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  • Mesulid 100
    / Rafa


    Active Ingredient
    Nimesulide 100 mg

    Status in Israel
    RX

    Presentation and Status in Health Basket

    Presentation Basket Yarpa Pharmasoft

    Caplets

    30 X 100 mg

    not in the basket chart 9259 13013

    Related information


    Dosage

    Mesulid should be used for the shortest possible duration, as required by the clinical situation. Moreover, undesirable effects may be minimized by using the minimum effective dose for the shortest duration necessary to control symptoms. The maximum duration of a treatment course with nimesulide is 15 days.
    Adults: One 100mg caplet twice a day after meals.
    Elderly: in elderly patients there is no need to reduce the daily dosage.
    Children (< 12 years): Mesulid is contraindicated in these patients.
    Adolescents (from 12 to 18 years): on the basis of the kinetic profile in adults and on the pharmacodynamic characteristics of nimesulide, no dosage adjustment in these patients is necessary.
    Impaired renal function: on the basis of pharmacokinetics, no dosage adjustment is necessary in patients with mild to moderate renal impairment (creatinine clearance of 30-80 ml/min), while Mesulid is contraindicated in case of severe renal impairement (creatinine clearance<30 ml/min).
    Hepatic impairment: the use of Mesulid is contraindicated in patients with hepatic impairment.


    Indications

    For short term use: Treatment of acute pain, symptomatic treatment of painful osteoarthritis, primary dysmenorrhea.


    Contra-Indications

    – Hypersensitivity to nimesulide or to any of the excipients.
    – History of hypersensitivity reactions (e.g. bronchospasm, rhinitis, urticaria, nasal polyps)) in response to acetylsalicylic acid or other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.
    – History of hepatotoxic reactions to nimesulide.
    – Concomitant exposure to other potentially hepatotoxic substances.
    – Alcoholism, drug addiction.
    – History of gastrointestinal bleeding or perforation, related to previous NSAIDs therapy.
    – Active, or history of recurrent peptic ulcer/haemorrhage (two or more distinct episodes of proven ulceration or bleeding).
    – cerebrovascular bleeding or other active bleeding or bleeding disorders.
    – Severe coagulation disorders.
    – Severe heart failure.
    – Severe renal impairment.
    – Hepatic impairment.
    – Patients with fever and / or flu-like symptoms.
    – Children under 12 years.
    – The third trimester of pregnancy and breastfeeding.


    Special Precautions

    The use of Mesulid with concomitant NSAIDs including cyclooxygenase-2 selective inhibitors should be avoided. In addition, patients should be advised to refrain from other concomitant analgesics.Undesirable effects may be minimised by using the minimum effective dose for the shortest duration necessary to control symptoms. Treatment should be discontinued if no benefit is seen.
    Hepatic effects: Rarely Mesulid has been reported to be associated with serious hepatic reactions, including very rare fatal cases . Patients who experience symptoms compatible with hepatic injury during treatment with Mesulid (e.g. anorexia, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, fatigue, dark urine) or patients who develop abnormal liver function tests should have treatment discontinued. These patients should not be rechallenged with nimesulide. Liver damage, in most cases reversible, has been reported following short exposure to the drug.
    Patients receiving nimesulide who develop fever and / or flu-like symptoms should discontinue treatment.
    Gastrointestinal effects: Gastrointestinal bleeding, ulceration and perforation: GI bleeding, ulceration or perforation, which can be fatal, has been reported with all NSAIDs at anytime during treatment, with or without warning symptoms or a previous history of GI events.
    The risk of GI bleeding, ulceration or perforation is higher with increasing NSAID doses, in patients with a history of ulcer, particularly if complicated with haemorrhage or perforation, and in the elderly. These patients should commence treatment on the lowest dose available. Combination therapy with protective agents (e.g. misoprostol or proton pump inhibitors) should be considered for these patients, and also for patients requiring concomitant low dose aspirin, or other drugs likely to increase gastrointestinal risk . Patients with a history of GI toxicity, particularly when elderly, should report any unusual abdominal symptoms (especially GI bleeding), particularly in the initial stages of treatment. Gastrointestinal bleeding or ulceration / perforation can occur at any time during treatment with or without warning symptoms or a previous history of gastrointestinal events. If gastrointestinal bleeding or ulceration occurs, nimesulide should be discontinued. Nimesulide should be used with caution in patients with gastrointestinal disorders, including history of peptic ulceration, history of gastrointestinal haemorrhage, ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s disease. Caution should be advised in patients receiving concomitant medications which could increase the risk of ulceration or bleeding, such as oral corticosteroids, anticoagulants such as warfarin, selective serotonin-reuptake inhibitors or antiplatelet agents such as aspirin. When GI bleeding or ulceration occurs in patients receiving Mesulid the treatment should be withdrawn. NSAIDs should be given with care to patients with a history of gastrointestinal disease (ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease) as their condition may be exacerbated.
    Elderly: The elderly have an increased frequency of adverse reactions to NSAIDs, especially gastrointestinal bleeding and perforation which may be fatal. Therefore, appropriate clinical monitoring is advisable.
    Cardiovascular and cerebrovascular effects: Appropriate monitoring and advice are required for patients with a history of hypertension and/or mild to moderate congestive heart failure as fluid retention and oedema have been reported in association with NSAID therapy. Clinical trial and epidemiological data suggest that use of some NSAIDs (particularly at high doses and in long term treatment) may be associated with a small increased risk of arterial thrombotic events (for example, myocardial infarction or stroke). There are insufficient data to exclude such a risk for Mesulid. Patients with uncontrolled hypertension, congestive heart failure, established ischaemic heart disease, peripheral arterial disease, and/or cerebrovascular disease should only be treated with Mesulid after careful consideration. Similar consideration should be made before initiating longer-term treatment of patients with risk factors for cardiovascular disease (e.g. hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, diabetes mellitus, smoking). As nimesulide can interfere with platelet function, it should be used with caution in patients with bleeding diathesis. However, Mesulid is not a substitute for acetylsalicylic acid for cardiovascular prophylaxis.
    Renal effects: In patients with renal or cardiac impairment, caution is required since the use of Mesulid may result in deterioration of renal function. In the event of deterioration, the treatment should be discontinued.
    Skin Reactions: Serious skin reactions, some of them fatal, including exfoliative dermatitis, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, and toxic epidermal necrolysis, have been reported very rarely in association with the use of NSAIDs. Patients appear to be at highest risk of these reactions early in the course of therapy, the onset of the reaction occurring in the majority of cases within the first month of treatment. Mesulid should be discontinued at the first appearance of skin rash, mucosal lesions, or any other sign of hypersensitivity.
    Fertility effects: The use of Mesulid may impair female fertility and is not recommended in women attempting to conceive. In women who have difficulties conceiving or who are undergoing investigation of infertility, withdrawal of Mesulid should be considered.
    Mesulid contain lactose, therefore patients with rare hereditary problems of galactose intolerance, the Lapp lactase deficiency or glucose-galactose malabsorption should not take this medicine.
    For full details see prescribing information


    Side Effects

    General Description: Clinical trial and epidemiological data suggest that use of some NSAIDs (particularly at high doses and in long term treatment) may be associated with a small increased risk of arterial thrombotic events (for example myocardial infarction or stroke).
    Oedema, hypertension, and cardiac failure have been reported in association with NSAID treatment. Very rare cases of bullous reactions including Stevens Johnson Syndrom and Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis have been reported.
    The most commonly-observed adverse events are gastrointestinal in nature. Peptic ulcers, perforation or GI bleeding, sometimes fatal, particularly in the elderly, may occur. Nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, flatulence, constipation, dyspepsia, abdominal pain, melaena, haematemesis, ulcerative stomatitis, exacerbation of colitis and Crohn’s disease have been reported following administration. Less frequently, gastritis has been observed.
    See prescribing information for full details.


    Drug interactions

    Other non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs): The combined use of Mesulid with other non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, including acetylsalicylic acid given at anti-inflammatory doses (≥ 1g as single intake or ≥ 3g as total daily amount) is not recommended.
    Corticosteroids: Increased risk of gastrointestinal ulceration or bleeding.
    Anti-coagulants: NSAIDs may enhance the effects of anti-coagulants, such as warfarin. Patients receiving warfarin or similar anticoagulant agents or acetylsalicylic acid have an increased risk of bleeding complications, when treated with Mesulid. Therefore this combination is not recommended and is contraindicated in patients with severe coagulation disorders. If the combination cannot be avoided, anticoagulant activity should be monitored closely.
    Anti-platelet agents and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs): increased risk of gastrointestinal bleeding).
    Diuretics, Angiotensin Conversion Enzyme Inhibitors (ACE inhibitors) and Angiotensin II Antagonists (AIIA): NSAIDs may reduce the efficacy of diuretics and that of other antihypertensive drugs. In some patients with reduced renal function (e.g. dehydrated patients or elderly subjects with impairment of renal function), concomitant administration of an ACE inhibitor and cyclo-oxygenase inhibitors may result in progression of the deterioration of renal function, including the possibility of acute renal insufficiency, which is normally reversible.The occurrence of these interactions should be taken into consideration in patients who have to take Mesulid in association with ACE inhibitors or AIIA. Consequently, this drug association should be administered with precaution, especially in elderly patients. Patients should be properly hydrated, and the need for monitoring of renal function after starting the concomitant treatment and periodically after that should be analysed.
    Pharmacokinetic interactions: effect of nimesulide on the pharmacokinetics of other drugs.
    Furosemide: In healthy subjects, nimesulide transiently decreases the effect of furosemide on sodium excretion and, to a lesser extent, on potassium excretion and reduces the diuretic response. Co-administration of nimesulide and furosemide results in a decrease (of about 20%) of the AUC and cumulative excretion of furosemide, without affecting its renal clearance.
    The concomitant use of furosemide and Mesulid requires caution in susceptible renal or cardiac patients.
    Lithium: Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs have been reported to reduce the clearance of lithium, resulting in elevated plasma levels and lithium toxicity. If Mesulid is prescribed for a patient receiving lithium therapy, lithium levels should be monitored closely.
    Potential pharmacokinetic interactions with glibenclamide, theophylline, warfarin, digoxin, cimetidine and an antacid preparation (i.e. a combination of aluminium and magnesium hydroxide) were also studied in vivo. No clinically significant interactions were observed.
    Nimesulide inhibits CYP2C9. The plasma concentrations of drugs that are substrates of this enzyme may be increased when Mesulid is used concomitantly.
    Caution is required if nimesulide is used less than 24 hours before or after treatment with methotrexate because the serum level of methotrexate might increase and therefore, the toxicity of this drug might increase.
    Due to their effect on renal prostaglandins, prostaglandin synthetase inhibitors like nimesulide may increase the nephrotoxicity of cyclosporines.
    Pharmacokinetic Interactions: Effects of other drugs on the pharmacokinetics of nimesulide:
    In vitro studies have shown displacement of nimesulide from binding sites by tolbutamide, salicylic acid and valproic acid. However, despite a possible effect on plasma levels, these interactions have not demonstrated clinical significance.
    See prescribing information for full details.


    Pregnancy and Lactation

    Pregnancy: The use of Mesulid is contraindicated in the third trimester of pregnancy. Like other NSAIDs, Mesulid is not recommended in women attempting to conceive. Inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis may have a negative impact on pregnancy and/or embryonic/fetal development. Results of epidemiological studies suggest an increased risk of miscarriage and of cardiac malformation and gastroschisis after the use of an inhibitor of prostaglandin synthesis in the first stage of pregnancy. The absolute risk for cardiac malformations was increased from less than 1% to approximately 1.5%. The risk has been considered to increase with the dose and duration of treatment. In animals, administration of inhibitors of prostaglandin synthesis has been shown to provoke an increase in pre- and postimplantation loss and in embryonic-fetal mortality. Furthermore, an increased incidence of various malformations, including the cardiovascular one, has been reported in animals to which inhibitors of prostaglandin synthesis were administered during the period of organogenesis. Studies in rabbits have shown an atypical reproductive toxicity and no adequate data from the use of nimesulide-containing medicinal products in pregnant women are available. Therefore, the potential risk for humans is unknown and prescribing the drug during the first two trimesters of pregnancy is not recommended, except in cases where it is strictly necessary. If Mesulid is used by a woman who is trying to conceive, or during the first and second trimesters of pregnancy, the dose and duration of treatment should be kept as low as possible. During the third trimester of pregnancy, all inhibitors of prostaglandin synthesis may expose the fetus to:
    – cardiopulmonary toxicity (with premature closure of the ductus arteriosus and pulmonary hypertension);
    – renal dysfunction, which may progress to renal insufficiency with oligohydramnios;
    – the mother and the newborn infant, at the end of pregnancy, to:
    – possible prolongation of bleeding time, and an antiplatelet effect which may occur even at very low doses;
    – inhibition of uterine contractions resulting in delay or prolongation of labour.
    Consequently, Mesulid is contraindicated during the third trimester of pregnancy.
    Lactation: It is not known whether nimesulide is excreted in human milk. Mesulid is contraindicated when breastfeeding.


    Overdose

    Symptoms following acute NSAID overdoses are usually limited to lethargy, drowsiness, nausea, vomiting and epigastric pain, which are generally reversible with supportive care. Gastrointestinal bleeding can occur. Hypertension, acute renal failure, respiratory depression and coma may occur, but are rare. Anaphylactoid reactions have been reported with therapeutic ingestion of NSAIDs, and may occur following an overdose. Patients should be managed by symptomatic and supportive care following an NSAID overdose. There are no specific antidotes. No information is available regarding the removal of nimesulide by haemodialysis, but based on its high degree of plasma protein binding (up to 97.5%) dialysis is unlikely to be useful in overdose. Emesis and/or activated charcoal (60 to 100 g in adults) and/or osmotic cathartic may be indicated in patients seen within 4 hours of ingestion with symptoms or following a large overdose. Forced diuresis, alkalinization of
    urine, haemodialysis, or haemoperfusion may not be useful due to high protein binding. Renal and hepatic function should be monitored.


    Manufacturer
    Rafa Laboratories Ltd.

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