General
An increase in acute attacks of gout has been reported during the
early stages of allopurinol administration, even when normal or subnormal serum
uric acid levels have been attained. Accordingly, maintenance doses of
colchicine generally should be given prophylactically when allopurinol is begun.
In addition, it is recommended that the patient start with a low dose of
allopurinol (100 mg daily) and increase at weekly intervals by 100 mg until a
serum uric acid level of 6 mg/dL or less is attained but without exceeding the
maximum recommended dose (800 mg per day). The use of colchicine or
anti-inflammatory agents may be required to suppress gouty attacks in some
cases. The attacks usually become shorter and less severe after several months
of therapy. The mobilization of urates from tissue deposits which cause
fluctuations in the serum uric acid levels may be a possible explanation for
these episodes. Even with adequate allopurinol therapy, it may require several
months to deplete the uric acid pool sufficiently to achieve control of the
acute attacks.
A fluid intake sufficient to yield a daily urinary output of at least 2
liters and the maintenance of a neutral or, preferably, slightly alkaline urine
are desirable to (1) avoid the theoretical possibility of formation of xanthine
calculi under the influence of allopurinol therapy and (2) help prevent renal
precipitation of urates in patients receiving concomitant uricosuric agents.
Some patients with pre-existing renal disease or poor urate clearance have
shown a rise in BUN during allopurinol administration. Although the mechanism
responsible for this has not been established, patients with impaired renal
function should be carefully observed during the early stages of allopurinol
administration and the dosage decreased or the drug withdrawn if increased
abnormalities in renal function appear and persist.
Renal failure in association with allopurinol administration has been
observed among patients with hyperuricemia secondary to neoplastic diseases.
Concurrent conditions such as multiple myeloma and congestive myocardial disease
were present among those patients whose renal dysfunction increased after
allopurinol was begun. Renal failure is also frequently associated with gouty
nephropathy and rarely with hypersensitivity reactions associated with
allopurinol. Albuminuria has been observed among patients who developed clinical
gout following chronic glomerulonephritis and chronic pyelonephritis.
Patients with decreased renal function require lower doses of allopurinol
than those with normal renal function. Lower than recommended doses should be
used to initiate therapy in any patients with decreased renal function and they
should be observed closely during the early stages of allopurinol
administration. In patients with severely impaired renal function or decreased
urate clearance, the half-life of oxipurinol in the plasma is greatly prolonged.
Therefore, a dose of 100 mg per day or 300 mg twice a week, or perhaps less, may
be sufficient to maintain adequate xanthine oxidase inhibition to reduce serum
urate levels.
Bone marrow depression has been reported in patients receiving allopurinol,
most of whom received concomitant drugs with the potential for causing this
reaction. This has occurred as early as six weeks to as long as six years after
the initiation of allopurinol therapy. Rarely a patient may develop varying
degrees of bone marrow depression, affecting one or more cell lines, while
receiving allopurinol alone.
Information for Patients
Patients should be informed of the following:
(1) They should
be cautioned to discontinue allopurinol and to consult their physician
immediately at the first sign of a skin rash, painful urination, blood in the
urine, irritation of the eyes, or swelling of the lips or mouth. (2) They should
be reminded to continue drug therapy prescribed for gouty attacks since optimal
benefit of allopurinol may be delayed for two to six weeks. (3) They should be
encouraged to increase fluid intake during therapy to prevent renal stones. (4)
If a single dose of allopurinol is occasionally forgotten, there is no need to
double the dose at the next scheduled time. (5) There may be certain risks
associated with the concomitant use of allopurinol and dicumarol,
sulfinpyrazone, mercaptopurine, azathioprine, ampicillin, amoxicillin and
thiazide diuretics, and they should follow the instructions of their physician.
(6) Due to the occasional occurrence of drowsiness, patients should take
precautions when engaging in activities where alertness is mandatory. (7)
Patients may wish to take allopurinol after meals to minimize gastric
irritation.
Laboratory Tests
The correct dosage and schedule for maintaining the serum uric
acid within the normal range is best determined by using the serum uric acid
level as an index.
In patients with pre-existing liver disease, periodic liver function tests
are recommended during the early stages of therapy (see WARNINGS).
Allopurinol and its primary active metabolite oxipurinol are eliminated by
the kidneys; therefore, changes in renal function have a profound effect on
dosage. In patients with decreased renal function or who have concurrent
illnesses which can affect renal function such as hypertension and diabetes
mellitus, periodic laboratory parameters of renal function, particularly BUN and
serum creatinine or creatinine clearance, should be performed and the patient’s
allopurinol dosage reassessed.
The prothrombin time should be reassessed periodically in the patients
receiving dicumarol who are given allopurinol.
Drug Interactions
In patients receiving mercaptopurine or azathioprine, the
concomitant administration of 300-600 mg of allopurinol per day will require a
reduction in dose to approximately one-third to one-fourth of the usual dose of
mercaptopurine or azathioprine. Subsequent adjustment of doses of mercaptopurine
or azathioprine should be made on the basis of therapeutic response and the
appearance of toxic effects (see CLINICAL
PHARMACOLOGY).
It has been reported that allopurinol prolongs the half-life of the
anticoagulant, dicumarol. The clinical basis of this drug interaction has not
been established but should be noted when allopurinol is given to patients
already on dicumarol therapy.
Since the excretion of oxipurinol is similar to that of urate, uricosuric
agents, which increase the excretion of urate, are also likely to increase the
excretion of oxipurinol and thus lower the degree of inhibition of xanthine
oxidase. The concomitant administration of uricosuric agents and allopurinol has
been associated with a decrease in the excretion of oxypurines (hypoxanthine and
xanthine) and an increase in urinary uric acid excretion compared with that
observed with allopurinol alone. Although clinical evidence to date has not
demonstrated renal precipitation of oxypurines in patients either on allopurinol
alone or in combination with uricosuric agents, the possibility should be kept
in mind.
The reports that the concomitant use of allopurinol and thiazide diuretics
may contribute to the enhancement of allopurinol toxicity in some patients have
been reviewed in an attempt to establish a cause-and-effect relationship and a
mechanism of causation. Review of these case reports indicates that the patients
were mainly receiving thiazide diuretics for hypertension and that tests to rule
out decreased renal function secondary to hypertensive nephropathy were not
often performed. In those patients in whom renal insufficiency was documented,
however, the recommendation to lower the dose of allopurinol was not followed.
Although a causal mechanism and a cause-and-effect relationship have not been
established, current evidence suggests that renal function should be monitored
in patients on thiazide diuretics and allopurinol even in the absence of renal
failure, and dosage levels should be even more conservatively adjusted in those
patients on such combined therapy if diminished renal function is detected.
An increase in the frequency of skin rash has been reported among patients
receiving ampicillin or amoxicillin concurrently with allopurinol compared to
patients who are not receiving both drugs. The cause of the reported association
has not been established.
Enhanced bone marrow suppression by cyclophosphamide and other cytotoxic
agents has been reported among patients with neoplastic disease, except
leukemia, in the presence of allopurinol. However, in a well-controlled study of
patients with lymphoma on combination therapy, allopurinol did not increase the
marrow toxicity of patients treated with cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin,
bleomycin, procarbazine and/or mechlorethamine.
Tolbutamide’s conversion to inactive metabolites has been shown to be
catalyzed by xanthine oxidase from rat liver. The clinical significance, if any,
of this observation is unknown.
Chlorpropamide’s plasma half-life may be prolonged by allopurinol, since
allopurinol and chlorpropamide may compete for excretion in the renal tubule.
The risk of hypoglycemia secondary to this mechanism may be increased if
allopurinol and chlorpropamide are given concomitantly in the presence of renal
insufficiency.
Rare reports indicate that cyclosporine levels may be increased during
concomitant treatment with allopurinol. Monitoring of cyclosporine levels and
possible adjustment of cyclosporine dosage should be considered when these drugs
are co-administered.
Drug/Laboratory Test Interactions
Allopurinol is not known to alter the accuracy of laboratory
tests.
Pregnancy
Teratogenic Effects
Pregnancy Category C. Reproductive studies have been performed in rats and
rabbits at doses up to twenty times the usual human dose (5 mg/kg/day), and it
was concluded that there was no impaired fertility or harm to the fetus due to
allopurinol. There is a published report of a study in pregnant mice given 50 or
100 mg/kg allopurinol intraperitoneally on gestation days 10 or 13. There were
increased numbers of dead fetuses in dams given 100 mg/kg allopurinol but not in
those given 50 mg/kg. There were increased numbers of external malformations in
fetuses at both doses of allopurinol on gestation day 10 and increased numbers
of skeletal malformations in fetuses at both doses on gestation day 13. It
cannot be determined whether this represented a fetal effect or an effect
secondary to maternal toxicity. There are, however, no adequate or
well-controlled studies in pregnant women. Because animal reproduction studies
are not always predictive of human response, this drug should be used during
pregnancy only if clearly needed.
Experience with allopurinol during human pregnancy has been limited partly
because women of reproductive age rarely require treatment with allopurinol.
There are two unpublished reports and one published paper of women giving birth
to normal offspring after receiving allopurinol during pregnancy.
Nursing Mothers
Allopurinol and oxipurinol have been found in the milk of a
mother who was receiving allopurinol. Since the effect of allopurinol on the
nursing infant is unknown, caution should be exercised when allopurinol is
administered to a nursing woman.
Pediatric Use
Allopurinol is rarely indicated for use in children with the
exception of those with hyperuricemia secondary to malignancy or to certain rare
inborn errors of purine metabolism (see INDICATIONS AND
USAGE and DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION).