PRECAUTIONS
General
Patients should maintain an adequate nutritional status,
particularly an adequate intake of calcium and vitamin D.
Therapy has been withheld from some patients with
enterocolitis since diarrhea may be experienced, particularly at higher doses.
Didronel is not metabolized and is excreted intact
via the kidney. Hyperphosphatemia may occur at doses of 10 to 20 mg/kg/day,
apparently as a result of drug-related increases in tubular reabsorption of
phosphate. Serum phosphate levels generally return to normal 2 to 4 weeks post
therapy. There is no experience to specifically guide treatment in patients
with impaired renal function. Didronel dosage should be reduced when
reductions in glomerular filtration rates are present. Patients with renal
impairment should be closely monitored. In approximately 10 percent of patients
in clinical trials of Didronel®I. V. Infusion (etidronate
disodium) for hypercalcemia of malignancy, occasional, mild-to-moderate
abnormalities in renal function (increases of > 0.5 mg/dl serum creatinine)
were observed during or immediately after treatment.
Didronel suppresses bone turnover, and may retard
mineralization of osteoid laid down during the bone accretion process. These
effects are dose and time dependent. Osteoid, which may accumulate noticeably
at doses of 10 to 20 mg/kg/day, mineralizes normally post therapy. In patients
with fractures, especially of long bones, it may be advisable to delay or
interrupt treatment until callus is evident.
Osteonecrosis of the jaw (ONJ)
ONJ, which can occur spontaneously, is generally
associated with tooth extraction and/or local infection with delayed healing,
and has been reported in patients taking bisphosphonates, including Didronel.
Known risk factors for osteonecrosis of the jaw include invasive dental
procedures (for example, tooth extraction, dental implants, boney surgery),
diagnosis of cancer, concomitant therapies (for example, chemotherapy,
corticosteroids), poor oral hygiene, and co-morbid disorders (for example, periodontal
and/or other pre-existing dental disease, anemia, coagulopathy, infection,
ill-fitting dentures). The risk of ONJ may increase with duration of exposure
to bisphosphonates.
For patients requiring invasive dental procedures,
discontinuation of bisphosphonate treatment may reduce the risk for ONJ.
Clinical judgment of the treating physician and/or oral surgeon should guide
the management plan of each patient based on individual benefit/risk
assessment.
Patients who develop osteonecrosis of the jaw while on
bisphosphonate therapy should receive care by an oral surgeon. In these
patients, extensive dental surgery to treat ONJ may exacerbate the condition.
Discontinuation of bisphosphonate therapy should be considered based on
individual benefit/risk assessment.
Musculoskeletal Pain
In postmarketing experience, there have been infrequent
reports of severe and occasionally incapacitating bone, joint, and/or muscle
pain in patients taking bisphosphonates (see ADVERSE REACTIONS). The
time to onset of symptoms varied from one day to several months after starting
the drug. Most patients had relief of symptoms after stopping medication. A
subset had recurrence of symptoms when rechallenged with the same drug or another
bisphosphonate.
Paget’s Disease
In Paget's patients, treatment regimens exceeding the
recommended (see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION) daily maximum dose of 20
mg/kg or continuous administration of medication for periods greater than 6
months may be associated with osteomalacia and an increased risk of fracture.
Long bones predominantly affected by lytic lesions,
particularly in those patients unresponsive to Didronel therapy, may be
especially prone to fracture.
Patients with predominantly lytic lesions should be
monitored radiographically and biochemically to permit termination of Didronel
in those patients unresponsive to treatment.
Carcinogenesis
Long-term studies in rats have indicated that Didronel
is not carcinogenic.
Pregnancy
Teratogenic Effects
Pregnancy Category C. In teratology and
developmental toxicity studies conducted in rats and rabbits treated with
dosages of up to 100 mg/kg (5 to 20 times the clinical dose), no adverse or
teratogenic effects have been observed in the offspring. Etidronate disodium
has been shown to cause skeletal abnormalities in rats when given at oral dose
levels of 300 mg/kg (15 to 60 times the human dose). Other effects on the
offspring (including decreased live births) are at dosages that cause
significant toxicity in the parent generation and are 25 to 200 times the human
dose. The skeletal effects are thought to be the result of the pharmacological
effects of the drug on bone.
Bisphosphonates are incorporated into the bone matrix,
from which they are gradually released over periods of weeks to years. The
amount of bisphosphonate incorporation into adult bone, and hence, the amount
available for release back into the systemic circulation, is directly related
to the dose and duration of bisphosphonate use. There are no data on fetal risk
in humans. However, there is a theoretical risk of fetal harm, predominantly
skeletal, if a woman becomes pregnant after completing a course of
bisphosphonate therapy. The impact of variables such as time between cessation
of bisphosphonate therapy to conception, the particular bisphosphonate used,
and the route of administration (intravenous versus oral) on this risk has not
been studied.
There are no adequate and well-controlled studies in
pregnant women. Didronel (etidronate disodium) should be used during
pregnancy only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the
fetus.
Nursing Mothers
It is not known whether this drug is excreted in human
milk. Because many drugs are excreted in human milk, caution should be
exercised when Didronel is administered to a nursing woman.
Pediatric Use
Safety and effectiveness in pediatric patients have not
been established. Pediatric patients have been treated with Didronel, at
doses recommended for adults, to prevent heterotopic ossifications or soft
tissue calcifications. A rachitic syndrome has been reported infrequently at
doses of 10 mg/kg/day and more for prolonged periods approaching or exceeding a
year. The epiphyseal radiologic changes associated with retarded mineralization
of new osteoid and cartilage, and occasional symptoms reported, have been
reversible when medication is discontinued.
Geriatric Use
Clinical studies of Didronel did not include
sufficient numbers of subjects aged 65 and over to determine whether they
respond differently from younger subjects. Other reported clinical experience
has not identified differences in responses between elderly and younger
patients. In general, dose selection for an elderly patient should be cautious,
reflecting the greater frequency of decreased hepatic, renal, or cardiac
function, and of concomitant disease or other drug therapy. This drug is known
to be substantially excreted by the kidney, and the risk of toxic reactions to
this drug may be greater in patients with impaired renal function. Because
elderly patients are more likely to have decreased renal function, care should
be taken when prescribing this drug therapy. As stated in PRECAUTIONS, Didronel
dosage should be reduced when reductions in glomerular filtration rates are
present. In addition, patients with renal impairment should be closely
monitored.