SIDE EFFECTS
Associated With Discontinuation Of Treatment
Approximately 16% of the 453 patients who received REMERON
(mirtazapine) Tablets in US 6-week controlled clinical trials discontinued
treatment due to an adverse experience, compared to 7% of the 361
placebo-treated patients in those studies. The most common events ( ≥ 1%)
associated with discontinuation and considered to be drug related (i.e., those
events associated with dropout at a rate at least twice that of placebo) are
included in Table 2.
Table 2: Common Adverse Events Associated With Discontinuation
of Treatment in 6-Week US REMERON Trials
Adverse Event |
Percentage of Patients Discontinuing With Adverse Event |
REMERON
(n=453) |
Placebo
(n=361) |
Somnolence |
10.4% |
2.2% |
Nausea |
1.5% |
0% |
Commonly Observed Adverse Events In US Controlled Clinical
Trials
The most commonly observed adverse events associated with
the use of REMERON (mirtazapine) Tablets (incidence of 5% or greater) and not
observed at an equivalent incidence among placebo-treated patients (REMERON
incidence at least twice that for placebo) are listed in Table 3.
Table 3: Common Treatment-Emergent Adverse Events Associated
With the Use of REMERON in 6-Week US Trials
Adverse Event |
Percentage of Patients Reporting Adverse Event |
REMERON
(n=453) |
Placebo
(n=361) |
Somnolence |
54% |
18% |
Increased Appetite |
17% |
2% |
Weight Gain |
12% |
2% |
Dizziness |
7% |
3% |
Adverse Events Occurring At An Incidence Of 1% Or More Among
REMERON-Treated Patients
Table 4 enumerates adverse events that occurred at an
incidence of 1% or more, and were more frequent than in the placebo
group, among REMERON (mirtazapine) Tablets-treated patients who participated in
short-term US placebo-controlled trials in which patients were dosed in a range
of 5 to 60 mg/day. This table shows the percentage of patients in each group
who had at least 1 episode of an event at some time during their treatment.
Reported adverse events were classified using a standard COSTART-based
dictionary terminology.
The prescriber should be aware that these figures cannot be
used to predict the incidence of side effects in the course of usual medical
practice where patient characteristics and other factors differ from those
which prevailed in the clinical trials. Similarly, the cited frequencies cannot
be compared with figures obtained from other investigations involving different
treatments, uses, and investigators. The cited figures, however, do provide the
prescribing physician with some basis for estimating the relative contribution
of drug and nondrug factors to the side-effect incidence rate in the population
studied.
Table 4: Incidence of Adverse Clinical Experiences*
( ≥ 1%) in Short-Term US Controlled Studies
Body System Adverse Clinical Experience |
REMERON
(n=453) |
Placebo
(n=361) |
Body as a Whole |
Asthenia |
8% |
5% |
Flu Syndrome |
5% |
3% |
Back Pain |
2% |
1% |
Digestive System |
Dry Mouth |
25% |
15% |
Increased Appetite |
17% |
2% |
Constipation |
13% |
7% |
Metabolic and Nutritional Disorders |
Weight Gain |
12% |
2% |
Peripheral Edema |
2% |
1% |
Edema |
1% |
0% |
Musculoskeletal System |
Myalgia |
2% |
1% |
Nervous System |
Somnolence |
54% |
18% |
Dizziness |
7% |
3% |
Abnormal Dreams |
4% |
1% |
Thinking Abnormal |
3% |
1% |
Tremor |
2% |
1% |
Confusion |
2% |
0% |
Respiratory System |
Dyspnea |
1% |
0% |
Urogenital System |
Urinary Frequency |
2% |
1% |
*Events reported by at least 1% of patients treated with
REMERON are included, except the following events, which had an incidence on
placebo greater than or equal to REMERON: headache, infection, pain, chest
pain, palpitation, tachycardia, postural hypotension, nausea, dyspepsia,
diarrhea, flatulence, insomnia, nervousness, libido decreased, hypertonia,
pharyngitis, rhinitis, sweating, amblyopia, tinnitus, taste perversion. |
ECG Changes
The electrocardiograms for 338 patients who received REMERON
(mirtazapine) Tablets and 261 patients who received placebo in 6-week,
placebo-controlled trials were analyzed. Prolongation in QTc ≥ 500 msec
was not observed among mirtazapine-treated patients; mean change in QTc was
+1.6 msec for mirtazapine and - 3.1 msec for placebo. Mirtazapine was associated
with a mean increase in heart rate of 3.4 bpm, compared to 0.8 bpm for placebo.
The clinical significance of these changes is unknown.
The effect of REMERON (mirtazapine) on QTc interval was assessed
in a clinical randomized trial with placebo and positive (moxifloxacin)
controls involving 54 healthy volunteers using exposure response analysis. This
trial showed a positive relationship between mirtazapine concentrations and
prolongation of the QTc interval. However, the degree of QT prolongation
observed with both 45 mg (therapeutic) and 75 mg (supratherapeutic) doses of
mirtazapine was not at a level generally considered to be clinically
meaningful.
Other Adverse Events Observed During The Premarketing
Evaluation Of REMERON
During its premarketing assessment, multiple doses of
REMERON (mirtazapine) Tablets were administered to 2796 patients in clinical
studies. The conditions and duration of exposure to mirtazapine varied greatly,
and included (in overlapping categories) open and double-blind studies,
uncontrolled and controlled studies, inpatient and outpatient studies,
fixed-dose and titration studies. Untoward events associated with this exposure
were recorded by clinical investigators using terminology of their own choosing.
Consequently, it is not possible to provide a meaningful estimate of the
proportion of individuals experiencing adverse events without first grouping
similar types of untoward events into a smaller number of standardized event
categories.
In the tabulations that follow, reported adverse events were
classified using a standard COSTART-based dictionary terminology. The
frequencies presented, therefore, represent the proportion of the 2796 patients
exposed to multiple doses of REMERON who experienced an event of the type cited
on at least 1 occasion while receiving REMERON. All reported events are
included except those already listed in Table 4, those adverse experiences
subsumed under COSTART terms that are either overly general or excessively
specific so as to be uninformative, and those events for which a drug cause was
very remote.
It is important to emphasize that, although the events
reported occurred during treatment with REMERON, they were not necessarily
caused by it.
Events are further categorized by body system and listed in
order of decreasing frequency according to the following definitions: frequent
adverse events are those occurring on 1 or more occasions in at least 1/100
patients; infrequent adverse events are those occurring in 1/100 to
1/1000 patients; rare events are those occurring in fewer than 1/1000
patients. Only those events not already listed in Table 4 appear in this
listing. Events of major clinical importance are also described in the WARNINGS
and PRECAUTIONS sections.
Body as a Whole: frequent: malaise, abdominal
pain, abdominal syndrome acute; infrequent: chills, fever, face edema,
ulcer, photosensitivity reaction, neck rigidity, neck pain, abdomen enlarged; rare:
cellulitis, chest pain substernal.
Cardiovascular System: frequent: hypertension,
vasodilatation; infrequent: angina pectoris, myocardial infarction,
bradycardia, ventricular extrasystoles, syncope, migraine, hypotension; rare:
atrial arrhythmia, bigeminy, vascular headache, pulmonary embolus, cerebral
ischemia, cardiomegaly, phlebitis, left heart failure.
Digestive System: frequent: vomiting,
anorexia; infrequent: eructation, glossitis, cholecystitis, nausea and
vomiting, gum hemorrhage, stomatitis, colitis, liver function tests abnormal; rare:
tongue discoloration, ulcerative stomatitis, salivary gland enlargement,
increased salivation, intestinal obstruction, pancreatitis, aphthous
stomatitis, cirrhosis of liver, gastritis, gastroenteritis, oral moniliasis,
tongue edema.
Endocrine System: rare: goiter,
hypothyroidism.
Hemic and Lymphatic System: rare:
lymphadenopathy, leukopenia, petechia, anemia, thrombocytopenia, lymphocytosis,
pancytopenia.
Metabolic and Nutritional Disorders: frequent:
thirst; infrequent: dehydration, weight loss; rare: gout, SGOT
increased, healing abnormal, acid phosphatase increased, SGPT increased,
diabetes mellitus, hyponatremia.
Musculoskeletal System: frequent: myasthenia,
arthralgia; infrequent: arthritis, tenosynovitis; rare: pathologic
fracture, osteoporosis fracture, bone pain, myositis, tendon rupture,
arthrosis, bursitis.
Nervous System: frequent: hypesthesia, apathy,
depression, hypokinesia, vertigo, twitching, agitation, anxiety, amnesia,
hyperkinesia, paresthesia; infrequent: ataxia, delirium, delusions, depersonalization,
dyskinesia, extrapyramidal syndrome, libido increased, coordination abnormal,
dysarthria, hallucinations, manic reaction, neurosis, dystonia, hostility,
reflexes increased, emotional lability, euphoria, paranoid reaction; rare:
aphasia, nystagmus, akathisia (psychomotor restlessness), stupor, dementia,
diplopia, drug dependence, paralysis, grand mal convulsion, hypotonia,
myoclonus, psychotic depression, withdrawal syndrome, serotonin syndrome.
Respiratory System: frequent: cough increased,
sinusitis; infrequent: epistaxis, bronchitis, asthma, pneumonia; rare:
asphyxia, laryngitis, pneumothorax, hiccup.
Skin and Appendages: frequent: pruritus, rash;
infrequent: acne, exfoliative dermatitis, dry skin, herpes simplex,
alopecia; rare: urticaria, herpes zoster, skin hypertrophy, seborrhea,
skin ulcer.
Special Senses: infrequent: eye pain,
abnormality of accommodation, conjunctivitis, deafness, keratoconjunctivitis,
lacrimation disorder, angle-closure glaucoma, hyperacusis, ear pain; rare:
blepharitis, partial transitory deafness, otitis media, taste loss, parosmia.
Urogenital System: frequent: urinary tract
infection; infrequent: kidney calculus, cystitis, dysuria, urinary incontinence,
urinary retention, vaginitis, hematuria, breast pain, amenorrhea, dysmenorrhea,
leukorrhea, impotence; rare: polyuria, urethritis, metrorrhagia,
menorrhagia, abnormal ejaculation, breast engorgement, breast enlargement,
urinary urgency.
Other Adverse Events Observed During Postmarketing
Evaluation Of REMERON
Adverse events reported since market introduction, which
were temporally (but not necessarily causally) related to mirtazapine therapy,
include cases of the ventricular arrhythmia Torsades de Pointes. In the
majority of these cases, however, concomitant drugs were implicated. Cases of
severe skin reactions, including Stevens-Johnson syndrome, bullous dermatitis,
erythema multiforme and toxic epidermal necrolysis have also been reported. Increased
creatine kinase blood levels and rhabdomyolysis have also been reported.
Drug Abuse And Dependence
Controlled Substance Class
REMERON (mirtazapine) Tablets are not a controlled
substance.
Physical And Psychologic Dependence
REMERON (mirtazapine) Tablets have not been systematically
studied in animals or humans for its potential for abuse, tolerance, or
physical dependence. While the clinical trials did not reveal any tendency for
any drug-seeking behavior, these observations were not systematic and it is not
possible to predict on the basis of this limited experience the extent to which
a CNS-active drug will be misused, diverted and/or abused once marketed.
Consequently, patients should be evaluated carefully for history of drug abuse,
and such patients should be observed closely for signs of REMERON misuse or
abuse (e.g., development of tolerance, incrementations of dose, drug-seeking
behavior).