WARNINGS
Seizure Risk: Seizures have
been reported in patients receiving tramadol HCl within the
recommended dosage range. Spontaneous post-marketing reports
indicate that seizure risk is increased with doses of tramadol
HCl above the recommended range. Concomitant use of tramadol
HCl increases the seizure risk in patients taking:
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI
antidepressants or anoretics),
Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs), and other tricyclic compounds
(e.g., cyclobenzaprine, promethazine, etc.), or
Opioids.
Administration of tramadol HCl may enhance the seizure
risk in patients taking:
MAO inhibitors (see also Use with MAO Inhibitors),
Neuroleptics, or Other drugs that reduce the seizure threshold.
Risk of convulsions may also increase in patients
with epilepsy, those with a history of seizures, or in patients
with a recognized risk for seizure (such as head trauma, metabolic
disorders, alcohol and drug withdrawal, CNS infections). In
tramadol HCl overdose, naloxone administration may increase
the risk of seizure.
Anaphylactoid Reactions: Serious
and rarely fatal anaphylactoid reactions have been reported
in patients receiving therapy with tramadol HCl. These reactions
often occur following the first dose. Other reported reactions
include pruritus, hives, bronchospasm, and angioedema. Patients
with a history of anaphylactoid reactions to codeine and other
opioids may be at increased risk and therefore should not
receive tramadol HCl (see CONTRAINDICATIONS).
Use in Opioid-dependent Patients: Tramadol HCl should not be used in opioid-dependent patients.
Tramadol HCl has been shown to reinitiate physical dependence
in some patients that have been previously dependent on other
opioids. Consequently, in patients with a tendency to opioid
abuse or opioid dependence, treatment with tramadol HCl is
not recommended.
Use with CNS Depressants: Tramadol
should be used with caution and in reduced dosages when administered
to patients receiving CNS depressants such as alcohol, opioids,
anesthetic agents, phenothiazines, tranquilizers or sedative
hypnotics.
Use with MAO Inhibitors: Tramadol
should be used with great caution in patients taking monoamine
oxidase inhibitors, because animal studies have shown increased
deaths with combined administration.
PRECAUTIONS
Respiratory Depression: Administer
tramadol HCl cautiously in patients at risk for respiratory
depression. When large doses of tramadol HCl are administered
with anesthetic medications or alcohol, respiratory depression
may result. Treat such cases as an overdose. If naloxone is
to be administered, use cautiously because it may precipitate
seizures (see WARNINGS , Seizure Risk and OVERDOSAGE).
Increased Intracranial Pressure or Head
Trauma: Tramadol should be used with caution in patients
with increased intracranial pressure or head injury. Pupillary
changes (miosis) from tramadol may obscure the existence,
extent, or course of intracranial pathology. Clinicians should
also maintain a high index of suspicion for adverse drug reaction
when evaluating altered mental status in these patients if
they are receiving tramadol.
Acute Abdominal Conditions: The administration of tramadol may complicate the clinical
assessment of patients with acute abdominal conditions.
Withdrawal: Withdrawal symptoms
may occur if tramadol HCl is discontinued abruptly. These
symptoms may include: anxiety, sweating, insomnia, rigors,
pain, nausea, tremors, diarrhoea, upper respiratory symptoms,
piloerection, and rarely hallucinations. Clinical experience
suggests that withdrawal symptoms may be relieved by tapering
the medication.
Patients Physically Dependent on Opioids: Tramadol is not recommended for patients who are dependent
on opioids. Patients who have recently taken substantial amounts
of opioids may experience withdrawal symptoms. Because of
the difficulty in assessing dependence in patients who have
previously received substantial amounts of opioid medication,
administer tramadol cautiously to such patients.
Use in Renal and Hepatic Disease: Impaired renal function results in a decreased rate and extent
of excretion of tramadol and its active metabolite, M1. In
patients with creatinine clearances of less than 30 ml/min,
dosing reduction is recommended (see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION).
Metabolism of tramadol and M1 is reduced in patients
with advanced cirrhosis of the liver. In cirrhotic patients,
dosing reduction is recommended (see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION).
With the prolonged half-life in these conditions,
achievement of steady state is delayed, so that it may take
several days for elevated plasma concentrations to develop.
Information for the Patient
Tramadol HCl may impair mental or physical abilities
required for the performance of potentially hazardous tasks
such as driving a car or operating machinery.
Tramadol HCl should not be taken with alcohol containing beverages.
Tramadol HCl should be used with caution when taking medications
such as tranquilizers, hypnotics or other opiate containing
analgesics.
Patients should be instructed to inform the physician if they
are pregnant, think they might become pregnant, or are trying
to become pregnant (see Labor and Delivery).
The patient should understand the single-dose and 24-hour
dose limit and the time interval between doses, since exceeding
these recommendations can result in respiratory depression
and seizures.
Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, and Impairment of Fertility:
Tramadol was not mutagenic in the following assays: Ames Salmonella
microsomal activation test, CHO/HPRT mammalian cell assay,
mouse lymphoma assay (in the absence of metabolic activation),
dominant lethal mutation tests in mice, chromosome aberration
test in Chinese hamsters, and bone marrow micronucleus tests
in mice and Chinese hamsters. Weakly mutagenic results occurred
in the presence of metabolic activation in the mouse lymphoma
assay and micronucleus test in rats. Overall, the weight of
evidence from these tests indicates that tramadol does not
pose a genotoxic risk to humans.
A slight, but statistically significant, increase
in two common murine tumors, pulmonary and hepatic, was observed
in a mouse carcinogenicity study, particularly in aged mice
(dosing orally up to 30 mg/kg for approximately two years,
although the study was not done with the Maximum Tolerated
Dose). This finding is not believed to suggest risk in humans.
No such finding occurred in a rat carcinogenicity study.
No effects on fertility were observed for tramadol
at oral dose levels up to 50 mg/kg in male rats and 75 mg/kg
in female rats.
Pregnancy, Teratogenic Effects, Pregnancy
Category C: There are no adequate and well-controlled
studies in pregnant women. Tramadol should be used during
pregnancy only if the potential benefit justifies the potential
risk to the fetus.
Tramadol has been shown to be embryotoxic and
fetotoxic in mice, rats and rabbits at maternally toxic doses
3 to 15 times the maximum human dose or higher (120 mg/kg
in mice, 25 mg/kg or higher in rats and 75 mg/kg or higher
in rabbits), but was not teratogenic at these dose levels.
No harm to the fetus due to tramadol was seen at doses that
were not maternally toxic.
No drug-related teratogenic effects were observed
in progeny of mice, rats or rabbits treated with tramadol
by various routes (up to 140 mg/kg for mice, 80 mg/kg for
rats or 300 mg/kg for rabbits). Embryo and fetal toxicity
consisted primarily of decreased fetal weights, skeletal ossification
and increased supernumerary ribs at maternally toxic dose
levels. Transient delays in developmental or behavioral parameters
were also seen in pups from rat dams allowed to deliver. Embryo
and fetal lethality were reported only in one rabbit study
at 300 mg/kg, a dose that would cause extreme maternal toxicity
in the rabbit.
In peri- and post-natal studies in rats, progeny
of dams receiving oral (gavage) dose levels of 50 mg/kg or
greater had decreased weights, and pup survival was decreased
early in lactation at 80 mg/kg (6 to 10 times the maximum
human dose). No toxicity was observed for progeny of dams
receiving 8, 10, 20, 25 or 40 mg/kg. Maternal toxicity was
observed at all dose levels, but effects on progeny were evident
only at higher dose levels where maternal toxicity was more
severe.
Labor and Delivery: Tramadol should not be used
in pregnant women prior to or during labor unless the potential
benefits outweigh the risks. Safe use in pregnancy has not
been established. Chronic use during pregnancy may lead to
physical dependance and post-partum withdrawl symptoms in
the newborn. Tramadol has been shown to cross the placenta.
The mean ratio of serum tramadol in the umbilical veins compared
to maternal veins was 0.83 for 40 women given tramadol during
labor.
The effect of tramadol, if any, on the later
growth, development, and functional maturation of the child
is unknown.
Nursing Mothers: Tramadol is
not recommended for obstetrical preoperative medication or
for post-delivery analgesia in nursing mothers because its
safety in infants and newborns has not been studied. Following
a single IV 100 mg dose of tramadol, the cumulative excretion
in breast milk within 16 hours postdose was 100 mcg of tramadol
(0.1% of the maternal dose) and 27 mcg of M1.
Pediatric Use: The pediatric
use of tramadol is not recommended because safety and efficacy
in patients under 16 years of age have not been established.
Geriatric Use: In subjects
over the age of 75 years, serum concentrations are slightly
elevated and the elimination half-life is slightly prolonged.
The aged also can be expected to vary more widely in their
ability to tolerate adverse drug effects. Daily doses in excess
of 300 mg are not recommended in patients over 75 (see DOSAGE
AND ADMINISTRATION).
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