SIDE EFFECTS
Some patients may develop drug fever, usually during the
first month of therapy. THIOLA® treatment should be discontinued until the
fever subsides. It may be reinstated at a small dose, with a gradual increase
in dosage until the desired level is achieved.
A generalized rash (erythematous, maculopapular or
morbilliform) accompanied by pruritis may develop during the first few months
of treatment. It may be controlled by antihistamine therapy, typically recedes
when THIOLA® treatment is discontinued, and seldom recurs when THIOLA® treatment
is restarted at a lower dosage. Less commonly, rash may appear late in the course
of treatment (of more than 6 months). Located usually in the trunk, the late
rash is associated with intense pruritis, recedes slowly after discontinuing treatment,
and usually recurs upon resumption of treatment.
A drug reaction simulating lupus erythematous, manifested
by fever, arthralgia and lymphadenopathy may develop. It may be associated with
a positive antinuclear antibody test, but not necessarily with nephropathy. It
may require discontinuance of THIOLA® treatment.
A reduction in taste perception may develop. It is
believed to be the result of chelation of trace metals by THIOLA™. Hypogeusia
is often self-limiting.
Unlike during d-penicillamine therapy, vitamin B6 deficiency
is uncommonly associated with THIOLA® treatment.
Some patients may complain of wrinkling and friability of
skin. This complication usually occurs after long-term treatment, and is
believed to result from the effect of THIOLA® on collagen.
A multiclinic trial involving 66 cystinuric patients in
the United States indicated that THIOLA® is associated with fewer or less
severe adverse reactions than d-penicillamine. Among those who had to stop
taking d-penicillamine due to toxicity, 64.7% could take THIOLA® . In those
without prior history of d-penicillamine treatment, only 5.9% developed
reactions of sufficient severity to require THIOLA® withdrawal. A review of
available literature supports the findings from this trial.
Despite this apparent reduced toxicity to THIOLA® relative
to d-penicillamine, THIOLA® treatment may potentially be associated with all
the adverse reactions reported with d-penicillamine. They include:
Gastrointestinal side-effects (nausea, emesis, diarrhea
or softstools, anorexia, abdominal pain, bloating or flatus) in about 1 in 6
patients; Impairment in taste and smell in about 1 in 25 patients;
Dermatologic complications (pharyngitis, oral ulcers,
rash, ecchymosis, prurites, uritcaria, warts, skin wrinkling, pemphigus,
elastosis perforans serpiginosa) in about 1 in 6 patients;
Hypersensitivity reactions (laryngeal edema, dyspnea,
respiratory distress, fever, chills, arthralgia, weakness, fatigue, myalgia,
adenopathy) in about 1 in 25 patients;
Hematologic abnormalities (increased bleeding, anemia,
leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, eosinophilia) in about 1 in 25 patients;
Renal complications (proteinuria, nephrotic syndrome, hematuria)
in about 1 in 20 patients;
Pulmonary manifestations (bronchiolitis, hemoptysis,
pulmonary infiltrates, dyspnea) in about 1 in 50 patients;
Neurologic complications (myasthenic syndrome) in about 1
in 50 patients.
These reactions are more likely to develop during THIOLA®
therapy among patients who had previously shown toxicity to d-penicillamine.
In patients who had previously manifested adverse
reactions to d-penicillamine, adverse reactions to THIOLA® are more likely to
occur than in patients who took THIOLA® for the first time. A close supervision
with a careful monitoring of potential side effects is mandatory during THIOLA®
treatment. Patients should be told to report promptly any symptoms suggesting toxicity.
The treatment with THIOLA® should be stopped if severe toxicity develops.
Jaundice and abnormal liver function tests have been
reported during THIOLA® therapy for non-cystinuric conditions. A direct cause
and effect relationship, based upon these foreign reports, has not been established.
Although such complications were not encountered in the small multi-center trials
in the United States, patients should be carefully monitored and if any abnormalities
are noted, the drug should be discontinued and the patient treated by
appropriate measures.
DRUG INTERACTIONS
No information provided.