Adults and Adolescents
A single 1.0 gram initial dose of Ca-DTPA administered intravenously.
Children less than 12 years of age
A single 14 mg/kg initial dose of Ca-DTPA administered intravenously, not to exceed 1.0 gram.
If Zn-DTPA is not available
For adults and adolescents, the recommended maintenance dose is 1.0 gram Ca-DTPA once daily administered intravenously. For children less than 12 years of age, the recommended maintenance dose is 14 mg/kg Ca-DTPA once daily administered intravenously, not to exceed 1.0 gram per day.
Renally Impaired Patients
No dose adjustment is needed. However, renal impairment may reduce the rate at which chelators remove radiocontaminants from the body. In heavily contaminated patients with renal impairment, dialysis may be used to increase the rate of elimination. High efficiency high flux dialysis is recommended. Because dialysis fluid will become radioactive, radiation precautions must be taken to protect personnel, other patients, and the general public.
During Treatment
- Measure the radioactivity in blood, urine, and fecal samples weekly to monitor the radioactive contaminant elimination rate.
- Monitor CBC with differential, BUN, serum creatinine and electrolytes, and urinalysis. If the individual is receiving more than one dose of Ca-DTPA, consider mineral supplementation as appropriate based on these laboratory tests.
- Record any adverse events from Ca-DTPA.
Risk Summary
There are no adequate and well-controlled studies of Ca-DTPA use in pregnant women. Ca-DTPA chelation therapy causes depletion of body stores of zinc, a trace metal essential for fetal development [see Warnings and Precautions (5.2)]. The consequences of zinc depletion and results of animal studies suggest a teratogenic risk in humans. Ca-DTPA was teratogenic and embryotoxic in mice at daily doses 2 to 8 times the recommended daily human dose, based on body surface area (BSA), with a dose-dependent increase in the frequency of gross malformations. Ca-DTPA was teratogenic in dogs at approximately half the recommended daily human dose based on BSA, as described below. There are no animal or human data evaluating the teratogenic effect of a single dose of Ca-DTPA. Ca-DTPA should be used during pregnancy only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the fetus.
Clinical Considerations
Chelation treatment of pregnant women should begin and continue with Zn-DTPA, if available, except in cases of high internal radioactive contamination. Because Ca-DTPA is more effective than Zn-DTPA in the first 24 hours after internal contamination, it may be appropriate to use a single dose of Ca-DTPA with vitamin or mineral supplements that contain zinc as the initial treatment.
Animal Data
Ca-DTPA is teratogenic and embryotoxic in mice during any period of gestation following five daily subcutaneous injections of 720 to 2880 micromol Ca-DTPA/kg [2 to 8 times the recommended daily human dose of 1 gram based on BSA]. The frequency of gross malformations (e.g., exencephaly, spina bifida, cleft palate, ablepharia, and polydactyly) and fetal mortality increased with dose, with higher susceptibility in early and mid gestation. Five daily doses of 360 micromol Ca-DTPA/kg in mice, approximately equivalent to the recommended daily human dose (based on BSA) produced no harmful effects. A study of two pregnant dogs given daily intravenous injections of 30 micromol Ca-DTPA/kg (approximately half the recommended daily human dose based on BSA) from implantation until parturition showed severe teratogenic effects (brain damage), and decrease in the number of surviving pups.
Absorption
Ca-DTPA is poorly absorbed in the gastrointestinal tract. In animal studies, after oral administration, absorption was approximately 5%. In a U.S. Registry of 18 patients who received a single inhaled or intravenous dose of 1 gram, urine data indicate that the inhaled product was absorbed and resulted in a comparable elimination of the radiocontaminant. One study of 2 human subjects that received Ca-DTPA with 14C-DTPA by inhalation revealed approximately 20% absorption from the lungs. Human or animal bioavailability comparisons for Ca-DTPA are not available after administration by inhalation and intravenous injection. [See Clinical Studies (14)]
Distribution
Following intravenous administration, Ca-DTPA is rapidly distributed throughout the extracellular fluid space. No significant amount of Ca-DTPA penetrates into erythrocytes or other cells. No accumulation of Ca-DTPA in specific organs has been observed. There is little or no binding of the chelating agent by the renal parenchyma.
Metabolism
Ca-DTPA undergoes a minimal amount of metabolic change in the body.
Adverse Metabolic Effects
Studies in animals and humans showed that Ca-DTPA binds endogenous metals of the body (i.e., zinc (Zn), magnesium (Mg) and manganese (Mn)). In an animal study, high doses of Ca-DTPA led to the loss of zinc and manganese mainly from the small intestine, skeleton, pancreas, and testes. Dosing over several days resulted in mobilization or binding of endogenous metals in exchange for calcium and a consequent impairment of metal-controlled or activated systems. The rate and amount of endogenous metal depletion increased with split daily dosing and with the length of treatment. Depletion of these endogenous metals can interfere with necessary mitotic cellular processes. Over longer time periods, depletion of zinc due to Ca-DTPA therapy may result in transient inhibition of a metalloenzyme-δ-aminolevulinic acid dehydrase (ALAD) in the blood and suppressed hematopoiesis.
Elimination
Ca-DTPA is cleared from the plasma in the first few hours after dosing through urinary excretion by glomerular filtration. Renal tubular excretion has not been documented. In stool samples tested, only a very small amount of radioactivity (<3%) was detected.
Renal Impaired and/or Compromised Liver Function Patients
Adequate and well-controlled pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic studies in renally impaired and/or hepatically impaired patients were not identified in the literature. Both Ca-DTPA and its radioactive chelates are excreted by glomerular filtration. Impaired renal function may decrease their rates of elimination and increase the serum half-life of Ca-DTPA.
Revised: 10/2016
44641/17/16