Version
v1
Version
v1
Effective date
April 17, 2007
Original packager
—
Sections captured
24
Percentage of patients reported with sign or symptom | ||||
Acute Overdose (Large Single Ingestion) | Chronic Overdosage (Multiple Excessive Doses) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Study 1 | Study 2 | Study 1 | Study 2 | |
*These data are derived from two studies in patients with serum theophylline concentrations >30 mcg/mL. In the first study (Study #1 - Shanon, Ann Intern Med 1993;119:1161-67), data were prospectively collected from 249 consecutive cases of theophylline toxicity referred to a regional poison center for consultation. In the second study (Study #2 - Sessler, Am J Med 1990;88:567-76), data were retrospectively collected from 116 cases with serum theophylline concentrations >30 mcg/mL among 6000 blood samples obtained for measurement of serum theophylline concentrations in three emergency departments. Differences in the incidence of manifestations of theophylline toxicity between the two studies may reflect sample selection as a result of study design (e.g., in Study #1, 48% of the patients had acute intoxications versus only 10% in Study #2) and different methods of reporting results. | ||||
**NR = Not reported in a comparable manner. | ||||
Sign/Symptom | (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 tachycardias | 2 | 21 | 12 | 14 |
Ventricular premature beats | 3 | 21 | 10 | 19 |
Atrial fibrillation or flutter | 1 | NR** | 12 | NR** |
Multifocal atrial tachycardia | 0 | NR** | 2 | NR** |
Ventricular arrhythmiaswith hemodynamic instability | 7 | 14 | 40 | 0 |
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 |
| | |
For various North American patient populations from literature reports. Different rates of elimination and consequent dosage requirements have been observed among other peoples. | ||
*Clearance represents the volume of blood completely cleared of theophylline by the liver in one minute. Values listed were generally determined at serum theophylline concentrations <20 mcg/mL; clearance may decrease and half-life may increase at higher serum concentrations due to non-linear pharmacokinetics. | ||
††Reported range or estimated range (mean ± 2 SD) where actual range not reported. | ||
†NR = not reported or not reported in a comparable format. | ||
**Median | ||
| ||
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 with acute viral respiratory illness (children 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) |
| | |
1. Starting Dosage | 12-14 mg/kg/day up to a maximum of 300 mg/day divided Q4-6 hrs* | 300 mg/day divided Q6-8 hrs* |
2. After 3 days, | 16 mg/kg/day up to a maximum of 400 mg/day divided Q4-6 hrs* | 400 mg/day divided Q6-8 hrs* |
3. After 3 more days, | 20 mg/kg/day up to a maximum of 600 mg/day divided Q4-6 hrs* | 600 mg/day divided Q6-8 hrs* |
| |
Dose reduction and/or serum theophylline concentration measurement is indicated whenever adverse effects are present, physiologic abnormalities that can reduce theophylline clearance occur (e.g., sustained fever), or a drug that interacts with theophylline is added or discontinued (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 recommendations for chronic overdosage). |
>30 mcg/mL | Treat overdose as indicated (see recommendations for chronic overdosage). If theophylline is subsequently resumed, decrease dose by at least 50% and recheck serum concentration after 3 days to guide further dosage adjustment. |
| | | |
*Refer to | |||
| |||
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 | 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 | May lower theophylline seizure threshold. | |
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 and phenytoin concentrations decrease about 40%. | |
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, systemic and inhaled | felodipinefinasteride | nizatidinenorfloxacin |
amoxicillin | hydrocortisone | ofloxacin |
ampicillin, with or without sulbactam | isofluraneisoniazid | omeprazoleprednisone, prednisolone |
atenolol | isradipine | ranitidine |
azithromycin | influenza vaccine | rifabutin |
caffeine, dietary ingestion | ketoconazolelomefloxacin | roxithromycinsorbitol |
cefaclor | mebendazole | (purgative doses do not |
co-trimoxazole (trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole) | medroxyprogesteronemethylprednisolone | inhibit theophylline absorption) |
diltiazem | metronidazole | sucralfate |
dirithromycin | metoprolol | terbutaline, systemic |
enflurane | nadolol | terfenadine |
famotidine | nifedipine | tetracycline |
tocainide | ||
*Refer to |
| | | |
*Refer to | |||
| |||
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 | 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 | May lower theophylline seizure threshold. | |
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 and phenytoin concentrations decrease about 40%. | |
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, systemic and inhaled | felodipinefinasteride | nizatidinenorfloxacin |
amoxicillin | hydrocortisone | ofloxacin |
ampicillin, with or without sulbactam | isofluraneisoniazid | omeprazoleprednisone, prednisolone |
atenolol | isradipine | ranitidine |
azithromycin | influenza vaccine | rifabutin |
caffeine, dietary ingestion | ketoconazolelomefloxacin | roxithromycinsorbitol |
cefaclor | mebendazole | (purgative doses do not |
co-trimoxazole (trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole) | medroxyprogesteronemethylprednisolone | inhibit theophylline absorption) |
diltiazem | metronidazole | sucralfate |
dirithromycin | metoprolol | terbutaline, systemic |
enflurane | nadolol | terfenadine |
famotidine | nifedipine | tetracycline |
tocainide | ||
*Refer to |