Version
v1
Version
v1
Effective date
October 8, 2006
Original packager
—
Sections captured
26
Percentage of patients reported | ||||||
with sign or symptom | ||||||
Acute Overdose | Chronic Overdosage | |||||
(Large Single Ingestion) | (Multiple Excessive Doses) | |||||
Sign/Symptom | Study 1 | Study 2 | Study 1 | Study 2 | ||
(n=157) | (n=14) | (n=92) | (n=102) | |||
| ||||||
| ||||||
| NR** | 0 | NR** | 6 | ||
| ||||||
Vomiting | 73 | 93 | 30 | 61 | ||
Abdominal Pain | NR** | 21 | NR** | 12 | ||
Diarrhea | NR** | 0 | NR** | 14 | ||
Hematemesis | NR** | 0 | NR** | 2 | ||
| ||||||
Hypokalemia | 85 | 79 | 44 | 43 | ||
Hyperglycemia | 98 | NR** | 18 | NR** | ||
Acid/base disturbance | 34 | 21 | 9 | 5 | ||
Rhabdomyolysis | NR** | 7 | NR** | 0 | ||
| ||||||
Sinus tachycardia | 100 | 86 | 100 | 62 | ||
Other supraventricular | 2 | 21 | 12 | 14 | ||
tachycardias | ||||||
Ventricular premature beats | 3 | 21 | 10 | 19 | ||
Atrial fibrillation or flutter | 1 | NR** | 12 | NR** | ||
| ||||||
Multifocal atrial tachycardia | 0 | NR** | 2 | NR** | ||
Ventricular arrhythmias with | 7 | 14 | 40 | 0 | ||
hemodynamic instability | ||||||
Hypotension/shock | NR** | 21 | NR** | 8 | ||
| ||||||
Nervousness | NR** | 64 | NR** | 21 | ||
Tremors | 38 | 29 | 16 | 14 | ||
Disorientation | NR** | 7 | NR** | 11 | ||
Seizures | 5 | 14 | 14 | 5 | ||
| 3 | 21 | 10 | 4 |
| | |
---|---|---|
| | |
| | |
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
Premature neonates | ||
postnatal age 3-15 days | 0.29 (0.09-0.49) | 30 (17-43) |
postnatal age 25-57 days | 0.64 (0.04-1.2) | 20 (9.4-30.6) |
Term infants | ||
postnatal age 1-2 days | NR† | 25.7 (25-26.5) |
postnatal age 3-30 weeks | NR† | 11 (6-29) |
Children | ||
1-4 years | 1.7 (0.5-2.9) | 3.4 (1.2-5.6) |
4-12 years | 1.6 (0.8-2.4) | NR† |
13-15 years | 0.9 (0.48-1.3) | NR† |
16-17 years | 1.4 (0.2-2.6) | 3.7 (1.5-5.9) |
Adults (16-60 years) | ||
otherwise healthy | ||
non-smoking asthmatics | 0.65 (0.27-1.03) | 8.7 (6.1-12.8) |
Elderly (>60 years) | ||
non-smokers with normal cardiac, | ||
liver, and renal function | 0.41 (0.21-0.61) | 9.8 (1.6-18) |
| ||
| ||
Acute pulmonary edema | 0.33** (0.07-2.45) | 19** (3.1-82) |
COPD->60 years, stable | ||
non-smoker >1 year | 0.54 (0.44-0.64) | 11 (9.4-12.6) |
COPD with cor pulmonale | 0.48 (0.08-0.88) | NR† |
Cystic fibrosis (14-28 years) | 1.25 (0.31-2.2) | 6.0 (1.8-10.2) |
Fever associated viral respiratory | ||
illness (children with | ||
acute 9-15 years) | NR† | 7.0 (1.0-13) |
Liver disease - cirrhosis | 0.31** (0.1-0.7) | 32** (10-56) |
acute hepatitis | 0.35 (0.25-0.45) | 19.2 (16.6-21.8) |
cholestasis | 0.65 (0.25-1.45) | 14.4 (5.7-31.8) |
Pregnancy - 1st trimester | NR† | 8.5 (3.1-13.9) |
2nd trimester | NR† | 8.8 (3.8-13.8) |
3rd trimester | NR† | 13.0 (8.4-17.6) |
Sepsis with multi-organ failure | 0.47 (0.19-1.9) | 18.8 (6.3-24.1) |
Thyroid disease - hypothyroid | 0.38 (0.13-0.57) | 11.6 (8.2-25) |
hyperthyroid | 0.8 (0.68-0.97) | 4.5 (3.7-5.6) |
Food | Fasting | |
AUC0-72 (μg hr/mL) | 153.0 ± 51.9 | 149.7 ± 39.5 |
Cmax (μg/mL) | 8.4 ± 1.8 | 6.9 ± 1.31 |
Tmax (hr) | 7.3 ± 1.7 | 7.1 ± 1.3 |
| |||
| |||
| | | |
1 Starting Dosage | 12-14 mg/kg/day up to a maximum | 300 mg/day divided | |
of 300 mg/day divided Q8-12 hrs* | Q8-12 hrs* | ||
2 After 3 days, | 16 mg/kg/day up to a maximum | 400 mg/day divided | |
| of 400 mg/day divided Q8-12 hrs* | Q8- 12 hrs* | |
increase dose to: | |||
3 After 3 more days, | 20 mg/kg/day up to a maximum | 600 mg/day divided | |
| of 600 mg/day divided Q8-12 hrs* | Q8-12 hrs* | |
increase dose to: | |||
| | ||
The slow absorption rate of this preparation may allow once-daily administration in adult nonsmokers with appropriate total body clearance and other patients with low dosage requirements. Once-daily dosing should be considered only after the patient has been gradually and satisfactorily treated to therapeutic levels with q12h dosing. Once-daily dosing should be based on the dosing guidelines in | |||
| | ||
In children 1-15 years of age, the final theophylline dose should not exceed 16 mg/kg/day up to a maximum of 400 mg/day in the presence of risk factors for reduced theophylline clearance (see |
| |
---|---|
| |
<9.9 mcg/mL | If symptoms are not controlled and current dosage is tolerated, increase dose about 25%. Recheck serum concentration after three days for further dosage adjustment. |
10 to 14.9 mcg/mL | If symptoms are controlled and current dosage is tolerated, maintain dose and recheck serum concentration at 6-12 month intervals.¶ If symptoms are not controlled and current dosage is tolerated consider adding additional medication(s) to treatment regimen. |
15-19.9 mcg/mL | Consider 10% decrease in dose to provide greater margin of safety even if current dosage is tolerated.¶ |
20-24.9 mcg/mL | Decrease dose by 25% even if no adverse effects are present. Recheck serum concentration after 3 days to guide further dosage adjustment. |
25-30 mcg/mL | Skip next dose and decrease subsequent doses at least 25% even if no adverse effects are present. Recheck serum concentration after 3 days to guide further dosage adjustment. If symptomatic, consider whether overdose treatment is indicated (see |
>30 mcg/mL | Treat overdose as indicated (see |
| ||
| ||
| | |
---|---|---|
Adenosine | Theophylline blocks adenosine receptors. | Higher doses of adenosine may be required to achieve desired effect. |
Alcohol | A single large dose of alcohol (3 mL/kg of whiskey) decreases theophylline clearance for up to 24 hours. | 30% increase |
Allopurinol | Decreases theophylline clearance at allopurinol doses ≥600 mg/day. | 25% increase |
Aminoglutethimide | Increases theophylline clearance by induction of microsomal enzyme activity. | 25% decrease |
Carbamazepine | Similar to aminoglutethimide. | 30% decrease |
Cimetidine | Decreases theophylline clearance by inhibiting cytochrome P450 1A2. | 70% increase |
Ciprofloxacin | Similar to cimetidine. | 40% increase |
Clarithromycin | Similar to erythromycin. | 25% increase |
Diazepam | Benzodiazepines increase CNS concentrations of adenosine, a potent CNS depressant, while theophylline blocks adenosine receptors. | Larger diazepam doses may be required to produce desired level of sedation. Discontinuation of theophylline without reduction of diazepam dose may result in respiratory depression. |
Disulfiram | Decreases theophylline clearance by inhibiting hydroxylation and demethylation. | 50% increase |
Enoxacin | Similar to cimetidine. | 300% increase |
Ephedrine | Synergistic CNS effects. | Increased frequency of nausea, nervousness, and insomnia. |
Erythromycin | Erythromycin metabolite decreases theophylline clearance by inhibiting cytochrome P450 3A3. | 35% increase. Erythromycin steady-state serum concentrations decrease by a similar amount. |
Estrogen | Estrogen containing oral contraceptives decrease theophylline clearance in a dose-dependent fashion. The effect of progesterone on theophylline clearance is unknown. | 30% increase |
Flurazepam | Similar to diazepam. | Similar to diazepam. |
Fluvoxamine | Similar to cimetidine. | Similar to cimetidine. |
Halothane | Halothane sensitizes the myocardium. to catecholamines, theophylline increases release of endogenous catecholamines. | Increased risk of ventricular arrhythmias. |
Interferon, human recombinant alpha-A | Decreases theophylline clearance. | 100% increase |
Isoproterenol (IV) | Increases theophylline clearance. | 20% decrease |
Ketamine | Pharmacologic seizure threshold. | May lower theophylline |
Lithium | Theophylline increases renal lithium clearance. | Lithium dose required to achieve a therapeutic serum concentration increased an average of 60%. |
Lorazepam | Similar to diazepam. | Similar to diazepam. |
Methotrexate (MTX) | Decreases theophylline clearance. | 20% increase after low dose MTX, higher dose MTX may have a greater effect. |
Mexiletine | Similar to disulfiram. | 80% increase |
Midazolam | Similar to diazepam. | Similar to diazepam. |
Moricizine | Increases theophylline clearance. | 25% decrease |
Pancuronium | Theophylline may antagonize non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocking effects; possibly due to phosphodiesterase inhibition. | Larger dose of pancuronium may be required to achieve neuromuscular blockade. |
Pentoxifylline | Decreases theophylline clearance. | 30% increase |
Phenobarbital (PB) | Similar to aminoglutethimide. | 25% decrease after two weeks of concurrent PB. |
Phenytoin | Phenytoin increases theophylline clearance by increasing microsomal enzyme activity. Theophylline decreases phenytoin absorption. | Serum theophylline |
Propafenone | Decreases theophylline clearance and pharmacologic interaction. | 40% increase. Beta-2 blocking effect may decrease efficacy of theophylline. |
Propranolol | Similar to cimetidine and pharmacologic interaction. | 100% increase. Beta-2 blocking effect may decrease efficacy of theophylline. |
Rifampin | Increases theophylline clearance by increasing cytochrome P450 1A2 and 3A3 activity. | 20-40% decrease |
Sulfinpyrazone | Increases theophylline clearance by increasing demethylation and hydroxylation. Decreases renal clearance of theophylline. | 20% decrease |
Tacrine | Similar to cimetidine, also increases renal clearance of theophylline. | 90% increase |
Thiabendazole | Decreases theophylline clearance. | 190% increase |
Ticlopidine | Decreases theophylline clearance. | 60% increase |
Troleandomycin | Similar to erythromycin. | 33-100% increase depending on troleandomycin dose. |
Verapamil | Similar to disulfiram. | 20% increase |
| |||
albuterol, | diltiazem | medroxyprogesterone | roxithromycin |
systemic and inhaled | dirithromycin | methylprednisolone | sorbitol |
amoxicillin | enflurane | metronidazole | (purgative doses |
ampicillin, | famotidine | metoprolol | do not inhibit |
with or without | felodipine | nadolol | theophylline |
sulbactam | finasteride | nifedipine | absorption) |
atenolol | hydrocortisone | nizatidine | sucralfate |
azithromycin | isoflurane | norfloxacin | terbutaline, systemic |
caffeine, | isoniazid | ofloxacin | terfenadine |
dietary ingestion | isradipine | omeprazole | tetracycline |
cefaclor | influenza vaccine | prednisone, | tocainide |
co-trimoxazole | ketoconazole | prednisolone | |
(trimethoprim and | lomefloxacin | ranitidine | |
sulfamethoxazole) | mebendazole | rifabutin |
| ||
| ||
| | |
---|---|---|
Adenosine | Theophylline blocks adenosine receptors. | Higher doses of adenosine may be required to achieve desired effect. |
Alcohol | A single large dose of alcohol (3 mL/kg of whiskey) decreases theophylline clearance for up to 24 hours. | 30% increase |
Allopurinol | Decreases theophylline clearance at allopurinol doses ≥600 mg/day. | 25% increase |
Aminoglutethimide | Increases theophylline clearance by induction of microsomal enzyme activity. | 25% decrease |
Carbamazepine | Similar to aminoglutethimide. | 30% decrease |
Cimetidine | Decreases theophylline clearance by inhibiting cytochrome P450 1A2. | 70% increase |
Ciprofloxacin | Similar to cimetidine. | 40% increase |
Clarithromycin | Similar to erythromycin. | 25% increase |
Diazepam | Benzodiazepines increase CNS concentrations of adenosine, a potent CNS depressant, while theophylline blocks adenosine receptors. | Larger diazepam doses may be required to produce desired level of sedation. Discontinuation of theophylline without reduction of diazepam dose may result in respiratory depression. |
Disulfiram | Decreases theophylline clearance by inhibiting hydroxylation and demethylation. | 50% increase |
Enoxacin | Similar to cimetidine. | 300% increase |
Ephedrine | Synergistic CNS effects. | Increased frequency of nausea, nervousness, and insomnia. |
Erythromycin | Erythromycin metabolite decreases theophylline clearance by inhibiting cytochrome P450 3A3. | 35% increase. Erythromycin steady-state serum concentrations decrease by a similar amount. |
Estrogen | Estrogen containing oral contraceptives decrease theophylline clearance in a dose-dependent fashion. The effect of progesterone on theophylline clearance is unknown. | 30% increase |
Flurazepam | Similar to diazepam. | Similar to diazepam. |
Fluvoxamine | Similar to cimetidine. | Similar to cimetidine. |
Halothane | Halothane sensitizes the myocardium. to catecholamines, theophylline increases release of endogenous catecholamines. | Increased risk of ventricular arrhythmias. |
Interferon, human recombinant alpha-A | Decreases theophylline clearance. | 100% increase |
Isoproterenol (IV) | Increases theophylline clearance. | 20% decrease |
Ketamine | Pharmacologic seizure threshold. | May lower theophylline |
Lithium | Theophylline increases renal lithium clearance. | Lithium dose required to achieve a therapeutic serum concentration increased an average of 60%. |
Lorazepam | Similar to diazepam. | Similar to diazepam. |
Methotrexate (MTX) | Decreases theophylline clearance. | 20% increase after low dose MTX, higher dose MTX may have a greater effect. |
Mexiletine | Similar to disulfiram. | 80% increase |
Midazolam | Similar to diazepam. | Similar to diazepam. |
Moricizine | Increases theophylline clearance. | 25% decrease |
Pancuronium | Theophylline may antagonize non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocking effects; possibly due to phosphodiesterase inhibition. | Larger dose of pancuronium may be required to achieve neuromuscular blockade. |
Pentoxifylline | Decreases theophylline clearance. | 30% increase |
Phenobarbital (PB) | Similar to aminoglutethimide. | 25% decrease after two weeks of concurrent PB. |
Phenytoin | Phenytoin increases theophylline clearance by increasing microsomal enzyme activity. Theophylline decreases phenytoin absorption. | Serum theophylline |
Propafenone | Decreases theophylline clearance and pharmacologic interaction. | 40% increase. Beta-2 blocking effect may decrease efficacy of theophylline. |
Propranolol | Similar to cimetidine and pharmacologic interaction. | 100% increase. Beta-2 blocking effect may decrease efficacy of theophylline. |
Rifampin | Increases theophylline clearance by increasing cytochrome P450 1A2 and 3A3 activity. | 20-40% decrease |
Sulfinpyrazone | Increases theophylline clearance by increasing demethylation and hydroxylation. Decreases renal clearance of theophylline. | 20% decrease |
Tacrine | Similar to cimetidine, also increases renal clearance of theophylline. | 90% increase |
Thiabendazole | Decreases theophylline clearance. | 190% increase |
Ticlopidine | Decreases theophylline clearance. | 60% increase |
Troleandomycin | Similar to erythromycin. | 33-100% increase depending on troleandomycin dose. |
Verapamil | Similar to disulfiram. | 20% increase |
| |||
albuterol, | diltiazem | medroxyprogesterone | roxithromycin |
systemic and inhaled | dirithromycin | methylprednisolone | sorbitol |
amoxicillin | enflurane | metronidazole | (purgative doses |
ampicillin, | famotidine | metoprolol | do not inhibit |
with or without | felodipine | nadolol | theophylline |
sulbactam | finasteride | nifedipine | absorption) |
atenolol | hydrocortisone | nizatidine | sucralfate |
azithromycin | isoflurane | norfloxacin | terbutaline, systemic |
caffeine, | isoniazid | ofloxacin | terfenadine |
dietary ingestion | isradipine | omeprazole | tetracycline |
cefaclor | influenza vaccine | prednisone, | tocainide |
co-trimoxazole | ketoconazole | prednisolone | |
(trimethoprim and | lomefloxacin | ranitidine | |
sulfamethoxazole) | mebendazole | rifabutin |