PRECAUTIONS
General
For ophthalmic use only. The initial prescription and
renewal of the medication order beyond 14 days should be made by a physician
only after examination of the patient with the aid of magnification, such as
slit lamp biomicroscopy and, where appropriate, fluorescein staining.
If signs and symptoms fail to improve after two days, the
patient should be re-evaluated.
If this product is used for 10 days or longer,
intraocular pressure should be monitored.
Fungal infections of the cornea are particularly prone to
develop coincidentally with long-term local steroid application. Fungus invasion
must be considered in any persistent corneal ulceration where a steroid has
been used or is in use. Fungal cultures should be taken when appropriate.
Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, Impairment of Fertility
Long-term animal studies have not been conducted to
evaluate the carcinogenic potential of loteprednol etabonate. Loteprednol
etabonate was not genotoxic in vitro in the Ames test, the mouse lymphoma tk
assay, or in a chromosome aberration test in human lymphocytes, or in vivo in
the single dose mouse micronucleus assay. Treatment of male and female rats
with up to 50 mg/kg/day and 25 mg/kg/day of loteprednol etabonate,
respectively, (1500 and 750 times the maximum clinical dose, respectively)
prior to and during mating did not impair fertility in either gender.
Pregnancy
Teratogenic effects - Pregnancy Category C
Loteprednol etabonate has been shown to be embryotoxic
(delayed ossification) and teratogenic (increased incidence of meningocele,
abnormal left common carotid artery, and limb flexures) when administered orally
to rabbits during organogenesis at a dose of 3 mg/kg/day (85 times the maximum daily
clinical dose), a dose which caused no maternal toxicity. The
no-observed-effect-level (NOEL) for these effects was 0.5 mg/kg/day (15 times
the maximum daily clinical dose). Oral treatment of rats during organogenesis
resulted in teratogenicity (absent innominate artery at ≥ 5 mg/kg/day
doses, and cleft palate and umbilical hernia at ≥ 50 mg/kg/day) and embryotoxicity
(increased postimplantation losses at 100 mg/kg/day and decreased fetal body
weight and skeletal ossification with ≥ 50 mg/kg/day). Treatment of rats
with 0.5 mg/kg/day (15 times the maximum clinical dose) during organogenesis
did not result in any reproductive toxicity. Loteprednol etabonate was
maternally toxic (significantly reduced body weight gain during treatment) when
administered to pregnant rats during organogenesis at doses of ≥ 5
mg/kg/day.
Oral exposure of female rats to 50 mg/kg/day of
loteprednol etabonate from the start of the fetal period through the end of
lactation, a maternally toxic treatment regimen (significantly decreased body
weight gain), gave rise to decreased growth and survival, and retarded development
in the offspring during lactation; the NOEL for these effects was 5 mg/kg/day.
Loteprednol etabonate had no effect on the duration of gestation or parturition
when administered orally to pregnant rats at doses up to 50 mg/kg/day during
the fetal period.
There are no adequate and well controlled studies in
pregnant women. ALREX Ophthalmic Suspension should be used during pregnancy
only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the fetus.
Nursing Mothers
It is not known whether topical ophthalmic administration
of corticosteroids could result in sufficient systemic absorption to produce
detectable quantities in human milk. Systemic steroids appear in human milk and
could suppress growth, interfere with endogenous corticosteroid production, or
cause other untoward effects. Caution should be exercised when ALREX is
administered to a nursing woman.
Pediatric Use
Safety and effectiveness in pediatric patients have not
been established.