(mSv/MBq)

2.0E-01

2.6E-01

4.0E-01

6.1E-01

1.1E+00

The above data are valid in normal pharmacokinetic behaviour. Especially when renal function is impaired, due to disease or due to previous therapy, the effective dose equivalent and the radiation dose delivered to organs (notably to bone, red marrow and lungs) might be increased considerably.

12 INSTRUCTIONS FOR PREPARATION OF RADIOPHARMACEUTICALS

This radiopharmaceutical may be received, used and administered only by authorised persons in designated clinical settings. Its receipt, storage, use, transfer and disposal are subject to the regulations and/or appropriate licences of the local competent official organisations (see section 6.6).

The administration of radiopharmaceuticals creates risks to other persons, from external radiation or contamination from spills or urine, vomiting, etc. Radiation protection precautions in accordance with national regulations must therefore be taken.

Radiochemical purity measurement

The radiochemical purity of [ I]iobenguane can be determined by high performance liquid chromatography on a silica gel (5 pm) column, 0.25 m x 4 mm, eluted isocratically with a mixture of ammonium nitrate solution (8%): dilute ammonia : methanol (1:2:27). Peak detection is by the use of a suitable radioactivity detector and by ultraviolet spectrophotometry at 254 nm. Peaks are identified by reference to standard solutions of sodium iodide (1mg/ml) and iobenguane sulphate (0.2 mg/ml).