Medine.co.uk

Out of date information, search another

Paclitaxel 6mg/Ml Concentrate For Solution For Infusion

Out of date information, search another
Informations for option: Paclitaxel 6mg/Ml Concentrate For Solution For Infusion, show other option
Document: document 2 change

ft

Hospira


Package leaflet: Information for the user

Paclitaxel 6 mg/ml concentrate for solution for infusion Paclitaxel

Read all of this leaflet carefully before you start using this medicine because it contains important information for you.

•    Keep this leaflet. You may need to read it again.

•    If you have any further questions, ask your doctor, pharmacist or nurse.

•    If you get any side effects, talk to your doctor, pharmacist or nurse. This includes any possible side effects not listed in this leaflet. See section 4.


What is in this leaflet:

1.    What Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion is and what it is used for

2.    What you need to know before you use Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion

3.    How to use Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion

4.    Possible side effects

5.    How to store Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion

6.    Contents of the pack and other information

1. What Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion is and what it is used for

Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion is used in the treatment of a number of different types of cancer including ovarian cancer and breast cancer (after surgery or in advanced/spreading state) and non-small cell lung cancer (advanced state). It may be used in combination with other treatments or after other treatments have failed. It may also be used in the treatment of patients with advanced AIDS (Acquired Immuno-Deficiency Syndrome)-related Kaposi’s sarcoma where previous other treatments have not been effective. Paclitaxel works by preventing the growth of certain cancer cells.

2. What you need to know before you use Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion

You may need to have laboratory tests (e.g. blood tests) to ensure that you can be given this medicinal product. Some patients may also need to have heart tests.

Do not use Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion

•    If you are allergic to paclitaxel, macrogolglycerol ricinoleate (polyoxyl castor oil) or any of the other ingredients of Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion

•    If you are breast-feeding

•    If your white blood cell or platelet count is very low (this is checked by blood tests)

•    If you have a serious, uncontrolled infection and paclitaxel is to be given for the treatment of Kaposi’s sarcoma

•    If you have severe liver problems

Warnings and precautions

Talk to your doctor, pharmacist or nurse before using Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion

•    If you notice marked allergic reaction which may cause shortness of breath, dizziness (caused by low blood pressure), swelling of the face or rash

•    If you have heart disease or liver problems (if liver damage is severe, you should not be given paclitaxel)

•    If your blood cell counts are abnormal

•    If you experience irregular heartbeats, dizziness or faintness during treatment

•    If you experience tingling, burning or numbness in your fingers and/or toes

•    If this product is given to you along with radiation treatment (radiotherapy) of the lungs (see 4. Possible side effects)

•    If diarrhoea occurs during or shortly after treatment with this product as your colon could be inflamed

•    If you have Kaposi’s sarcoma and have a sore or inflamed mouth

•    This product is not recommended for use in children under 18 years

Other medicines and Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion

Special care should be taken if you are taking other medicinal products which could interact with paclitaxel.

The following drugs may increase the level of paclitaxel in the blood:

•    erythromycin (antibiotic)

•    fluoxetine (used to treat nervous disorders such as depression)

•    gemfibrozil (used to prevent heart disease)

•    nelfinavir and ritonavir (antiviral treatments for HIV/AIDS infection)

The following drugs may decrease the level of paclitaxel in the blood:

•    rifampicin (antibiotic)

•    carbamazepine, phenytoin and phenobarbital (used to control epilepsy)

•    efavirenz and nevirapine (antiviral treatments for HIV/AIDS infection)

Tell your doctor or pharmacist if you are taking, have recently taken or might take any other medicines.

Pregnancy, breast-feeding and fertility

If you are pregnant or breast-feeding, think you may be pregnant or are planning to have a baby, ask your doctor for advice before taking this medicine.

Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion must not be given if you are pregnant unless clearly advised. This medicine may cause birth defects, therefore, you must not become pregnant during treatment with paclitaxel and you and/or your partner must use an effective method of contraception whilst you are receiving treatment with paclitaxel and for six months after treatment has finished. If pregnancy occurs during treatment, or within the six months after treatment has finished, inform your doctor immediately.

Do not use Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion if you are breast-feeding or if you wish to start breast-feeding whilst you are receiving treatment with paclitaxel.

Paclitaxel may have an anti-fertility effect which could be irreversible. Male patients are therefore advised to seek advice on conservation of sperm prior to treatment.

Driving and using machines

Immediately after a course of treatment, the amount of alcohol in this medicinal product may affect your ability to drive or use machines. In addition, some side effects such as dizziness, nausea or tiredness may affect your ability to drive or operate machinery.

Paclitaxel 6 mg/ml concentrate for solution for infusion contains macrogolglycerol ricinoleate (polyoxyl castor oil) and ethanol.

This medicinal product contains macrogolglycerol ricinoleate (polyoxyl castor oil) which may cause severe allergic reactions.

It also contains 49.7% vol ethanol (alcohol), i.e. up to 21 g per average dose, equivalent to 740 ml of a 3.5% vol beer, 190 ml of a 14% vol wine per dose. This may be harmful to patients suffering from alcoholism. It should also be taken into account when considering using this medicine in children and high risk groups such as those with liver disease or epilepsy. The alcohol in this medicine may also affect the way other medicines work.

3. How to use Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion

Your treatment will usually be given to you in hospital. Paclitaxel will be given under supervision of a doctor, who can give you more information.

Before you receive your paclitaxel injection you will be given other medicines to prevent allergic reactions (a corticosteroid, e.g. dexamethasone, an antihistamine, e.g. diphenhydramine and an H2-receptor antagonist, e.g. cimetidine or ranitidine).

Paclitaxel may be given alone or in combination with other anti-cancer medicines. Your doctor will decide on the dose of product you should have and how many doses you will be given.

If you are receiving combination treatment with paclitaxel and cisplatin, the paclitaxel should be administered before the cisplatin in order to reduce the possibility of side effects. If you are receiving combination treatment with paclitaxel and doxorubicin, the paclitaxel should be administered 24 hours after doxorubicin.

You will be given paclitaxel as an infusion (slow injection via a drip) into a vein. Tell your doctor or nurse at once if you notice any pain at the injection site during or shortly after treatment. Pain around the injection site could mean the needle has not been properly inserted into the vein.

The dose of paclitaxel will depend on the illness for which you are being treated, the results of your blood tests and any side effects you have had to previous doses. The dose also depends on your body surface area (expressed as mg/m2) which is calculated from your height and weight. Depending on your illness, dosing is typically between 100 mg/m2 and 220 mg/m2 of paclitaxel given over 3 or 24 hours and repeated every two or three weeks.

As paclitaxel is most likely to be given to you in hospital, under the supervision of a doctor, it is unlikely that you will receive an incorrect dose. However if you have any concerns about the dose you receive, please tell your doctor.

4. Possible side effects

Like all medicines, this medicine can cause side effects, although not everybody gets them.

If you experience any of the following side effects, tell your doctor immediately as these are all serious. You may need urgent medical attention or hospitalisation.

Uncommon: may affect up to 1 in 100 people

•    Severe chest pains possibly radiating to the jaw or arm, sweating, breathlessness and nausea (heart attack)

•    Severe infection including sepsis (blood poisoning) with a state of shock

•    Feeling unusually hot or cold (fever or chills)

•    Blood clots in the veins (thrombosis) and inflammation of the veins associated with blood clots (thrombophlebitis) - this may present as pain and/or swelling in your arms or legs or inflammation of the vein

•    Severe allergic reactions causing low or high blood pressure, chest pain, breathing problems,

^--------------------

The following information is intended for medical or healthcare professionals only:

Further to the information included in section 3 practical information on the preparation/handling of the medicinal product is provided here.

Instructions for use, handling and disposal

Handling: Paclitaxel is a cytotoxic anticancer medicinal product and caution should be exercised in handling paclitaxel. Dilution should be carried out under aseptic conditions, by trained personnel in a designated area. Appropriate gloves should be used. Contact of paclitaxel with skin and mucous membranes should be avoided.

If paclitaxel solution contacts the skin, wash the skin immediately and thoroughly with soap and water. Following topical exposure, events have included tingling, burning, and redness. If paclitaxel contacts mucous membranes, the membranes should be flushed thoroughly with water. Upon inhalation, dyspnoea, chest pain, burning throat, and nausea have been reported.

Preparation forIVAdministration: During dilution of the concentrate for infusion, cytostatic dispensing needles or similar devices with spikes should not be used with vials of paclitaxel since they can cause the stopper to collapse resulting in loss of sterile integrity of the solution.

Prior to infusion, paclitaxel must be diluted to a ready-to-use solution for infusion (0.3 to 1.2 mg/ml) using aseptic techniques with one of the following solutions:

•    9 mg/ml (0.9%) sodium chloride solution for infusion,

•    50 mg/ml (5%) glucose solution for infusion,

•    50 mg/ml glucose- and 9 mg/ml sodium chloride solution for infusion, or

•    Ringer’s solution containing 50 mg/ml glucose.

Once diluted, the ready-to-use infusions are for single use only.

After dilution chemical and physical in-use stability has been demonstrated for:

Diluent

Target Concentration

Storage Conditions

Time period

0.9% (9 mg/ml) sodium chloride solution for infusion

0.3 mg/ml and 1.2 mg/ml

2-8°C in the absence of light in non-PVC (polyolefin) infusion bags

28 days

5% (50 mg/ml) glucose solution for infusion

0.3 mg/ml and 1.2 mg/ml

2-8°C in the absence of light in non-PVC (polyolefin) infusion bags

14 days

0.9% (9 mg/ml) sodium chloride solution for infusion

0.3 mg/ml and 1.2 mg/ml

25°C under normal lighting conditions in non-PVC (polyolefin) infusion bags

72 hours

5% (50 mg/ml) glucose solution for infusion

0.3 mg/ml and 1.2 mg/ml

25°C under normal lighting conditions in non-PVC (polyolefin) infusion bags

72 hours

fast heart-beat (pulse), pain in your abdomen or extremities, sweating, severe itching and/or back pain.

Rare: may affect up to 1 in 1,000 people

•    Severe allergic reaction (anaphylactic reaction): you may experience a sudden itchy rash (hives), swelling of the hands, feet, ankles, face, lips, mouth or throat (which may cause difficulty in swallowing or breathing), and you may feel you are going to faint

•    Shortness of breath, cough, coughing up blood or pain in the chest or shoulder

(e.g. pulmonary embolism). Some of these effects may not occur immediately (lung fibrosis)

Very rare: may affect up to 1 in 10,000 people

•    Life-threatening allergic reaction (anaphylactic shock)

•    Seizures (‘fits’)

•    Rapid formation of a rash followed by the appearance of skin lesions on the soles of the feet and palms and ulcers in the mouth (erythema multiforme, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, epidermal necrolysis). Severe skin peeling (exfoliative dermatitis)

•    Persistent diarrhoea

Tell your doctor as soon as possible if you notice any of the following:

Very common: may affect more than 1 in 10 people

•    Joint or muscle weakness, pain, aching or loss of sensation in the limbs. These usually reduce or disappear several months after stopping treatment with paclitaxel

•    Infection - usually of the urinary tract or upper respiratory tract. This may be associated with low blood cell count resulting from receiving paclitaxel. This can sometimes be fatal

•    Bone marrow suppression, which can lead to decreased blood cell counts and may result in infections, anaemia with paleness and weakness, and bruising and bleeding

•    Low blood pressure which may cause you to feel light-headed, particularly when standing up

•    Pain in the muscle or joints

•    Hair loss

•    Nausea and vomiting

•    Mild diarrhoea

•    Soreness of the mouth or tongue

•    Mild allergic reactions including flushing and skin rash

•    Nerve problems - these may appear as pins and needles in the hands and feet

Common: may affect up to 1 in 10 people

•    Slow heartbeat

•    Injection site reactions (local swelling, pain, redness, hardening of tissues, death of skin tissue, extravasation (leaking of drug outside the vein) resulting in cellulitis (painful swelling and redness))

•    Temporary mild changes to the nails and skin

Uncommon: may affect up to 1 in 100 people

•    Irregular heartbeats

•    Fainting

•    High blood pressure (may give you headaches)

•    Yellowing of whites of eyes and skin

•    Pain in the middle of your chest which may be caused by heart disease

•    Pain or weakness in heart muscles (heart muscle degeneration)

•    Irregular heartbeat (may be caused by irregular impulse conduction)

Rare: may affect up to 1 in 1,000 people

•    Pneumonia

•    Effect on nerves that control the muscles, resulting in muscle weakness in arms and legs (motor neuropathy)

•    Itching, skin rash/redness

•    Accumulation of fluid in the whole body (oedema)

•    Dehydration

•    Loss of energy

•    Problems with your lungs such as inflammation or accumulation of fluids, which may make it difficult to breathe

•    Abdominal pain caused by inflammation in your bowel, bowel obstruction or perforation of the wall of your bowel

•    Inflammation of your pancreas (pancreatitis)

•    Heart failure

•    A feeling of discomfort or uneasiness

Very rare: may affect up to 1 in 10,000 people

•    Increased frequency of heartbeat

•    Nettle rash (urticaria)

•    Effect on the brain (encephalopathy)

•    Damage to the liver which may be severe (hepatic necrosis). This may have an effect on brain function (hepatic encephalopathy). This can sometimes be fatal

•    Loss of hearing or ringing in the ears

•    Balance problems

•    Visual disturbances

•    Staggering when walking

•    Dizziness

•    Headache

•    Constipation

•    Abdominal pain which may be caused by accumulation of fluid in the abdomen (ascites), inflammation in your gut or blood clot in the blood vessels to your bowel

•    Loss of appetite

•    Confusion

•    Shock

•    Loosening of finger or toe nails (you are advised to wear protection on your hands and feet when exposed to the sun)

•    Heartburn, nausea and/or vomiting which may be caused by inflammation of the gullet

•    Cough

•    Muscle weakness, cramps, severe bowel or abdominal pain or dizziness when standing up which may be caused by a disease of the nervous system

•    Acute leukaemia (blood cancer) or related condition (myelodysplastic syndrome) which your doctor will check for

Not known: frequency cannot be estimated from the available data

•    A condition called tumour lysis syndrome which may cause high levels of sodium or potassium or low levels of calcium in your blood

•    A swelling of part of the back of your eye (macular oedema)

•    Visual disturbances such as seeing flashes of light (photopsia) or floaters

•    Disease of your connective tissue (scleroderma)

•    An autoimmune disorder that may affect your skin, joints, kidneys, brain, and other organs (systemic lupus erythematosus)

Like many other anti-cancer medicines, paclitaxel may cause sterility, which could be permanent.

Paclitaxel may cause inflammation of the lungs when used in combination with, or after, radiotherapy.

Laboratory tests (e.g. blood tests) may be performed to check for changes in liver activity, kidney function and blood cells, which are side effects of paclitaxel treatment.

If any of the side effects gets serious, or if you notice any side effects not listed in this leaflet, please tell your doctor.

Reporting of side effects

If you get any side effects, talk to your doctor, pharmacist or nurse. This includes any possible side effects not listed in this leaflet. You can also report side effects directly via the Yellow Card Scheme. Website www.mhra.gov.uk/yellowcard. By reporting side effects, you can help provide more information on the safety of this medicine.

5. How to store Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion

Keep this medicine out of the sight and reach of children.

Do not use Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion after the expiry date printed on the vial label and carton. The expiry date refers to the last day of that month.

Do not store above 25°C. Keep the vial in the outer carton, in order to protect from light.

The infusion should be clear and colourless to pale yellow. Infusions which contain clear particles or are strongly coloured should not be used.

6. Contents of the pack and other information

What Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion contains

The active substance is paclitaxel. Each ml of concentrate contains 6 mg of paclitaxel.

The other ingredients are macrogolglycerol ricinoleate (polyoxyl castor oil), ethanol (anhydrous) and citric acid (anhydrous).

What Paclitaxel concentrate for solution for infusion looks like and contents of the pack

This medicinal product is a concentrate for solution (sterile concentrate). This means that the concentrated solution in the vial must be diluted prior to use. Once diluted it is given as a slow injection into a vein. The sterile concentrate is a clear, colourless to pale yellow solution.

This medicinal product contains 6 mg of paclitaxel per ml of concentrate. It is available in four vial sizes: 30 mg/5 ml, 100 mg/16.7 ml, 150 mg/25 ml, or 300 mg/50 ml. Each presented in packs containing a single vial. Not all presentations may be marketed.

Marketing Authorisation Holder and Manufacturer

Hospira UK Limited

Queensway

Royal Leamington Spa

Warwickshire

CV31 3RW

United Kingdom

This leaflet was last revised in: September 2014

5% (50 mg/ml) glucose and 0.9% (9 mg/ml) sodium chloride solution for infusion

0.3 mg/ml and 1.2 mg/ml

25°C under normal lighting conditions in non-PVC (polyolefin) infusion bags

72 hours

Ringer’s solution containing 5%

(50 mg/ml) glucose

0.3 mg/ml and 1.2 mg/ml

25°C under normal lighting conditions in non-PVC (polyolefin) infusion bags

72 hours

Although this product contains ethanol, it cannot be considered as assurance of microbiological integrity.

From a microbiological point of view, the diluted product should be used immediately. If not used immediately, in-use storage times and conditions prior to use are the responsibility of the user and would normally not be longer than 24 hours at 2 to 8°C, unless reconstitution/dilution has taken place in controlled and validated aseptic conditions.

After first use and following multiple needle entries and product withdrawals, any unused concentrate maintains microbial, chemical and physical stability when stored below 25°C, protected from light for up to 28 days. Other in-use storage times and conditions are the responsibility of the user.

The ready-to-use infusion should be visually inspected for particulate matter and discoloration.

Upon preparation, solutions may show haziness, which is attributed to the formulation vehicle, and is not removed by filtration. However haziness does not affect the potency of the product. The solution for infusion should be administered through an in-line filter with microporous membrane not greater than 0.22 microns. No significant losses in potency have been noted following simulated delivery of the solution through I.V. tubing containing an in-line (0.22 micron) filter.

There have been some reports of precipitation during paclitaxel infusions, with precipitation usually taking place towards the end of a 24-hour infusion period. To reduce the risk of precipitation, paclitaxel should be used as soon as possible after dilution and excessive shaking or agitation should be avoided. The infusion solution should be regularly inspected during infusion and the infusion should be discontinued if precipitation occurs.

To minimise patient exposure to DEHP which may be leached from plasticised PVC infusion bags, sets, or other medical instruments, diluted paclitaxel solutions should be stored in non-PVC bottles (glass, polypropylene) or plastic bags (polypropylene, polyolefin) and administered through polyethylene-lined administration sets. Use of filter devices which incorporate short inlet and/or outlet plasticised PVC tubing has not resulted in significant leaching of DEHP.

Disposal: All items used for preparation, administration, infusion, or otherwise coming into contact with paclitaxel should be placed in an appropriate safety container and disposed according to local guidelines for the handling of cytotoxic compounds.