Suicidal ideation and behaviour have been reported in patients treated with anti-epileptic agents in several indications. A meta-analysis of randomised placebo controlled trials of anti-epileptic drugs has also shown a small increased risk of suicidal ideation and behaviour. The mechanism of this risk is not known and the available data do not exclude the possibility of an increased risk for Phenytoin.
Therefore patients should be monitored for signs of suicidal ideation and behaviours and appropriate treatment should be considered. Patients (and caregivers of patients) should be advised to seek medical advice should signs of suicidal ideation or behaviour emerge.
This drug must be administered slowly, at a rate not exceeding 50 mg/minute intravenously in adults. In neonates, the drug should be administered at a rate not exceeding 1-3 mg/kg/min. The response to phenytoin may be significantly altered by the concomitant use of other drugs (see section 4.5).
Hypotension may occur. Severe cardiotoxic reactions and fatalities have been reported with arrhythmias including bradycardia, atrial and ventricular depression, and ventricular fibrillation. In some cases cardiac arrhythmias have resulted in asystole/ cardiac arrest and death. Severe complications are most commonly encountered in elderly or gravely ill patients. Cardiac adverse events have also been reported in adults and children without underlying cardiac disease or comorbidities and at recommended doses and infusion rates. Therefore, careful cardiac (including respiratory) monitoring is needed when administering IV loading doses of phenytoin. Reduction in rate of administration or discontinuation of dosing may be needed.
Phenytoin should be used with caution in patients with hypotension and/or severe myocardial insufficiency.
In these patients, the drug should be administered at a rate not exceeding 25 mg/minute, and if necessary, at a slow rate of 5 to 10 mg/minute.
Serum levels of phenytoin sustained above the optimal range may produce encephalopathy, or confusional states (delirium, psychosis or encephalopathy), or rarely irreversible cerebellar dysfunction. Plasma level determinations are recommended at the first signs of acute toxicity. If plasma levels are excessive, then dosage reduction is indicated. Termination is recommended if symptoms persist.
Abrupt withdrawal of phenytoin in epileptic patients may precipitate the possibility of increased seizure frequency, including status epilepticus. When, in the judgement of the clinician, it is necessary to reduce the dose of phenytoin, discontinuation, or substitution of alternative antiepileptic medication arises this should be done gradually. However, in the event of an allergic or a hypersensitivity reaction, where rapid substitution of therapy is warranted, the alternative drug should be one not belonging to the hydantoin class of compounds.
Phenytoin may precipitate or aggravate absence seizures and myoclonic seizures.
Herbal preparations containing St John's wort (Hypericum perforatum) should not be used while taking phenytoin due to the risk of decreased plasma concentrations and reduced clinical effects of phenytoin (see section 4.5).
Subcutaneous or perivascular injection should be avoided because of the highly alkaline nature of the solution.
Intramuscular phenytoin administration may cause pain, necrosis, and abscess formation at the injection site (see section 4.2).
Soft tissue irritation and inflammation has occurred at the site of injection with and without extravasation of intravenous phenytoin. Such injection may cause soft tissue irritation of the tissues varying from slight tenderness to extensive necrosis, sloughing and in rare instances has led to amputation.
The intramuscular route is not recommended for the treatment of status epilepticus because of slow absorption. Serum levels of phenytoin in the therapeutic range cannot be rapidly achieved by this method.
Women of Childbearing Potential
Phenytoin may cause foetal harm when administered to a pregnant woman. Prenatal exposure to phenytoin may increase the risks for major congenital malformations and other adverse development outcomes (see section 4.6).
Phenytoin Injection should not be used in women of childbearing potential unless the benefit is judged to outweigh the risks following careful consideration of alternative suitable treatment options.
Before the initiation of treatment with phenytoin in a woman of childbearing potential, pregnancy testing should be considered.
Women of childbearing potential should be fully informed of the potential risk to the foetus if they take phenytoin during pregnancy.
Women of childbearing potential should be counselled regarding the need to consult their physician as soon as they are planning a pregnancy to discuss switching to alternative treatments prior to conception and before contraception is discontinued (see section 4.6).
Women of childbearing potential should be counselled to contact their doctor immediately if they become pregnant or might be pregnant and are taking phenytoin.
Women of childbearing potential should use effective contraception during treatment and for one month after stopping treatment. Due to enzyme induction, phenytoin Injection may result in a failure of the therapeutic effect of hormonal contraceptives, therefore, women of childbearing potential should be counselled regarding the use of other effective contraceptive methods (see Sections 4.5 and 4.6).
Phenytoin is highly protein bound and extensively metabolised by the liver.
The liver is the principal site of biotransformation of phenytoin; patients with impaired liver function, elderly patients, or those who are gravely ill may show early signs of toxicity.
Reduced maintenance dosage to prevent accumulation and toxicity may therefore be required in patients with impaired liver function. Where protein binding is reduced, as in uraemia, total serum phenytoin levels will be reduced accordingly. However, the pharmacologically active free drug concentration is unlikely to be altered. Therefore, under these circumstances therapeutic control may be achieved with total phenytoin levels below the normal range of 10-20 mg/l. Dosage should not exceed the minimum necessary to control convulsions.
Patients with renal function impairment should also be carefully observed when prescribing phenytoin, as excretion and protein binding may be altered.
A small percentage of individuals who have been treated with phenytoin have been shown to metabolize the drug slowly. Slow metabolism appears to be due to limited enzyme availability and lack of induction, which may be genetically determined.
Phenytoin may affect glucose metabolism and inhibit insulin release.
Hyperglycaemia has been reported. Phenytoin is not indicated for seizures due to hypoglycaemia or other metabolic causes. Phenytoin should be used with caution in diabetic patients as hyperglycaemia may be potentiated.
Measurement of serum phenytoin levels is recommended when using phenytoin in the management of status epilepticus and in establishing a maintenance dose. The usually accepted therapeutic level is 10-20 mg/l, although some patients with tonic-clonic seizures can be controlled with lower serum levels.
Phenytoin is not effective for petit mal seizures. Therefore, combined therapy is required if both tonic-colonic (grand mal) and absence (petit mal) seizures are present.
In view of isolated reports associating phenytoin with exacerbation of porphyria, caution should be exercised in using this medication in patients suffering from this disease.
Anticonvulsant Hypersensitivity Syndrome:
Anticonvulsant Hypersensitivity Syndrome (AHS) is a rare drug-induced, multi-organ syndrome that is potentially fatal and occurs in some patients taking anticonvulsant medication. It is characterized by fever, rash, lymphadenopathy, and other multi-organ pathologies, often hepatic. The mechanism is unknown. The interval between first drug exposure and symptoms is usually 2-4 weeks, but has been reported in individuals receiving anticonvulsants for 3 or more months. Drug rash with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS) reflects a serious hypersensitivity reaction to drugs, characterized by skin rash, fever, lymph node enlargement, and internal organ involvement. Cases of DRESS have been noted in patients taking phenytoin.
Patients at higher risk for developing AHS include black patients, patients who have a family history of or who have experienced this syndrome in the past, and immunosuppressed patients. The syndrome is more severe in previously sensitized individuals. If a patient is diagnosed with AHS, discontinue the phenytoin and provide appropriate supportive measures.
Serious skin reactions:
Phenytoin can cause rare, severe cutaneous adverse reactions (SCARs) such as acute generalised exanthematous pustulosis (AEGP (see section 4.8)), exfoliative dermatitis, Stevens-Johnson Syndrome (SJS), toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) and drug rash with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS), which can be fatal. Although serious skin reactions may occur without warning, patients should be alert for the signs and symptoms of skin rash and blisters, fever, or other signs of hypersensitivity such as itching, and should seek medical advice from their physician immediately when observing any indicative signs or symptoms. The highest risk for occurrence of SJS or TEN is within the first weeks of treatment. The physician can advise the patient to discontinue or re-institute medication and if further therapy is contraindicated.
If symptoms or signs of SJS or TEN (e.g. progressive skin rash often with blisters or mucosal lesions) are present, phenytoin treatment should be discontinued. The best results in managing SJS and TEN come from early diagnosis and immediate discontinuation of any suspect drug. Early withdrawal is associated with a better prognosis. If the patient has developed SJS or TEN with the use of phenytoin, phenytoin must not be re-started in this patient at any time.
If the rash is of a milder type (measles-like or scarlantiniform), therapy may be resumed after the rash has completely disappeared. If the rash recurs upon reinstitution of therapy, further phenytoin medication is contraindicated.
Several individual case reports and published literature has suggested that there may be an increased, although still rare, risk of hypersensitivity reactions, including skin rash, SJS, TEN and hepatotoxicity in black patients.
Studies in patients of Chinese ancestry have found a strong association between the risk of developing SJS/TEN and the presence of HLA-B*1502, an inherited allelic variant of the HLA-B gene, in patients using carbamazepine. Limited evidence suggests that HLA-B*1502 may be a risk factor for the development of SJS/TEN in patients of Asian ancestry taking drugs associated with SJS/TEN, including phenytoin. Consideration should be given to avoiding use of drugs associated with SJS/TEN, including phenytoin, in HLA-B*1502 positive patients when alternative therapies are otherwise equally available.
In the Caucasian and Japanese population, the frequency of the HLA-B*1502 allele is extremely low, and thus it is not possible at present to conclude on risk association. Adequate information about risk association in other ethnicities is currently not available.
Case-control, genome-wide association studies in Taiwanese, Japanese, Malaysian and Thai patients have identified an increased risk of SCARs in carriers of the decreased function CYP2C9*3 variant.
Literature reports suggest that the combination of phenytoin, cranial irradiation, and the gradual reduction of corticosteroids may be associated with the development of erythema multiforme and/or SJS and/or TEN.
CYP2C9 metabolism
Phenytoin is metabolised by the CYP450 CYP2C9 enzyme. Patients who are carriers of the decreased function CYP2C9*2 or CYP2C9*3 variants (intermediate or poor metabolizers of CYP2C9 substrates) may be at risk of increased phenytoin plasma concentrations and subsequent toxicity. In patients who are known to be carriers of the decreased function CYP2C9*2 or *3 alleles, close monitoring of clinical response is advised and monitoring of plasma phenytoin concentrations may be required.
Angioedema
Angioedema has been reported in patients treated with phenytoin. Phenytoin should be discontinued immediately if symptoms of angioedema, such as facial, perioral, or upper airway swelling occur (see section 4.8).
Local Toxicity (including Purple Glove Syndrome)
Soft tissue irritation and inflammation have occurred at the site of injection with and without extravasation of intravenous phenytoin.
Oedema, discoloration and pain distal to the site of injection (described as “purple glove syndrome”) have been reported following peripheral intravenous phenytoin injection. Soft tissue irritation may vary from slight tenderness to extensive necrosis, and sloughing of skin. The syndrome may not develop for several days after injection. Although resolution of symptoms may be spontaneous, skin necrosis and limb ischemia have occurred and required such interventions as fasciotomies, skin grafting, and, in rare cases, amputation.
Improper administration including subcutaneous or perivascular injection should be avoided.
Intramuscular phenytoin administration may cause pain, necrosis and abscess formation at the injection site.
Laboratory Tests:
Phenytoin serum level determinations may be necessary to achieve optimal dosage adjustments.
This product contains a number of excipients known to have a recognized action or effect. These are:
Ethanol
This medicinal product contains 416.4 mg ethanol per 5 ml of solution.
Ethanol exposure can vary based on indication and patient population (see section 4.2).
The following example reflects when this medicine is administered for Status Epilepticus in an emergency setting:
- a loading dose of 15 mg/kg would result in exposure to 24.98 mg/kg of ethanol which may cause a rise in blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of about 4.16 mg/100 ml.
For comparison, for an adult drinking a glass of wine or 500 ml of beer, the BAC is likely to be about 50 mg/100 ml.
Co-administration with medicines containing e.g. propylene glycol or ethanol may lead to accumulation of ethanol and induce adverse effects, in particular in young children with low or immature metabolic capacity.
Propylene glycol
This medicinal product contains 2,075 mg of propylene glycol per 5ml of solution.
Propylene glycol exposure can vary based on indication and patient population (see section 4.2).
The following example reflects when this medicine is administered for Status Epilepticus in an emergency setting:
- a loading dose of 15 mg/kg would result in exposure to 124.5mg/kg of propylene glycol.
Co-administration with any substrate for alcohol dehydrogenase such as ethanol may induce adverse effects in children less than 5 years old.
While propylene glycol has not been shown to cause reproductive or developmental toxicity in animals or humans, it may reach the foetus and was found in milk. As a consequence, administration of propylene glycol to pregnant or lactating patients should be considered on a case by case basis.
Medical monitoring is required in patients with impaired renal or hepatic functions because various adverse events attributed to propylene glycol have been reported such as renal dysfunction (acute tubular necrosis), acute renal failure and liver dysfunction.
Sodium
This medicinal product contains 24.26 mg (1.05 mmol) sodium per 5 ml of solution, equivalent to 1.2% of the WHO maximum recommended daily intake (RDI) of 2 g sodium for an adult.
Paediatric Population
Phenytoin is used for neonates, infants and children.