General
Calcium folinate treatment may mask pernicious anaemia and other megaloblastic anaemias resulting from vitamin B12 deficiency.
Calcium Folinate should only be used with methotrexate under the direct supervision of a clinician experienced in the use of cancer chemotherapeutic agents.
In the treatment of inadvertent overdosage of a folic acid antagonist, folinate should be administered as soon as possible; if a period exceeding 4 hours intervenes, the treatment may not be effective.
In general, Calcium Folinate should not be given simultaneously with folic acid antagonists, such as methotrexate, to abort clinical toxicity as the therapeutic effect of the antagonist may be nullified. However, Calcium Folinate given concurrently with folate antagonists, such as pyrimethamine and trimethoprim does not inhibit their antibacterial activity.
Parenteral administration of folinate is preferable to oral dosing following chemotherapy with folic acid antagonists if there is a possibility that the patient may vomit and not absorb the folinate.
Many cytotoxic medicinal products – direct or indirect DNA synthesis inhibitors – lead to macrocytosis (hydroxycarbamide, cytarabine, mercaptopurine, thioguanine). Such macrocytosis should not be treated with folinic acid.
In epileptic patients treated with phenobarbitone, phenytoin, primidone, and succinimides there is a risk to increase the frequency of seizures due to a decrease of plasma concentrations of anti-epileptic drugs (see section 4.5). Clinical monitoring, possibly monitoring of the plasma concentrations and, if necessary, dose adaptation of the anti-epileptic drug during calcium folinate administration and after discontinuation is recommended.
Calcium folinate/methotrexate
Measures to ensure the prompt excretion of methotrexate are important as part of Calcium Folinate Rescue Therapy. These measures include:
1) Alkalinisation of urine so that the urinary pH is greater than 7.0 before methotrexate infusion (to increase solubility of methotrexate and its metabolites).
2) Maintenance of urine output of 1800-2000 cc/m2/24 hr by increased oral or intravenous fluids on days 2, 3 and 4 following methotrexate therapy.
3) Plasma methotrexate concentration, BUN and creatinine should be measured on days 2, 3 and 4.
These measures must be continued until the plasma methotrexate level is less than 10-7 molar (0.1μM).
For specific details on reduction of methotrexate toxicity refer to the health-care professional labelling for methotrexate. An accidental overdose with a folate antagonist, such as methotrexate, should be treated quickly as a medical emergency. As the time interval between methotrexate administration and calcium folinate rescue increases, calcium folinate effectiveness in counteracting toxicity decreases.
Calcium folinate has no effect on non-haematological toxicities of methotrexate such as the nephrotoxicity resulting from methotrexate and/or metabolite precipitation in the kidney. Patients who experience delayed early methotrexate elimination are likely to develop reversible renal failure and all toxicities associated with methotrexate. The presence of pre-existing or methotrexate-induced renal insufficiency is potentially associated with delayed excretion of methotrexate and may increase the need for higher doses or more prolonged use of calcium folinate.
Excessive calcium folinate doses must be avoided since this might impair the antitumour activity of methotrexate, especially in CNS tumours where calcium folinate accumulates after repeated courses.
Resistance to methotrexate as a result of decreased membrane transport implies also resistance to folinic acid rescue as both medicinal products share the same transport system.
Laboratory tests
The following provides general advice for monitoring patients; however, specific monitoring recommendations may vary with local medical practice.
Methotrexate/calcium folinate therapy
Serum creatinine levels and serum methotrexate levels: at least once daily.
Urine pH: in cases of methotrexate overdose or delayed excretion, monitor as appropriate, to ensure maintenance of pH ≥7.0.
Excipient information
Patients with rare hereditary problems of galactose intolerance, total lactase deficiency or glucose-galactose malabsorption should not take this medicine.