Information For Patients:
Promethazine and dextromethorphan may cause marked drowsiness or
impair the mental and/or physical abilities required for the performance of
potentially hazardous tasks, such as driving a vehicle or operating machinery.
Ambulatory patients should be told to avoid engaging in such activities until it
is known that they do not become drowsy or dizzy from promethazine and
dextromethorphan therapy. Children should be supervised to avoid potential harm
in bike riding or in other hazardous activities.
The concomitant use of alcohol or other central nervous system depressants,
including narcotic analgesics, sedatives, hypnotics, and tranquilizers, may have
an additive effect and should be avoided or their dosage reduced.
Patients should be advised to report any involuntary muscle movements.
Avoid prolonged exposure to the sun.
Drug Interactions:Dextromethorphan:
Hyperpyrexia, hypotension, and death have been reported
coincident with the coadministration of monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibitors and
products containing dextromethorphan. Thus, concomitant administration of
promethazine with dextromethorphan and MAO inhibitors should be avoided (see
CONTRAINDICATIONS).
Promethazine:
CNS Depressants – Promethazine may increase, prolong, or intensify the sedative
action of other central nervous system depressants, such as alcohol,
sedatives/hypnotics (including barbiturates), narcotics, narcotic analgesics,
general anesthetics, tricyclic antidepressants, and tranquilizers; therefore,
such agents should be avoided or administered in reduced dosage to patients
receiving promethazine HCl. When given concomitantly with promethazine, the dose
of barbiturates should be reduced by at least one-half, and the dose of
narcotics should be reduced by one-quarter to one-half. Dosage must be
individualized. Excessive amounts of promethazine HCl relative to a narcotic may
lead to restlessness and motor hyperactivity in the patient with pain; these
symptoms usually disappear with adequate control of the pain.
Epinephrine – Because of the potential for promethazine to reverse
epinephrine's vasopressor effect, epinephrine should NOT be used to treat hypotension associated with
promethazine overdose.
Anticholinergics – Concomitant use of other agents with anticholinergic properties
should be undertaken with caution.
Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors
(MAOI) – Drug interactions, including an increased incidence of
extrapyramidal effects, have been reported when some MAOI and phenothiazines are
used concomitantly.
Drug/Laboratory Test Interactions:
The following laboratory tests may be affected in patients who
are receiving therapy with promethazine hydrochloride.
Pregnancy Tests:
Diagnostic pregnancy tests based on immunological reactions
between HCG and anti-HCG may result in false-negative or false-positive
interpretations.
Glucose Tolerance Test:
An increase in blood glucose has been reported in patients
receiving promethazine.
Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, Impairment Of
Fertility:
Long-term animal studies have not been performed to assess the
carcinogenic potential of promethazine or of dextromethorphan. There are no
animal or human data concerning the carcinogenicity, mutagenicity, or impairment
of fertility with these drugs. Promethazine was nonmutagenic in the Salmonella test system of
Ames.
Pregnancy:Teratogenic Effects –
Pregnancy
Category C:Teratogenic effects have not been demonstrated in rat-feeding
studies at doses of 6.25 and 12.5 mg/kg of promethazine HCl. These doses are
from approximately 2.1 to 4.2 times the maximum recommended total daily dose of
promethazine for a 50-kg subject, depending upon the indication for which the
drug is prescribed. Daily doses of 25 mg/kg intraperitoneally have been found to
produce fetal mortality in rats.
Specific studies to test the action of the drug on parturition, lactation,
and development of the animal neonate were not done, but a general preliminary
study in rats indicated no effect on these parameters. Although antihistamines
have been found to produce fetal mortality in rodents, the pharmacological
effects of histamine in the rodent do not parallel those in man. There are no
adequate and well-controlled studies of promethazine in pregnant women.
Promethazine and dextromethorphan should be used during pregnancy only if the
potential benefit justifies the risk to the fetus.
Nonteratogenic Effects:
Promethazine administered to a pregnant woman within two weeks of
delivery may inhibit platelet aggregation in the newborn.
Labor And Delivery:
Limited data suggest that use of promethazine HCl during labor
and delivery does not have an appreciable effect on the duration of labor or
delivery and does not increase the risk of need for intervention in the newborn.
The effect on later growth and development of the newborn is unknown. See also
" Nonteratogenic Effects
".
Nursing Mothers:
It is not known whether promethazine or dextromethorphan is
excreted in human milk.
Caution should be exercised when promethazine and dextromethorphan is
administered to a nursing woman.
Pediatric Use:
PROMETHAZINE HYDROCHLORIDE
AND DEXTROMETHORPHAN HYDROBROMIDE SYRUP IS CONTRAINDICATED FOR USE IN PEDIATRIC
PATIENTS LESS THAN TWO YEARS OF AGE (see WARNINGS – Black Box
Warning and Use In Pediatric Patients).
Promethazine hydrochloride and dextromethorphan hydrobromide syrup should be
used with caution in pediatric patients 2 years of age and older (see WARNINGS
–
Use In Pediatric Patients).
Geriatric Use:
Clinical studies of promethazine hydrochloride and
dextromethorphan hydrobromide syrup 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 the elderly and younger patients. In general,
dose selection for an elderly patient should be cautious, usually starting at
the low end of the dosing range, reflecting the greater frequency of decreased
hepatic, renal or cardiac function, and of concomitant disease or other drug
therapy.
Sedating drugs may cause confusion and over-sedation in the elderly; elderly
patients generally should be started on low doses of promethazine hydrochloride
and dextromethorphan hydrobromide syrup and observed closely.