General
Safety and efficacy of bromocriptine mesylate have not been established in patients with renal or
hepatic disease. Care should be exercised when administering bromocriptine therapy concomitantly
with other medications known to lower blood pressure.
The drug should be used with caution in patients with a history of psychosis or cardiovascular
disease. If acromegalic patients or patients with prolactinoma or Parkinson’s disease are being
treated with bromocriptine during pregnancy, they should be cautiously observed, particularly during
the postpartum period if they have a history of cardiovascular disease.
Patients with rare hereditary problems of galactose intolerance, severe lactase deficiency or
glucose-galactose malabsorption should not take this medicine.
Hyperprolactinemic States
Visual field impairment is a known complication of macroprolactinoma. Effective treatment with bromocriptine leads to a reduction in hyperprolactinemia and often to a resolution of the visual
impairment. In some patients, however, a secondary deterioration of visual fields may subsequently
develop despite normalized prolactin levels and tumor shrinkage, which may result from traction on
the optic chiasm which is pulled down into the now partially empty sella. In these cases, the visual
field defect may improve on reduction of bromocriptine dosage while there is some elevation of
prolactin and some tumor re‑expansion. Monitoring of visual fields in patients with macroprolactinoma is therefore recommended for an early recognition of secondary field loss due to chiasmal herniation and adaptation of drug dosage.
The relative efficacy of bromocriptine versus surgery in preserving visual fields is not known.
Patients with rapidly progressive visual field loss should be evaluated by a neurosurgeon to help
decide on the most appropriate therapy.
Since pregnancy is often the therapeutic objective in many hyperprolactinemic patients presenting
with amenorrhea/galactorrhea and hypogonadism (infertility), a careful assessment of the pituitary is
essential to detect the presence of a prolactin‑secreting adenoma. Patients not seeking pregnancy,
or those harboring large adenomas, should be advised to use contraceptive measures, other than
oral contraceptives, during treatment with bromocriptine. Since pregnancy may occur prior to
reinitiation of menses, a pregnancy test is recommended at least every 4 weeks during the
amenorrheic period and, once menses are reinitiated, every time a patient misses a menstrual
period. Treatment with bromocriptine mesylate tablets or capsules should be discontinued as soon
as pregnancy has been established. Patients must be monitored closely throughout pregnancy for
signs and symptoms that may signal the enlargement of a previously undetected or existing
prolactin‑secreting tumor. Discontinuation of bromocriptine treatment in patients with known
macroadenomas has been associated with rapid regrowth of tumor and increase in serum prolactin
in most cases.
Cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea has been observed in some patients with prolactin-secreting
adenomas treated with bromocriptine.
Acromegaly
Cold-sensitive digital vasospasm has been observed in some acromegalic patients treated with
bromocriptine. The response, should it occur, can be reversed by reducing the dose of bromocriptine
and may be prevented by keeping the fingers warm. Cases of severe gastrointestinal bleeding from
peptic ulcers have been reported, some fatal. Although there is no evidence that bromocriptine
increases the incidence of peptic ulcers in acromegalic patients, symptoms suggestive of peptic
ulcer should be investigated thoroughly and treated appropriately. Patients with a history of peptic
ulcer or gastrointestinal bleeding should be observed carefully during treatment with bromocriptine.
Possible tumor expansion while receiving bromocriptine therapy has been reported in a few patients.
Since the natural history of growth hormone-secreting tumors is unknown, all patients should be
carefully monitored and, if evidence of tumor expansion develops, discontinuation of treatment and
alternative procedures considered.
Parkinson’s Disease
Safety during long‑term use for more than 2 years at the doses required for parkinsonism has not
been established.
As with any chronic therapy, periodic evaluation of hepatic, hematopoietic, cardiovascular, and renal
function is recommended. Symptomatic hypotension can occur and, therefore, caution should be
exercised when treating patients receiving antihypertensive drugs.
High doses of bromocriptine may be associated with confusion and mental disturbances. Since
parkinsonian patients may manifest mild degrees of dementia, caution should be used when treating
such patients.
Bromocriptine administered alone or concomitantly with levodopa may cause hallucinations (visual
or auditory). Hallucinations usually resolve with dosage reduction; occasionally, discontinuation of
bromocriptine is required. Rarely, after high doses, hallucinations have persisted for several weeks
following discontinuation of bromocriptine.
Postmarketing reports suggest that patients treated with anti-Parkinson medications can experience
intense urges to gamble, increased sexual urges, intense urges to spend money uncontrollably, and
other intense urges. Patients may be unable to control these urges while taking one or more of the
medications that are generally used for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease and that increase
central dopaminergic tone, including bromocriptine. In some cases, although not all, these urges
were reported to have stopped when the dose was reduced or the medication was discontinued.
Because patients may not recognize these behaviors as abnormal it is important for prescribers to
specifically ask patients or their caregivers about the development of new or increased gambling
urges, sexual urges, uncontrolled spending or other urges while being treated with bromocriptine.
Physicians should consider dose reduction or stopping the medication if a patient develops such
urges while taking bromocriptine.
As with levodopa, caution should be exercised when administering bromocriptine to patients with a
history of myocardial infarction who have a residual atrial, nodal, or ventricular arrhythmia.
Retroperitoneal fibrosis has been reported in a few patients receiving long‑term therapy (2 to 10 years)
with bromocriptine in doses ranging from 30-140 mg daily.
Epidemiological studies have shown that patients with Parkinson’s disease have a higher risk
(2-approximately 6-fold higher) of developing melanoma than the general population. Whether the
increased risk observed was due to Parkinson’s disease or other factors, such as drugs used to treat
Parkinson’s disease, is unclear. For the reasons stated above, patients and providers are advised to
monitor for melanomas frequently and on a regular basis when using bromocriptine for any
indication. Ideally, periodic skin examinations should be performed by appropriately qualified
individuals (e.g., dermatologists).
Discontinuation of bromocriptine should be undertaken gradually whenever possible, even if the
patient is to remain on l-dopa. A symptom complex resembling the neuroleptic malignant syndrome
(characterized by elevated temperature, muscular rigidity, altered consciousness, and autonomic
instability), with no other obvious etiology, has been reported in association with rapid dose
reduction, withdrawal of, or changes in antiparkinsonian therapy.
Information for Patients
During clinical trials, dizziness, drowsiness, faintness, fainting, and syncope have been reported
early in the course of bromocriptine therapy. In postmarketing reports, bromocriptine has been
associated with somnolence, and episodes of sudden sleep onset, particularly in patients with
Parkinson’s disease. Sudden onset of sleep during daily activities, in some cases without awareness
or warning signs, has been reported very rarely. All patients receiving bromocriptine should be
cautioned with regard to engaging in activities requiring rapid and precise responses, such as driving
an automobile or operating machinery. Patients being treated with bromocriptine and presenting with
somnolence and/or sudden sleep episodes must be advised not to drive or engage in activities
where impaired alertness may put themselves or others at risk of serious injury or death (e.g.,
operating machines).
Patients receiving bromocriptine for hyperprolactinemic states associated with macroadenoma or
those who have had previous transsphenoidal surgery, should be told to report any persistent watery
nasal discharge to their physician. Patients receiving bromocriptine for treatment of a
macroadenoma should be told that discontinuation of drug may be associated with rapid regrowth of
the tumor and recurrence of their original symptoms.
Patients and their caregivers should be alerted to the possibility that they may experience intense
urges to spend money uncontrollably, intense urges to gamble, increased sexual urges and other intense urges and the inability to control these urges while taking bromocriptine (see PRECAUTIONS).
Especially during the first days of treatment, hypotensive reactions may occasionally occur and
result in reduced alertness. Particular care should be exercised when driving a vehicle or operating
machinery.
Drug Interactions
The risk of using bromocriptine in combination with other drugs has not been systematically
evaluated, but alcohol may potentiate the side effects of bromocriptine. Bromocriptine may
interact with dopamine antagonists, butyrophenones, and certain other agents. Compounds in
these categories result in a decreased efficacy of bromocriptine: phenothiazines, haloperidol,
metoclopramide, and pimozide. Bromocriptine is a substrate of CYP3A4. Caution should
therefore be used when co-administering drugs which are strong inhibitors of this enzyme (such
as azole antimycotics, HIV protease inhibitors). The concomitant use of macrolide antibiotics
such as erythromycin was shown to increase the plasma levels of bromocriptine (mean AUC and
Cmax values increased 3.7-fold and 4.6-fold, respectively).1 The concomitant treatment of
acromegalic patients with bromocriptine and octreotide led to increased plasma levels of
bromocriptine (bromocriptine AUC increased about 38%).4 Concomitant use of bromocriptine
with other ergot alkaloids is not recommended. Dose adjustment may be necessary in those
cases where high doses of bromocriptine are being used (such as Parkinson’s disease
indication).
Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, Impairment of Fertility
A 74‑week study was conducted in mice using dietary levels of bromocriptine mesylate equivalent to
oral doses of 10 and 50 mg/kg/day. A 100‑week study in rats was conducted using dietary levels
equivalent to oral doses of 1.7, 9.8, and 44 mg/kg/day. The highest doses tested in mice and rats
were approximately 2.5 and 4.4 times, respectively, the maximum human dose administered in
controlled clinical trials (100 mg/day) based on body surface area. Malignant uterine tumors,
endometrial and myometrial, were found in rats as follows: 0/50 control females, 2/50 females given
1.7 mg/kg daily, 7/49 females given 9.8 mg/kg daily, and 9/50 females given 44 mg/kg daily. The
occurrence of these neoplasms is probably attributable to the high estrogen/progesterone ratio
which occurs in rats as a result of the prolactin‑inhibiting action of bromocriptine mesylate. The
endocrine mechanisms believed to be involved in the rats are not present in humans. There is no
known correlation between uterine malignancies occurring in bromocriptine‑treated rats and human
risk. In contrast to the findings in rats, the uteri from mice killed after 74 weeks of treatment did not
exhibit evidence of drug‑related changes.
Bromocriptine mesylate was evaluated for mutagenic potential in the battery of tests that included
Ames bacterial mutation assay, mutagenic activity in vitro on V79 Chinese hamster fibroblasts,
cytogenetic analysis of Chinese hamster bone marrow cells following in vivo treatment, and an in
vivo micronucleus test for mutagenic potential in mice.
No mutagenic effects were obtained in any of these tests.
Fertility and reproductive performance in female rats were not influenced adversely by treatment with
bromocriptine beyond the predicted decrease in the weight of pups due to suppression of lactation.
In males treated with 50 mg/kg of this drug, mating and fertility were within the normal range.
Increased perinatal loss was produced in the subgroups of dams, sacrificed on day 21 postpartum
(p.p.) after mating with males treated with the highest dose (50 mg/kg).
Pregnancy
Category B: Administration of 10‑30 mg/kg of bromocriptine to 2 strains of rats on days 6 to 15
postcoitum (p.c.) as well as a single dose of 10 mg/kg on day 5 p.c. interfered with nidation.
Three mg/kg given on days 6 to 15 were without effect on nidation, and did not produce any
anomalies. In animals treated from day 8‑15 p.c., i.e., after implantation, 30 mg/kg produced
increased prenatal mortality in the form of increased incidence of embryonic resorption. One
anomaly, aplasia of spinal vertebrae and ribs, was found in the group of 262 fetuses derived from the
dams treated with 30 mg/kg bromocriptine. No fetotoxic effects were found in offspring of dams
treated during the peri‑or postnatal period.
Two studies were conducted in rabbits (2 strains) to determine the potential to interfere with nidation.
Dose levels of 100 or 300 mg/kg/day from day 1 to day 6 p.c. did not adversely affect nidation. The
high dose was approximately 63 times the maximum human dose administered in controlled clinical
trials (100 mg/day), based on body surface area. In New Zealand white rabbits, some embryo
mortality occurred at 300 mg/kg which was a reflection of overt maternal toxicity. Three studies were
conducted in 2 strains of rabbits to determine the teratological potential of bromocriptine at dose
levels of 3, 10, 30, 100, and 300 mg/kg given from day 6 to day 18 p.c. In 2 studies with the
Yellow‑silver strain, cleft palate was found in 3 and 2 fetuses at maternally toxic doses of 100 and
300 mg/kg, respectively. One control fetus also exhibited this anomaly. In the third study conducted
with New Zealand white rabbits using an identical protocol, no cleft palates were produced.
No teratological or embryotoxic effects of bromocriptine were produced in any of 6 offspring from 6
monkeys at a dose level of 2 mg/kg.
Information concerning 1276 pregnancies in women taking bromocriptine has been collected. In the
majority of cases, bromocriptine was discontinued within 8 weeks into pregnancy (mean 28.7 days),
however, 8 patients received the drug continuously throughout pregnancy. The mean daily dose for
all patients was 5.8 mg (range 1‑40 mg).
Of these 1276 pregnancies, there were 1088 full-term deliveries (4 stillborn), 145 spontaneous
abortions (11.4%), and 28 induced abortions (2.2%). Moreover, 12 extrauterine gravidities and 3
hydatidiform moles (twice in the same patient) caused early termination of pregnancy. These data
compare favorably with the abortion rate (11% ‑ 25%) cited for pregnancies induced by clomiphene
citrate, menopausal gonadotropin, and chorionic gonadotropin.
Although spontaneous abortions often go unreported, especially prior to 20 weeks of gestation, their
frequency has been estimated to be 15%.
The incidence of birth defects in the population at large ranges from 2% ‑ 4.5%. The incidence in
1109 live births from patients receiving bromocriptine is 3.3%.
There is no suggestion that bromocriptine contributed to the type or incidence of birth defects in this
group of infants.
Nursing Mothers
Bromocriptine should not be used during lactation in postpartum women.
Pediatric Use
The safety and effectiveness of bromocriptine for the treatment of prolactin‑secreting pituitary
adenomas have been established in patients age 16 to adult. No data are available for
bromocriptine use in pediatric patients under the age of 8 years. A single 8‑year-old patient treated
with bromocriptine for a prolactin‑secreting pituitary macroadenoma has been reported without
therapeutic response.
The use of bromocriptine for the treatment of prolactin‑secreting adenomas in pediatric patients in
the age group 11 to under 16 years is supported by evidence from well‑controlled trials in adults,
with additional data in a limited number (n=14) of children and adolescents 11 to 15 years of age
with prolactin‑secreting pituitary macro‑ and microadenomas who have been treated with
bromocriptine. Of the 14 reported patients, 9 had successful outcomes, 3 partial responses, and 2
failed to respond to bromocriptine treatment. Chronic hypopituitarism complicated macroadenoma
treatment in 5 of the responders, both in patients receiving bromocriptine alone and in those who
received bromocriptine in combination with surgical treatment and/or pituitary irradiation.
Safety and effectiveness of bromocriptine in pediatric patients have not been established for any
other indication listed in the INDICATIONS AND USAGE section.
Geriatric Use
Clinical studies for bromocriptine did not include sufficient numbers of subjects aged 65 and over to
determine whether the elderly respond differently from younger subjects. However, other reported
clinical experiences, including postmarketing reporting of adverse events, have not identified
differences in response or tolerability between elderly and younger patients. Even though no
variation in efficacy or adverse reaction profile in geriatric patients taking bromocriptine has been
observed, greater sensitivity of some elderly individuals cannot be categorically ruled out. In general,
dose selection for an elderly patient should be cautious, starting at the lower end of the dose range,
reflecting the greater frequency of decreased hepatic, renal or cardiac function, and of concomitant
disease or other drug therapy in this population.