DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION
Before prescribing ADAGEN®(pegademase
bovine) Injection the physician should be thoroughly familiar with the details
of this prescribing information. For further information concerning the
essential monitoring of ADAGEN® (pegademase bovine) Injection
therapy, the prescribing physician should contact Sigma-Tau Pharmaceuticals,
Inc., Gaithersburg, MD 20878. Telephone 1-866Â792-5172.
ADAGEN® (pegademase bovine) Injection
is recommended for use in infants from birth or in children of any age at the
time of diagnosis.
Parenteral drug products should be inspected visually for
particulate matter and discoloration prior to administration, whenever solution
and container permits.
ADAGEN® (pegademase bovine) Injection
should not be diluted nor mixed with any other drug prior to administration.
ADAGEN® (pegademase bovine) Injection
should be administered every 7 days as an intramuscular injection. The dosage
of ADAGEN® (pegademase bovine) Injection should be
individualized. The recommended dosing schedule is 10 U/kg for the first dose,
15 U/kg for the second dose, and 20 U/kg for the third dose. The usual
maintenance dose is 20 U/kg per week. Further increases of 5 U/kg/week may be
necessary, but a maximum single dose of 30 U/kg should not be exceeded. Plasma
levels of ADA more than twice the upper limit of 35 μmol/hr/mL have
occurred on occasion in several patients, and have been maintained for several
weeks in one patient who received twice weekly injections (20 U/kg per dose) of
ADAGEN® (pegademase bovine) Injection. No adverse effects
have been observed at these higher levels; there is no evidence that
maintaining pre-injection plasma ADA above 35 μmol/hr/mL produces any
additional clinical benefits.
Dose proportionality has not been established and
patients should be closely monitored when the dosage is increased. ADAGEN®
(pegademase bovine) Injection is not recommended for intravenous
administration.
The optimal dosage and schedule of administration should
be established for each patient based on monitoring of plasma ADA activity
levels (trough levels before maintenance injection) and biochemical markers of
ADA deficiency (primarily red cell dATP content). Since improvement in immune
function follows correction of metabolic abnormalities, maintenance dosage in
individual patients should be aimed at achieving the following biochemical
goals: 1) maintain plasma ADA activity (trough levels before maintenance
injection) in the range of 15-35 μmol/hr/mL (assayed at 37°C); and 2)
decline in erythrocyte dATP to ≤ 0.005-0.015 μmol/mL packed
erythrocytes, or ≤ 1% of the total erythrocyte adenine nucleotide (ATP +
dATP) content, with a normal ATP level, as measured in a pre-injection sample.
In addition, continued monitoring of immune function and clinical status is
essential in any patient with a primary immunodeficiency disease and should be
continued in patients undergoing treatment with ADAGEN®(pegademase
bovine) Injection.
HOW SUPPLIED
ADAGEN® (pegademase bovine) Injection is a clear, colorless, preservative free solution for intramuscular injection. ADAGEN®
is supplied as a sterile solution in single-use vials containing 375
units per 1.5 mL solution, in boxes of 4 vials (NDC-57665-001Â01).
Use only one dose per vial; do not re-enter the vial.
Discard unused portions. Do not save unused drug for later administration.
Refrigerate. Store between +2°C and +8°C (36°F and 46°F). DO NOT FREEZE. ADAGEN®
(pegademase bovine) Injection should not be stored at room temperature.
This product should not be used if there are any indications that it may have
been frozen.
REFERENCES
1. Hershfield MS, Buckley RH, Greenberg ML, et al.
Treatment of adenosine deaminase deficiency with polyethylene glycol-modified
adenosine deaminase. N Engl J Med 1987; 316:589-96.
2. Levy Y, Hershfield MS, Fernandez-Mejia C, Polmar ST,
Scudiery D, Berger M, Sorensen RU. Adenosine deaminase deficiency with late
onset of recurrent infections: response to treatment with polyethylene
glycolmodified adenosine deaminase. J Pediatr 1988; 113:312-17.
3. Kredich NM, Hershfield MS. Immunodeficiency diseases
caused by adenosine deaminase deficiency and purine nucleoside phosphorylase
deficiency. 6th ed. In: Scriver CR, Beaudet AL, Sly WS, Valle D, eds. The
metabolic basis of inherited disease. New York: McGraw Hill, 1989; 1045-75.
4. Hirschhorn R. Inherited enzyme deficiencies and
immunodeficiency: adenosine deaminase (ADA) and purine nucleoside phosphorylase
(PNP) deficiencies. Clin Immunol Immunopathol 1986; 40:157-65.
5. Hirschhorn R, Roegner-Maniscalco V, Kuritsky L, Rosen
FS. Bone marrow transplantation only partially restores purine metabolites to
normal adenosine deaminase-deficient patients. J Clin Invest 1981; 68:1387-93.
6. Polmar AH, Stern RC, Schwartz AL, Wetzler EM, Chase
PA, Hirschhorn R. Enzyme replacement therapy for adenosine deaminase deficiency
and severe combined immunodeficiency. N Engl J Med 1976; 295:1337-43.
7. Rubinstein A, Hirschhorn R, Sicklick M, Murphy RA. In
vivo and in vitro effects of thymosin and adenosine deaminase on
adenosine-deaminase-deficient lymphocytes. N Engl J Med 1979; 300:387-92.
8. Hirschhorn R, Papageorgiou PS, Kesarwala HH, Taft LT.
Amelioration of neurologic abnormalities after “enzyme replacement” in
adenosine deaminase deficiency. N Engl J Med 1980; 303:377-80.
9. Hirschhorn R, Ratech H, Rubinstein A, et al. Increased
excretion of modified adenine nucleosides by children with adenosine deaminase
deficiency. Pediatr Res 1982; 16:362-9.
10.Polmar SH. Enzyme replacement and other biochemical
approaches to the therapy of adenosine deaminase deficiency. In: Elliott K,
Whelan J, eds. Enzyme defects and immune dysfunction. Amsterdam: Excerpta
Medica, 1979; 213-30.
Manufactured by Sigma-Tau PharmaSource, Inc.,
Indianapolis, IN 46268. Distributed by Sigma-Tau Pharmaceuticals, Inc.,
Gaithersburg, MD 20878. sigma-tau, Pharmaceuticas, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD 20878.
Manufactured by: Sigma-tau pharmaceuticals Inc. Gaithersburg, MD 20878. Revised 2013