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نشرة الممارس الصحي نشرة معلومات المريض بالعربية نشرة معلومات المريض بالانجليزية صور الدواء بيانات الدواء
  SFDA PIL (Patient Information Leaflet (PIL) are under review by Saudi Food and Drug Authority)

INEGY contains the active substances ezetimibe and simvastatin.  INEGY is a medicine used to lower levels of total cholesterol, “bad” cholesterol (LDL cholesterol), and fatty substances called triglycerides in the blood. In addition, INEGY raises levels of “good” cholesterol (HDL cholesterol).

 

INEGY works to reduce your cholesterol in two ways. The active ingredient ezetimibe reduces the cholesterol absorbed in your digestive tract. The active ingredient simvastatin belonging to the class of “statins” inhibits the production of the cholesterol your body makes by itself.

 

Cholesterol is one of several fatty substances found in the bloodstream. Your total cholesterol is made up mainly of LDL and HDL cholesterol.

 

LDL cholesterol is often called “bad” cholesterol because it can build up in the walls of your arteries forming plaque. Eventually this plaque build-up can lead to a narrowing of the arteries. This narrowing can slow or block blood flow to vital organs such as the heart and brain. This blocking of blood flow can result in a heart attack or stroke.

 

HDL cholesterol is often called “good” cholesterol because it helps keep the bad cholesterol from building up in the arteries and protects against heart disease.

 

Triglycerides are another form of fat in your blood that may increase your risk for heart disease.

 

INEGY is used for patients who cannot control their cholesterol levels by diet alone. You should stay on a cholesterol-lowering diet while taking this medicine.

INEGY is used in addition to your cholesterol-lowering diet if you have:

 

·       a raised cholesterol level in your blood (primary hypercholesterolaemia [heterozygous familial and non-familial]) or elevated fat levels in your blood (mixed hyperlipidaemia):

·       that is not well controlled with a statin alone

·       for which you have used a statin and ezetimibe as separate tablets

 

·   a  hereditary  illness  (homozygous  familial  hypercholesterolaemia)  that  increases  the cholesterol level in your blood. You may also receive other treatments.

 

·   heart disease, INEGY reduces the risk of heart attack, stroke, surgery to increase heart blood flow, or hospitalization for chest pain.

 

INEGY does not help you lose weight.


1.  Do not take INEGY if:

·        you are allergic (hypersensitive) to ezetimibe, simvastatin, or any of the other ingredients of this medicine (listed in Section 6: Contents of the pack and other information)

·        you currently have liver problems

·        you are pregnant or breast-feeding

·        you  are  taking  medicine(s)  with  one  or  more  than  one  of  the  following  active ingredients:

·        itraconazole, ketoconazole, posaconazole, or voriconazole (used to treat fungal infections)

·        erythromycin, clarithromycin, or telithromycin (used to treat infections)

·        HIV protease inhibitors such as indinavir, nelfinavir, ritonavir, and saquinavir (HIV protease inhibitors are used to treat HIV infections)

·        boceprevir or telaprevir (used to treat hepatitis C virus infections)

·        nefazodone (used to treat depression)

·        cobicistat

·        gemfibrozil (used to lower cholesterol)

·        ciclosporin (often used in organ transplant patients)

·        danazol (a man-made hormone used to treat endometriosis, a condition in which the lining of the uterus grows outside the uterus).

·       you are taking or, in the last 7 days, have taken or been given a medicine called fusidic acid (used to treat bacterial infection).

Do not take more than 10/40 mg INEGY if you are taking lomitapide (used to treat a serious and rare genetic cholesterol condition).

 

Ask your doctor if you are not sure if your medicine is listed above.

 

Warnings and precautions

 

Tell your doctor:

·         about all your medical conditions including allergies.

 

·        if you drink large amounts of alcohol or have ever had liver disease. INEGY may not be right for you.

·        if you are due to have an operation. You may need to stop taking INEGY tablets for a short time.

·        if you are Asian, because a different dose may be applicable to you.

 

Your doctor should do a blood test before you start taking INEGY and if you have any symptoms of liver problems while you take INEGY. This is to check how well your liver is working.

 

Your doctor may also want you to have blood tests to check how well your liver is working after you start taking INEGY.

 

While you are on this medicine your doctor will monitor you closely if you have diabetes or are at risk of developing diabetes. You are likely to be at risk of developing diabetes if you have high levels of sugars and fats in your blood, are overweight and have high blood pressure.

 

Tell your doctor if you have severe lung disease.

 

The combined use of INEGY and fibrates (certain medicines for lowering cholesterol) should be avoided since the combined use of INEGY and fibrates has not been studied.

 

Contact your doctor immediately if you experience unexplained muscle  pain, tenderness, or weakness. This is because on rare occasions, muscle problems can be serious, including muscle breakdown resulting in kidney damage; and very rare deaths have occurred.

 

The risk of muscle breakdown is greater at higher doses of INEGY, particularly the 10/80 mg dose. The risk of muscle breakdown is also greater in certain patients.  Talk with your doctor if any of the following applies:

·        you have kidney problems

·        you have thyroid problems

·        you are 65 years or older

·        you are female

·        you have ever had muscle problems during treatment with cholesterol lowering medicines called “statins” (like simvastatin, atorvastatin, and rosuvastatin) or fibrates (like gemfibrozil and bezafibrate)

·        you or close family members have a hereditary muscle disorder

 

Also tell your doctor or pharmacist if you have a muscle weakness that is constant. Additional tests and medicines may be needed to diagnose and treat this.

 

Children and adolescents

 

·       INEGY is not recommended for children under age 10.

 

Other medicines and INEGY

 

Tell your doctor if you are taking, have recently taken or might take any other medicine(s) with any of the following active ingredients. Taking INEGY with any of the following medicines can increase the risk of muscle problems (some of these have already been listed in the above section “Do not take INEGY if").

 

·        ciclosporin (often used in organ transplant patients)

·        danazol (a man-made hormone used to treat endometriosis, a condition in which the lining of the uterus grows outside the uterus)

·        medicines  with  an  active  ingredient  like  itraconazole,  ketoconazole,  fluconazole, posaconazole, or voriconazole (used to treat fungal infections)

·        fibrates  with  active  ingredients  like  gemfibrozil  and  bezafibrate  (used  to  lower cholesterol)

·        erythromycin, clarithromycin, telithromycin, or fusidic acid (used to treat bacterial infections). Do not take fusidic acid while using this medicine. Also see section 4 of this leaflet.

·        HIV protease inhibitors such as indinavir, nelfinavir, ritonavir, and saquinavir (used to treat AIDS)

·       boceprevir or telaprevir (used to treat hepatitis C virus infections)

·       nefazodone (used to treat depression)

·       medicines with the active ingredient cobicistat

·       amiodarone (used to treat an irregular heartbeat)

·       verapamil, diltiazem, or amlodipine (used to treat high blood pressure, chest pain associated with heart disease, or other heart conditions)

·       lomitapide (used to treat a serious and rare genetic cholesterol condition)

·       large amounts (1 gram or more each day) of niacin or nicotinic acid (also used to lower cholesterol)

·        colchicine (used to treat gout).

 

As well as the medicines listed above, tell your doctor or pharmacist if you are taking or have recently taken any other medicines, including those obtained without prescription. In particular, tell your doctor if you are taking any of the following:

·       medicines  with  an  active  ingredient  to  prevent  blood  clots,  such  as  warfarin, fluindione, phenprocoumon or acenocoumarol (anticoagulants)

·       colestyramine (also used to lower cholesterol), because it affects the way INEGY works

·       fenofibrate (also used to lower cholesterol)

·       rifampicin (used to treat tuberculosis).

 

You should also tell any doctor who is prescribing a new medicine for you that you are taking INEGY.

 

INEGY with food and drink

 

Grapefruit juice contains one or more components that alter the metabolism of some medications, including INEGY. Consuming grapefruit juice should be avoided as it may increase your risk of muscle problems.

 

Pregnancy and breast-feeding

 

Do not take INEGY if you are pregnant, are trying to get pregnant or think you may be pregnant. If you get pregnant while taking INEGY, stop taking it immediately and tell your doctor. Do not take INEGY if you are breast-feeding, because it is not known if the medicine is passed into breast milk.

 

Ask your doctor or pharmacist for advice before taking any medicine.

 

Driving and using machines

 

INEGY is not expected to interfere with your ability to drive or to use machinery. However, it should be taken into account that some people get dizzy after taking INEGY.

 

INEGY contains lactose

INEGY tablets contain a sugar called lactose. If you have been told by your doctor that you have an intolerance to some sugars, contact your doctor before taking this medicinal product.

 


Your doctor will determine the appropriate tablet strength for you, depending on your current treatment and your personal risk status.

 

The tablets are not scored and should not be divided.

 

Always take this medicine exactly as your doctor or pharmacist has told you. Check with your doctor or pharmacist if you are not sure.

·        Before starting INEGY, you should be on a diet to lower your cholesterol.

·        You should keep on this cholesterol-lowering diet while taking INEGY. Adults: The dose is 1 tablet INEGY by mouth once a day.

 

Use in adolescents (10 to 17 years of age): The dose is 1 tablet INEGY by mouth once a day (a maximum dose of 10 mg/40 mg once daily must not be exceeded).

 

The INEGY 10 mg/80 mg dose is only recommended for adult patients with very high cholesterol levels and at high risk of heart disease problems who have not reached their cholesterol goal on lower doses.

 

Take INEGY in the evening. You can take it with or without food.

 

If your doctor has prescribed INEGY along with another medicine for lowering cholesterol containing the active ingredient colestyramine or any other bile acid sequestrant, you should take INEGY at least 2 hours before or 4 hours after taking the bile acid sequestrant.

 

If you take more INEGY than you should:

 

·        please contact your doctor or pharmacist

 

If you forget to take INEGY:

 

·        Do not take a double dose to make up for a forgotten tablet, just take your normal amount of INEGY at the usual time the next day

 

If you stop taking INEGY:

 

·        talk to your doctor or pharmacist because your cholesterol may rise again.

If you have any further questions on the use of this medicine, ask your doctor or pharmacist.


Like all medicines, INEGY can cause side effects, although not everybody gets them (see Section 2 What you need to know before you take INEGY).

 

The following common side effects were reported (may affect up to 1 in 10 people):

·       muscle aches

·       elevations in laboratory blood tests of liver (transaminases) and/or muscle (CK) function

 

The following uncommon side effects were reported (may affect up to 1 in 100 people):

·     elevations in blood tests of liver function; elevations in blood uric acid; elevations in the time it takes for blood to clot; protein in urine; weight decreased

·       dizziness; headache; tingling sensation

·       abdominal  pain;  indigestion;  flatulence;  nausea;  vomiting;  abdominal  bloating; diarrhoea; dry mouth; heartburn

·       rash; itching; hives

·       joint pain; muscle pain, tenderness, weakness or spasms; neck pain; pain in arms and legs; back pain

·       unusual tiredness or weakness; feeling tired; chest pain; swelling, especially in the hands and feet

·       sleep disorder; trouble sleeping

 

Additionally, the following side effects have been reported in people taking either INEGY or medicines containing the active ingredients ezetimibe or simvastatin:

·       low red blood cell count (anaemia); reduction in blood cell counts, which may cause bruising/bleeding (thrombocytopenia)

·       numbness or weakness of the arms and legs; poor memory, memory loss, confusion

·       breathing problems including persistent cough and/or shortness of breath or fever

·       constipation

·       inflammation of the pancreas often with severe abdominal pain

·       inflammation of the liver with the following symptoms: yellowing of the skin and eyes, itching, dark coloured urine or pale coloured stool, feeling tired or weak, loss of appetite; liver failure; gallstones or inflammation of the gallbladder (which may cause abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting)

·       hair loss; raised red rash, sometimes with target-shaped lesions (erythema multiforme)

·       a hypersensitivity reaction including some of the following: hypersensitivity (allergic reactions including swelling of the face, lips, tongue and/or throat which may cause difficulty in breathing or swallowing and requires treatment immediately, pain or inflammation of the joints, inflammation of blood vessels, unusual bruising, skin eruptions and swelling, hives, skin sensitivity to the sun, fever, flushing, shortness of breath and feeling unwell, lupus-like disease picture (including rash, joint disorders, and effects on white blood cells))

·       muscle pain, tenderness, weakness or cramps; muscle breakdown; tendon problems, sometimes complicated by rupture of the tendon

·       decreased appetite

·       hot flush; high blood pressure

·       pain

·       erectile dysfunction

·       depression

·       alterations in some laboratory blood tests for liver function

 

Additional possible side effects reported with some statins:

·      sleep disturbances, including nightmares

·      sexual difficulties

·      diabetes. This is more likely if you have high levels of sugars and fats in your blood, are overweight and have high blood pressure. Your doctor will monitor you while you are taking this medicine.

·      muscle pain, tenderness, or weakness that is constant that may not go away after stopping INEGY (frequency not known).

 

Contact your doctor immediately if you experience unexplained muscle  pain, tenderness, or weakness. This is because on rare occasions, muscle problems can be serious, including muscle breakdown resulting in kidney damage; and very rare deaths have occurred.

 

Reporting of side effects

If you get any side effects, talk to your doctor or pharmacist. This includes any possible side effects not listed in this leaflet. You can also report side effects directly via (The National Pharmacovigilance and Drug Safety Centre (NPC), SFDA). By reporting side effects , you can help provide more information on the safety of this medicine.


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

·     Do not use this medicine after the expiry date which is stated on the carton or container after [EXP].

·     Store below 30°C.

·     Store in the original package.

 

Do not throw away any medicines via wastewater or household waste. Ask your pharmacist how to throw away medicines you no longer use. These measures will help protect the environment.

 

 


1.  What INEGY contains

The active substances are ezetimibe and simvastatin. Each tablet contains 10 mg ezetimibe and 20 mg, 40 mg, or 80 mg simvastatin.

 

The other ingredients are: butylated hydroxyanisole, citric acid monohydrate, croscarmellose sodium, hypromellose, lactose monohydrate, magnesium stearate, microcrystalline cellulose, propyl gallate.

 


INEGY Tablets are white to off-white, capsule-shaped tablets with code “312”, “313”, or “315” on one side. The tablets are not scored and should not be divided. Pack sizes: 7, 10, 14, 28, 30, 50, 56, 84, 90, 98, multi-pack containing 98 (2 cartons of 49), 100, or 300 tablets Not all pack sizes may be marketed.

Marketing Authorization Holder Merck Sharp & Dohme Limited.,

Hertford Road, UK-Hoddesdon,

Hertfordshire EN11 9BU,

United Kingdom

 

Manufacturer

MSD International GmbH,

21 Tuas South Avenue 6,

637766 Singapore (Singapore branch)

 

Packed by

Pharma Pharmaceutical Industries,

Second Industrial Area,

P.O. Box 11351 Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

 

 


The leaflet was last revised on February 2016 Version No. (02)
  نشرة الدواء تحت مراجعة الهيئة العامة للغذاء والدواء (اقرأ هذه النشرة بعناية قبل البدء في استخدام هذا المنتج لأنه يحتوي على معلومات مهمة لك)

يحتوي إينيجي على المادتَيْن الفعّالتَيْن إيزيتيمايب و سيمفاستاتين.

إينيجي يعمل على خفّض مستوى الكولسترول الكُلّي، الكولسترول السيء (البروتين ُالشَّحْمِيُّ المنخفض الكَثافة) والمواد الدهنيّة المعروفة بالدهون الثلاثية في الدم. إضافة إلى ذلك، إينيجي يعمل على رفع من مستويات الكولسترول الجيّد (البروتين ُالشَّحْمِيُّ المُرْتَفِعُ الكَثافَة).

يعمل إينيجي على خفّض مستوى الكولسترول في الدم بطريقتَيْن. تعمل المادة الفعالة إيزيتيمايب ، على خفض امتصاص الكولسترول في جهازك الهضمي. أما المادة الفاعلة سيمفاستاتين ، التي تنتمي إلى فئة الستاتين، تعمل على خفّض إنتاج الكولسترول الذي يُنتجه جسمك.

يُعتبَر الكولسترول واحدًا من المواد الدهنيّة العديدة في مجرى الدم. الكولسترول الكُلّي مُؤلّف بشكل أساسي من الكولسترول السيء (البروتين  الشَّحْمِيُّ  المنخفض الكَثافة) والكولسترول الجيّد (البروتين  الشَّحْمِيُّ المُرْتَفِعُ الكَثافَة).

غالبًا ما يُعرَف الكولسترول (البروتين ُالشَّحْمِيُّ المنخفض الكَثافة) بالكولسترول السّيء لأنّه يتكدّس في جدران شرايينك فيشكّل لويحة قد تُضيّق مجاري الشرايين، ممّا قد يُبطئ تدفّق الدم أو يُعرقله فيمنع وصوله إلى الأعضاء الحيويّة، مثل القلب والدماغ. قد يُسبّب انسداد تدفّق الدم إلى سكتة أو نوبة قلبيّة.

أما الكولسترول (البروتين ُالشَّحْمِيُّ المُرْتَفِعُ الكَثافَة) فغالبًا ما يُعرَف بالكولسترول الجيّد لأنّه يُساهم في منع الكولسترول السيء من التكدّس في الشرايين ويحمي من أمراض القلب.

الدهون الثلاثيّة شكل آخر من المواد الدهنيّة في دمك التي قد تزيد من خطر تعرّضك لأمراض قلبيّة.

يُستخدَم إينيجي  لدى المرضى الذين لا يُمكنهم السيطرة على مستويات الكولسترول من خلال مجرّد حمية غذائيّة مخّفضة للكولسترول. عليك الابقاء على الحمية المُخفِّضة للكولسترول عندما تتناول هذا الدواء.

 

يُستخدَم ازيترول بالإضافة إلى الحمية المُخفِّضة للكولسترول في الحالات التالية:

-      مستوى الكولسترول مرتفع في دمك (فرط كولسترول الدم الأولي) (متغاير الزيجوت العائلي وغير العائلي) أو مستوى دهون مرتفع في الدم (فرط شحوم الدم المختلط):

·       لا يُمكن السيطرة على مستوى الكولسترول بواسطة مادة الستاتين بمفردها

·       تمّ استخدام مادة الستاتين و إيزيتيمايب على شكل أقراص مختلفة

-      مرض وراثي (فرط كولسترول الدم العائلي المتماثل الزيجوت) يزيد من مستوى الكولسترول في الدم. قد تتلقّى علاجات أخرى.

-      إذا كان لديك مرض في القلب، فإن إينيجي يعمل على التقليل خطر الإصابة بالنوبات القلبية والسكتة الدماغية، و الحاجة إلى عملية جراحية لزيادة تدفق الدم من القلب، أو دخول المستشفى لعلاج آلام الصدر.

 

لا يُساعدك إينيجي على فقدان الوزن.

لا تأخذ إينيجي في الحالات التالية:

-      إذا كان لديك حساسيّة (حساسيّة مفرطة) من إيزيتيمايب أو سيمفاستاتين أو من أيّ من المكوّنات الأخرى لهذا الدواء (راجع البند 6: معلومات إضافيّة ومحتوى العبوة).

-      لديك مشاكل حاليّة في الكبد

-      إذا كنتِ امرأةً حاملًا أو مُرضعًا

-      إذا كنت تتناول دواءً/أدويةً تحتوى على مادة فاعلة أو أكثر من المواد الفاعلة التالية:

·       ايتراكونازول، أو كيتوكونازول، أو بوزاكونازول، أو فوريكونازول (أدوية للاتهابات الفطريّة)

·       ايريثروميسين، أو كلاريثروميسين، أو تيليثروميسين (لمعالجة الالتهابات)

·       مثبّطات الانزيم البروتيني لفيروس نقص المناعة البشريّة، على غرار إندينافير، ونالفينافير، وريتونافير، وساكينافير (تُستخدَم مثبّطات الانزيم البروتيني لفيروس نقص المناعة البشريّة في حال التهابات فيروس نقص المناعة البشريّة)

·       بوسيبريفير أو تيلابريفير (أدوية ضد التهاب الكبد الفيروسي ج)

·       نيفازودون (دواء مضاد للإكتئاب)

·        كوبيسيستات

·       جامفيبروزيل (دواء لخفض مستوى الكولسترول في الدم)

·       سيكلوسبورين (دواء غالبًا ما يُستعمل لدى المرضى الذين يخضعون لعمليّات زرع أعضاء)

·       دانازول (هرمون من صنع الإنسان لمعالجة الانتباذ البطاني الرحمي، حالة مرضية تؤدي إلى نمو بطانة الرحم خارج الرحم)

-      إذا كنت تتناول أو تناولت في الأيام السبعة الأخيرة دواءً يُعرَف بحمض الفوسيديك (لمعالجة التهاب بكتيري)

 

لا تتناول أكثر من 10/40 ملغم من إينيجي إذا كنت تتناول لوميتابيد (لمعالجة حالة كولسترول خطرة ووراثيّة نادرة). اسأل الطبيب في حال لم تكن متأكّدًا من أنّ الدواء الذي تتناوله مدرج أعلاه.

 

اسأل الطبيب في حال لم تكن متأكّدًا من أنّ الدواء الذي تتناوله مدرج أعلاه.

 

المخاطر و الاحتياطات

اخبر الطبيب:

-       على حالاتك الطبيّة الكاملة، بما في ذلك الحساسيّة.

-      اخبر طبيبك في حال كنت تشرب كميّاتٍ كبيرةً من الكحول أو في حال أُصبت في الماضي بمرض في الكبد. قد لا يكون إينيجي الدواء الملائم لك.

-      اخبر طبيبك في حال كنت ستخضع لعمليّة جراحيّة قريبًا. قد تحتاج إلى التوقّف عن تناول أقراص إينيجي لفترة زمنيّة قصيرة.

-      اخبر الطبيب في حال كنت آسيويًا، إذ إن الجرعة قد تختلف.

 

على طبيبك إخضاعك لفحص دم قبل المباشرة بتناول إينيجي وفي حال كان لديك أي عوارض لإصابتك بأمراض في الكبد وأنت تتناول إينيجي، وذلك للتأكّد من مدى كفاءة عمل الكبد.

 

قد يطلب منك طبيبك أيضًا إجراء فحوصات دم للتأكّد من عمل كبدك بعد البدء بتناول إينيجي.

 

عندما تتناول إينيجي، سيُراقب طبيبك وضعك الصحي عن كثب، إذا كنت مُصابًا بداء السُّكري أو إذا كنت عرضةً للإصابة بداء السُّكري. ومن المحتمَل أن تكون عرضةً للإصابة بداء السُّكري في حال كان مستوى الدهون والسكريّات مرتفعًا في دمك وكنت تعاني وزنًا زائدًا وضغط دم مرتفعًا.

اخبر طبيبك في حال كنت تعاني مرضًا خطيرًا في الرئتَيْن.

يجب تفادي تناول إينيجي والفيبرات (أدوية لتخفيض مستوى الكولسترول في الدم) معًا بما أنّ هذا المزيج لم يُدرس بعد.

 

اتصل بطبيبك على الفور في حال إصابتك بألم في العضلات غير مبرر، أو حساسيّة عند اللمس، أو وهن، لأنّه، في حالات نادرة، قد تكون آلام العضلات خطيرة، بما في ذلك تدهور العضلات الذي يُسبّب الأضرار للكلى؛ و لقد طرأت حالات وفاة في حالات نادرة جدًّا.

يكون خطر التعرّض لتدهور العضلات أكبر عند تناول جرعات كبيرة من إينيجي ، بشكل خاص جرعة 10/80 ملغم. كما يكون خطر التعرّض لتدهور العضلات أكبر بالنسبة إلى بعض المرضى. اتّصل بطبيبك في الحالات التالية:

-       إذا كنت تواجه مشاكل في الكلى

-       إذا كنت تواجه مشاكل في الغدّة الدرقيّة

-       إذا كنت تبلغ من العمر 65 وما فوق

-       إذا كنتِ أنثى

-       إذا تعرّضت في الماضي إلى مشاكل في العضلات نتيجة العلاج بأدوية تعمل على خفض مستوى الكولسترول تُعرف بـ"ستاتين" (على غرار سيمفاستاتين، وأتورفاستاتين، وروزوفاستاتين) أو فيبرات (على غرار جامفيبروزيل وبيزافيبرات)

-       إذا كنتَ أنت أو أحد أعضاء أسرتك المقرّبون تُعانون اضطرابًا وراثيًّا في العضلات.

اخبر الطبيب أو الصيدلي أيضًا في حال شعورك بوهن مستمر في العضلات. قد تحتاج إلى الخضوع  لفحوصات إضافيّة للتشخيص وتناول أدوية أخرى للعلاج.

الأطفال والمراهقين

لا يُوصى بإعطاء إينيجي للأطفال دون سن العاشرة

 

الأدوية الأخرى و إينيجي

اخبر طبيبك في حال كنت تتناول أو تناولت مؤخّرًا أو قد تتناول أيًّا من الأدوية التي تحتوي على المواد الفاعلة التالية. يُمكن لتناول إينيجي مع أي من هذه الأدوية التالية أن يزيد من خطر التعرّض إلى مشاكل في العضلات (بعض هذه الأدوية مدرج في البند أعلاه " لا تأخذ إينيجي في الحالات التالية")

-      سيكلوسبورين (غالبًا ما يُستخدم لدى المرضى الذين يخضعون لزراعة الأعضاء)

-      دانازول (هرمون من صنع الإنسان لمعالجة الانتباذ البطاني الرحمي، حالة مرضية تؤدي إلى نمو بطانة الرحم خارج الرحم)

-      أدوية تحتوي على مادة فاعلة على غرار ايتراكونازول، أو كيتوكونازول، أو فلوكونازول أو بوزاكونازول، أو فوريكونازول (أدوية لعلاج الالتهابات الفطريّة)

-      فيبرات، على غرار جامفيبروزيل أو بيزافيبرات (أدوية لخفض مستوى الكولسترول في الدم)

-      ايريثروميسين، أو كلاريثروميسين، أو تيليثروميسين أو حمض الفوسيديك (مضادات حيويّة ضدّ الالتهابات البكتيريّة) . لا تستخدم حمض الفوسيديك وأنت تتناول إينيجي. راجع أيضًا البند 4 من هذا النشرة.

-      مثبّطات الانزيم البروتيني لفيروس نقص المناعة البشريّة، على غرار إندينافير، ونالفينافير، وريتونافير، وساكينافير (أدوية لفيروس الأيدز)

-      بوسيبريفير أو تيلابريفير (أدوية ضد التهاب الكبد الفيروسي ج)

-      نيفازودون (دواء مضاد للإكتئاب)

-      الأدوية التي تحتوي على المكوّن الفعّال، الكوبيسيستات

-      أميودارون (دواء لدقات القلب غير المنتظمة)

-      فيراباميل، أو ديلتيازيم، أو أملوديبين (أدوية لضغط الدم المرتفع، وألم في الصدر مرتبط بمرض قلبي أو أي حالات أخرى للقلب)

-      لوميتابيد (لمعالجة حالة كولسترول خطيرة ووراثيّة نادرة)

-      كميّات كبيرة (غرام واحد أو أكثر يوميًّا) للنياسين أو حمض النيكوتين (أدوية لتخفيض مستوى الكولسترول)

-      كولشيسين (دواء لمعالجة النقرس)

 

إضافة إلى الأدوية المدرجة أعلاه، اخبر الطبيب أو الصيدلي في حال كنت تتناول أو تناولت مؤخّرًا أي دواء آخر، بما في ذلك تلك الأدوية بدون وصفة طبيّة. وبشكل خاص، اخبر طبيبك في حال كنت تتناول أيًّا من الأدوية التالية:

-       الأدوية التي تحتوي على مادة فاعلة للوقاية من جلطات الدم، مثل وارفارين، أو فلوينديون، أو فينبروكومون، أو أسينوكومارول (مضادات للتخثّر)

-       كوليستيرامين (دواء لتخفيض الكولسترول)، لأنّه يؤثّر على طريقة عمل إينيجي

-       فينوفيبرات (دواء لتخفيض الكولسترول)

-       ريفامبيسين (دواء لمعالجة داء السل)

كما يجب إطلاع أي طبيب يصف لك دواءً جديدًا بأنّك تتناول إينيجي.

تناول إينيجي مع المأكولات والمشروبات

يحتوي عصير الجريب فروت على مكوّن أو بعض المكوّنات التي تبدّل أيض بعض الأدوية، بما في ذلك دواء إينيجي. يجب تفادي شرب عصير الجريب فروت بما أنّه قد يزيد من خطر تعرّضك لمشاكل في العضلات.

 

الحمل والرضاعة

لا تتناولي إينيجي إذا كنتِ حاملًا، أو تُحاولين الحمل، أو تظنّين أنّك قد تكونين حاملًا. في حال حدوث الحمل وأنت تتناولين إينيجي ، توقّفي عن تناوله على الفور واخبري الطبيب. لا تتناولي إينيجي إذا كنتِ مُرضعًا لأنّه من غير المعروف إذا كان هذا الدواء بنتقل إلى حليب الأم.

اطلبي مشورة الطبيب أو الصيدلي قبل تناول أي دواء.

 

القيادة و استخدام الآلات

لا يُتوقَّع أن يؤثّر إينيجي على قدرتك على القيادة أو على استخدام الآلات لكن، يجب الأخذ بعين الاعتبار أن بعض الأشخاص قد يُصابون بالدُّوَار بعد تناول إينيجي.

 

يحتوي إينيجي على اللاكتوز

يحتوي إينيجي على مادة سُكريّة تُعرَف باللاكتوز. في حال قال لك الطبيب بأنّك لا تحتمل بعض المواد السُّكريّة، عليك الاتصال بطبيبك قبل تناول هذا الدواء.

 

 

https://localhost:44358/Dashboard

سيحدّد لك طبيبك الجرعة الملائمة لك، حسب حالتك وحسب علاجك الحالي وحسب نسبة تعرّضك للمخاطر.

الأقراص غير محززة ويجب عدم تقسيمها.

 

دائمًا تناول إينيجي كما طلب منك الطبيب أو الصيدلي. عليك مراجعة الطبيب أو الصيدلي في حال لم تكن متأكّدًا.

-      قبل البدء بتناول إينيجي ، يجب أن تتّبع حميّة غذائيّة لخفض مستوى الكولسترول لديك.

-      عليك الابقاء على الحمية الغذائيّة المُخفّضة للكولسترول وأنت تتناول إينيجي.

البالغين: الجرعة الموصى بها هي قرص إينيجي واحد عبر الفم، مرةً واحدةً يوميًّا.

 

الاستخدام لدى المراهقين

الاستخدام لدى المراهقين (10 إلى 17 سنة): قرص واحد من إينيجي عبر الفم يوميًّا (يجب عدم تجاوز الجرعة القصوى من 10 ملغم/40 ملغم مرة يوميًّا)

لا يوصى بجرعة 10/80 ملغم إلّا إلى المرضى البالغين مع مستويات مرتفعة جدًّا من الكولسترول في الدم وعرضة للإصابة بأمراض قلب، الذين لم يتمكّنوا من بلوغ مستوى الكولسترول المطلوب عند تناول جرعات أقل.

تناول إينيجي ليلاً مع أو من دون الطعام.

في حال وصف لك طبيبك إينيجي مع دواء آخر لخفض مستوى الكولسترول يحتوي على المادة الفاعلة كوليستيرامين أو وعلى أي منحيات العصارة الصفراوية ، عليك تناول إينيجي قبل ساعتَيْن أو بعد 4 ساعات على الأقل بعد تناول منحيات العصارة الصفراوية.

في حال تناولت جرعة زائدة من إينيجي

عليك الاتصال بالطبيب أو بالصيدلي.

 

في حال نسيت تناول جرعة إينيجي

لا تتناول جرعةً زائدةً، بل اكتفِ بتناول جرعتك العاديّة من إينيجي في الوقت المُعتاد في اليوم التالي.

 

اذا توقفت عن تناول جرعة إينيجي

تحدث إلى طبيبك أو الصيدلي لأنه من الممكن ارتفاع نسبة الكوليسترول لديك مجددًا.

اتّصل بالطبيب أو بالصيدلي في حال كان لديك أي أسئلة إضافيّة حول استخدام هذا الدواء.

 

على غرار الأدوية كلّها، قد يُسبّب إينيجي أعراضًا جانبيّةً، وإن كان لا يُصاب الجميع بها (اقرأ البند 2 "ما يجب معرفته قبل تناول إينيجي").

 

تمّ الابلاغ عن الأعراض الجانبيّة الشائعة التالية (قد يؤثر على ما يصل إلى فرد واحد من اصل 10 أشخاص):

-       آلام في العضلات

-       مستويات مرتفعة في فحوصات الدم المخبريّة لوظيفة الكبد (ناقلات الأمين) أو وظيفة (كرياتنين كاينيز) في العضلات

 

تمّ الابلاغ عن الأعراض الجانبيّة غير الشائعة التالية (قد يؤثر على ما يصل إلى فرد واحد من أصل 100 أشخاص):

-       ارتفاع في نتائج فحوصات الدم لوظيفة الكبد؛ حمض اليوريك في الدم؛ زيادة في مدة الوقت الذي يحتاج الدم إليه للتخثّر؛ وجود البروتين في البول؛ انخفاض الوزن

-       الدُّوَار، الصداع، إحساس بالوخز

-       ألم في البطن، عسر هضم، انتفاخ غازي في البطن، غثيان، تقيّؤ، اسهال، جفاف الفم، حرقة في المعدة

-       طفح جلدي، حكاك، شرى

-       ألم في المفاصل، ألم في العضلات، حساسيّة عند اللمس، ضعف أو تشنّجات، ألم في العنق، ألم في الذراعَيْن والرجلَيْن، ألم في الظهر.

-       تعب أو وهن غير اعتيادي؛ شعور بالتعب؛ ألم في الصدر؛ تورّم اليدَيْن والقدمَيْن بشكل خاص.

-       اضطرابات النوم، صعوبة في النوم.

إضافة  إلى ذلك، تمّ الابلاغ عن الأعراض الجانبيّة التالية لدى الأشخاص الذين يتناولون إينيجي أو أدوية تحتوي على المادة الفاعلة إيزيتيمايب  أو سيمفاستاتين:

-       إنخفاض مستوى كريات الدم الحمراء (فقر دم)؛ انخفاض مستوى كريّات الدم، ممّا قد يُسبب كدمات/نزيفًا (قلّة الصُفيحات)

-       النمنمة أو الوهن في الذراعَيْن والرجلَيْن؛ ذاكرة سيّئة؛ فقدان الذاكرة؛ الإرتباك

-       مشاكل في التنفّس، بما في ذلك السعال المستمر و/أو ضيق في التنفّس أو الحمى

-       الإمساك؛

-       التهاب البنكرياس المترافق غالبآ مع ألم حاد في البطن؛

-       التهاب الكبد مع العوارض التاليّة: اصفرار البشرة والعينَيْن، الحكاك، البول الداكن اللون أو البراز الباهت اللون؛ الشعور بالتعب أو بالوهن؛ فقدان الشهيّة؛ قصور الكبد؛ حصاة صفراويّة أو التهاب المرارة (ممّا قد يُسبّب الغثيان، والتقيّؤ، وألمًا في البطن)

-       فقدان الشعر؛ طفح جلدي أحمر؛ مع حُمامى عديدة الأشكال أحيانًا

-       ردة فعل عالية الحساسيّة، بما في ذلك ما يلي: حساسيّة مفرطة (ردات فعل حساسيّة، بما في ذلك تورّم الوجه، والشفتَيْن، واللسان و/أو الحنجرة، ما قد يُسبّب صعوبةً في التنفّس أو البلع ويحتاج إلى علاج على الفور؛ ألم أو التهاب المفاصل؛ التهاب الأوعية الدمويّة، الكدمات غير الاعتياديّة، الطفرات الجلديّة والانتفاخ؛ الشرى؛ حساسيّة الجلد على أشعّة الشمس؛ الحمى؛ الهبّات الساخنة؛ ضيق في التنفّس وشعور بالانزعاج، أعراض مرض مشابه للذئبة (بما في ذلك الطفح الجلدي، واضطرابات المفاصل، والأثر على كريات الدم البيضاء)

-       ألم في العضلات، وحساسيّة عند اللمس، ووهن أو تشنّجات؛ وتدهور العضلات، مشاكل في الوتر، تزداد تعقيدًا بسبب انقطاع الوتر

-       انخفاض الشهيّة

-       الهبّات الساخنة؛ ارتفاع في ضغط الدم

-       الألم

-       اضطرابات في الانتصاب

-       اكتئاب

-       تغيّرات في نتائج بعض فحوصات الدم المخبريّة بالنسبة إلى وظيفة الكبد

 

تمّ الابلاغ عن أعراض جانبيّة محتملة إضافيّة بالنسبة إلى بعض مواد الستاتين:

-       اضطرابات في النوم، بما في ذلك الكوابيس

-       صعوبات جنسيّة

-       داء السُّكري: يُعتبَر ذلك أكثر شيوعًا في حال كنت تعاني مستويات مرتفعة من السُّكريّات والدهون في دمك، وتعاني الوزن الزائد وضغط الدم المرتفع. سيُراقبك طبيبك عن كثب في حال كنت تتناول هذا الدواء.

-       ألم في العضلات، أو عند اللمس، أو وهن مستمر قد لا يزول بعد التوقّف عن تناول إينيجي (الوتيرة غير معروفة).

 

اتصل بطبيبك على الفور في حال إصابتك بألم في العضلات غير مبرر، أو تدهور العضلات، أو وهن، لأنّه، في حالات نادرة، قد تكون آلام العضلات خطيرة، بما في ذلك تدهور العضلات الذي يُسبّب الأضرار للكلى؛ و لقد طرأت حالات وفاة في حالات نادرة جدًّا.

 

الابلاغ عن الأعراض الجانبيّة المحتملة:

اتّصل بالطبيب أو الصيدلي في حال تعرّضك لأي أعراض جانبيّة محتملة بالإضافة إلى تلك غير المذكورة في هذه النشرة. يمكنك الإبلاغ عن الأعراض الجانبيّة مباشرة من خلال " المركز الوطني للتيقظ والسلامة الدوائية"، التابع لهيئة الغذاء و الدواء السعودية. يُمكنك تأمين المزيد من المعلومات حول سلامة هذا الدواء من خلال الابلاغ عن الأعراض الجانبيّة.

 

 

 

يُحفظ بعيدًا عن متناول أيدي ومرأى الأطفال.

لا تستخدم هذا الدواء بعد انتهاء تاريخ الصلاحيّة الوارد على العبوة أو على الحاوية بعد كلمة "EXP". يُشير تاريخ إنتهاء الصلاحيّة إلى آخر يوم من الشهر المذكور.

يُحفظ في درجة حرارة أقل من ٣۰ درجة مئوية.

يُحفظ في العبوة الأصلية .

 لا ينبغي التخلص من الأدوية عن طريق مياه الصرف الصحي أو النفايات المنزلية. اسأل الصيدلي عن كيفية التخلص من الأدوية التي لم تعد مطلوبة. سوف تساعد هذه التدابير لحماية البيئة.

ماذا يحتوي إينيجي

المواد الفعالة هي إيزيتيمايب و سيمفاستاتين. يحتوي كل قرص على 10 ملغم من إيزيتيمايب  و20 ملغم، أو 40 ملغم، أو 80 ملغم من سيمفاستاتين.

أمّا المكوّنات الأخرى فهي: بوتيل هيدروكسي الأنيسول، هيدرات أحادي الحمض الستريك، صوديوم كروسكارميلوز، هيبروميلوز، أحادي هيدرات اللاكتوز، سترات ماغنسيوم، سيلولوز ميكرو كريستالين، بروبيل غالات.

 

أقراص أينيجي لونها أبيض إلى أبيض مائل إلى الأصفر على شكل كابسولات مع رمز "312"، أو "313" أو "315" على جهة منها. الأقراص غير محززة ولا يُمكن تقسيمها. الأحجام المتوفّرة: 7، أو 10، أو 14، أو 28، أو 30، أو 50، أو 56، أو 84، أو 90، أو 98، أو 100، أو 300 قرص. قد لا يتمّ تسويق أحجام العبوات كلّها.

ميرك شارب ودوم المحدودة،

طريق هيرتفورد، هوديسدون، هيرتفوردشاير

 أي أن ١١ ٩ بي يو، المملكة المتحدة

 

الشركة الصانعة:

إم إس دي إنترناشيونال جي إم بي أتش،

٢١ تواس ساوث أفونيو 6،

سنغافورة ٦٣٧٧٦٦، سنغافورة (فرع سنغافورة)

 

التغليف بواسطة:

فارما للصناعات الدوائية

المنطقة الصناعية الثانية،

ص ب: ١١٣٥١ الرياض، المملكة العربية السعودية

 

تمّت آخر مراجعة لهذه النشرة في فبراير 2016الاصدار رقم (2)
 Read this leaflet carefully before you start using this product as it contains important information for you

INEGY® 10 mg/20 mg, 10 mg/40 mg, or 10 mg/80 mg Tablets

Excipient(s) with known effect: Each 10/40 mg tablet contains 262.9 mg of lactose monohydrate. For the full list of excipients, see section 6.1.

Tablet. White to off-white capsule-shaped tablets with code “312”, “313”, or “315” on one side.

 

Prevention of Cardiovascular Events

Inegy is indicated to reduce the risk of cardiovascular events (see section 5.1) in patients with coronary heart disease (CHD) and a history of acute coronary syndrome (ACS), either previously treated with a statin or not.

 

Hypercholesterolaemia

INEGY is indicated as adjunctive therapy to diet for use in patients with primary (heterozygous familial and non-familial) hypercholesterolaemia or mixed hyperlipidaemia where use of a combination product is appropriate:

 

·       patients not appropriately controlled with a statin alone

·       patients already treated with a statin and ezetimibe  Homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolaemia (HoFH)

INEGY is indicated as adjunctive therapy to diet for use in patients with HoFH. Patients may also receive adjunctive treatments (e.g., low-density lipoprotein [LDL] apheresis).

 


Posology

 

Hypercholesterolaemia

 

The patient should be on an appropriate lipid-lowering diet and should continue on this diet during treatment with INEGY.

 

Route of administration is oral. The dosage range of INEGY is 10/10 mg/day through 10/80 mg/day in the evening. All dosages may not be available  in  all  member  states.  The  typical  dose  is 10/20 mg/day or 10/40 mg/day given as a single dose in the evening. The 10/80-mg dose is only recommended in patients with severe hypercholesterolaemia and at high risk for cardiovascular complications who have not achieved their treatment goals on lower doses and when the benefits are expected to outweigh the potential risks (see section 4.4 and 5.1). The patient’s low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) level, coronary heart disease risk status, and response to current cholesterol-lowering therapy should be considered when starting therapy or adjusting the dose.

 

The dose of INEGY should be individualised based on the known efficacy of the various dose strengths of INEGY (see section 5.1, Table 1) and the response to the current cholesterol-lowering therapy. Adjustments of dosage, if required, should be made at intervals of not less than 4 weeks. INEGY can be administered with or without food. The tablet should not be split.

 

Patients with Coronary Heart Disease and ACS Event History

In the cardiovascular events risk reduction study (IMPROVE-IT), the starting dose was 10/40 mg once a day in the evening. The 10/80-mg dose is only recommended when the benefits are expected to outweigh the potential risks.

 

Homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolaemia

The recommended starting dosage for patients with homozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia is INEGY 10/40 mg/day in the evening. The 10/80-mg dose is only recommended when the benefits are expected to outweigh the potential risks (see above; sections 4.3 and 4.4). INEGY may be used as an adjunct to other lipid-lowering treatments (e.g., LDL apheresis) in these patients or if such treatments are unavailable.

 

In patients taking lomitapide concomitantly with INEGY, the dose of INEGY must not exceed 10/40 mg/day (see sections 4.3, 4.4 and 4.5).

 

Coadministration with other medicines

Dosing of INEGY should occur either ³2 hours before or ³4 hours after administration of a bile acid sequestrant.

 

In patients taking amiodarone, amlodipine, verapamil, or diltiazem concomitantly with INEGY, the dose of INEGY should not exceed 10/20 mg/day (see sections 4.4 and 4.5).

 

In patients taking lipid-lowering doses (³ 1 g/day) of niacin concomitantly with INEGY, the dose of INEGY should not exceed 10/20 mg/day (see sections 4.4 and 4.5).

 

Older people

No dosage adjustment is required for elderly patients (see section 5.2).

 

Paediatric population

Initiation of treatment must be performed under review of a specialist.

 

Adolescents ≥ 10 years (pubertal status: boys Tanner Stage II and above and girls who are at least one year post-menarche): The clinical experience in paediatric and adolescent patients (aged 10-17 years old) is limited. The recommended usual starting dose is 10/10 mg once a day in the evening. The recommended dosing range is 10/10 to a maximum of 10/40 mg/day (see sections 4.4 and 5.2).

 

Children < 10 years: INEGY is not recommended for use in children below age 10 due to insufficient data on safety and efficacy (see section 5.2). The experience in pre-pubertal children is limited.

Patients with Hepatic Impairment

No dosage adjustment is required in patients with mild hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh score 5 to 6). Treatment with INEGY is not recommended in patients with moderate (Child-Pugh score 7 to 9) or severe (Child-Pugh score > 9) liver dysfunction. (See sections 4.4 and 5.2.)

 

Patients with Renal Impairment

No modification of dosage should be necessary in patients with-mild renal impairment (estimated glomerular filtration rate ≥60 ml/min/1.73 m2). In patients with chronic kidney disease and estimated glomerular filtration rate <60 ml/min/1.73 m2, the recommended dose  of  INEGY  is 10/20 mg once a day in  the evening (see sections 4.4, 5.1, and 5.2). Higher doses should be implemented cautiously.

 

Method of Administration

 

Inegy is for oral administration. Inegy can be administered as a single dose in the evening.


Hypersensitivity to the active substance(s) or to any of the excipients listed in section 6.1. Pregnancy and lactation (see section 4.6). Active liver disease or unexplained persistent elevations in serum transaminases. Concomitant administration of potent CYP3A4 inhibitors (agents that increase AUC approximately 5 fold or greater) (e.g., itraconazole, ketoconazole, posaconazole, voriconazole, erythromycin, clarithromycin, telithromycin, HIV protease inhibitors (e.g. nelfinavir), boceprevir, telaprevir, nefazodone, and drugs containing cobicistat) (see sections 4.4 and 4.5). Concomitant administration of gemfibrozil, ciclosporin, or danazol (see sections 4.4 and 4.5) In patients with HoFH, concomitant administration of lomitapide with doses > 10/40 mg INEGY (see sections 4.2, 4.4 and 4.5)

Myopathy/Rhabdomyolysis

In post-marketing experience with ezetimibe, cases of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis have been reported. Most patients who developed rhabdomyolysis were taking a statin concomitantly with ezetimibe. However, rhabdomyolysis has been reported very rarely with ezetimibe monotherapy and very rarely with the addition of ezetimibe to other agents known to be associated with increased risk of rhabdomyolysis.

 

INEGY contains simvastatin. Simvastatin, like other inhibitors of HMG-CoA  reductase, occasionally causes myopathy manifested as muscle pain, tenderness or weakness with creatine kinase (CK) above 10 X the upper limit of normal (ULN). Myopathy sometimes takes the form of rhabdomyolysis with or without acute renal failure secondary to myoglobinuria, and very rare fatalities have occurred. The risk of myopathy is increased by high levels of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitory activity in plasma.

 

As with other HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors, the risk of myopathy/rhabdomyolysis is dose related for simvastatin. In a clinical trial database in which 41,413 patients were treated with simvastatin, 24,747 (approximately 60 %) of whom were enrolled in studies with a median follow-up of at least 4 years, the incidence of myopathy was approximately 0.03 %, 0.08 % and 0.61 % at 20, 40 and 80 mg/day, respectively. In these trials, patients were carefully monitored and some interacting medicinal products were excluded.

 

In a clinical trial in which patients with a history of myocardial infarction were treated with simvastatin 80 mg/day (mean follow-up 6.7 years), the incidence of myopathy was approximately 1.0% compared with 0.02% for patients on 20 mg/day. Approximately half of these myopathy cases occurred during the first year of treatment. The incidence of myopathy during each subsequent year of treatment was approximately 0.1%. (See sections 4.8 and 5.1.)

 

The risk of myopathy is greater in patients on INEGY 10/80 mg compared with other statin-based therapies with similar LDL-C-lowering efficacy. Therefore, the 10/80-mg dose of INEGY should only be used in patients with severe hypercholesterolemia and at high risk for cardiovascular complications who have not achieved their treatment goals on lower doses and when the benefits are expected to outweigh the potential risks. In patients taking INEGY 10/80 mg for whom an interacting agent is needed, a lower dose of INEGY or an alternative statin-based regimen with less potential for drug-drug interactions should be used (see below Measures to reduce the risk of myopathy caused by medicinal product interactions and sections 4.2, 4.3, and 4.5).

 

In the IMProved Reduction of Outcomes: Vytorin Efficacy International Trial (IMPROVE-IT), 18,144 patients with coronary heart disease and ACS event history were randomised to receive INEGY 10/40 mg daily (n=9067) or simvastatin 40 mg daily (n=9077). During a median follow-up of 6.0 years, the incidence of myopathy was 0.2% for INEGY and 0.1% for simvastatin, where myopathy was defined as unexplained muscle weakness or pain with a serum CK ≥10 times ULN or two consecutive observations of CK ≥5 and <10 times ULN. The incidence of rhabdomyolysis was 0.1% for INEGY and 0.2% for simvastatin, where rhabdomyolysis was defined as unexplained muscle weakness or pain with a serum CK ≥10 times ULN with evidence of renal injury, ≥5 times ULN and <10 times ULN on two consecutive occasions with evidence of renal injury or CK

≥10,000 IU/L without evidence of renal injury. (See section 4.8.)

 

In a clinical trial in which over 9000 patients with chronic kidney disease were randomised to receive INEGY 10/20 mg daily (n=4650) or placebo (n=4620) (median follow-up 4.9 years), the incidence of myopathy was 0.2 % for INEGY and 0.1 % for placebo (see section 4.8.).

 

In a clinical trial in which patients at high risk of cardiovascular disease were treated with simvastatin 40 mg/day (median follow-up 3.9 years), the incidence of myopathy was approximately

0.05 % for non-Chinese patients (n=7367) compared with 0.24 % for Chinese patients (n=5468). While the only Asian population assessed in this clinical trial was Chinese, caution should be used when prescribing INEGY to Asian patients and the lowest dose necessary should be employed.

 

Reduced function of transport proteins

Reduced function of hepatic OATP transport proteins can increase the systemic exposure of simvastatin acid and increase the risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis. Reduced function can occur as the result of inhibition by interacting medicines (eg ciclosporin) or in patients who are carriers of the SLCO1B1 c.521T>C genotype.

 

Patients carrying the SLCO1B1 gene allele (c.521T>C) coding for a less active OATP1B1 protein have an increased systemic exposure of simvastatin acid and increased risk of myopathy. The risk of high dose (80 mg) simvastatin related myopathy is about 1 % in general, without genetic testing. Based on the results of the SEARCH trial, homozygote C allele carriers (also called CC) treated

 

with 80 mg have a 15% risk of myopathy within one year, while the risk in heterozygote C allele carriers (CT) is 1.5%. The corresponding risk is 0.3% in patients having the most common genotype (TT) (See section 5.2). Where available, genotyping for the presence of the C allele should be considered as part of the benefit-risk assessment prior to prescribing 80 mg simvastatin for individual patients and high doses avoided in those found to carry the CC genotype. However, absence of this gene upon genotyping does not exclude that myopathy can still occur.

 

Creatine Kinase measurement

Creatine Kinase (CK) should not be measured following strenuous exercise or in the presence of any plausible alternative cause of CK increase as this makes value interpretation difficult. If CK levels  are significantly elevated  at  baseline (>5 X ULN),  levels  should  be re-measured  within 5 to 7 days later to confirm the results.

 

Before the treatment

All patients starting therapy with INEGY, or whose dose of INEGY is being increased, should be advised of the risk of myopathy and told to report promptly any unexplained muscle pain, tenderness or weakness.

 

Caution should be exercised in patients with pre-disposing factors for rhabdomyolysis. In order to establish a reference baseline value, a CK level should be measured before starting treatment in the following situations:

 

·       Elderly (age ³65 years)

·       Female gender

·       Renal impairment

·       Uncontrolled hypothyroidism

·       Personal or familial history of hereditary muscular disorders

·       Previous history of muscular toxicity with a statin or fibrate

·       Alcohol abuse.

 

In such situations, the risk of treatment should be considered in relation to possible benefit, and clinical monitoring is recommended. If a patient has previously experienced a muscle disorder on a fibrate or a statin, treatment with any statin-containing product (such as INEGY) should only be initiated with caution. If CK levels are significantly elevated at baseline (>5 X ULN), treatment should not be started.

 

Whilst on treatment

If muscle pain, weakness or cramps occur whilst a patient is receiving treatment with INEGY, their CK levels should be measured. If these levels are found, in the absence of strenuous exercise, to be significantly elevated (>5 X ULN), treatment should be stopped. If muscular symptoms are severe and cause daily discomfort, even if CK levels are <5 X ULN, treatment discontinuation may be considered. If myopathy is suspected for any other reason, treatment should be discontinued.

 

There have been very rare reports of an immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy (IMNM) during or after treatment with some statins. IMNM is clinically characterised by persistent proximal muscle weakness and elevated serum creatine kinase, which persist despite discontinuation of statin treatment (see section 4.8).

 

If symptoms resolve and CK levels return to normal, then re-introduction of INEGY or introduction of another statin-containing product may be considered at the lowest dose and with close monitoring.

 

A higher rate of myopathy has been observed in patients titrated to the 80 mg dose of simvastatin (see section 5.1). Periodic CK measurements are recommended as they may be useful to identify subclinical cases of myopathy. However, there is no assurance that such monitoring will prevent myopathy.

 

Therapy with INEGY should be temporarily stopped a few days prior to elective major surgery and when any major medical or surgical condition supervenes.

 

Measures to reduce the risk of myopathy caused by medicinal product interactions (see also section 4.5)

The risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis is significantly increased by concomitant use of INEGY with potent inhibitors of CYP3A4 (such as itraconazole, ketoconazole, posaconazole, voriconazole, erythromycin, clarithromycin, telithromycin, HIV protease inhibitors (e.g. nelfinavir), boceprevir, telaprevir, nefazodone medicinal products containing cobicistat), as well as ciclosporin, danazol, and gemfibrozil. Use of these medicinal products is contraindicated (see section 4.3).

 

Due to the simvastatin component of INEGY, the risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis is also increased by concomitant use of other fibrates, lipid-lowering doses (³1 g/day) of niacin or by concomitant use of amiodarone, amlodipine, verapamil or diltiazem with certain doses of INEGY (see sections 4.2 and 4.5). The risk of myopathy including rhabdomyolysis may be increased by concomitant administration of fusidic acid with INEGY. For patients with HoFH, this risk may be increased by concomitant use of lomitapide with INEGY (see section 4.5).

 

Consequently, regarding CYP3A4 inhibitors, the use of INEGY concomitantly with itraconazole, ketoconazole, posaconazole, voriconazole, HIV protease inhibitors (e.g. nelfinavir), boceprevir, telaprevir, erythromycin, clarithromycin, telithromycin, nefazodone, and medicinal products containing cobicistat is contraindicated (see sections 4.3 and 4.5). If treatment with potent CYP3A4 inhibitors (agents that increase AUC approximately 5 fold or greater) is unavoidable, therapy with INEGY must be suspended (and use of an alternative statin considered) during the course of treatment. Moreover, caution should be exercised when combining INEGY with certain other less potent CYP3A4 inhibitors: fluconazole, verapamil, diltiazem (see sections 4.2 and 4.5). Concomitant intake of grapefruit juice and INEGY should be avoided.

 

Simvastatin must not be co-administered with fusidic acid. There have been reports of rhabdomyolysis (including some fatalities) in patients receiving this combination (see section 4.5). In patients where the use of systemic fusidic acid is considered essential, statin treatment should be discontinued throughout the duration of fusidic acid treatment. The patient should be advised to seek medical advice immediately if they experience any symptoms of muscle weakness, pain or tenderness.

 

Statin therapy may be re-introduced seven days after the last dose of fusidic acid. In exceptional circumstances, where prolonged systemic fusidic acid is needed, e.g. for the treatment of severe infections, the need for co-administration of INEGY and fusidic acid should only be considered on a case-by-case basis under close medical supervision.

 

The combined use  of  INEGY  at  doses  higher  than  10/20 mg daily with  lipid-lowering doses (³ 1 g/day) of niacin should be avoided unless the clinical benefit is likely to outweigh the increased risk of myopathy (see sections 4.2 and 4.5).

 

Rare cases of myopathy/rhabdomyolysis have been associated with concomitant administration of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors and lipid-modifying doses (³ 1 g/day) of niacin (nicotinic acid), either of which can cause myopathy when given alone.

 

In a clinical trial (median follow-up 3.9 years) involving patients at high risk of cardiovascular disease and with well-controlled LDL-C levels on simvastatin 40 mg/day with or without ezetimibe 10 mg, there was no incremental benefit on cardiovascular outcomes with the addition of lipid- modifying doses (≥1 g/day) of niacin (nicotinic acid). Therefore, physicians contemplating combined therapy with simvastatin and lipid-modifying doses (³ 1 g/day) of niacin (nicotinic acid) or products containing niacin should carefully weigh the potential benefits and risks and should carefully monitor patients for any signs and symptoms of muscle pain, tenderness, or weakness, particularly during the initial months of therapy and when the dose of either medicinal product is increased.

 

In addition, in this trial, the incidence of myopathy was approximately 0.24 % for Chinese patients on simvastatin 40 mg or ezetimibe/simvastatin 10/40 mg compared with 1.24 % for Chinese patients on simvastatin 40 mg or ezetimibe/simvastatin 10/40 mg coadministered with modified- release nicotinic acid/laropiprant 2000 mg/40 mg. While the only Asian population assessed in this clinical trial was Chinese, because the incidence of myopathy is higher in Chinese than in non- Chinese patients, coadministration of INEGY with lipid-modifying doses (³1 g/day) of niacin (nicotinic acid) is not recommended in Asian patients.

 

Acipimox is structurally related to niacin. Although acipimox was not studied, the risk for muscle related toxic effects may be similar to niacin.

 

The combined use of INEGY at doses higher than 10/20 mg daily with amiodarone, amlodipine, verapamil, or diltiazem should be avoided. In patients with HoFH, the combined use of INEGY at doses higher than 10/40 mg daily with lomitapide must be avoided. (See sections 4.2, 4.3 and 4.5.)

 

Patients taking other medicines labelled as having a moderate inhibitory effect on CYP3A4 at therapeutic doses concomitantly with INEGY, particularly higher INEGY doses, may have an increased risk of myopathy. When co-administering INEGY with a moderate inhibitor of CYP3A4 (agents that increase AUC approximately 2-5 fold), a dose adjustment may be necessary. For certain moderate CYP3A4 inhibitors e.g. diltiazem, a maximum dose of 10/20mg INEGY is recommended (see section 4.2).

 

The safety and efficacy of INEGY administered with fibrates have not been studied. There is an increased risk of myopathy when simvastatin is used concomitantly with fibrates (especially gemfibrozil). Therefore, concomitant use of INEGY with gemfibrozil is contraindicated (see section 4.3) and concomitant use with other fibrates is not recommended (see section 4.5).

 

Liver Enzymes

In controlled coadministration trials in patients receiving ezetimibe with simvastatin, consecutive transaminase elevations (³3 X ULN) have been observed (see section 4.8).

 

In IMPROVE-IT, 18,144 patients with coronary heart disease and ACS event history were randomised to receive INEGY 10/40 mg daily (n=9067) or simvastatin 40 mg daily (n=9077). During a median follow-up of 6.0 years, the incidence of consecutive elevations of transaminases (≥3 X ULN) was 2.5% for INEGY and 2.3% for simvastatin (see section 4.8.).

 

In a controlled clinical study in which over 9000 patients with chronic kidney disease were randomised to receive INEGY 10/20 mg daily (n=4650), or placebo (n=4620) (median follow-up period of 4.9 years), the incidence of consecutive elevations of transaminases (>3 X ULN) was

0.7 % for INEGY and 0.6 % for placebo (see section 4.8).

It is recommended that liver function tests be performed before treatment with INEGY begins and thereafter when clinically indicated. Patients titrated to the 10/80-mg dose should receive an additional test prior to titration, 3 months after titration to the 10/80-mg dose, and periodically thereafter (e.g., semiannually) for the first year of treatment. Special attention should be paid to

 

patients who develop elevated serum transaminase levels, and in these patients, measurements should be repeated promptly and then performed more frequently. If the transaminase levels show evidence of progression, particularly if they rise to 3 X ULN and are persistent, the drug should be discontinued. Note that ALT may emanate from muscle, therefore ALT rising with CK may indicate myopathy (see above Myopathy/Rhabdomyolysis).

 

There have been rare postmarketing reports of fatal and non-fatal hepatic failure in patients taking statins, including simvastatin. If serious liver injury with clinical symptoms and/or hyperbilirubinaemia or jaundice occurs during treatment with INEGY promptly interrupt therapy. If an alternate etiology is not found, do not restart INEGY.

INEGY should be used with caution in patients who consume substantial quantities of alcohol. Hepatic impairment

Due to the unknown effects of the increased exposure to ezetimibe in patients with moderate or severe hepatic impairment, INEGY is not recommended (see section 5.2).

 

Diabetes mellitus

Some evidence suggests that statins as a class raise blood glucose and in some patients, at high risk of future diabetes, may produce a level of hyperglycaemia where formal diabetes care is appropriate. This risk, however, is outweighed by the reduction in vascular risk with statins and therefore should not be a reason for stopping statin treatment. Patients at risk (fasting glucose 5.6 to 6.9 mmol/L, BMI > 30 kg/m2, raised triglycerides, hypertension) should be monitored both clinically and biochemically according to national guidelines.

 

Paediatric population

Efficacy and safety of ezetimibe co-administered with simvastatin in patients 10 to 17 years of age with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia have been evaluated in a controlled clinical trial in adolescent boys (Tanner stage II or above) and in girls who were at least one year post-menarche.

 

In this limited controlled study, there was generally no detectable effect on growth or sexual maturation in the adolescent boys or girls, or any effect on menstrual cycle length in girls. However, the effects of ezetimibe for a treatment period > 33 weeks on growth and sexual maturation have not been studied (see sections 4.2 and 4.8)

 

The safety and efficacy of ezetimibe co-administered with doses simvastatin above 40mg daily have not been studied in paediatric patients 10 to 17 years of age.

 

Ezetimibe has not been studied in patients younger than 10 years of age or in pre-menarchal girls (see sections 4.2 and 4.8.).

 

The long-term efficacy of therapy with ezetimibe in patients below 17 years of age to reduce morbidity and mortality in adulthood has not been studied.

 

Fibrates

The safety and efficacy of ezetimibe administered with fibrates have not been established (see above and sections 4.3 and 4.5).

 

Anticoagulants

If INEGY is added to warfarin, another coumarin anticoagulant, or fluindione, the International Normalised Ratio (INR) should be appropriately monitored (see section 4.5).

 

Interstitial lung disease

Cases of interstitial lung disease have been reported with some statins, including simvastatin, especially with long term therapy (see section 4.8). Presenting features can include dyspnoea, non productive cough and deterioration in general health (fatigue, weight loss and fever). If it is suspected a patient has developed interstitial lung disease, INEGY therapy should be discontinued.

 

Excipient

Patients with rare hereditary problems of galactose intolerance, the Lapp lactase deficiency or glucose-galactose malabsorption should not take this medicine.

 


Pharmacodynamic interactions

 

Interactions with lipid-lowering medicinal products that can cause myopathy when given alone

The risk of myopathy, including rhabdomyolysis, is increased during concomitant administration of simvastatin with fibrates. Additionally, there is a pharmacokinetic interaction of simvastatin with gemfibrozil resulting in increased simvastatin plasma levels (see below Pharmacokinetic interactions and sections 4.3 and 4.4). Rare cases of myopathy/rhabdomyolysis have been associated with simvastatin co-administered with lipid-modifying doses (³ 1 g/day) of niacin (see section 4.4).

 

Fibrates may increase cholesterol excretion into the bile, leading to cholelithiasis. In a preclinical study in dogs, ezetimibe increased cholesterol in the gallbladder bile (see section 5.3). Although the relevance of this preclinical finding to humans is unknown, coadministration of INEGY with fibrates is not recommended (see section 4.4).

 

Pharmacokinetic interactions

 

Prescribing recommendations for interacting agents are summarized in the table below (further details are provided in the text; see also sections 4.2, 4.3, and 4.4).

 

 

Drug           Interactions             Associated             with                    Increased Risk of Myopathy/Rhabdomyolysis

Interacting agents

Prescribing recommendations

Potent CYP3A4 inhibitors, e.g. Itraconazole

Ketoconazole Posaconazole Voriconazole Erythromycin Clarithromycin Telithromycin

HIV  protease  inhibitors  (e.g. nelfinavir)

Boceprevir Telaprevir Nefazodone Cobicistat

Ciclosporin Danazol Gemfibrozil

Contraindicated with INEGY

Other Fibrates Fusidic acid

Not recommended with INEGY

Niacin          (nicotinic           acid) (³ 1 g/day)

For         Asian              patients,              not recommended with INEGY

Amiodarone Amlodipine Verapamil Diltiazem

Niacin (³1 g/day)

Do  not  exceed  10/20 mg  INEGY daily

Lomitapide

For  patients  with  HoFH,  do  not exceed 10/40 mg INEGY daily

Grapefruit juice

Avoid grapefruit juice when taking INEGY

 

Effects of other medicinal products on INEGY INEGY

Niacin: In a study of 15 healthy adults, concomitant INEGY (10/20 mg daily for 7 days) caused a small increase in the mean AUCs of niacin (22%) and nicotinuric acid (19%) administered as NIASPAN extended-release tablets (1000 mg for 2 days and 2000 mg for 5 days following a low-fat breakfast). In the same study, concomitant NIASPAN slightly increased the mean AUCs of ezetimibe  (9%),  total  ezetimibe  (26%),  simvastatin  (20%)  and  simvastatin  acid  (35%).  (See

sections 4.2 and 4.4).

 

Drug interaction studies with higher doses of simvastatin have not been investigated.

 

Ezetimibe

 

Antacids: Concomitant antacid administration decreased the rate of absorption of ezetimibe but had no effect on the bioavailability of ezetimibe. This decreased rate of absorption is not considered clinically significant.

 

Cholestyramine: Concomitant cholestyramine administration decreased the mean area under the curve (AUC) of total ezetimibe (ezetimibe + ezetimibe glucuronide) approximately 55%. The incremental LDL-C reduction due to adding INEGY to cholestyramine may be lessened by this interaction (see section 4.2).

 

Ciclosporin:  In  a  study  of  eight  post-renal  transplant  patients  with  creatinine  clearance  of

>50 ml/min on a stable dose of ciclosporin, a single 10-mg dose of ezetimibe resulted in a 3.4-fold (range 2.3- to 7.9-fold) increase in the mean AUC for total ezetimibe compared to a healthy control population, receiving ezetimibe alone, from another study (n=17). In a different study, a renal transplant patient with severe renal impairment who was receiving ciclosporin and multiple other medications demonstrated a 12-fold greater exposure to total ezetimibe compared to concurrent controls receiving ezetimibe alone. In a two-period crossover study in twelve healthy subjects, daily administration of 20 mg ezetimibe for 8 days with a single 100-mg dose of ciclosporin on Day 7 resulted in a mean 15% increase in ciclosporin AUC (range 10% decrease to 51% increase) compared to a single 100-mg dose of ciclosporin alone. A controlled study on the effect of coadministered ezetimibe on ciclosporin exposure in renal transplant patients has not been conducted. Concomitant administration of INEGY with ciclosporin is contraindicated (see section 4.3).

 

Fibrates: Concomitant fenofibrate  or gemfibrozil administration increased total ezetimibe concentrations approximately  1.5- and 1.7-fold, respectively. Although these increases are not considered clinically significant, coadministration of INEGY with gemfibrozil is contraindicated and with other fibrates is not recommended (see sections 4.3 and 4.4).

 

Simvastatin

 

Simvastatin is a substrate of cytochrome P450 3A4. Potent inhibitors of cytochrome P450 3A4 increase the risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis by increasing the concentration of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitory activity in plasma during simvastatin therapy. Such inhibitors include itraconazole, ketoconazole, posaconazole, voriconazole, erythromycin, clarithromycin, telithromycin, HIV protease inhibitors (e.g. nelfinavir), boceprevir, telaprevir, nefazodone, and medicinal products containing cobicistat. Concomitant administration of itraconazole resulted in a more than 10-fold increase in exposure to simvastatin acid (the active beta-hydroxyacid metabolite). Telithromycin caused an 11-fold increase in exposure to simvastatin acid.

 

Combination with itraconazole, ketoconazole, posaconazole, voriconazole, HIV protease inhibitors (e.g. nelfinavir), boceprevir, telaprevir, erythromycin, clarithromycin, telithromycin, nefazodone,and medicinal products containing cobicistat is contraindicated, as well as gemfibrozil, ciclosporin, and danazol (see section 4.3). If treatment with potent CYP3A4 inhibitors (agents that increase AUC approximately 5 fold or greater) is unavoidable, therapy with INEGY must be suspended (and use of an alternative statin considered) during the course of treatment. Caution should be exercised when combining INEGY with certain other less potent CYP3A4 inhibitors: fluconazole, verapamil, or diltiazem (see sections 4.2 and 4.4).

 

Fluconazole: Rare cases of rhabdomyolysis associated with concomitant administration of simvastatin and fluconazole have been reported (see section 4.4).

 

Ciclosporin: The risk of myopathy/rhabdomyolysis is increased by concomitant administration of ciclosporin with INEGY; therefore, use with ciclosporin is contraindicated (see sections 4.3 and 4.4). Although the mechanism is not fully understood, ciclosporin has been shown to increase the AUC of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors. The increase in AUC for simvastatin acid is presumably due, in part, to inhibition of CYP3A4 and/or OATP1B1.

 

Danazol: The risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis is increased by concomitant administration of danazol with INEGY; therefore, use with danazol is contraindicated (see sections 4.3 and 4.4).

 

Gemfibrozil: Gemfibrozil increases the AUC of simvastatin acid by 1.9-fold, possibly due to inhibition of the glucuronidation pathway and/or OATP1B1 (see sections 4.3 and 4.4). Concomitant administration with gemfibrozil is contraindicated.

 

Fusidic acid: The risk of myopathy including rhabdomyolysis may be increased by the concomitant administration of systemic fusidic acid with statins. Co-administration of this combination may cause increased plasma concentrations of both agents. The mechanism of this interaction (whether it is pharmacodynamics or pharmacokinetic, or both) is yet unknown. There have been reports of rhabdomyolysis (including some fatalities) in patients receiving this combination. If treatment with fusidic acid is necessary, INEGY treatment should be discontinued throughout the duration of the fusidic acid treatment (see section 4.4.).

 

Amiodarone: The risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis is increased by concomitant administration of amiodarone with simvastatin (see section 4.4). In a clinical trial, myopathy was reported in 6% of patients receiving simvastatin 80 mg and amiodarone. Therefore, the dose of INEGY should not exceed 10/20 mg daily in patients receiving concomitant medication with amiodarone.

 

Calcium Channel Blockers

·       Verapamil: The risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis is increased by concomitant administration of verapamil with simvastatin 40 mg or 80 mg (see section 4.4). In a pharmacokinetic study, concomitant administration of simvastatin with verapamil resulted in 2.3-fold increase in exposure of simvastatin acid, presumably due, in part, to inhibition of CYP3A4. Therefore, the dose of INEGY should not exceed 10/20 mg daily in patients receiving concomitant medication with verapamil.

 

·       Diltiazem: The risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis is increased by concomitant administration of diltiazem with simvastatin 80 mg (see section 4.4). In a pharmacokinetic study, concomitant administration of diltiazem with simvastatin caused a 2.7-fold increase in exposure of simvastatin acid, presumably due to inhibition of CYP3A4. Therefore, the dose of INEGY should not exceed 10/20 mg daily in patients receiving concomitant medication with diltiazem.

 

·       Amlodipine: Patients on amlodipine treated concomitantly with simvastatin have an increased risk of myopathy. In a pharmacokinetic study, concomitant administration of amlodipine caused a 1.6-fold increase in exposure of simvastatin acid. Therefore, the dose of INEGY should not exceed 10/20 mg daily in patients receiving concomitant medication with amlodipine.

 

Lomitapide: The risk of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis may be increased by concomitant administration of lomitapide with simvastatin (see sections 4.3 and 4.4). Therefore, in patients with HoFH, the dose of INEGY must not exceed 10/40 mg daily in patients receiving concomitant medication with lomitapide.

 

Moderate Inhibitors of CYP3A4: Patients taking other medicines labelled as having a moderate inhibitory effect on CYP3A4 concomitantly with INEGY, particularly higher INEGY doses, may have an increased risk of myopathy (see section 4.4).

 

Inhibitors of the Transport Protein OATP1B1: Simvastatin acid is a substrate of the transport protein OATP1B1. Concomitant administration of medicinal products that are inhibitors of the

 

transport protein OATP1B1 may lead to increased plasma concentrations of simvastatin acid and an increased risk of myopathy (see sections 4.3 and 4.4).

 

Grapefruit juice: Grapefruit juice inhibits cytochrome P450 3A4. Concomitant intake of large quantities (over 1 litre daily) of grapefruit juice and simvastatin resulted in a 7-fold increase in exposure to simvastatin acid. Intake of 240 ml of grapefruit juice in the morning and administration of simvastatin in the evening also resulted in a 1.9-fold increase. Intake of grapefruit juice during treatment with INEGY should therefore be avoided.

 

Colchicine: There have been reports of myopathy and rhabdomyolysis with the concomitant administration of colchicine and simvastatin, in patients with renal impairment. Close clinical monitoring of such patients taking this combination is advised.

 

Rifampicin: Because rifampicin is a potent CYP3A4 inducer, patients undertaking long-term rifampicin therapy (e.g. treatment of tuberculosis) may experience loss of efficacy of simvastatin. In a pharmacokinetic study in normal volunteers, the area under the plasma concentration curve (AUC) for simvastatin acid was decreased by 93% with concomitant administration of rifampicin.

 

Niacin: Cases of myopathy/rhabdomyolysis have been observed with simvastatin coadministered with lipid-modifying doses (³1 g/day) of niacin (see section 4.4).

 

Effects of INEGY on the pharmacokinetics of other medicinal products Ezetimibe

In preclinical studies, it has been shown that ezetimibe does not induce cytochrome P450 drug metabolising enzymes. No clinically significant pharmacokinetic interactions have been observed between ezetimibe and drugs known to be metabolised by cytochromes P450 1A2, 2D6, 2C8, 2C9, and 3A4, or N-acetyltransferase.

 

Anticoagulants: Concomitant administration of ezetimibe (10 mg once daily) had no significant effect on bioavailability of warfarin and prothrombin time in a study of twelve healthy adult males. However, there have been post-marketing reports of increased International Normalised Ratio (INR) in patients who had ezetimibe added to warfarin or fluindione. If INEGY is added to warfarin, another coumarin anticoagulant, or fluindione, INR should be appropriately monitored (see section 4.4).

 

Simvastatin: Simvastatin does not have an inhibitory effect on cytochrome P450 3A4. Therefore, simvastatin is not expected to affect plasma concentrations of substances metabolised via cytochrome P450 3A4.

 

Oral anticoagulants: In two clinical studies, one in normal volunteers and the other in hypercholesterolaemic patients, simvastatin 20-40 mg/day modestly potentiated the effect of coumarin anticoagulants: the prothrombin time, reported as International Normalized Ratio (INR), increased from a baseline of 1.7 to 1.8 and from 2.6 to 3.4 in the volunteer and patient studies, respectively. Very rare cases of elevated INR have been reported. In patients taking coumarin anticoagulants, prothrombin time should be determined before starting INEGY and frequently enough during early therapy to ensure that no significant alteration of prothrombin time occurs. Once a stable prothrombin time has been documented, prothrombin times can be monitored at the intervals usually recommended for patients on coumarin anticoagulants. If the dose of INEGY is changed or discontinued, the same procedure should be repeated. Simvastatin therapy has not been associated with bleeding or with changes in prothrombin time in patients not taking anticoagulants.

 

Paediatric population

Interaction studies have only been performed in adults.


Pregnancy

Atherosclerosis is a chronic process, and ordinarily discontinuation of lipid-lowering drugs during pregnancy should have little impact on the long-term risk associated with primary hypercholesterolaemia.

 

INEGY

INEGY is contraindicated during pregnancy. No clinical data are available on the use of INEGY during pregnancy. Animal studies on combination therapy have demonstrated reproduction toxicity. (See section 5.3.)

 

Simvastatin

The safety of simvastatin in pregnant women has not been established. No controlled clinical trials with simvastatin have been conducted in pregnant women. Rare reports of congenital anomalies following intrauterine exposure to HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors have been received. However, in an analysis of approximately 200 prospectively followed pregnancies exposed during the first trimester to simvastatin or another closely related HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor, the incidence of congenital anomalies was comparable to that seen in the general population. This number of pregnancies was statistically sufficient to exclude a  2.5-fold or greater increase  in congenital anomalies over the background incidence.

 

Although there is no evidence that the incidence of congenital anomalies in offspring of patients taking simvastatin or another closely related HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor differs from that observed in the general population, maternal treatment with simvastatin may reduce the foetal levels of mevalonate which is a precursor of cholesterol biosynthesis. For this reason, INEGY must not be used in women who are pregnant, trying to become pregnant or suspect they are pregnant. Treatment with INEGY must be suspended for the duration of pregnancy or until it has been determined that the woman is not pregnant. (See section 4.3.)

 

Ezetimibe

No clinical data are available on the use of ezetimibe during pregnancy.

 

Breast-feeding

INEGY is contraindicated during lactation. Studies on rats have shown that ezetimibe is excreted into breast milk. It is not known if the active components of INEGY are secreted into human breast milk. (See section 4.3.)

 

Fertility

Ezetimibe

No clinical trial data are available on the effects of ezetimibe on human fertility. Ezetimibe had no effect on the fertility of male or female rats (see section 5.3).

 

Simvastatin

No clinical trial data are available on the effects of simvastatin on human fertility. Simvastatin had no effect on the fertility of rats male and female (see section 5.3).


No studies on the effects on the ability to drive and use machines have been performed. However, when driving vehicles or operating machines, it should be taken into account that dizziness has been reported.


Tabulated list of adverse reactions (Clinical studies)

 

INEGY (or coadministration of ezetimibe and simvastatin equivalent to INEGY) has been evaluated for safety in approximately 12,000 patients in clinical trials.

 

The frequencies of adverse events are ranked according to the following: Very common (³ 1/10), Common (³ 1/100, < 1/10), Uncommon (³ 1/1000, < 1/100), Rare (³ 1/10,000, < 1/1000), Very Rare (< 1/10,000) including isolated reports.

 

The following adverse reactions were observed in patients treated with INEGY (N=2404) and at a greater incidence than placebo (N=1340).

 

Adverse reactions with INEGY and at a greater incidence than placebo

System organ class

Adverse reactions

Frequency

Investigations

ALT and/or AST increased; blood CK increased

Common

 

blood bilirubin increased; blood uric acid increased; gamma- glutamyltransferase increased; international normalised ratio increased; protein urine present; weight decreased

Uncommon

Nervous system disorders

dizziness; headache

Uncommon

Gastrointestinal disorders

abdominal pain; abdominal discomfort; abdominal pain upper; dyspepsia; flatulence; nausea; vomiting

Uncommon

Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders

pruritus; rash

Uncommon

Musculoskeletal                                      and connective tissue disorders

arthralgia; muscle spasms; muscular                                        weakness; musculoskeletal discomfort; neck pain; pain in extremity

Uncommon

General         disorders                     and administration site condition

asthenia; fatigue; malaise; oedema peripheral

Uncommon

Psychiatric disorders

sleep disorder

Uncommon

 

The following adverse reactions were observed in patients treated with INEGY (N=9595) and at a greater incidence than statins administered alone (N=8883).

 

 

Adverse reactions with INEGY and at a greater incidence than statins

System organ class

Adverse reactions

Frequency

Investigations

ALT and/or AST increased

Common

 

blood bilirubin increased; blood CK increased;                 gamma- glutamyltransferase increased

Uncommon

Nervous system disorders

headache; paraesthesia

Uncommon

Gastrointestinal disorders

abdominal distension; diarrhoea; dry mouth; dyspepsia; flatulence; gastroesophageal reflux disease; vomiting

Uncommon

Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders

pruritus; rash; urticaria

Uncommon

Musculoskeletal                                     and connective tissue disorders

myalgia

Common

arthralgia; back pain; muscle spasms; muscular weakness; musculoskeletal pain; pain in extremity

Uncommon

General         disorders                     and administration site condition

asthenia;                   chest oedema peripheral

pain;

fatigue;

Uncommon

Psychiatric disorders

insomnia

Uncommon

     

 

Paediatric population

In a study involving adolescent (10 to 17 years of age) patients with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia (n=248), elevations of ALT and/or  AST (≥3X ULN, consecutive) were observed in 3% (4 patients) of the ezetimibe/simvastatin patients compared to 2% (2 patients) in the simvastatin monotherapy group; these figures were respectively 2% (2 patients) and 0% for elevation of CPK (≥ 10X ULN). No cases of myopathy were reported.

This trial was not suited for comparison of rare adverse drug reactions. Patients with Coronary Heart Disease and ACS Event History

In the IMPROVE-IT study (see section 5.1), involving 18,144 patients treated with either INEGY

10/40 mg (n=9067; of whom 6% were uptitrated to INEGY 10/80 mg) or simvastatin 40 mg (n=9077; of whom 27% were uptitrated to simvastatin 80 mg), the safety profiles were similar during a median follow-up period of 6.0 years. Discontinuation rates due to adverse experiences were 10.6% for patients treated with INEGY and 10.1% for patients treated with simvastatin. The incidence of myopathy was 0.2% for INEGY and 0.1% for simvastatin, where myopathy was defined as unexplained muscle weakness or pain with a serum CK ≥10 times ULN or two consecutive observations of CK ≥5 and <10 times ULN. The incidence of rhabdomyolysis was 0.1% for INEGY and 0.2% for simvastatin, where rhabdomyolysis was defined as unexplained muscle weakness or pain with a serum CK ≥10 times ULN with evidence of renal injury, ≥5 times ULN and

<10 times ULN on two consecutive occasions with evidence of renal injury or CK ≥10,000 IU/L without evidence of renal  injury.  The  incidence  of  consecutive  elevations  of  transaminases (≥3 X ULN) was 2.5% for INEGY and 2.3% for simvastatin. (See section 4.4.) Gallbladder-related adverse effects were reported in 3.1% vs 3.5% of patients allocated to INEGY and simvastatin, respectively. The incidence of cholecystectomy hospitalisations was 1.5% in both treatment groups. Cancer (defined as any new malignancy) was diagnosed during the trial in 9.4% vs 9.5%, respectively.

 

Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease

In the Study of Heart and Renal Protection (SHARP) (see section 5.1), involving over 9000 patients treated with INEGY 10/20 mg daily (n=4650) or placebo (n=4620), the safety profiles were comparable during a median follow-up period of 4.9 years. In this trial, only serious adverse events and discontinuations due to any adverse events were recorded. Discontinuation rates due to adverse events were comparable (10.4 % in patients treated with INEGY, 9.8 % in patients treated with placebo). The incidence of myopathy/rhabdomyolysis was 0.2 % in patients treated with INEGY and 0.1 % in patients treated with placebo. Consecutive elevations of transaminases (> 3X ULN) occurred in 0.7% of patients treated with INEGY compared with 0.6 % of patients treated with placebo (see section 4.4.). In this trial, there were no statistically significant increases in the incidence of pre-specified adverse events, including cancer (9.4 % for INEGY, 9.5 % for placebo), hepatitis, cholycystectomy or complications of gallstones or pancreatitis.

 

Laboratory Values

In coadministration trials, the incidence of clinically important elevations in serum transaminases (ALT and/or AST ³3 X ULN, consecutive) was 1.7% for patients treated with INEGY. These elevations were generally asymptomatic, not associated with cholestasis, and returned to baseline after discontinuation of therapy or with continued treatment (see section 4.4.)

 

Clinically important elevations of CK (³10 X ULN) were seen in 0.2% of the patients treated with INEGY.

 

Post-marketing Experience

The following additional adverse reactions have been reported in post-marketing use with INEGY or during clinical studies or post-marketing use with one of the individual components.

 

Blood and lymphatic system disorders: thrombocytopaenia; anaemia

 

Nervous system disorders: peripheral neuropathy; memory impairment

 

Respiratory, thoracic and mediastinal disorders: cough; dyspneoa; interstitial lung disease (see section 4.4).

 

Gastrointestinal disorders: constipation; pancreatitis; gastritis

 

Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders: alopecia; erythema multiforme; hypersensitivity reactions, including rash, urticaria, anaphylaxis, angio-oedema

 

Musculoskeletal and connective tissue disorders: muscle cramps; myopathy* (including myositis); rhabdomyolysis with or without acute renal failure (see section 4.4); tendinopathy, sometimes complicated by rupture; immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy (IMNM) (frequency not known)**

 

In a clinical trial, myopathy occurred commonly in patients treated with simvastatin 80 mg/day compared to patients treated with 20 mg/day (1.0 % vs 0.02 %, respectively) (see sections 4.4 and 4.5).

** There have been very rare reports of immune-mediated necrotizing myopathy (IMNM), an autoimmune myopathy, during or after treatment with some statins. IMNM is clinically characterised by: persistent proximal muscle weakness and elevated serum creatine kinase, which persist despite discontinuation of statin treatment; muscle biopsy showing necrotizing myopathy without significant inflammation; improvement with immunosuppressive agents (see section 4.4).

 

Metabolism and nutrition disorders: decreased appetite

 

Vascular disorders: hot flush; hypertension

 

General disorders and administration site conditions: pain

 

Hepato-biliary disorders: hepatitis/jaundice; fatal and non-fatal hepatic failure; cholelithiasis; cholecystitis

 

Reproductive system and breast disorders: erectile dysfunction

 

Psychiatric disorders: depression, insomnia

 

An apparent hypersensitivity syndrome has been reported rarely which has included some of the following features: angio-oedema, lupus-like syndrome, polymyalgia rheumatica, dermatomyositis, vasculitis, thrombocytopaenia, eosinophilia, red blood cell sedimentation rate increased, arthritis and arthralgia, urticaria, photosensitivity reaction, pyrexia, flushing, dyspnoea and malaise.

 

Laboratory Values: elevated alkaline phosphatase; liver function test abnormal

 

Increases in HbA1c and fasting serum glucose levels have been reported with statins, including simvastatin.

 

There have been rare post-marketing reports of cognitive impairment (e.g., memory loss, forgetfulness, amnesia, memory impairment, confusion) associated with statin use, including simvastatin. The reports are generally nonserious, and reversible upon statin discontinuation, with variable times to symptom onset (1 day to years) and symptom resolution (median of 3 weeks).

 

The following additional adverse events have been reported with some statins:

·   Sleep disturbances, including nightmares

·   Sexual dysfunction

·  Diabetes mellitus: Frequency will depend on the presence or absence of risk factors (fasting blood glucose ≥ 5.6 mmol/L, BMI > 30 kg/m2, raised triglycerides, history of hypertension).

 

Reporting of suspected adverse reactions

Reporting suspected adverse reactions after authorization 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 and Drug Safety Centre (NPC), SFDA

o Fax: +966-11-205-7662

o Call NPC at +966-11-20382222, Exts: 2317-2356-2353-2354-2334-2340.

o Toll free phone: 8002490000

o E-mail: npc.drug@sfda.gov.sa

o Website: www.sfda.gov.sa/npc

·             Other GCC States:

Please contact the relevant competent authority.


INEGY

 

In the event of an overdose, symptomatic and supportive measures should be employed. Coadministration of ezetimibe (1000 mg/kg) and simvastatin (1000 mg/kg) was well-tolerated in acute, oral toxicity studies in mice and rats. No clinical signs of toxicity were observed in these animals.  The  estimated  oral  LD50   for  both  species  was  ezetimibe  ³1000 mg/kg/simvastatin

³1000 mg/kg.

 

Ezetimibe

In clinical studies, administration of ezetimibe, 50 mg/day to 15 healthy subjects for up to 14 days, or 40 mg/day to 18 patients with primary hypercholesterolaemia for up to 56 days, was generally well tolerated. A few cases of overdosage have been reported; most have not been associated with adverse experiences. Reported adverse experiences have not been serious. In animals, no toxicity was observed after single oral doses of 5000 mg/kg of ezetimibe in rats and mice and 3000 mg/kg in dogs.

 

Simvastatin

A few cases of overdosage have been reported; the maximum dose taken was 3.6 g. All patients recovered without sequelae.

 


Pharmacotherapeutic group: HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors in combination with other lipid modifying agents, ATC code: C10BA02

 

INEGY (ezetimibe/simvastatin) is a lipid-lowering product that selectively inhibits the intestinal absorption of cholesterol and related plant sterols and inhibits the endogenous synthesis of cholesterol.

 

Mechanism of action

INEGY

Plasma cholesterol is derived from intestinal absorption and endogenous synthesis. INEGY contains ezetimibe and simvastatin, two lipid-lowering compounds with complementary mechanisms of action. INEGY reduces elevated total cholesterol (total-C), LDL-C, apolipoprotein B (Apo B), triglycerides (TG), and non-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (non-HDL-C), and increases high- density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) through dual inhibition  of  cholesterol absorption  and synthesis.

 

Ezetimibe

Ezetimibe inhibits the intestinal absorption of cholesterol. Ezetimibe is orally active and has a mechanism of action that differs from other classes of cholesterol-reducing compounds (e.g., statins, bile acid sequestrants [resins], fibric acid derivatives, and plant stanols). The molecular target of ezetimibe is the sterol transporter, Niemann-Pick C1-Like 1 (NPC1L1), which is responsible for the intestinal uptake of cholesterol and phytosterols.

 

Ezetimibe localises at the brush border of the small intestine and inhibits the absorption of cholesterol, leading to a decrease in the delivery of intestinal cholesterol to the liver; statins reduce cholesterol synthesis in the liver and together these distinct mechanisms provide complementary cholesterol reduction. In a 2-week clinical study in 18 hypercholesterolaemic patients, ezetimibe inhibited intestinal cholesterol absorption by 54%, compared with placebo.

 

A series of preclinical studies was performed to determine the selectivity of ezetimibe for inhibiting cholesterol absorption. Ezetimibe inhibited the absorption of [14C]-cholesterol with no effect on the absorption of triglycerides, fatty acids, bile acids, progesterone, ethinyl estradiol, or fat soluble vitamins A and D.

 

Simvastatin

After oral ingestion, simvastatin, which is an inactive lactone, is hydrolyzed in the liver to the corresponding active b-hydroxyacid form which has a potent activity in inhibiting HMG-CoA reductase (3 hydroxy - 3 methylglutaryl CoA reductase). This enzyme catalyses the conversion of HMG-CoA to mevalonate, an early and rate-limiting step in the biosynthesis of cholesterol.

 

Simvastatin has been shown to reduce both normal and elevated LDL-C concentrations. LDL is formed from very-low-density protein (VLDL) and is catabolized predominantly by the high affinity LDL receptor. The mechanism of the LDL-lowering effect of simvastatin may involve both reduction of VLDL-cholesterol (VLDL-C) concentration and induction of the LDL receptor, leading

to reduced production and increased catabolism of LDL-C. Apolipoprotein B also falls substantially during treatment with simvastatin. In addition, simvastatin moderately increases HDL-C  and reduces plasma TG. As a result of these changes, the ratios of total- to HDL-C and LDL- to HDL-C are reduced.

 

Clinical efficacy and safety

 

In controlled clinical studies, INEGY significantly reduced total-C, LDL-C, Apo B, TG, and non- HDL-C, and increased HDL-C in patients with hypercholesterolaemia.

 

Prevention of Cardiovascular Events

INEGY has been shown to reduce major cardiovascular events in patients with coronary heart disease and ACS event history.

 

The IMProved Reduction of Outcomes: Vytorin Efficacy International Trial (IMPROVE-IT) was a multicenter, randomised, double-blind, active-control study of 18,144 patients enrolled within 10 days of hospitalisation for acute coronary syndrome (ACS; either acute myocardial infarction [MI] or unstable angina [UA]). Patients had an LDL-C ≤125 mg/dL (≤3.2 mmol/L) at the time of presentation with ACS if they had not  been  taking  lipid-lowering  therapy,  or  ≤100 mg/dL (≤2.6 mmol/L) if they had been receiving lipid-lowering therapy. All patients were randomised in a 1:1 ratio to receive either ezetimibe/simvastatin 10/40 mg (n=9067) or simvastatin 40 mg (n=9077) and followed for a median of 6.0 years.

 

Patients had a mean age of 63.6 years; 76% were male, 84% were Caucasian, and 27% were diabetic. The average LDL-C value  at  the  time  of  study  qualifying  event  was  80 mg/dL (2.1 mmol/L) for those on lipid-lowering therapy (n=6390) and 101 mg/dL (2.6 mmol/L) for those not on previous lipid-lowering therapy (n=11594). Prior to the hospitalisation for the qualifying ACS event, 34% of the patients were on statin therapy. At one year, the average LDL-C for patients continuing on therapy was 53.2 mg/dL  (1.4 mmol/L)  for  the  INEGY  group  and  69.9 mg/dL (1.8 mmol/L) for the simvastatin monotherapy group. Lipid values were generally obtained for patients who remained on study therapy.

 

The primary endpoint was a composite consisting of cardiovascular death, major coronary events (MCE; defined as non-fatal myocardial infarction, documented unstable angina that required hospitalisation, or any coronary revascularsation procedure occurring at least 30 days after randomised treatment assignment) and non-fatal stroke. The study demonstrated that treatment with INEGY provided incremental benefit in reducing the primary composite endpoint of cardiovascular death, MCE, and non-fatal stroke compared with simvastatin alone (relative risk reduction of 6.4%, p=0.016). The primary endpoint occurred in 2572 of 9067 patients (7-year Kaplan-Meier [KM] rate 32.72%) in the INEGY group and 2742 of 9077 patients (7-year KM rate 34.67%) in the simvastatin alone group. (See Figure 1 and Table 1.) Total mortality was unchanged in this high risk group (see Table 1).

 

There was an overall benefit for all strokes; however there was a small non-significant increase in haemorrhagic stroke in the ezetimibe-simvastatin group compared with simvastatin alone (see Table 1). The risk of haemorrhagic stroke for ezetimibe coadministered with higher potency statins in long-term outcome studies has not been evaluated.

The treatment effect of ezetimibe/simvastatin was generally consistent with the overall results across many subgroups, including sex, age, race, medical history of diabetes mellitus, baseline lipid levels, prior statin therapy, prior stroke, and hypertension.

 

Figure  1:  Effect  of  INEGY  on   the   Primary   Composite   Endpoint   of Cardiovascular Death, Major Coronary Event, or Non-fatal Stroke

 

 

 

Outcome

INEGY

10/40 mg(N=9067)

 

 

 

 

 

n

K-M

%c

n            K-M %

c

 

 

 

Primary Composite Efficacy Endpoint

(CV    death,    Major     Coronary Events and non-fatal stroke)

2572

32.72%

2742      34.67%    0.936     (0.887,

0.988)

0.016

Secondary Composite Efficacy Endpoints

CHD death, nonfatal MI, urgent coronary revascularsation after 30 days

 

1322

 

17.52%

1448      18.88%    0.912     (0.847,

0.983)

 

0.016

MCE,  non-fatal  stroke,  death (all causes)

3089

38.65%

3246      40.25%    0.948     (0.903,

0.996)

0.035

CV death, non-fatal MI, unstable angina requiring hospitalisation,                         any

revascularsation,             non-fatal stroke

 

 

2716

 

 

34.49%

 

2869      36.20%    0.945     (0.897,

0.996)

 

 

0.035

Components  of  Primary  Composite  Endpoint  and  Select  Efficacy  Endpoints  (first occurrences of specified event at any time)

Cardiovascular death

537

6.89%

538       6.84%      1.

000 (0.887,

1.127)

0.997

Major Coronary Event:

Non-fatal MI

945

12.77%

1083     14.41%      0.

871 (0.798,

0.950)

0.002

Unstable      angina      requiring hospitalisation

156

2.06%

148       1.92%      1.

059 (0.846,

1.326)

0.618

Coronary          revascularsation after 30 days

1690

21.84%

1793     23.36%      0.

947 (0.886,

1.012)

0.107

Non-fatal stroke

245

3.49%

305       4.24%      0.

802 (0.678,

0.949)

0.010

All MI (fatal and non-fatal)

977

13.13%

1118     14.82%      0.

872 (0.800,

0.950)

0.002

All stroke (fatal and non-fatal)

296

4.16%

345       4.77%      0.

857 (0.734,

1.001)

0.052

Non-haemorrhagic stroked

242

3.48%

305       4.23%      0.

793 (0.670,

0.939)

0.007

Haemorrhagic stroke

59

0.77%

43        0.59%      1.

377 (0.930,

2.040)

0.110

Death from any cause

1215

15.36%

1231     15.28%      0.

989 (0.914,

1.070)

0.782

 

 

Table 1

 

Major Cardiovascular Events by Treatment Group in All Randomised Patients in IMPROVE-IT

io    p- value

 

a   6% were uptitrated to ezetimibe/simvastatin 10/80 mg.

b   27% were uptitrated to simvastatin 80 mg.

c   Kaplan-Meier estimate at 7 years.

d   includes ischemic stroke or stroke of undetermined type.

 

Primary Hypercholesterolaemia

In a double-blind, placebo-controlled, 8-week study, 240 patients with hypercholesterolaemia already receiving simvastatin monotherapy and not at National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) LDL-C goal (2.6 to 4.1 mmol/l [100 to 160 mg/dl], depending on baseline characteristics) were randomised to receive either ezetimibe 10 mg or placebo in addition to their on-going simvastatin therapy. Among simvastatin-treated patients not at LDL-C goal at baseline (~80%), significantly more patients randomised to ezetimibe coadministered with simvastatin achieved their LDL-C goal at study endpoint compared to patients randomised to placebo coadministered with simvastatin, 76% and 21.5%, respectively.

 

The corresponding LDL-C reductions for ezetimibe or placebo coadministered with simvastatin were also significantly different (27% or 3%, respectively). In addition, ezetimibe coadministered with simvastatin significantly decreased total-C, Apo B, and TG compared with placebo coadministered with simvastatin.

 

In a multicentre, double-blind, 24-week trial, 214 patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus treated with thiazolidinediones (rosiglitazone or pioglitazone) for a minimum  of 3 months  and simvastatin 20 mg for a minimum of 6 weeks with a mean LDL-C of 2.4 mmol/L (93 mg/dl), were randomised to receive either simvastatin 40 mg or the coadministered active ingredients equivalent to INEGY 10 mg/20 mg. INEGY 10 mg/20 mg was significantly more effective than doubling the dose of simvastatin to 40 mg in further reducing LDL-C (-21% and 0%, respectively), total-C (-14% and

-1%, respectively), Apo B (-14% and -2%, respectively), and non-HDL-C (-20% and -2%, respectively) beyond the reductions observed with simvastatin 20 mg. Results for HDL-C and TG between the two treatment groups were not significantly different. Results were not affected by type of thiazolidinedione treatment.

 

The efficacy of the different dose-strengths of INEGY (10/10 to 10/80 mg/day) was demonstrated in a multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled 12-week trial that included all available doses of INEGY and all relevant doses of simvastatin. When patients receiving all doses of INEGY were compared to those receiving all doses of simvastatin, INEGY significantly lowered total-C, LDL-C, and TG (see Table 2) as well as Apo B (-42% and -29%, respectively), non-HDL-C (-49% and - 34%, respectively) and C-reactive protein (-33% and -9%, respectively). The effects of INEGY on HDL-C were similar to the effects seen with simvastatin. Further analysis showed INEGY significantly increased HDL-C compared with placebo.

 

 

 

 

 

Table 2

Response to INEGY in Patients with Primary Hypercholesterolaemia

 

(Meana % Change from Untreated Baselineb)

Treatment

 

(Daily Dose)

 

N

Total-

C

LDL-

C

HDL-

C

TGa

Pooled      data     (All

INEGY doses)c             353

-38

-53

+8

-28

 

Pooled      data     (All

simvastatin doses)c

349

-26

-38

+8

-15

Ezetimibe10 mg

92

-14

-20

+7

-13

Placebo

93

+2

+3

+2

-2

INEGY by dose

 

 

 

 

 

10/10

87

-32

-46

+9

-21

10/20

86

-37

-51

+8

-31

10/40

89

-39

-55

+9

-32

10/80

91

-43

-61

+6

-28

Simvastatin by dose

 

 

 

 

 

10 mg

81

-21

-31

+5

-4

20 mg

90

-24

-35

+6

-14

40 mg

91

-29

-42

+8

-19

80 mg

87

-32

-46

+11

-26

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

a For triglycerides, median % change from baseline

 

b Baseline - on no lipid-lowering drug

c INEGY doses pooled (10/10-10/80) significantly reduced total-C, LDL-C, and TG, compared to simvastatin, and significantly increased HDL-C compared to placebo.

 

In a similarly designed study, results for all lipid parameters were generally consistent. In a pooled analysis of these two studies, the lipid response to INEGY was similar in patients with TG levels greater than or less than 200 mg/dl.

 

In a multicenter, double-blind, controlled clinical study (ENHANCE), 720 patients with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia were randomised to receive ezetimibe 10 mg in combination with simvastatin 80 mg (n=357) or simvastatin 80 mg (n=363) for 2 years. The primary objective of the study was to investigate the effect of the ezetimibe/simvastatin combination therapy on carotid artery intima-media thickness (IMT) compared to simvastatin monotherapy. The impact of this surrogate marker on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality is still not demonstrated.

 

The primary endpoint, the change in the mean IMT of all six carotid segments, did not differ significantly (p= 0.29) between the two treatment groups as measured by B-mode ultrasound. With ezetimibe 10 mg in combination with simvastatin 80 mg or simvastatin 80 mg alone, intima-medial thickening increased by 0.0111 mm and 0.0058 mm, respectively, over the study’s 2 year duration (baseline mean carotid IMT 0.68 mm and 0.69 mm respectively).

 

Ezetimibe 10 mg in combination with simvastatin 80 mg lowered LDL-C, total-C, Apo B, and TG significantly more than simvastatin 80 mg. The percent increase in HDL-C was similar for the two treatment groups. The adverse reactions reported for ezetimibe 10 mg in combination with simvastatin 80 mg were consistent with its known safety profile.

 

INEGY contains simvastatin. In two large placebo-controlled clinical trials, the Scandinavian Simvastatin Survival Study (20-40 mg; N=4,444 patients) and the Heart Protection Study (40 mg; N=20,536 patients), the effects of treatment with simvastatin were assessed in patients at high risk of coronary events because of existing coronary heart disease, diabetes, peripheral vessel disease, history of stroke or other cerebrovascular disease. Simvastatin was proven to reduce: the risk of total mortality by reducing CHD deaths; the risk of non-fatal myocardial infarction and stroke; and the need for coronary and non-coronary revascularsation procedures.

 

The Study of the Effectiveness of Additional Reductions in Cholesterol and Homocysteine (SEARCH) evaluated the effect of treatment with simvastatin 80 mg versus 20 mg (median follow- up 6.7 yrs) on major vascular events (MVEs; defined as fatal CHD, non-fatal MI, coronary revascularsation procedure, non-fatal or fatal stroke, or peripheral revascularsation procedure) in 12,064 patients with a history of myocardial infarction. There was no significant difference in the incidence of MVEs between the 2 groups; simvastatin 20 mg (n = 1553; 25.7 %) vs. simvastatin 80 mg (n = 1477; 24.5 %); RR 0.94, 95 % CI: 0.88 to 1.01. The absolute difference in LDL-C between the two groups over the course of the study was 0.35 ± 0.01 mmol/L. The safety profiles were similar between the two treatment groups except that the incidence of myopathy was approximately 1.0 % for patients on simvastatin 80 mg compared with 0.02 % for patients on 20 mg. Approximately half of these myopathy cases occurred during the first year of treatment. The incidence of myopathy during each subsequent year of treatment was approximately 0.1 %.

 

Paediatric population

 

In a multicentre, double-blind, controlled  study,  142 boys  (Tanner  stage  II  and  above)  and 106 postmenarchal girls, 10 to 17 years of age (mean age 14.2 years) with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia (HeFH) with baseline LDL-C levels between 4.1 and 10.4 mmol/l were randomised to either ezetimibe 10 mg co-administered with simvastatin (10, 20 or 40 mg) or simvastatin (10, 20 or 40 mg) alone for 6 weeks, co-administered ezetimibe and 40 mg simvastatin or 40 mg simvastatin alone for the next 27 weeks, and open-label co-administered ezetimibe and simvastatin (10 mg, 20 mg, or 40 mg) for 20 weeks thereafter.

 

At Week 6, ezetimibe co-administered with simvastatin (all doses) significantly reduced total-C (38 % vs 26 %), LDL-C (49 % vs 34 %), Apo B (39 % vs 27 %), and non-HDL-C (47 % vs 33 %)

compared to simvastatin (all doses) alone. Results for the two treatment groups were similar for TG and HDL-C (-17 % vs -12 % and +7 % vs +6 %, respectively). At Week 33, results were consistent with those at Week 6 and significantly more patients receiving ezetimibe and 40 mg simvastatin (62 %) attained the NCEP AAP ideal goal (< 2.8 mmol/L [110 mg/dL]) for LDL-C compared to those receiving 40 mg simvastatin (25 %). At Week 53, the end of the open label extension, the effects on lipid parameters were maintained.

 

The safety and efficacy of ezetimibe co-administered with doses of simvastatin above 40 mg daily have not been studied in paediatric patients 10 to 17 years of age. The long-term efficacy of therapy with ezetimibe in patients below 17 years of age to reduce morbidity and mortality in adulthood has not been studied.

 

The European Medicines Agency has waived the obligation to submit the results of studies with INEGY in all subsets of the paediatric population in Hypercholesterolaemia (see section 4.2 for information on paediatric use).

 

Homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolaemia (HoFH)

A double-blind, randomised, 12-week study was performed in patients with a clinical and/or genotypic diagnosis of HoFH. Data were analysed from a subgroup of patients (n=14) receiving

 

simvastatin 40 mg at baseline. Increasing the dose of simvastatin from 40 to 80 mg (n=5) produced a reduction of LDL-C of 13% from baseline on simvastatin 40 mg. Coadministered ezetimibe and simvastatin equivalent to INEGY (10 mg/40 mg and 10 mg/80 mg pooled, n=9), produced a reduction of LDL-C of 23% from baseline on simvastatin 40 mg. In those patients coadministered ezetimibe and simvastatin equivalent to INEGY (10 mg/80 mg, n=5), a reduction of LDL-C of 29% from baseline on simvastatin 40 mg was produced.

 

Prevention of Major Vascular Events in Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)

The Study of Heart and Renal Protection (SHARP) was a multi-national, randomised, placebo- controlled, double-blind study conducted in 9438 patients with chronic kidney disease, a third of whom were on dialysis at baseline. A total of 4650 patients were allocated to INEGY 10/20 and 4620 to placebo, and followed for a median of 4.9 years. Patients had a mean age of 62 and 63 % were male, 72 % Caucasian, 23 % diabetic and, for those not on dialysis, the mean estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was 26.5 ml/min/1.73 m2. There were no lipid entry criteria. Mean LDL-C at baseline was 108 mg/dL. After one year, including patients no longer taking study medication, LDL-C was reduced 26 % relative to placebo by simvastatin 20 mg alone and 38 % by INEGY 10/20 mg.

 

The SHARP protocol-specified primary comparison was an intention-to-treat analysis of "major vascular events" (MVE; defined as nonfatal MI or cardiac death, stroke, or any revascularsation procedure) in only those patients initially randomised to the INEGY (n=4193) or placebo (n=4191) groups. Secondary analyses included the same composite analyzed for the full cohort randomised (at study baseline or at year 1) to INEGY (n=4650) or placebo (n=4620) as well as the components of this composite.

 

The primary endpoint analysis showed that INEGY significantly reduced the risk of major vascular events (749 patients with events in the placebo group vs. 639 in the INEGY group) with a relative risk reduction of 16 % (p=0.001).

 

Nevertheless, this study design did not allow for a separate contribution of the monocomponent ezetimibe to efficacy to significantly reduce the risk of major vascular events in patients with CKD.

 

The individual components of MVE in all randomised patients are presented in Table 3. INEGY significantly reduced the risk of stroke and any revascularsation, with non-significant numerical differences favouring INEGY for nonfatal MI and cardiac death.

 

Table 3

Major Vascular Events by Treatment Group in all randomised patients in SHARPa

 

 

Outcome

INEGY  10/20 (N=4650)

Placebo (N=4620)

Risk Ratio  (95% CI)

P-value

Major Vascular Events

701 (15.1%)

814 (17.6%)

0.85 (0.77-

0.94)

0.001

Nonfatal MI

134 (2.9%)

159 (3.4%)

0.84 (0.66-

1.05)

0.12

Cardiac Death

253 (5.4%)

272 (5.9%)

0.93 (0.78-

1.10)

0.38

Any Stroke

171 (3.7%)

210 (4.5%)

0.81 (0.66-

0.99)

0.038

Non-haemorrhagic Stroke

131 (2.8%)

174 (3.8%)

0.75 (0.60-

0.94)

0.011

Haemorrhagic Stroke

45 (1.0%)

37 (0.8%)

1.21 (0.78-

1.86)

0.40

Any Revascularsation

284 (6.1%)

352 (7.6%)

0.79 (0.68-

0.93)

0.004

Major       Atherosclerotic Events (MAE)b

526 (11.3%)

619 (13.4%)

0.83 (0.74-

0.94)

0.002

 

aIntention-to-treat analysis on all SHARP patients randomised to INEGY or placebo either at baseline or year 1

b  MAE; defined as the composite of nonfatal myocardial infarction, coronary death, non-haemorrhagic

stroke, or any revascularsation

 

The absolute reduction in LDL cholesterol achieved with INEGY was lower among patients with a lower baseline LDL-C (<2.5 mmol/l) and patients on dialysis at baseline than the other patients, and the corresponding risk reductions in these two groups were attenuated.

 

Aortic Stenosis

The Simvastatin and Ezetimibe for the Treatment of Aortic Stenosis (SEAS) study was a multi- center, double-blind, placebo-controlled study with a median duration of 4.4 years conducted in 1873 patients with asymptomatic aortic stenosis (AS), documented by Doppler-measured aortic peak flow velocity within the range of 2.5 to 4.0 m/s. Only patients who were considered not to require statin treatment for purposes of reducing atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk were enrolled. Patients were randomised 1:1 to receive placebo or co-administered ezetimibe 10 mg and simvastatin 40 mg daily.

 

The primary endpoint was the composite of major cardiovascular events (MCE) consisting of cardiovascular death, aortic valve replacement (AVR) surgery, congestive heart failure (CHF) as a result of progression of AS, nonfatal myocardial infarction, coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG),  percutaneous  coronary  intervention  (PCI),  hospitalisation  for  unstable  angina,  and

 

nonhaemorrhagic stroke. The key secondary endpoints were composites of subsets of the primary endpoint event categories.

 

Compared to placebo, ezetimibe/simvastatin 10/40 mg did not significantly reduce the risk of MCE. The primary outcome occurred in 333 patients (35.3%) in the ezetimibe / simvastatin group and in 355 patients (38.2%) in the placebo group (hazard ratio in the ezetimibe / simvastatin group, 0.96; 95% confidence interval, 0.83 to 1.12; p = 0.59). Aortic valve replacement was performed in 267 patients (28.3%) in the ezetimibe / simvastatin group and in 278 patients (29.9%) in the placebo group (hazard ratio, 1.00; 95% CI, 0.84 to 1.18; p = 0.97). Fewer patients had ischemic cardiovascular events in the ezetimibe / simvastatin group (n=148) than in the placebo group (n=187) (hazard ratio, 0.78; 95% CI, 0.63 to 0.97; p = 0.02), mainly because of the smaller number of patients who underwent coronary artery bypass grafting.

 

Cancer occurred more frequently in the ezetimibe / simvastatin group (105 versus 70, p = 0.01). The clinical relevance of this observation is uncertain as in the bigger SHARP trial the total number of patients with any incident cancer (438 in the ezetimibe/ simvastatin versus 439 placebo group) did not differ. In addition, in the IMPROVE-IT trial the total number of patients with any new malignancy (853 in the ezetimibe/simvastatin group versus 863 in the simvastatin group) did not differ significantly and therefore the finding of SEAS trial could not be confirmed by SHARP or IMPROVE-IT.

 


No clinically significant pharmacokinetic interaction was seen when ezetimibe was coadministered with simvastatin.

 

Absorption

INEGY

INEGY is bioequivalent to coadministered ezetimibe and simvastatin.

 

Ezetimibe

After oral administration, ezetimibe is rapidly absorbed and extensively conjugated to a pharmacologically active phenolic glucuronide (ezetimibe-glucuronide). Mean maximum plasma concentrations (Cmax) occur within 1 to 2 hours for ezetimibe-glucuronide and 4 to 12 hours for ezetimibe. The absolute bioavailability of ezetimibe cannot be determined as the compound is virtually insoluble in aqueous media suitable for injection.

 

Concomitant food administration (high-fat or non-fat meals) had no effect on the oral bioavailability of ezetimibe when administered as 10-mg tablets.

 

Simvastatin

The availability of the active b-hydroxyacid to the systemic circulation following an oral dose of simvastatin was found to be less than 5% of the dose, consistent with extensive hepatic first-pass extraction. The major metabolites of simvastatin present in human plasma are the b-hydroxyacid and four additional active metabolites.

 

Relative to the fasting state, the plasma profiles of both active and total inhibitors were not affected when simvastatin was administered immediately before a test meal.

 

Distribution

Ezetimibe

Ezetimibe and ezetimibe-glucuronide are bound 99.7% and 88 to 92% to human plasma proteins, respectively.

 

Simvastatin

Both simvastatin and the b-hydroxyacid are bound to human plasma proteins (95%).

 

The pharmacokinetics of single and multiple doses of simvastatin showed that no accumulation of drug occurred after multiple dosing. In all of the above pharmacokinetic studies, the maximum plasma concentration of inhibitors occurred 1.3 to 2.4 hours post-dose.

 

Biotransformation

Ezetimibe

Ezetimibe is metabolised primarily in the small intestine and liver via glucuronide conjugation (a phase II reaction) with subsequent biliary excretion. Minimal oxidative metabolism (a phase I reaction) has been observed in all species evaluated. Ezetimibe and ezetimibe-glucuronide are the major drug-derived compounds detected in plasma, constituting approximately 10 to 20% and 80 to 90% of the total drug in plasma, respectively. Both ezetimibe and ezetimibe-glucuronide are slowly eliminated from plasma with evidence of significant enterohepatic recycling. The half-life for ezetimibe and ezetimibe-glucuronide is approximately 22 hours.

 

Simvastatin

Simvastatin is an inactive lactone which is readily hydrolyzed in vivo to the corresponding b- hydroxyacid, a potent inhibitor of HMG-CoA reductase. Hydrolysis takes place mainly in the liver; the rate of hydrolysis in human plasma is very slow.

 

In man simvastatin is well absorbed and undergoes extensive hepatic first-pass extraction. The extraction in the liver is dependent on the hepatic blood flow. The liver is its primary site of action, with subsequent excretion of drug equivalents in the bile. Consequently, availability of active drug to the systemic circulation is low.

Following an intravenous injection of the b-hydroxyacid metabolite, its half-life averaged 1.9 hours.  Elimination

Ezetimibe

Following oral administration of 14C-ezetimibe (20 mg) to human subjects, total ezetimibe accounted for approximately 93% of the total radioactivity in plasma. Approximately 78% and 11% of the administered radioactivity were recovered in the faeces and urine, respectively, over a 10-day collection period. After 48 hours, there were no detectable levels of radioactivity in the plasma.

 

Simvastatin

Simvastatin acid is taken up actively into the hepatocytes by the transporter OATP1B1.

 

Following an oral dose of radioactive simvastatin to man, 13% of the radioactivity was excreted in the urine and 60% in the faeces within 96 hours. The amount recovered in the faeces represents absorbed drug equivalents excreted in bile as well as unabsorbed drug. Following an intravenous injection of the b-hydroxyacid metabolite, an average of only 0.3% of the IV dose was excreted in urine as inhibitors.

 

Special Populations

Paediatric Population

The absorption and metabolism of ezetimibe are similar between children and adolescents (10 to 18 years) and adults. Based on total ezetimibe, there are no pharmacokinetic differences between adolescents and adults. Pharmacokinetic data in the paediatric population < 10 years of age are not available. Clinical experience in paediatric and adolescent patients includes patients with HoFH, HeFH, or sitosterolaemia (see section 4.2.).

 

Older people

Plasma concentrations for total ezetimibe are about 2-fold higher in the elderly (³65 years) than in the young (18 to 45 years). LDL-C reduction and safety profile are comparable between elderly and younger subjects treated with ezetimibe (see section 4.2.).

 

Hepatic impairment

After a single 10-mg dose of ezetimibe, the mean AUC for total ezetimibe was increased approximately 1.7-fold in patients with mild hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh score 5 or 6), compared to healthy subjects. In a 14-day, multiple-dose study (10 mg daily) in patients with moderate hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh score 7 to 9), the mean AUC for total ezetimibe was increased approximately 4-fold on Day 1 and Day 14 compared to healthy subjects. No dosage adjustment is necessary for patients with mild hepatic impairment. Due to the unknown effects of the increased exposure to ezetimibe in patients with moderate or severe (Child-Pugh score > 9) hepatic impairment, ezetimibe is not recommended in these patients (see sections 4.2 and 4.4).

 

Renal impairment Ezetimibe

After a single 10-mg dose of ezetimibe in patients with severe renal disease (n=8; mean CrCl

£30 ml/min), the mean AUC for total ezetimibe was increased approximately 1.5-fold, compared to healthy subjects (n=9). (See section 4.2.)

 

An additional patient in this study (post-renal transplant and receiving multiple medications, including ciclosporin) had a 12-fold greater exposure to total ezetimibe.

 

Simvastatin

In a study of patients with severe renal impairment (creatinine clearance < 30 ml/min), the plasma concentrations of total inhibitors after a single dose of a related HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor were approximately two-fold higher than those in healthy volunteers.

 

Gender

Plasma concentrations for total ezetimibe are slightly higher (approximately 20%) in women than in men. LDL-C reduction and safety profile are comparable between men and women treated with ezetimibe.

 

SLCO1B1 polymorphism

Carriers of the SLCO1B1 gene c.521T>C allele have lower OATP1B1 activity. The mean exposure (AUC)

of the main active metabolite, simvastatin acid is 120% in heterozygote carriers (CT) of the C allele and 221% in homozygote (CC) carriers relative to that of patients who have the most common genotype (TT). The C allele has a frequency of 18% in the European population. In patients with SLCO1B1 polymorphism there is a risk of increased exposure of simvastatin acid, which may lead to an increased risk of rhabdomyolysis (see section 4.4).


INEGY

In coadministration studies with ezetimibe and simvastatin, the toxic effects observed were essentially those typically associated with statins. Some of the toxic effects were more pronounced than observed during treatment with statins alone. This is attributed to pharmacokinetic and/or pharmacodynamic interactions following coadministration. No such interactions occurred in the clinical studies. Myopathies occurred in rats only after exposure to doses that were several times higher than the human therapeutic dose (approximately 20 times the AUC level for simvastatin and

 

1800 times the AUC level for the active metabolite). There was no evidence that coadministration of ezetimibe affected the myotoxic potential of simvastatin.

 

In dogs coadministered ezetimibe and statins, some liver effects were observed at low exposures (<1 times human AUC). Marked increases in liver enzymes (ALT, AST) in the absence of tissue necrosis were seen. Histopathologic liver findings (bile duct hyperplasia, pigment accumulation, mononuclear cell infiltration and small hepatocytes) were observed in dogs coadministered ezetimibe and simvastatin. These changes did not progress with longer duration of dosing up to 14 months. General recovery of the liver findings was observed upon discontinuation of dosing. These findings were consistent with those described with HMG-CoA inhibitors or attributed to the very low cholesterol levels achieved in the affected dogs.

 

The coadministration of ezetimibe and simvastatin was not teratogenic in rats. In pregnant rabbits a small number of skeletal deformities (fused caudal vertebrae, reduced number of caudal vertebrae) were observed.

 

In a series of in vivo and in vitro assays, ezetimibe, given alone or coadministered with simvastatin, exhibited no genotoxic potential.

 

Ezetimibe

Animal studies on the chronic toxicity of ezetimibe identified no target organs for toxic effects. In dogs treated for four weeks with ezetimibe (³0.03 mg/kg/day) the cholesterol concentration in the cystic bile was increased by a factor of 2.5 to 3.5. However, in a one year study on dogs given doses of up to 300 mg/kg/day no increased incidence of cholelithiasis or other hepatobiliary effects were observed. The significance of these data for humans is not known. A lithogenic risk associated with the therapeutic use of ezetimibe cannot be ruled out.

 

Long-term carcinogenicity tests on ezetimibe were negative.

 

Ezetimibe had no effect on the fertility of male or female rats, nor was it found to be teratogenic in rats or rabbits, nor did it affect prenatal or postnatal development. Ezetimibe crossed the placental barrier in pregnant rats and rabbits given multiple doses of 1000 mg/kg/day.

 

Simvastatin

Based on conventional animal studies regarding pharmacodynamics, repeated dose toxicity, genotoxicity and carcinogenicity, there are no other risks for the patient than may be expected on account of the pharmacological mechanism. At maximally tolerated doses in both the rat and the rabbit, simvastatin produced no foetal malformations, and had no effects on fertility, reproductive function or neonatal development.

 


Butylated hydroxyanisole Citric acid monohydrate Croscarmellose sodium Hypromellose

Lactose monohydrate Magnesium stearate Microcrystalline cellulose Propyl gallate


Not applicable.

 


2 Years

Store below 30°C.

Store in the original package.


INEGY 10 mg/20 mg, and 10 mg/40 mg

 

White HDPE bottles with foil induction seals, white child-resistant polypropylene closure, and silica gel desiccant, containing 100 tablets.

 

INEGY 10 mg/20 mg and 10 mg/40 mg

 

Push-through blisters of opaque polychlorotrifluoroethylene /PVC sealed to vinyl coated aluminum in packs of 90 tablets.

 

INEGY 10 mg/20 mg

 

Push-through blisters of opaque polychlorotrifluoroethylene /PVC sealed to vinyl coated aluminum in packs of 7, 10, 14, 28, 30, 50, 56, 84, 98, 100, or 300 tablets.

 

Unit dose push-through blisters of opaque polychlorotrifluoroethylene /PVC sealed to vinyl coated aluminum in packs of 30, 50, 100, or 300 tablets.

 

INEGY 10 mg/40 mg and 10 mg/80 mg

 

Push-through blisters of opaque polychlorotrifluoroethylene /PVC sealed to vinyl coated aluminum in packs of 7, 10, 14, 28, 30, 50, 56, 84, 98, multi-pack containing 98 (2 cartons of 49), 100, or 300 tablets.

 

Unit dose push-through blisters of opaque polychlorotrifluoroethylene /PVC sealed to vinyl coated aluminum in packs of 30, 50, 100, or 300 tablets.

 

Not all pack sizes may be marketed.

 


No special requirements.

 


Marketing Authorization Holder Merck Sharp & Dohme Limited., Hertford Road, UK-Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire EN11 9BU, United Kingdom Manufacturer MSD International GmbH, 21 Tuas South Avenue 6, 637766 Singapore (Singapore branch) Packed by Pharma Pharmaceutical Industries, Second Industrial Area, P.O. Box 11351 Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

4 February 2016
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