| The most frequent adverse reaction after intracavernosal injection of Caverject is penile pain. In studies, 37% of the patients reported penile pain at least once; however, this event was associated with only 11% of the administered injections. In the majority of the cases, penile pain was rated mild or moderate in intensity. 3% of patients discontinued treatment because of penile pain. Prolonged erection (defined as an erection that lasts for 4 to 6 hours) after intracavernosal administration of Caverject was reported in 4% of patients. The frequency of priapism (defined as an erection that lasts 6 hours or longer) was 0.4%. (Please refer to Section 4.4 - Special warnings and precautions for use). In the majority of cases, spontaneous detumescence occurred.Penile fibrosis, including angulation, fibrotic nodules and Peyronie's disease was reported in 3% of clinical trial patients overall, however, in one self-injection study in which the duration of use was up to 18 months, the incidence of penile fibrosis was 7.8% (please refer to Section 4.4).Haematoma and ecchymosis at the site of injection, which is related to the injection technique rather than to the effects of alprostadil, occurred in 3% and 2% of patients, respectively. Penile oedema or rash was reported by 1% of alprostadil treated patients. The following local adverse reactions were reported by fewer than 1% of patients in clinical studies following intracavernosal injection of Caverject: balanitis, injection site haemorrhage, injection site inflammation, injection site itching, injection site swelling, injection site oedema, urethral bleeding and penile warmth, numbness, yeast infection, irritation, sensitivity, phimosis, pruritus, erythema, venous leak, painful erection and abnormal ejaculation.In terms of systemic events, 2 to 4% of alprostadil-treated patients reported headache, hypertension, upper respiratory infection, flu-like syndrome, prostatic disorder, localised pain (buttocks pain, leg pain, genital pain, abdominal pain), trauma, and sinusitis. One percent of patients reported each of the following: dizziness, back pain, nasal congestion and cough. The following were reported for less than 1% of patients in clinical trials and were judged to be possibly related to Caverject use: testicular pain, scrotal disorder (redness, pain, spermatocele), scrotal oedema, haematuria, testicular disorder (warmth, swelling, mass, thickening), impaired urination, urinary frequency, urinary urgency, pelvic pain, hypotension, vasodilatation, peripheral vascular disorder, supraventricular extrasystoles, vasovagal reactions, hypaesthesia, non-generalised weakness, diaphoresis, rash, non-application site pruritus, skin neoplasm, nausea, dry mouth, increased serum creatinine, leg cramps and mydriasis.Haemodynamic changes, manifested as decreases in blood pressure and increases in pulse rate, were observed during clinical studies, principally at doses above 20 micrograms and above 30 micrograms of Caverject, respectively and appeared to be dose-dependent. However, these changes were usually clinically unimportant; only three patients (0.2%) discontinued the treatment because of symptomatic hypotension. Caverject had no clinically important effect on serum or urine laboratory tests. | |