Rhotard Morphine Sr 60mg Tablets
SUMMARY OF PRODUCT CHARACTERISTICS
1 NAME OF THE MEDICINAL PRODUCT
Rhotard Morphine SR 60 mg Tablets Morphgesic SR 60 mg Tablets.
2. QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE COMPOSITION
Rhotard Morphine SR 60 mg Tablets/ Morphgesic SR 60 mg Tablets Each tablet contains 60 mg of morphine sulphate.
Excipients with known effect:
Lactose (33.000 mg per tablet).
Fd & C Yellow #6/Sunset Yellow FCF Lake (E110)
For the full list of excipients, see section 6.1.
3. PHARMACEUTICAL FORM
Controlled release tablets
Each 60 mg tablet is an orange coloured biconvex round film coated tablet.
4. CLINICAL PARTICULARS
4.1 Therapeutic indications
Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets are indicated in adults for the prolonged relief of severe pain.
4.2 Posology and method of administration
Posology
Paediatric population
Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets are not recommended for paediatric use.
Adults:
The dosage is dependent upon the severity of the pain and the patient’s previous history of analgesic requirements. The tablets should normally be administered twice daily at 12 hourly intervals. One or two 10 mg tablets (10 mg) twice daily is the recommended starting dosage for a patient presenting with severe pain. With increasing severity of pain it is recommended that the dosage of morphine be increased to achieve the desired relief. The dosage may be varied by choosing combinations of available strengths (10, 30, 60, and 100 mg) or by using higher strength tablets alone.
It is recommended that a patient transferred from another oral morphine preparation, having similar bioavailability to oral morphine liquid, should receive the same total morphine dose in one 24-hour period. This total dose should be divided between the morning and evening administration. Dosage titration and clinical assessment may be appropriate.
Where a patient had previously received parenteral morphine prior to being transferred to Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets, a higher dosage of morphine may be required. Individual dosage adjustment will be necessary to compensate for any reduction in analgesic effect associated with oral administration.
When Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets is to be given for the relief of post-operative pain, it is not advisable to administer it during the first 24 hours. Following this initial period, the dosage should be at the physician’s discretion.
Some patients may require supplemental parenteral morphine which is perfectly acceptable. Careful attention should be paid to the total morphine dosage however, and the prolonged effects of morphine in the Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR formulation should also be borne in mind.
Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets should be used with caution post-operatively (as with all morphine preparations) but especially following abdominal surgery.
Gastric motility should have returned and be maintained.
Method of administration Oral
Rhotard Morphine SR / Morphgesic SR tablets should be swallowed whole and not chewed.
4.3 Contraindications
Hypersensitivity to the active substance or to any of the excipients listed in section 6.1.
Respiratory depression, paralytic ileus, acute abdomen, delayed gastric emptying, obstructive airways disease, or acute hepatic disease. It is also contra-indicated in the presence of acute alcoholism, head injuries and conditions in which intracranial pressure is raised. Neither should it be given during an attack of bronchial asthma nor heart failure secondary to chronic lung disease.
Patients with excessive bronchial secretions should not be given Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets as morphine diminishes the cough response.
Not recommended for pre-operative use or for the first 24 hours post-operatively.
Not recommended during pregnancy and lactation (see section 4.6).
Concurrent administration of monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) or within two weeks of discontinuation of their use.
Renal impairment
Severe and prolonged respiratory depression may occur in patients with renal impairment given morphine; this is attributed to the accumulation of the active metabolite morphine-6-glucuronide. Therefore Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets should not be administered to patients with moderate or severe renal impairment (glomerular filtration rate <20 ml/min).
Hepatic impairment
As with other opioid analgesic containing preparations Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets should not be administered to patients with severe hepatic impairment as it may precipitate coma.
Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets, as with other opioid containing preparations, is contraindicated in patients with ulcerative colitis, since such preparations may precipitate toxic dilation or spasm of the colon.
4.4 Special warnings and precautions for use
Concomitant use of alcohol and Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets may increase the undesirable effects of Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets, concomitant use should be avoided.
Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets should be given with caution or in reduced doses to patients with hypothyroidism, adrenocortical insufficiency or shock. It should be used with caution in patients with either obstructive bowel disorders or myasthenia gravis.
Caution in patients with convulsive disorders, hypotension with hypovolaemia, the elderly, opioid dependent patients, diseases of the biliary tract, pancreatitis and inflammatory bowel disorders. Use with caution in patients with impaired respiratory function, delirium tremens, severe cor pulmonale and patients with a history of substance abuse. Morphine may lower the seizure threshold in patients with a history of epilepsy.
Should not be used where there is a possibility of paralytic ileus occurring. Should paralytic ileus be suspected to occur during use, treatment should be discontinued immediately.
Extreme caution should be exercised when administering morphine to patients with phaeochromocytoma, since aggravated hypertension has been reported in association with diamorphine.
As with all morphine sulphate preparations, patients about to undergo additional pain relieving procedures (e.g. cordotomy, surgery, plexus blockade) should not receive Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets for 24 hours prior to the intervention. If further treatment with Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets is indicated then the dosage should be adjusted to the new post-operative requirement.
The major risk of opioid excess is respiratory depression.
The patient may develop tolerance to the drug with chronic use and require progressively higher doses to maintain pain control. Prolonged use of this product may lead to physical dependence and a withdrawal syndrome may occur upon abrupt cessation of therapy. When a patient no longer requires therapy with morphine sulphate, it may be advisable to taper the dose gradually to prevent symptoms of withdrawal.
Morphine sulphate has an abuse profile similar to other strong agonist opioids. Morphine sulphate may be sought and abused by people with latent or manifest addiction disorders. There is potential for development of psychological dependence (addiction) to opioid analgesics, including morphine. The product should be used with particular care in patients with a history of alcohol and drug abuse.
The prolonged release tablets must be swallowed whole, and not broken, chewed, dissolved or crushed. The administration of broken, chewed or crushed tablets may lead to a rapid release and absorption of a potentially fatal dose of morphine sulphate (see section 4.9).
Abuse of Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets by parenteral administration can be expected to result in serious adverse events, which may be fatal.
Urinary retention may occur in patients with urethral disease or prostatic hypertrophy.
It is not possible to ensure bio-equivalence between different brands of controlled release morphine products. Therefore, it should be emphasised that patients, once titrated to an effective dose should not be changed from Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets to other slow, sustained or controlled release morphine or other potent narcotic analgesic preparations without retitration and clinical assessment.
Patients with rare hereditary problems of galactose intolerance, the Lapp lactase deficiency or glucose-galactose malabsorption should not take this medicine.
4.5 Interactions with other medicinal products and other forms of interaction
Alcohol may enhance the pharmacodynamic effects of Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets; concomitant use should be avoided.
Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets should not be concurrently administered with monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOI’s) or used within two weeks of discontinuation of MAOI use (see section 4.3). The depressant effects of morphine may be enhanced, or the effects of other compounds potentiated, by depressants of the central nervous system such as alcohol, anaesthetics, hypnotics and sedatives, tricyclic antidepressants and phenothiazines, as well as muscle relaxants, gabapentin and antihypertensives. Interactive effects resulting in respiratory depression, hypotension, profound sedation, or coma may result if these drugs are taken in combination with the usual doses of morphine sulphate. The action of morphine may in turn affect the activities of other compounds, for example its gastro-intestinal effects may delay absorption as with mexilitine or may be counteractive as with metoclopramide.
Cimetidine inhibits the metabolism of morphine.
Mixed agonist/antagonist opioid analgesics (e.g. buprenorphine, nalbuphine, pentazocine) should not be administered to a patient who has received a course of therapy with a pure opioid agonist analgesic.
The analgesic effect of opioids tends to be enhanced by co-administration of dexamfetamine and hydroxyzine.
Medicinal products that block the action of acetylcholine, for example antihistamines, anti-parkinsonian agents and anti-emetics, may interact with morphine sulphate to potentiate anti-cholinergic adverse events.
Plasma concentrations of morphine sulphate may be reduced by rifampicin.
Morphine may reduce the efficacy of diuretics by inducing the release of antidiuretic hormone.
Propranolol has been reported to enhance the lethality of toxic doses of opioids in animals, although the significance of this finding is not known for man. Caution should be exercised when these drugs are administered concurrently.
Although there are no pharmacokinetic data available for concomitant use of ritonavir with morphine sulphate, ritonavir induces the hepatic enzymes responsible for the glucuronidation of morphine sulphate, and may possibly decrease plasma concentrations of morphine sulphate.
4.6 Fertility, pregnancy and lactation
Pregnancy
Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets are not recommended during pregnancy and labour due to the risk of neonatal respiratory depression.
Breast-feeding
Administration to nursing mothers is not recommended as morphine sulphate is excreted in breast milk (see section 4.3). Withdrawal symptoms may be observed in the newborn of mothers undergoing chronic treatment.
Fertility
Effects of morphine exposure on sexual maturation of male rats, their reproductive capacity and the development of their progeny have been examined. Results indicated that exposure during adolescence led to pronounced inhibition of several indices of sexual maturation (e.g. hormone levels, reduced gonad weights), smaller litters and selective gender specific effects on endocrine function in the offspring.
A disruption in ovulation and amenorrhoea can occur in women given morphine.
4.7 Effects on ability to drive and use machines
Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets may modify the patient’s reactions to a varying extent depending on the dosage and susceptibility. If affected, patients should not drive or operate machinery.
This medicine can impair cognitive function and can affect a patient’s ability to drive safely. This class of medicine is in the list of drugs included in regulations under 5a of the Road Traffic Act 1988. When prescribing this medicine, patients should be told:
• The medicine is likely to affect your ability to drive
• Do not drive until you know how the medicine affects you
• It is an offence to drive while under the influence of this medicine
• However, you would not be committing an offence (called ‘statutory defence’) if:
o The medicine has been prescribed to treat a medical or dental problem and o You have taken it according to the instructions given by the prescriber and in the information provided with the medicine and o It was not affecting your ability to drive safely
4.8 Undesirable effects
In normal doses, the most common side effects of morphine are nausea, vomiting, constipation and drowsiness. With chronic therapy, nausea and vomiting are unusual with Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets but should they occur the tablets can be readily combined with an anti-emetic if required. Constipation may be treated with appropriate laxatives.
A case of morphine induced thrombocytopenia has been reported.
Morphine has a depressant effect on gonadal hormone secretion which can result in a reduction of testosterone leading to regression of secondary sexual characteristics in men on long-term therapy.
Very Common (incidence > 1/10), Common (incidence of > 1%) and Uncommon (incidence of < 1%) adverse drug reactions are listed in the table below:
Undesirable Effects |
Very Common |
Common (> 1 %) |
Uncommon (< 1 %) |
Frequency Unknown |
Immune system disorders |
Allergic reaction |
Anaphylactic reaction Anaphylactoid reaction | ||
Psychiatric disorders |
Confusion Insomnia |
Agitation Euphoria Hallucinations Mood altered |
Drug dependence, Dysphoria Thinking disturbances restlessness | |
Nervous system disorders |
Headache Involuntary muscle contractions Somnolence Dizziness |
Convulsions Hypertonia Myoclonus Paraesthesia Syncope |
Raised intracranial pressure Coma Hyperalgesia hyperaesthesia/a llodynia | |
Eye disorders |
Visual disturbance |
Miosis | ||
Ear and labyrinth disorders |
Vertigo | |||
Cardiac disorders |
Palpitations |
Bradycardia Tachycardia | ||
Vascular disorders |
Facial flushing Hypotension |
Circulatory failure Hypertension | ||
Respiratory, thoracic and mediastinal disorders |
Bronchospasm Pulmonary oedema Respiratory depression |
Cough decreased | ||
Gastrointestinal disorders |
Constipation Nausea |
Abdominal pain Anorexia Dry mouth Vomiting |
Dyspepsia Ileus Taste perversion |
Narcotic bowel syndrome |
Hepatobiliary disorders |
Increased hepatic enzymes |
Exacerbation of pancreatitis Biliary pain | ||
Skin and |
Hyperhidrosis |
Urticaria |
subcutaneous tissue disorders |
Rash | |||
Renal and urinary disorders |
Urinary retention |
Ureteric spasm Dysuria | ||
Reproductive system and breast disorders |
Amenorrhea Decreased libido Erectile dysfunction | |||
General disorders and administration site conditions |
Asthenic conditions Pruritus |
Peripheral oedema |
Drug tolerance Drug withdrawal syndrome Hypothermia |
*Physical and psychological dependence may appear after administration of therapeutic doses for periods of 1 to 2 weeks. Some cases of dependence have been observed after only 2 to 3 days.
Reporting of suspected adverse reactions
Reporting suspected adverse reactions after authorisation of the medicinal product is important. It allows continued monitoring of the benefit/risk balance of the medicinal product. Healthcare professionals are asked to report any suspected adverse reactions via Yellow Card Scheme (Website: www.mhra.gov.uk/yellowcard).
4.9 Overdose
Signs & symptoms:
Signs of morphine toxicity and overdosage are pin-point pupils, skeletal muscle flaccidity, bradycardia respiratory depression and hypotension. Circulatory failure and deepening coma may occur in more severe cases. Overdosage can result in death. Rhabdomyolysis progressing to renal failure has been reported in opioid overdosage.
Crushing and taking the contents of a prolonged release dosage form may lead to the release of morphine in an immediate fashion; this might result in a fatal overdose.
Management:
Primary attention should be given to the establishment of a patent airway and institution of assisted or controlled ventilation.
The pure opioid antagonists are specific antidotes against the effects of opioid overdose. Other supportive measures should be employed as needed.
In the case of massive overdosage, administer naloxone 0.8 mg intravenously. Repeat at 2-3 minute intervals as necessary, or by an infusion of 2 mg in 500 ml of normal saline or 5% dextrose (0.004 mg/ml).
The infusion should be run at a rate related to the previous bolus doses administered and should be in accordance with the patient's response. However, because the duration of action of naloxone is relatively short, the patient must be carefully monitored until spontaneous respiration is reliably re-established. Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets remaining in the intestine will continue to release and add to the morphine load for up to 12 hours after administration and the management of morphine overdosage should be modified accordingly.
For less severe overdosage, administer naloxone 0.2 mg intravenously followed by increments of 0.1 mg every 2 minutes if required.
Naloxone should not be administered in the absence of clinically significant respiratory or circulatory depression secondary to morphine overdosage. Naloxone should be administered cautiously to persons who are known, or suspected, to be physically dependent on morphine. In such cases, an abrupt or complete reversal of opioid effects may precipitate an acute withdrawal syndrome.
Gastric contents may need to be emptied as this can be useful in removing unabsorbed drug, particularly when a prolonged release formulation has been taken.
5. PHARMACOLOGICAL PROPERTIES
5.1 Pharmacodynamic properties
Pharmacotherapeutic group: Opiods ATC code: N02A
Mechanism of action
Morphine acts as an agonist at opiate receptors in the CNS particularly Mu and to a lesser extent Kappa receptors. Mu receptors are thought to mediate supraspinal analgesia, respiratory depression and euphoria, and Kappa receptors, spinal analgesia, miosis and sedation.
Central Nervous System:
The principal actions of therapeutic value of morphine are analgesia and sedation (i.e., sleepiness and anxiolysis). Morphine produces respiratory depression by direct action on brain stem respiratory centres. Morphine depresses the cough reflex by direct effect on the cough centre in the medulla. Antitussive effects may occur with doses lower than those usually required for analgesia. Morphine causes miosis, even in total darkness. Pinpoint pupils are a sign of narcotic overdose but are not pathognomonic (e.g., pontine lesions of haemorrhagic or ischaemic origin may produce similar findings). Marked mydriasis rather than miosis may be seen with hypoxia in the setting of morphine overdose.
Morphine and related analgesics may produce both physical and psychological dependence and should therefore be used with discrimination. Tolerance may also develop.
Gastrointestinal Tract and Other Smooth Muscle
Morphine causes a reduction in motility associated with an increase in smooth muscle tone in the antrum of the stomach and duodenum. Digestion of food in the small intestine is delayed and propulsive contractions are decreased. Propulsive peristaltic waves in the colon are decreased, while tone is increased to the point of spasm resulting in constipation. Morphine generally increases smooth muscle tone, especially the sphincters of the gastrointestinal and biliary tracts. Morphine may produce spasm of the sphincter of Oddi, thus raising intrabiliary pressure.
Cardiovascular System
Morphine may produce release of histamine with or without associated peripheral vasodilation. Manifestations of histamine release and/or peripheral vasodilation may include pruritus, flushing, red eyes, sweating, and/or orthostatic hypotension.
Endocrine System
Opioids may influence the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal or -gonadal axes. Some changes that can be seen include an increase in serum prolactin, and decreases in plasma cortisol and testosterone in association with inappropriately low or normal ACTH, LH or FSH levels. Some premenopausal women may have low oestrogen levels. Clinical symptoms may be manifest from these hormonal changes.
Other Pharmacological Effects
In vitro and animal studies indicate various effects of natural opioids, such as morphine, on components of the immune system; the clinical significance of these findings is unknown.
Routes of administration include the oral, subcutaneous, intramuscular, intravenous, intraspinal and rectal routes. Parenteral doses may be intermittent injections or continuous or intermittent infusions adjusted according to individual analgesic requirements.
5.2 Pharmacokinetic properties
Absorption
Morphine is immediately absorbed from the digestive tract following oral administration. Morphine has a plasma half life of about 2 to 3 hours and if given IV must be administered frequently. Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets, being a sustained release preparation of morphine, has the advantage that it is only administered twice daily.
Distribution
The percentage of binding to plasma proteins after absorption is low. There is no clearly defined correlation between the plasma concentration of morphine and the analgesic effect.
Metabolism
A considerable quantity of morphine is metabolised by the liver to glucuronides, which undergo enterohepatic recirculation.
Excretion
The product is eliminated essentially in the urine, by glomerular filtration, mainly as glucuronides. A small amount (less than 10%) is eliminated in the faeces.
A summary of the morphine pharmacokinetic parameters is given below:
(a) Half life; plasma half life; about 2-3 hours
(b) Volume of distribution; about 3-5 litres/KG
(c) Clearance; plasma clearance; about 15 to 20 ml/min/kg
(d) Protein binding; in plasma 20-35%
Pharmacokinetic parameters pertinent to Rhotard Morphine SR/ Morphgesic SR tablets are summarised in the following table:
Parameters |
Rhotard Morphine SR/ |
Rhotard Morphine SR/ |
Morphgesic SR Tablets |
Morphgesic SR Tablets | |
Fasting (A) |
Food (B) | |
AUC (0-t) (ng.h/ml) |
46.02 ± 18.85 |
59.88 ± 20.52 |
Cmax (ng/ml) |
9.2 ± 3.6 |
13.6 ± 4.6 |
T A max |
2.5 ± 1.7 |
3.9 ± 1.6 |
hours |
5.3 Pre-clinical safety data
A. Mutagenicity
No bacterial mutagenicity studies with morphine have been reported. A review of the literature has indicated that morphine was negative in gene mutation assays in Drosophila melanogaster, but was positive in a mammalian spermatocyte test. The results of another study has indicated that morphine causes chromosomal aberrations, in germ cells of male mice when given at dose levels of 10, 20, 40 or 60 mg/kg bodyweight for 3 consecutive days.
B. Carcinogenicity
No long term studies have been conducted in animals to determine whether morphine is potentially carcinogenic.
C. Teratogenicity
Morphine was not teratogenic in rats when dosed for up to 15 days at 70mg/kg/day. Morphine given subcutaneously to mice at very high doses (200, 300 or 400 mg/kg/day) on days 8 or 9 of gestation, resulted in a few cases of exencephaly and axial skeletal fusions. The hypoxic effects of such high doses could account for the defects seen.
Lower doses of morphine (40, 4.0 or 0.4 mg/ml) given to mice as a continuous i.v. infusion (at a dose volume of 0.3 ml/kg) between days 7 and 10 of gestation, caused soft tissue and skeletal malformations as shown in previous studies.
6. PHARMACEUTICAL PARTICULARS
6.1 List of excipients
Lactose,
Hydroxyethylcellulose,
Hypromellose (E464),
Povidone,
Talc,
Magnesium Stearate,
Macrogol
Industrial Methylated Spirits 99%
Rhotard Morphine SR 60 mg Tablets/ Morphgesic SR 60 mg Tablets contain the colourants listed below:
Titanium Dioxide (E171)
FD&C Yellow #6/Sunset Yellow FCF Lake (E110)
6.2 Incompatibilities Not applicable.
6.3 Shelf life
3 years
6.4 Special precautions for storage
Do not store above 25°C. Store in the original package.
6.5 Nature and contents of container
Each pack contains either 10 or 60 tablets in PVC blister packs with aluminium foil lidding.
6.6 Special precautions for disposal and other handling
None.
7 MARKETING AUTHORISATION HOLDER
Amdipharm UK Limited
Capital House, 85 King William Street,
London EC4N 7BL, UK
8 MARKETING AUTHORISATION NUMBER(S)
PL 20072/0233
9 DATE OF FIRST AUTHORISATION/RENEWAL OF THE
AUTHORISATION
28 June 2002
10 DATE OF REVISION OF THE TEXT
25/05/2015