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AstraZeneca UK Limited

Horizon Place, 600 Capability Green, Luton, Bedfordshire, LU1 3LU
Telephone: +44 (0)1582 836 000
Fax: +44 (0)1582 838 000
Medical Information Direct Line: +44 (0)1582 836 836
Medical Information e-mail: medical.informationuk@astrazeneca.com
Customer Care direct line: +44 (0)1582 837 837
Medical Information Fax: +44 (0)1582 838 003

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Summary of Product Characteristics last updated on the eMC: 03/05/2012
SPC Crestor 5mg, 10mg, 20mg and 40mg film-coated tablets

When a pharmaceutical company changes an SPC or PIL, a new version is published on the eMC. For each version, we show the dates it was published on the eMC and the reasons for change.

Updated on 03/05/2012 and displayed until Current
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Change to section 4.4 - Special warnings and precautions for Use
  • Change to section 4.8 - Undesirable Effects
  • Change to section 10 date of revision of the text
Date of revision of text on the SPC:   27-Apr-2012
Legal Category:   POM
Black Triangle (CHM):   NO

Free-text change information supplied by the pharmaceutical company

Section 4.4
Addition of imposed amended wording for new onset diabetes mellitus:

Some evidence suggests that statins as a class raise blood glucose and in some patients, at high risk of future diabetes, may produce a level of hyperglycaemia where formal diabetes care is appropriate. This risk, however, is outweighed by the reduction in vascular risk with statins and therefore should not be a reason for stopping statin treatment. Patients at risk (fasting glucose 5.6 to 6.9 mmol/l, BMI >30 kg/m2, raised triglycerides, hypertension) should be monitored both clinically and biochemically according to national guidelines.

In the JUPITER study, the reported overall frequency of diabetes mellitus was 2.8% in rosuvastatin and 2.3% in placebo, mostly in patients with fasting glucose 5.6 to 6.9 mmol/lL, treatment with rosuvastatin has been associated with an increased risk of diabetes mellitus (see Section 4.8).


Section 4.8
Addition of imposed wording for gynaecomastia

Reproductive system and breast disorders: Very rare: gynaecomastia.


Section 10
Update to date of revision from '20th December 2011" to "27th April 2012"
Updated on 05/01/2012 and displayed until 03/05/2012
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Change to section 4.2 - Posology and method of administration
  • Change to section 4.4 - Special warnings and precautions for Use
  • Individual SPC superseded by joint SPC covering several presentations
  • Change to section 4.8 - Undesirable Effects
  • Change to section 10 date of revision of the text
Date of revision of text on the SPC:   20-Dec-2011
Legal Category:   POM
Black Triangle (CHM):   NO

Free-text change information supplied by the pharmaceutical company



Section 4.2 and 4.4 - Addition of reference ‘(see Section 4.3)'

Section 4.8 - Add Tendon disorder

Section 10 Date of revision changed to 20th December 2011

Updated on 07/02/2011 and displayed until 05/01/2012
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Change to section 10 date of revision of the text
  • Removal of Black Triangle
  • Joint SPC superseded by SPCs for individual presentations
Date of revision of text on the SPC:   02-Feb-2011
Legal Category:   POM
Black Triangle (CHM):   NO

Free-text change information supplied by the pharmaceutical company

Section 1
Removal of black triangle warnings

Section 10
2nd February 2011
Updated on 07/05/2010 and displayed until 07/02/2011
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Change to section 1 -Name of the Medicinal product
  • Change to section 4.1 - Therapeutic indications
  • Change to section 4.2 - Posology and method of administration
  • Change to section 4.4 - Special warnings and precautions for Use
  • Change to section 4.8 - Undesirable Effects
  • Change to section 5.1 - Pharmacodynamic Properties
  • Change to section 5.2 - Pharmacokinetic Properties
  • Change to section 10 date of revision of the text
Date of revision of text on the SPC:   29-Apr-2010
Legal Category:   POM
Black Triangle (CHM):   YES

Free-text change information supplied by the pharmaceutical company



Section 1

Additional Text:

Crestor▼* 5 mg, 10 mg, 20 mg and 40 mg film-coated tablets.

* Intensive monitoring is requested only when used for the recently licensed indication of prevention of cardiovascular events and paediatric use.

 

Section 4.1

Additional first heading,

“Treatment of hypercholesterolaemia”

 

Additional text to first paragraph,

“Adults, adolescents and children aged 10 years or older with primary hypercholesterolaemia (type IIa including heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia) or mixed dyslipidaemia (type IIb) as an adjunct to diet when response to diet and other non-pharmacological treatments (e.g. exercise, weight reduction) is inadequate.”

Addition of 3rd and 4th paragraph,

Prevention of Cardiovascular Events

Prevention of major cardiovascular events in patients who are estimated to have a high risk for a first cardiovascular event (see Section 5.1), as an adjunct to correction of other risk factors.”

Section 4.2
Additional text and headings,

“Before treatment initiation the patient should be placed on a standard cholesterol-lowering diet that should continue during treatment. The dose should be individualised according to the goal of therapy and patient response, using current consensus guidelines.

Crestor may be given at any time of day, with or without food.

Treatment of hypercholesterolaemia
The recommended start dose is 5 mg or 10 mg orally once daily in both statin naïve or patients switched from another HMG CoA reductase inhibitor. The choice of start dose should take into account the individual patient’s cholesterol level and future cardiovascular risk as well as the potential risk for adverse reactions (see below). A dose adjustment to the next dose level can be made after 4 weeks, if necessary (see Section 5.1). In light of the increased reporting rate of adverse reactions with the 40 mg dose compared to lower doses (see Section 4.8), a final titration to the maximum dose of 40 mg should only be considered in patients with severe hypercholesterolaemia at high cardiovascular risk (in particular those with familial hypercholesterolaemia), who do not achieve their treatment goal on 20 mg, and in whom routine follow-up will be performed (see Section 4.4). Specialist supervision is recommended when the 40 mg dose is initiated.

Prevention of cardiovascular events
In the cardiovascular events risk reduction study, the dose used was 20 mg daily (see Section 5.1).

 

Paediatric population

Paediatric use should only be carried out by specialists.

 

Children and adolescents 10 to 17 years of age (boys Tanner Stage II and above, and girls who are at least 1 year post-menarche)

In children and adolescents with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia the usual start dose is 5 mg daily. The usual dose range is 5-20 mg orally once daily. Titration should be conducted according to the individual response and tolerability in paediatric patients, as recommended by the paediatric treatment recommendations (see Section 4.4). Children and adolescents should be placed on standard cholesterol-lowering diet before rosuvastatin treatment initiation; this diet should be continued during rosuvastatin treatment. Safety and efficacy of doses greater than 20 mg have not been studied in this population.

 

The 40 mg tablet is not suitable for use in paediatric patients.

 

Children younger than 10 years

Experience in children younger than 10 years is limited to a small number of children (aged between 8 and 10 years) with homozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia. Therefore, Crestor is not recommended for use in children younger than 10 years.

Use in the elderly

A start dose of 5 mg is recommended in patients >70 years (see Section 4.4). No other dose adjustment is necessary in relation to age.

Dosage in patients with renal insufficiency

No dose adjustment is necessary in patients with mild to moderate renal impairment. The recommended start dose is 5 mg in patients with moderate renal impairment (creatinine clearance of <60 ml/min). The 40 mg dose is contraindicated in patients with moderate renal impairment. The use of Crestor in patients with severe renal impairment is contraindicated for all doses (See Section 4.3 and Section 5.2).

Dosage in patients with hepatic impairment

There was no increase in systemic exposure to rosuvastatin in subjects with Child-Pugh scores of 7 or below. However, increased systemic exposure has been observed in subjects with Child-Pugh scores of 8 and 9 (see Section 5.2). In these patients an assessment of renal function should be considered (see Section 4.4  ). There is no experience in subjects with Child-Pugh scores above 9. Crestor is contraindicated in patients with active liver disease (see Section 4.3).

Race

Increased systemic exposure has been seen in Asian subjects (see Section 4.4 and Section 5.2). The recommended start dose is 5 mg for patients of Asian ancestry. The 40 mg dose is contraindicated in these patients.

Dosage in patients with pre-disposing factors to myopathy
The recommended start dose is 5 mg in patients with predisposing factors to myopathy (see Section 4.4).

The 40 mg dose is contraindicated in some of these patients (see Section 4.3).”

Section 4.4

New text after ‘Lactose intolerance’ paragraph,

”Interstitial lung disease

Exceptional cases of interstitial lung disease have been reported with some statins, especially with long term therapy (see Section 4.8). Presenting features can include dyspnoea, non-productive cough and deterioration in general health (fatigue, weight loss and fever). If it is suspected a patient has developed interstitial lung disease, statin therapy should be discontinued.

Diabetes Mellitus
In patients with fasting glucose 5.6 to 6.9 mmol/L, treatment with rosuvastatin has been associated with an increased risk of diabetes mellitus (see Section 4.8).

Paediatric population

The evaluation of linear growth (height), weight, BMI (body mass index), and secondary characteristics of sexual maturation by Tanner staging in paediatric patients 10 to 17 years of age taking rosuvastatin is limited to a one-year period. After 52 weeks of study treatment, no effect on growth, weight, BMI or sexual maturation was detected (see Section 5.1). The clinical trial experience in children and adolescent patients is limited and the long-term effects of rosuvastatin (>1 year) on puberty are unknown.

 

In a clinical trial of children and adolescents receiving rosuvastatin for 52 weeks, CK elevations >10xULN and muscle symptoms following exercise or increased physical activity were observed more frequently compared to observations in clinical trials in adults (see Section 4.8).”

 

Section 4.8

New text after ’Immune system disorders’ paragraph,

Endocrine disorders
Common
: diabetes mellitus1

 

New text after ’General disorders’ paragraph,

1 Observed in the JUPITER study (reported overall frequency 2.8% in rosuvastatin and 2.3% in placebo) mostly in patients with fasting glucose 5.6 to 6.9 mmol/L.”

 

New text after ’Post Marketing Experience’

Nervous system disorders: Very rare: polyneuropathy, memory loss. Respiratory, thoracic and mediastinal disorders: Not known: cough, dyspnoea.

Gastrointestinal disorders: Not known: diarrhoea.
Hepatobiliary disorders: Very rare: jaundice, hepatitis; rare: increased transaminases.
Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders: Not known: Stevens-Johnson syndrome. Musculoskeletal disorders: Very rare: arthralgia.
Renal disorders: Very rare: haematuria.

General disorders and administration site conditions: Not known: oedema.

 

The following adverse events have been reported with some statins:

Depression.

Sleep disturbances, including insomnia and nightmares.

Sexual dysfunction.

Exceptional cases of interstitial lung disease, especially with long term therapy (see Section 4.4).

 

The reporting rates for rhabdomyolysis, serious renal events and serious hepatic events (consisting mainly of increased hepatic transaminases) is higher at the 40 mg dose.

Paediatric population: Creatine kinase elevations >10xULN and muscle symptoms following exercise or increased physical activity were observed more frequently in a 52-week clinical trial of children and adolescents compared to adults (see Section 4.4). In other respects, the safety profile of rosuvastatin was similar in children and adolescents compared to adults.”

 

Section 5.1

Deletion of text and additional text at end of section,

In the Justification for the Use of Statins in Primary Prevention: An Intervention Trial Evaluating Rosuvastatin (JUPITER) study, the effect of rosuvastatin on the occurrence of major atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease events was assessed in 17,802 men (≥50 years) and women (≥60 years).

Study participants were randomly assigned to placebo (n=8901) or rosuvastatin 20 mg once daily (n=8901) and were followed for a mean duration of 2 years.

LDL-cholesterol concentration was reduced by 45% (p<0.001) in the rosuvastatin group compared to the placebo group.

In a post-hoc analysis of a high-risk subgroup of subjects with a baseline Framingham risk score >20% (1558 subjects) there was a significant reduction in the combined end-point of cardiovascular death, stroke and myocardial infarction (p=0.028) on rosuvastatin treatment versus placebo. The absolute risk reduction in the event rate per 1000 patient-years was 8.8. Total mortality was unchanged in this high risk group (p=0.193). In a post-hoc analysis of a high-risk subgroup of subjects (9302 subjects total) with a baseline SCORE risk ≥5% (extrapolated to include subjects above 65 yrs) there was a significant reduction in the combined end-point of cardiovascular death, stroke and myocardial infarction (p=0.0003) on rosuvastatin treatment versus placebo. The absolute risk reduction in the event rate was 5.1 per 1000 patient-years. Total mortality was unchanged in this high risk group (p=0.076).

In the JUPITER trial there were 6.6% of rosuvastatin and 6.2% of placebo subjects who discontinued use of study medication due to an adverse event. The most common adverse events that led to treatment discontinuation were: myalgia (0.3% rosuvastatin, 0.2% placebo), abdominal pain (0.03% rosuvastatin, 0.02% placebo) and rash (0.02% rosuvastatin, 0.03% placebo). The most common adverse events at a rate greater than or equal to placebo were urinary tract infection (8.7% rosuvastatin, 8.6% placebo), nasopharyngitis (7.6% rosuvastatin, 7.2% placebo), back pain (7.6% rosuvastatin, 6.9% placebo) and myalgia (7.6% rosuvastatin, 6.6% placebo).

Paediatric population

In a double-blind, randomized, multi-centre, placebo-controlled, 12-week study (n=176, 97 male and 79 female) followed by a 40-week (n=173, 96 male and 77 female), open-label, rosuvastatin dose-titration phase, patients 10-17 years of age (Tanner stage II-V, females at least 1 year post-menarche) with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia received rosuvastatin 5, 10 or 20 mg or placebo daily for 12 weeks and then all received rosuvastatin daily for 40 weeks. At study entry, approximately 30% of the patients were 10-13 years and approximately 17%, 18%, 40%, and 25% were Tanner stage II, III, IV, and V, respectively.

 

LDL-C was reduced 38.3%, 44.6%, and 50.0% by rosuvastatin 5, 10 and 20 mg, respectively, compared to 0.7% for placebo.

 

At the end of the 40-week, open-label, titration to goal, dosing up to a maximum of 20 mg once daily, 70 of 173 patients (40.5%) had achieved the LDL-C goal of less than 2.8 mmol/l.

 

After 52 weeks of study treatment, no effect on growth, weight, BMI or sexual maturation was detected (see Section 4.4). The clinical trial experience in children and adolescent patients is limited and the long-term effects of rosuvastatin (>1 year) on puberty are unknown. This trial (n=176) was not suited for comparison of rare adverse drug events.”

 

Section 5.2

Additional text, 6th paragraph, ‘Age and Sex’,

Age and sex: There was no clinically relevant effect of age or sex on the pharmacokinetics of rosuvastatin in adults. The pharmacokinetics of rosuvastatin in children and adolescents with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia was similar to that of adult volunteers (see “Paediatric population” below).

 

Race: Pharmacokinetic studies show an approximate 2-fold elevation in median AUC and Cmax in Asian subjects (Japanese, Chinese, Filipino, Vietnamese and Koreans) compared with Caucasians; Asian-Indians show an approximate 1.3-fold elevation in median AUC and Cmax. A population pharmacokinetic analysis revealed no clinically relevant differences in pharmacokinetics between Caucasian and Black groups.  

Renal insufficiency: In a study in subjects with varying degrees of renal impairment, mild to moderate renal disease had no influence on plasma concentration of rosuvastatin or the N-desmethyl metabolite. Subjects with severe impairment (CrCl <30 ml/min) had a 3-fold increase in plasma concentration and a 9-fold increase in the N-desmethyl metabolite concentration compared to healthy volunteers. Steady-state plasma concentrations of rosuvastatin in subjects undergoing haemodialysis were approximately 50% greater compared to healthy volunteers.

Hepatic insufficiency: In a study with subjects with varying degrees of hepatic impairment there was no evidence of increased exposure to rosuvastatin in subjects with Child-Pugh scores of 7 or below. However, two subjects with Child-Pugh scores of 8 and 9 showed an increase in systemic exposure of at least 2-fold compared to subjects with lower Child-Pugh scores. There is no experience in subjects with Child-Pugh scores above 9.

Paediatric population: The pharmacokinetic parameters in paediatric patients with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia aged 10 to 17 years have not been fully characterised. A small pharmacokinetic study with rosuvastatin (given as tablets) in 18 paediatric patients demonstrated that exposure in paediatric patients appears comparable to exposure in adult patients. In addition, the results indicate that a large deviation from dose proportionality is not expected.”

 

Section 10

29th April 2010

 

 

 

 

Updated on 12/05/2009 and displayed until 07/05/2010
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Change to section 4.4 - Special warnings and precautions for Use
  • Change to section 5.3 - Preclinical Safety Data
Date of revision of text on the SPC:   28-Apr-2009
Legal Category:   POM
Black Triangle (CHM):   NO

Free-text change information supplied by the pharmaceutical company

Section 4.4
Addition of paragraph:


Lactose intolerance
Patients with rare hereditary problems of galactose intolerance, the Lapp lactase deficiency or glucose-galactose malabsorption should not take this medicine.

Section 5.3
Replacement of text:


Preclinical data reveal no special hazard for humans based on conventional studies of safety pharmacology, genotoxicity and carcinogenicity potential. Specific tests for effects on hERG have not been evaluated. Adverse reactions not observed in clinical studies, but seen in animals at exposure levels similar to clinical exposure levels were as follows:  In repeated-dose toxicity studies histopathologic liver changes likely due to the pharmacologic action of rosuvastatin were observed in mouse, rat, and to a lesser extent with effects in the gall bladder in dogs, but not in monkeys. In addition, testicular toxicity was observed in monkeys and dogs at higher dosages. Reproductive toxicity was evident in rats, with reduced litter sizes, litter weight and pup survival observed at maternally toxic doses, where systemic exposures were several times above the therapeutic exposure level.

Section 10
Change of date to:

28th April 2009

Updated on 07/08/2008 and displayed until 12/05/2009
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Change to section 4.8 - Undesirable Effects
  • Change to section 10 date of revision of the text
Date of revision of text on the SPC:   25-Jun-2008
Legal Category:   POM
Black Triangle (CHM):   NO

Free-text change information supplied by the pharmaceutical company

Section 4.8

The frequencies of adverse events are ranked according to the following: Common (>1/100, <1/10); Uncommon (>1/1,000, <1/100); Rare (>1/10,000, <1/1000); Very rare (<1/10,000); Not known (cannot be estimated from the available data).

Post Marketing Experience:
In addition to the above, the following adverse events have been reported during post marketing experience for CRESTOR:
Gastrointestinal disorders: Not known: diarrhoea.
Hepatobiliary disorders: Very rare: jaundice, hepatitis; rare: increased transaminases.
Musculoskeletal disorders: Very rare: arthralgia.
Nervous system disorders: Very rare: polyneuropathy, memory loss.
Renal disorders: Very rare: haematuria.
Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders: Not known: Stevens-Johnson syndrome.

Section 10
Date updated to 25th June 2008


Updated on 12/02/2008 and displayed until 07/08/2008
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Change to section 2 - Qualitative and quantitative composition
  • Change to section 4.8 - Undesirable Effects
  • Change to section 6.1 - List of Excipients
  • Change to section 6. 4 - Special Precautions for Storage
  • Change to section 6. 5 - Nature and Contents of Container
  • Change to section 10 date of revision of the text
Date of revision of text on the SPC:   11/2007
Legal Category:   POM
Black Triangle (CHM):   NO

Free-text change information supplied by the pharmaceutical company

Section 2

More detailed information:

Each 5 mg tablet contains 94.88 mg lactose monohydrate.

Each 10 mg tablet contains 91.3 mg lactose monohydrate.

Each 20 mg tablet contains 182.6 mg lactose monohydrate.

Each 40 mg tablet contains 168.32 mg lactose monohydrate.

 

Section 4.8

Under the heading Skeletal muscle effects – additional text:

with and without acute renal failure

 

Section 6.1

Change of excipient under tablet coat :

from Glycerol Triacetate to Triacetin

 

Section 6.4

Change of storage instructions from do not store above 30°C to store below 30°C.

 

Section 6.5

Change from bottle to container

 

Section 10

Date of revision of text to 6th November 2007
Updated on 25/10/2007 and displayed until 12/02/2008
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Change to section 4.4 - Special warnings and precautions for Use
  • Change to section 4.5 - Interaction with other medicinal products and other forms of interaction
  • Change to section 4.8 - Undesirable Effects
  • Change to section 5.1 - Pharmacodynamic Properties
  • Change to section 10 date of revision of the text
Date of revision of text on the SPC:   10/2007
Legal Category:   POM
Black Triangle (CHM):   NO

Free-text change information supplied by the pharmaceutical company

Section 4.4

Additional text: New last paragraph

 

Protease inhibitors

The concomitant use with protease inhibitors is not recommended (see Section 4.5).

 

Section 4.5

Additional text; New 5th paragraph

Protease inhibitors:  Although the exact mechanism of interaction is unknown, concomitant protease inhibitor use may strongly increase rosuvastatin exposure.  In a pharmacokinetic study, co-administration of 20 mg rosuvastatin and a combination product of two protease inhibitors (400 mg lopinavir / 100 mg ritonavir) in healthy volunteers was associated with an approximately two-fold and five-fold increase in rosuvastatin steady-state AUC(0-24) and Cmax respectively.  Therefore, concomitant use of rosuvastatin in HIV patients receiving protease inhibitors is not recommended (see also Section 4.4).

 

Section 4.8

Under the heading: Post Marketing Experience

Memory loss is an additional adverse event under the nervous system disorders

Section 5.1

Additional text – last paragraph:

In a multi-centre, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical study (METEOR), 984 patients between 45 and 70 years of age and at low risk for coronary heart disease (defined as Framingham risk <10% over 10 years), with a mean LDL-C of 4.0 mmol/l (154.5 mg/dL), but with subclinical atherosclerosis (detected by Carotid Intima Media Thickness) were randomised to 40 mg rosuvastatin once daily or placebo for 2 years.  Rosuvastatin significantly slowed the rate of progression of the maximum CIMT for the 12 carotid artery sites compared to placebo by -0.0145 mm/year [95% confidence interval -0.0196, -0.0093; p<0.0001].  The change from baseline was -0.0014 mm/year (-0.12%/year (non-significant)) for rosuvastatin compared to a progression of +0.0131 mm/year (1.12%/year (p<0.0001)) for placebo.  No direct correlation between CIMT decrease and reduction of the risk of cardiovascular events has yet been demonstrated.  The population studied in METEOR is low risk for coronary heart disease and does not represent the target population of Crestor 40mg.  The 40mg dose should only be prescribed in patients with severe hypercholesterolaemia at high cardiovascular risk (see Section 4.2). 

 

Section 10

New revision date of text: 19th October 2007
Updated on 20/06/2007 and displayed until 25/10/2007
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Removal of Black Triangle
Date of revision of text on the SPC:   06/2007
Legal Category:   POM
Black Triangle (CHM):   NO

Free-text change information supplied by the pharmaceutical company

Section 1 - Removal of Black Triangle as no longer applies
Section 10 New Date of Revision changed to 14th June 2007
Updated on 15/03/2006 and displayed until 20/06/2007
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Change to section 4.4 - Special Warnings and Precautions for Use
  • Change to section 4.5 - Interactions with other Medicaments and other forms of Interaction
  • Change to section 4.8 - Undesirable Effects
  • Change to section 5.2 - Pharmacokinetic Properties
  • Change to section 10 (date of (partial) revision of the text
Updated on 02/11/2005 and displayed until 15/03/2006
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Introduction of new strength
  • Change to section 4.2 - Posology and Method of Administration
  • Change to section 4.5 - Interactions with other Medicaments and other forms of Interaction
  • Change to section 5.1 - Pharmacodynamic Properties
  • Change to section 10 (date of (partial) revision of the text
Updated on 15/03/2005 and displayed until 02/11/2005
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Change to section 4.8 - Undesirable Effects
  • Change to section 10 (date of (partial) revision of the text
Updated on 07/01/2005 and displayed until 15/03/2005
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Addition of Black Triangle
Updated on 07/01/2005 and displayed until 07/01/2005
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Change to section 4.2 - Posology and Method of Administration
  • Change to section 4.3 - Contra-indications
  • Change to section 4.4 - Special Warnings and Precautions for Use
  • Change to section 5.2 - Pharmacokinetic Properties
  • Change to section 4.8 - Undesirable Effects
  • Change to section 10 (date of (partial) revision of the text
  • Pending awaiting re-submission
Updated on 03/08/2004 and displayed until 07/01/2005
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Change to section 4.2 - Posology and Method of Administration
  • Change to section 4.3 - Contra-indications
  • Change to section 4.4 - Special Warnings and Precautions for Use
  • Change to section 4.5 - Interactions with other Medicaments and other forms of Interaction
  • Change to section 4.8 - Undesirable Effects
Updated on 10/06/2004 and displayed until 03/08/2004
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Addition of joint SPC covering all presentations
Updated on 09/06/2004 and displayed until 10/06/2004
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • New SPC for eMC ie an SPC for an existing product, but one that is new for the eMC
Updated on 20/02/2004 and displayed until 09/06/2004
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • SPC Retired pending re-submission
  • Change to section 4.4 - Special Warnings and Precautions for Use
  • Change to section 4.8 - Undesirable Effects
Updated on 15/01/2004 and displayed until 20/02/2004
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • Change to section 4.2 - Posology and Method of Administration
  • Change to section 4.4 - Special Warnings and Precautions for Use
  • Change to section 4.8 - Undesirable Effects
  • Change to section 5.2 - Pharmacokinetic Properties
Updated on 01/04/2003 and displayed until 15/01/2004
Reasons for adding or updating:
  • New SPC for new product

Active Ingredients/Generics

 
   rosuvastatin calcium