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نشرة الممارس الصحي | نشرة معلومات المريض بالعربية | نشرة معلومات المريض بالانجليزية | صور الدواء | بيانات الدواء |
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4.1 Therapeutic indications
Relief of symptoms of moderate to severe seasonal and perennial allergic rhinitis if monotherapy with either intranasal antihistamine or glucocorticoid is not considered sufficient.
Posology
For full therapeutic benefit regular usage is essential.
Contact with the eyes should be avoided.
Adults and adolescents (12 years and older)
One actuation in each nostril twice daily (morning and evening).
Children below 12 years
Dymista Nasal Spray is not recommended for use in children below 12 years of age as safety and efficacy
has not been established in this age group.
Elderly
No dose adjustment is required in this population.
Renal and hepatic impairment
There are no data in patients with renal and hepatic impairment.
Duration of treatment
Dymista Nasal Spray is suitable for long-term use.
The duration of treatment should correspond to the period of allergenic exposure.
Method of administration
Dymista Nasal Spray is for nasal use only.
Instruction for use
Preparing the spray:
The bottle should be shaken gently before use for about 5 seconds by tilting it upwards and downwards and the protective cap be removed afterwards. Prior to first use Dymista Nasal Spray must be primed by pressing down and releasing the pump 6 times. If Dymista Nasal Spray has not been used for more than 7 days it must be reprimed once by pressing down and releasing the pump.
Using the spray:
The bottle should be shaken gently before use for about 5 seconds by tilting it upwards and downwards and the protective cap be removed afterwards.
After blowing the nose the suspension is to be sprayed once into each nostril keeping the head tilted
downward (see figure). After use the spray tip is to be wiped and the protective cap to be replaced.
During post-marketing use, there have been reports of clinically significant drug interactions in patients
receiving fluticasone propionate and ritonavir, resulting in systemic corticosteroid effects including
Cushing’s syndrome and adrenal suppression. Therefore, concomitant use of fluticasone propionate and
ritonavir should be avoided, unless the potential benefit to the patient outweighs the risk of systemic
corticosteroid side-effects (see section 4.5).
Systemic effects of nasal corticosteroids may occur, particularly when prescribed at high doses for prolonged periods. These effects are much less likely to occur than with oral corticosteroids and may vary in individual patients and between different corticosteroid preparations. Potential systemic effects may include Cushing’s syndrome, Cushingoid features, adrenal suppression, growth retardation in children and adolescents, cataract, glaucoma and more rarely, a range of psychological or behavioural effects including psychomotor hyperactivity, sleep disorders, anxiety, depression or aggression (particularly in children).
Dymista Nasal Spray undergoes extensive first-pass metabolism, therefore the systemic exposure of
intranasal fluticasone propionate in patients with severe liver disease is likely to be increased. This may
result in a higher frequency of systemic adverse events.
Caution is advised when treating these patients.
Treatment with higher than recommended doses of nasal corticosteroids may result in clinically significant adrenal suppression. If there is evidence for higher than recommended doses being used, then additional systemic corticosteroid cover should be considered during periods of stress or elective surgery.
In general the dose of intranasal fluticasone formulations should be reduced to the lowest dose at which
effective control of the symptoms of rhinitis is maintained. Higher doses than the recommended one (see
section 4.2) have not been tested for Dymista. As with all intranasal corticosteroids, the total systemic burden of corticosteroids should be considered whenever other forms of corticosteroid treatment are prescribed concurrently.
Growth retardation has been reported in children receiving nasal corticosteroids at licensed doses. Since
growing up is also given in adolescents it is recommended that the growth of adolescents receiving
prolonged treatment with nasal corticosteroids is regularly monitored, too. If growth is slowed, therapy
should be reviewed with the aim of reducing the dose of nasal corticosteroid if possible, to the lowest dose at which effective control of symptoms is maintained.
Visual disturbance may be reported with systemic and topical corticosteroid use. If a patient presents with
symptoms such as blurred vision or other visual disturbances, the patient should be considered for referral to an ophthalmologist for evaluation of possible causes which may include cataract, glaucoma or rare diseases such as central serous chorioretinopathy (CSCR) which have been reported after use of systemic and topical corticosteroids.
Close monitoring is warranted in patients with a change in vision or with a history of increased ocular
pressure, glaucoma and/or cataracts.
If there is any reason to believe that adrenal function is impaired, care must be taken when transferring
patients from systemic steroid treatment to Dymista Nasal Spray.
In patients who have tuberculosis, any type of untreated infection, or have had a recent surgical operation or injury to the nose or mouth, the possible benefits of the treatment with Dymista Nasal Spray should be
weighed against possible risk.
Infections of the nasal airways should be treated with antibacterial or antimycotical therapy, but do not
constitute a specific contraindication to treatment with Dymista Nasal Spray.
Dymista contains benzalkonium chloride. Long term use may cause oedema of the nasal mucosa.
The preservative contained in Dymista (benzalkonium chloride) can cause swelling of the nasal mucosa,
especially with prolonged use. If there is reason to suspect such a reaction (persistent blocked nose), a
medicinal product that does not contain any pre- servative should be used in the nose if possible. If such
preservative-free medicinal products for intranasal use are not available, a different pharmaceutical form
should be considered.
Fluticasone propionate
Under normal circumstances, low plasma concentrations of fluticasone propionate are achieved after
intranasal dosing, due to extensive first pass metabolism and high systemic clearance mediated by
cytochrome P450 3A4 in the gut and liver. Hence, clinically significant drug interactions mediated by
fluticasone propionate are unlikely.
A drug interaction study in healthy subjects has shown that ritonavir (a highly potent cytochrome P450 3A4 inhibitor) can greatly increase fluticasone propionate plasma concentrations, resulting in markedly reduced serum cortisol concentrations. During postmarketing use, there have been reports of clinically significant drug interactions in patients receiving intranasal or inhaled fluticasone propionate and ritonavir, resulting in systemic corticosteroid effects. Co-treatment with other CYP 3A4 inhibitors, including cobicistat-containing products is also expected to increase the risk of systemic side-effects. The combination should be avoided unless the benefit outweighs the increased risk of systemic corticosteroid side-effects, in which case patients should be monitored for systemic corticosteroid side-effects.
Studies have shown that other inhibitors of cytochrome P450 3A4 produce negligible (erythromycin) and
minor (ketoconazole) increases in systemic exposure to fluticasone propionate without notable reductions in serum cortisol concentrations. Nevertheless, care is advised when co-administering potent cytochrome P4503A4 inhibitors (e.g. ketoconazole), as there is potential for increased systemic exposure to fluticasone propionate.
Azelastine hydrochloride
No specific interaction studies with azelastine hydrochloride nasal spray have been performed. Interaction
studies at high oral doses have been performed. However, they bear no relevance to azelastine nasal spray as given recommended nasal doses result in much lower systemic exposure. Nevertheless, care should be taken when administering azelastine hydrochloride in patients taking concurrent sedative or central nervous medications because sedative effect may be enhanced. Alcohol may also enhance this effect (see section 4.7).
Fertility
There are only limited data with regard to fertility (see section 5.3).
Pregnancy
There are no or limited amount of data from the use of azelastine hydrochloride and fluticasone propionate in pregnant women. Therefore, Dymista Nasal Spray should be used during pregnancy only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the foetus (see section 5.3).
Lactation
It is unknown whether nasally administered azelastine hydrochloride/metabolites or fluticasone
propionate/metabolites are excreted in human breast milk. Dymista Nasal Spray should be used during
lactation only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the newborns/infant.
Dymista Nasal Spray has minor influence on the ability to drive and use machines.
In isolated cases fatigue, weariness, exhaustion, dizziness or weakness that may also be caused by the disease itself, may occur when using Dymista Nasal Spray. In these cases, the ability to drive and use machines may be impaired. Alcohol may enhance this effect.
Commonly, dysgeusia, a substance-specific unpleasant taste, may be experienced after administration (often due to incorrect method of application, namely tilting the head too far backwards during administration).
Adverse reactions are listed below by system organ class and frequency. Frequencies are defined as:
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)
Very rare (<1/10,000)
Not known (cannot be estimated from the available data)
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* A very small number of spontaneous reports have been identified following prolonged treatment with
intranasal fluticasone propionate.
** Nasal septal perforation has been reported following the use of intranasal corticosteroids.
Systemic effects of some nasal corticosteroids may occur, particularly when administered at high doses for prolonged periods (see section 4.4).
Growth retardation has been reported in children receiving nasal corticosteroids. Growth retardation may be possible in adolescents, too (see section 4.4).
In rare cases osteoporosis was observed, if nasal glucocorticoids were administered long-term.
Reporting of suspected adverse reactions
Reporting suspected adverse reactions after authorisation of the medicinal product is important. It allows
continued monitoring of the benefit/risk balance of the medicinal product. Healthcare professionals are asked to report any suspected adverse reactions via:
Saudi Arabia:
The National Pharmacovigilance Centre (NPC):
Fax: +966-11-205-7662
SFDA Call Center: 19999
E-mail: npc.drug@sfda.gov.sa
Website: https://ade.sfda.gov.sa/
Other Countries:
Please contact the relevant competent authority.
With the nasal route of administration overdose reactions are not anticipated.
There are no data from patients available on the effects of acute or chronic overdosage with intranasal
fluticasone propionate.
Intranasal administration of 2 milligrams fluticasone propionate (10 times the recommended daily dose)
twice daily for seven days to healthy human volunteers has no effect on hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal
(HPA) axis function.
Administration of doses higher than those recommended over a long period of time may lead to temporary suppression of adrenal function.
In these patients, treatment with Dymista Nasal Spray should be continued at a dose sufficient to control
symptoms; the adrenal function will recover in a few days and can be verified by measuring plasma cortisol.
In the event of overdose after incidental oral uptake, disturbances of the central nervous system (including
drowsiness, confusion, coma, tachycardia and hypotension) caused by azelastine hydrochloride are to be
expected based on the results of animal experiments.
Treatment of these disorders must be symptomatic. Depending on the amount swallowed, gastric lavage is
recommended. There is no known antidote.
Pharmacotherapeutic group: Decongestants and other nasal preparations for topical use, corticosteroids/
fluticasone, combinations, ATC code: R01AD58.
Mechanism of action and pharmacodynamic effects
Dymista Nasal Spray contains azelastine hydrochloride and fluticasone propionate, which have different
modes of action and show synergistic effects in terms of improvement of allergic rhinitis and rhinoconjunctivitis symptoms.
Fluticasone propionate
Fluticasone propionate is a synthetic trifluorinated corticosteroid that possesses a very high affinity for the
glucocorticoid receptor and has a potent anti-inflammatory action, e.g. 3-5 fold more potent than
dexamethasone in cloned human glucocorticoid receptor binding and gene expression assays.
Azelastine hydrochloride
Azelastine, a phthalazinone derivative is classified as a potent long-acting anti-allergic compound with
selective H1-antagonist, mast cell stabilizing and anti-inflammatory properties. Data from in vivo
(preclinical) and in vitro studies show that azelastine inhibits the synthesis or release of the chemical
mediators known to be involved in early and late stage allergic reactions, e.g. leukotrienes, histamine,
platelet-activating factor (PAF) and serotonin.
A relief of nasal allergic symptoms is observed within 15 minutes after administration.
Dymista Nasal Spray
In 4 clinical studies in adults and adolescents with allergic rhinitis Dymista Nasal Spray one spray in each
nostril twice daily significantly improved nasal symptoms (comprising rhinorrhoea, nasal congestion,
sneezing and nasal itching) compared with placebo, azelastine hydrochloride alone and fluticasone
propionate alone. It significantly improved ocular symptoms (comprising itching, tearing/watering and
redness of the eyes) and the patients’ disease-related quality of life (Rhinoconjunctivitis Quality of Life
Questionnaire – RQLQ) in all 4 studies.
In comparison to a marketed fluticasone propionate nasal spray substantial symptom improvement (50%
reduction in nasal symptoms severity) was achieved significantly earlier (3 days and more) with Dymista
Nasal Spray. The superior effect of Dymista Nasal Spray to fluticasone propionate nasal spray was
maintained throughout one-year study in patients with chronic persistent allergic rhinitis and
nonallergic/vasomotor rhinitis.
In a ragweed pollen allergen exposure chamber study, first statistically significant relief of nasal symptoms was observed at 5 minutes after administration of Dymista Nasal Spray (compared to placebo). At 15 minutes after administration of Dymista 60% of patients reported a clinically relevant reduction in symptom scores of at least 30%.
Absorption
After intranasal administration of two sprays per nostril (548 mcg of azelastine hydrochloride and 200 mcg of fluticasone propionate) of Dymista Nasal Spray, the mean (± standard deviation) peak plasma exposure (Cmax) was 194.5 ± 74.4 pg/mL for azelastine and 10.3 ± 3.9 pg/mL for fluticasone propionate and the mean total exposure (AUC) was 4217 ± 2618 pg/mL*hr for azelastine and 97.7 ± 43.1 pg/mL*hr for fluticasone propionate. The median time to peak exposure (tmax) from a single dose was 0.5 hours for azelastine and 1.0 hours for fluticasone propionate.
Fluticasone propionate systemic exposure was ~50% increased comparing Dymista Nasal Spray with a
marketed fluticasone propionate nasal spray. Dymista Nasal Spray was equivalent to a marketed azelastine
nasal spray with respect to azelastine systemic exposure. There was no evidence of pharmacokinetic
interactions between azelastine hydrochloride and fluticasone propionate.
Distribution
Fluticasone propionate has a large volume of distribution at steady-state (approximately 318 litre). Plasma
protein binding is 91%.
The volume of distribution of azelastine is high indicating distribution predominantly into the peripheral
tissue. The level of protein binding is 80-90%. Additionally, both drugs have broad therapeutic windows.
Therefore, drug displacement reactions are unlikely.
Biotransformation
Fluticasone propionate is cleared rapidly from the systemic circulation, principally by hepatic metabolism to an inactive carboxylic acid metabolite, by the cytochrome P450 enzyme CYP3A4. Swallowed fluticasone propionate is also subject to extensive first pass metabolism. Azelastine is metabolized to Ndesmethylazelastine via various CYP isoenzymes, mainly CYP3A4, CYP2D6 and CYP2C19.
Elimination
The elimination rate of intravenous administered fluticasone propionate is linear over the 250—1000
microgram dose range and are characterised by a high plasma clearance (CL=1.1 l/min). Peak plasma
concentrations are reduced by approximately 98% within 3-4 hours and only low plasma
concentrations were associated with the 7.8 h terminal half-life. The renal clearance of fluticasone
propionate is negligible (<0.2%) and less than 5% as the carboxylic acid metabolite. The major route of elimination is the excretion of fluticasone propionate and its metabolites in the bile.
Plasma elimination half-lives after a single dose of azelastine are approximately 20-25 hours for azelastine and about 45 hours for the therapeutically active metabolite N-desmethylazelastine. Excretion occurs mainly via the faeces. The sustained excretion of small amounts of the dose in the faeces suggests that some enterohepatic circulation may take place.
Fluticasone propionate
Findings in general toxicology studies were similar to those observed with other glucocorticoids and are
associated with exaggerated pharmacological activity. These findings are not likely to be relevant for humans given recommended nasal doses which results in minimal systemic exposure. No genotoxic effects of fluticasone propionate have been observed in conventional genotoxicity tests. Further, there were no treatment-related increases in the incidence of tumours in two year inhalation studies in rats and mice.
In animal studies glucocorticoids have been shown to induce malformations including cleft palate and intrauterine growth retardation. Again this is not likely to be relevant for humans given recommended nasal doses which results in minimal systemic exposure (see section 5.2).
Azelastine hydrochloride
Azelastine hydrochloride displayed no sensitising potential in the guinea pig. Azelastine demonstrated no
genotoxic potential in a battery of in vitro and in vivo tests, nor any carcinogenic potential in rats or mice. In male and female rats, azelastine at oral doses greater than 3 mg/kg/day caused a dose-related decrease in the fertility index; no substance-related alterations were found in the reproductive organs of males or females during chronic toxicity studies, however, embryotoxic and teratogenic effects in rats, mice and rabbits occurred only at maternal toxic doses (for example, skeletal malformations were observed in rats and mice at doses of 68.6 mg/kg/day).
Dymista Nasal Spray
Repeated dose intranasal toxicity studies in rats for a period up to 90 days and in dogs for 14 days with
Dymista Nasal Spray revealed no new adverse effects in comparison to the individual components.
Disodium edetate
Glycerol
Microcrystalline cellulose
Carmellose sodium
Polysorbate 80
Benzalkonium chloride
Phenylethyl alcohol
Purified water
Summary of Product Characteristics (SPC) Pg. 8
Not applicable.
Store below 30°C
Do not refrigerate or freeze.
Type I amber glass bottle fitted with a spray pump, a nasal polypropylene applicator (actuator) and a dust
cap, containing 23 g (at least 120 actuations) suspension.
Pack sizes:
1 bottle with 23 g suspension in 25 ml bottles (at least 120 actuations)
No special requirements for disposal.
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