Pantoprazole 40 Mg Powder For Solution For Injection
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Pantoprazole 40 mg Powder for Solution for Injection or Infusion
Pantoprazole
Read all of this leaflet carefully before you start using this medicine because it contains important information for you.
• Keep this leaflet. You may need to read it again.
• If you have any further questions, ask your doctor, pharmacist or nurse.
• If you get any side effects, talk to your doctor, pharmacist or nurse. This includes any possible side effects not listed in this leaflet. See section 4.
What is in this leaflet:
1. What Pantoprazole is and what it is used for
2. What you need to know before you use Pantoprazole
3. How to use Pantoprazole
4. Possible side effects
5. How to store Pantoprazole
6. Contents of the pack and other information
1. What Pantoprazole is and what it is used for
Pantoprazole contains the active substance pantoprazole (as sodium sesquihydrate). Pantoprazole is a selective “proton pump inhibitor”, a medicine which reduces the amount of acid produced in your stomach. It is used for treating acid-related diseases of the stomach and intestine.
This preparation is injected into a vein and will only be given to you if your doctor thinks pantoprazole injections are more suitable for you at the moment than pantoprazole tablets. Tablets will replace your injections as soon as your doctor sees fit.
Pantoprazole is used for treating:
- Reflux oesophagitis. An inflammation of your oesophagus (the tube which connects your throat to your stomach) accompanied by the regurgitation of stomach acid.
- Stomach and duodenal ulcers.
- Zollinger-Ellison-Syndrome and other conditions producing too much acid in the stomach.
2. What you need to know before you use Pantoprazole Do not use Pantoprazole:
- If you are allergic to pantoprazole sodium or to any of the other ingredients of this medicine (listed in section 6).
- If you are allergic to medicines containing other proton pump inhibitors.
Warnings and Precautions
Talk to your doctor, pharmacist or nurse before using Pantoprazole
- If you have severe liver problems. Please tell your doctor if you ever had problems with your liver in the past. He will check your liver enzymes more frequently. In the case of a rise of liver enzymes the treatment should be stopped.
- If you are taking a medicine containing atazanavir (for the treatment of HIV-infection) at the same time as pantoprazole, ask your doctor for specific advice.
- People who use multiple daily doses of proton pump inhibitor medicines for a long period of time (a year or longer) may have an increased risk of fractures of the hip, wrist or spine. Talk to your doctor about your risk of bone fracture if you use Pantoprazole.
- If you have low magnesium levels in your body. This problem can be serious. Low magnesium can happen in some people who use a proton pump inhibitor medicine for at least 3 months. If low magnesium levels happen, it is usually after a year of treatment. You may or may not have symptoms of low magnesium.
Tell your doctor immediately, before or after using this medicine, if you notice any of the following symptoms, which could be a sign of another, more serious, disease:
- an unintentional loss of weight (not related to a diet or an exercise programme)
- vomiting, particularly if repeated
- vomiting blood; this may appear as dark coffee grounds in your vomit
- you notice blood in your stools; which may be black or tarry in appearance
- difficulty in swallowing or pain when swallowing
- you look pale and feel weak (anaemia)
- chest pain
- stomach pain
- severe and/or persistent diarrhoea, because this medicine has been associated with a small increase in infectious diarrhoea.
Your doctor may decide that you need some tests to rule out malignant disease because pantoprazole also alleviates the symptoms of cancer and could cause delay in diagnosing it. If your symptoms continue in spite of your treatment, further investigations will be considered.
Children and adolescents
Pantoprazole is not recommended for use in children as it has not been proven to work in children below 18 years of age.
Other medicines and Pantoprazole
Tell your doctor or pharmacist if you are taking, have recently taken or might take any other medicines, including medicines obtained without a prescription.
- Medicines such as ketoconazole, itraconazole and posaconazole (used to treat fungal infections) or erlotinib (used for certain types of cancer) because pantoprazole may stop these and other medicines from working properly.
- Warfarin and phenprocoumon, which affect the thickening, or thinning of the blood. You may need further checks.
- Atazanavir (used to treat HIV-infection) and other medicines used to treat HIV.
- Methotrexate (used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, and cancer) - if you are taking methotrexate your doctor may temporarily stop your Pantoprazole treatment because pantoprazole can increase levels of methotrexate in the blood.
Pregnancy and breast-feeding
There are no adequate data from the use of pantoprazole in pregnant women. Excretion into human milk has been reported. If you are pregnant or breast feeding, think you may be pregnant, or are planning to have a baby ask your doctor or pharmacist for advice before using this medicine. You should use this medicine, only if your doctor considers the benefit for you greater than the potential risk for your unborn child or baby.
Driving and using machines
If you experience side effects like dizziness or disturbed vision, you should not drive or operate machines. Pantoprazole contains sodium
This medicine contains less than 1 mmol sodium (23 mg) per vial, i.e. is essentially ‘sodium- free’.
3. How to use Pantoprazole
Your nurse or your doctor will administer the daily dose to you as an injection into a vein over a period of 2
- 15 minutes.
The recommended dose is:
- For gastric ulcers, duodenal ulcers and reflux oesophagitis.
One vial (40 mg pantoprazole) a day.
- For the long-term treatment of Zollinger-Ellison syndrome and other conditions in which too much stomach acid is produced.
Two vials (80 mg pantoprazole) a day.
Your doctor may later adjust the dose, depending on the amount of stomach acid you produce. If you are prescribed more than two vials (80 mg) a day, the injections will be given in two equal doses. Your doctor may prescribe a temporary dose of more than four vials (160 mg) a day. If your stomach acid level needs to be controlled rapidly, a starting dose of 160 mg (four vials) should be enough to lower the amount of stomach acid sufficiently.
Patients with liver problems
If you suffer from severe liver problems, the daily injection should be only 20 mg (half a vial).
Use in children and adolescents
These injections are not recommended for use in children and adolescents under 18 years.
If you use more Pantoprazole than you should
These doses are carefully checked by your nurse or your doctor so an overdose is extremely unlikely. There are no known symptoms of overdose.
If you have any further questions about the use of this medicine, ask your doctor, pharmacist or nurse.
4. Possible side effects
Like all medicines, this medicine can cause side effects, although not everybody gets them.
If you get any of the following side effects, tell your doctor immediately or contact the casualty department at your nearest hospital:
- Serious allergic reactions (frequency: rare may affect up to 1 in 1,000 people): swelling of the tongue and/or throat, difficulty in swallowing, hives (nettle rash), difficulties in breathing, allergic facial swelling (Quincke’s oedema / angioedema), severe dizziness with very fast heartbeat and heavy sweating.
- Serious skin conditions (frequency: not known frequency cannot be estimated from the available data): blistering of the skin and rapid deterioration of your general condition, erosion (including slight bleeding) of eyes, nose, mouth/lips or genitals (Stevens-Johnson-Syndrome, Lyell-Syndrome, Erythema multiforme) and sensitivity to light.
- Other serious conditions (frequency: not known frequency cannot be estimated from the available data): yellowing of the skin or whites of the eyes (severe damage to liver cells, jaundice) or fever, rash, and enlarged kidneys sometimes with painful urination and lower back pain (serious inflammation of the kidneys).
Other side effects are:
- Common (may affect up to 1 in 10 people)
Inflammation of the wall of the vein and blood clotting (thrombophlebitis) where the medicine is injected.
Uncommon (may affect up to 1 in 100 people)
Headache; dizziness; diarrhoea; feeling sick, vomiting; bloating and flatulence (wind); constipation; dry mouth; abdominal pain and discomfort; skin rash, exanthema, eruption; itching; feeling weak, exhausted or generally unwell; sleep disorders. Taking a proton pump inhibitor like pantoprazole, especially over a period of more than one year, may slightly increase your risk of fracture in the hip, wrist or spine. Tell your doctor if you have osteoporosis or if you are taking corticosteroids (which can increase the risk of osteoporosis).
- Rare (may affect up to 1 in 1,000 people)
Distortion or complete lack of the sense of taste; disturbances in vision such as blurred vision; hives; pain in the joints; muscle pains; weight changes; raised body temperature; swelling of the extremities (peripheral oedema); allergic reactions; depression; breast enlargement in males.
- Very Rare (may affect up to 1 in 10,000 people)
Disorientation.
- Not known (frequency cannot be estimated from the available data)
- Hallucination, confusion (especially in patients with a history of these symptoms); decreased sodium level in blood, feeling of tingling, prickling, pins and needles, burning sensation or numbness; low levels of potassium which can cause muscle weakness, twitching or abnormal heart rhythm; muscle spasm or cramps; low levels of calcium.
- If you are on pantoprazole for more than three months it is possible that the levels of magnesium in your blood may fall. Low levels of magnesium can be seen as fatigue, involuntary muscle contractions, disorientation, convulsions, dizziness, increased heart rate. If you get any of these symptoms, please tell your doctor promptly. Low levels of magnesium can also lead to a reduction in potassium or calcium levels in the blood. Your doctor may decide to perform regular blood tests to monitor your levels of magnesium (see section 2).
Side effects identified through blood tests:
- Uncommon (may affect up to 1 in 100 people) an increase in liver enzymes.
- Rare (may affect up to 1 in 1,000 people)
an increase in bilirubin; increased fats in the blood; sharp drop in circulating granular white blood cells, associated with high fever.
- Very Rare (may affect up to 1 in 10,000 people)
a reduction in the number of blood platelets, which may cause you to bleed or bruise more than normal; a reduction in the number of white blood cells, which may lead to more frequent infections; coexisting abnormal reduction in the number of red and white blood cells, as well as platelets.
Reporting of side effects
If you get any side effects, talk to your doctor, pharmacist or nurse. This includes any possible side effects
not listed in this leaflet. You can also report side effects directly via the Yellow Card Scheme at:
By reporting side effects you can help provide more information on the safety of this medicine.
5. How to store Pantoprazole
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 and vial after EXP. The expiry
date refers to the last day of that month.
Do not store above 25°C.
Keep the vial in the outer carton in order to protect from light.
Chemical and physical in-use stability has been demonstrated for 6 hours at 25°C and for 24 hours at 2-8°C. From a microbiological point of view, the reconstituted / diluted solution should be used immediately. If not used immediately, in-use storage times and conditions prior to use are the responsibility of the user and would normally not be longer than 24 hours at 2 to 8°C, unless dilution has taken place in controlled and validated aseptic conditions.
The reconstituted solution should be inspected visually prior to use. It should only be used if the solution is clear and colourless or slightly brownish, and practically free from particles.
Do not use pantoprazole if you notice that the visual appearance has changed (e.g. if cloudiness or precipitation is observed).
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.
6. Contents of the pack and other information
What Pantoprazole contains:
- The active substance is pantoprazole. Each vial contains 40 mg pantoprazole (as pantoprazole sodium).
- The other ingredient is disodium edetate.
What Pantoprazole looks like and contents of the pack
Pantoprazole is a white to almost white dry powder in a clear glass vial with a rubber stopper and sealed with aluminium caps fitted with plastic flip-off discs.
Pantoprazole 40 mg Powder for solution for injection or infusion is available in packs of 1, 5 and 10 vials: Not all pack sizes may be marketed.
Marketing Authorisation Holder and Manufacturer
Marketing Authorisation Holder TEVA UK Limited Brampton Road,
Hampden Park,
Eastbourne,
East Sussex BN22 9AG UNITED KINGDOM
Manufacturer
TEVA Pharmaceutical Works Private Limited Company
H-2100 Godollo, Tancsics Mihaly ut 82
Hungary
This leaflet was last revised in April 2015 PL 00289/1141
The following information is intended for medical or healthcare professionals only:
A ready-to-use solution is prepared by injecting 10 ml of sodium chloride 9 mg/ml (0.9%) solution for injection into the vial containing the dry powder. This solution may either be administered directly or after mixing it with 100 ml sodium chloride 9 mg/ml (0.9%) solution for injection or glucose 55 mg/ml (5%) solution for injection.
The reconstituted solution should be inspected visually prior to use. It should only be used if the solution is clear and colourless or slightly brownish, and practically free from particles.
Pantoprazole should not be prepared or mixed with solvents other than those stated.
After preparation, the solution must be used within 6 hours if it is stored at 25°C or within 24 hours at 2-8°C. From a microbiological point of view, the product should be used immediately. If not used immediately, inuse storage times and conditions prior to use are the responsibility of the user and would normally not be longer than 24 hours at 2 to 8°C.
The medicine should be administered intravenously over 2 - 15 minutes.
The content of the vial is for single intravenous use only. Any product that has remained in the container or whose visual appearance has changed (e.g. if cloudiness or precipitation is observed) must be discarded.