WARNINGS
Use of DIFFERIN® (adapalene gel) Gel should be discontinued if hypersensitivity to any
of the ingredients is noted. Patients with sunburn should be advised not to
use the product until fully recovered.
PRECAUTIONS
General
If a reaction suggesting sensitivity or chemical irritation occurs, use of
the medication should be discontinued. Exposure to sunlight, including sunlamps,
should be minimized during the use of adapalene. Patients who normally experience
high levels of sun exposure, and those with inherent sensitivity to sun, should
be warned to exercise caution. Use of sunscreen products and protective clothing
over treated areas is recommended when exposure cannot be avoided. Weather extremes,
such as wind or cold, also may be irritating to patients under treatment with
adapalene. Avoid contact with the eyes, lips, angles of the nose, and mucous
membranes. The product should not be applied to cuts, abrasions, eczematous
skin, or sunburned skin.
Certain cutaneous signs and symptoms such as erythema, dryness, scaling, burning, or pruritus may be experienced during treatment. These are most likely to occur during the first two to four weeks and will usually lessen with continued use of the medication. Depending upon the severity of adverse events, patients should be instructed to reduce the frequency of application or discontinue use.
Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, Impairment of Fertility: Carcinogenicity
studies with adapalene have been conducted in mice at topical doses of 0.3,
0.9, and 2.6 mg/kg/day and in rats at oral doses of 0.15, 0.5, and 1.5 mg/kg/day,
approximately 4-75 times the maximal daily human topical dose. In the oral study,
positive linear trends were observed in the incidence of follicular cell adenomas
and carcinomas in the thyroid glands of female rats, and in the incidence of
benign and malignant pheochromocytomas in the adrenal medullas of male rats.
No photocarcinogenicity studies were conducted. Animal studies have shown an increased tumorigenic risk with the use of pharmacologically similar drugs (e.g., retinoids) when exposed to UV irradiation in the laboratory or to sunlight. Although the significance of these studies to human use is not clear, patients should be advised to avoid or minimize exposure to either sunlight or artificial UV irradiation sources.
In a series of in vivo and in vitro studies, adapalene did not
exhibit mutagenic or genotoxic activities.
Pregnancy: Teratogenic effects. Pregnancy Category C.
No teratogenic effects were seen in rats at oral doses of adapalene 0.15 to
5.0 mg/kg/day, up to 120 times the maximal daily human topical dose. Cutaneous
route teratology studies conducted in rats and rabbits at doses of 0.6, 2.0,
and 6.0 mg/kg/day, up to 150 times the maximal daily human topical dose exhibited
no fetotoxicity and only minimal increases in supernumerary ribs in rats. There
are no adequate and well-controlled studies in pregnant women. Adapalene 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 DIFFERIN® (adapalene gel) Gel is administered to a nursing woman.
Pediatric Use: Safety and effectiveness in pediatric patients below
the age of 12 have not been established.