Information for Patients
To prevent contaminating the dropper tip and solution, care
should be taken not to touch the eyelids or surrounding areas with the dropper
tip of the bottle. Keep bottle tightly closed when not in use.
Patients should be advised not to wear a contact lens if their eye is red.
PATANOL® should not be used to treat contact lens-related irritation. The
preservative in PATANOL, benzalkonium chloride, may be absorbed by soft contact
lenses. Patients who wear soft contact lenses and whose eyes
are not red should be instructed to wait at least ten minutes after
instilling PATANOL (olopatadine hydrochloride ophthalmic solution) 0.1% before
they insert their contact lenses.
Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, Impairment of
Fertility
Olopatadine administered orally was not carcinogenic in mice and
rats in doses up to 500mg/kg/day and 200mg/kg/day, respectively. Based on a 40
µl drop size, these doses were 78,125 and 31,250 times higher than the maximum
recommended ocular human dose (MROHD). No mutagenic potential was observed when
olopatadine was tested in an in vitro bacterial
reverse mutation (Ames) test, an in vitro mammalian
chromosome aberration assay or an in vivo mouse
micronucleus test. Olopatadine administered to male and female rats at oral
doses of 62,500 times MROHD level resulted in a slight decrease in the fertility
index and reduced implantation rate; no effects on reproductive function were
observed at doses of 7,800 times the maximum recommended ocular human use
level.
Pregnancy
Pregnancy Category C. Olopatadine was
found not to be teratogenic in rats and rabbits. However, rats treated at 600
mg/kg/day, or 93,750 times the MROHD and rabbits treated at 400 mg/kg/day, or
62,500 times the MROHD, during organogenesis showed a decrease in live fetuses.
There are, however, no adequate and well-controlled studies in pregnant women.
Because animal studies are not always predictive of human responses, this drug
should be used in pregnant women only if the potential benefit to the mother
justifies the potential risk to the embryo or fetus.
Nursing Mothers
Olopatadine has been identified in the milk of nursing rats
following oral administration. It is not known whether topical ocular
administration could result in sufficient systemic absorption to produce
detectable quantities in the human breast milk. Nevertheless, caution should be
exercised when PATANOL (olopatadine hydrochloride ophthalmic solution) 0.1% is
administered to a nursing mother.
Pediatric Use
Safety and effectiveness in pediatric patients below the age of 3
years have not been established.
Geriatric Use
No overall differences in safety or effectiveness have been
observed between elderly and younger patients.