Patients Not Taking a Phosphate Binder. The recommended starting dose of Renagel is 800 to 1600 mg, which can be administered as one or two 800 mg Renagel® Tablets, or two to four 400 mg Renagel® Tablets, with meals based on serum phosphorus level. Table 1 provides recommended starting doses of Renagel for patients not taking a phosphate binder.
Table 1: Starting Dose for Dialysis Patients Not Taking a Phosphate Binder| Serum Phosphorus | Renagel® 800 mg | Renagel® 400 mg |
|---|
| >5.5 and <7.5 mg/dL | 1 tablet three times daily with meals | 2 tablets three times daily with meals |
| ≥7.5 and <9.0 mg/dL | 2 tablets three times daily with meals | 3 tablets three times daily with meals |
| ≥9.0 mg/dL | 2 tablets three times daily with meals | 4 tablets three times daily with meals |
Patients Switching from Calcium Acetate. In a study in 84 CKD patients on hemodialysis, a similar reduction in serum phosphorus was seen with equivalent doses (approximately mg for mg) of Renagel and calcium acetate. Table 2 gives recommended starting doses of Renagel based on a patient's current calcium acetate dose.
Table 2: Starting Dose for Dialysis Patients Switching From Calcium Acetate to RenagelCalcium Acetate 667 mg (Tablets per meal) | Renagel® 800 mg (Tablets per meal) | Renagel® 400 mg (Tablets per meal) |
|---|
| 1 tablet | 1 tablet | 2 tablets |
| 2 tablets | 2 tablets | 3 tablets |
| 3 tablets | 3 tablets | 5 tablets |
Dose Titration for All Patients Taking Renagel. Dosage should be adjusted based on the serum phosphorus concentration with a goal of lowering serum phosphorus to 5.5 mg/dL or less. The dose may be increased or decreased by one tablet per meal at two-week intervals as necessary. Table 3 gives a dose titration guideline. The average dose in a Phase 3 trial designed to lower serum phosphorus to 5.0 mg/dL or less was approximately three Renagel 800 mg tablets per meal. The maximum average daily Renagel dose studied was 13 grams.
Table 3: Dose Titration Guideline| Serum Phosphorus | Renagel® Dose |
|---|
| >5.5 mg/dL | Increase 1 tablet per meal at 2 week intervals |
| 3.5–5.5 mg/dL | Maintain current dose |
| <3.5 mg/dL | Decrease 1 tablet per meal |
Renagel® Tablets: Each film-coated tablet of Renagel contains either 800 mg or 400 mg of sevelamer hydrochloride on an anhydrous basis. The inactive ingredients are hypromellose, diacetylated monoglyceride, colloidal silicon dioxide, and stearic acid. The tablet imprint contains iron oxide black ink.
Drug Interactions
In vivo
Sevelamer carbonate has been studied in human drug-drug interaction studies (9.6 grams once daily with a meal) with warfarin and digoxin. Sevelamer hydrochloride, which contains the same active moiety as sevelamer carbonate, has been studied in human drug-drug interaction studies (2.4–2.8 grams single dose or three times daily with meals or two times daily without meals) with ciprofloxacin, digoxin, enalapril, iron, metoprolol, mycophenolate mofetil and warfarin.
Coadministered single dose of 2.8 grams of sevelamer hydrochloride in fasted state decreased the bioavailability of ciprofloxacin by approximately 50% in healthy subjects.
Concomitant administration of sevelamer and mycophenolate mofetil in adult and pediatric patients decreased the mean MPA Cmax and AUC0–12h by 36% and 26%, respectively.
Sevelamer carbonate or sevelamer hydrochloride did not alter the pharmacokinetics of a single dose of enalapril, digoxin, iron, metoprolol and warfarin when coadministered.
During postmarketing experience, cases of increased thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) levels have been reported in patients coadministered sevelamer hydrochloride and levothyroxine. Reduction in concentrations of cyclosporine and tacrolimus leading to dose increases has also been reported in transplant patients when coadministered with sevelamer hydrochloride without any clinical consequences (e.g., graft rejection). The possibility of an interaction cannot be excluded with these drugs.
Dosing Recommendations
The prescriber should inform patients to take Renagel with meals and adhere to their prescribed diets. Instructions should be given on concomitant medications that should be dosed apart from Renagel.
Adverse Reactions
Renagel may cause constipation that if left untreated may lead to severe complications. Patients should be cautioned to report new onset or worsening of existing constipation promptly to their physician.
Manufactured By:
Genzyme Ireland Ltd.
For: Genzyme Corporation
500 Kendall Street
Cambridge, MA 02142 USA