• Patients with severe liver or renal insufficiency. As mesalazine, also known as 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA), is eliminated mainly by acetylation and subsequent urinary excretion, patients with impaired liver function or renal failure should be closely monitored, so it is advisable to perform liver and renal function tests before instituting treatment and regularly during it. Treatment with Salcrozine should be stopped immediately if there is evidence of renal deterioration. In patients who develop renal impairment during treatment, mesalazine-induced nephrotoxicity should be suspected.
• Cases of nephrolithiasis have been reported with the use of mesalazine including stones with a 100 % mesalazine content. It is recommended to ensure adequate fluid intake during treatment.
• There have been reports of increases in liver enzyme levels in patients taking preparations with mesalazine. Liver function should be evaluated before and during treatment according to medical criteria. Caution is advised if Salcrozine is given to patients with hepatic impairment. (see 4.3 Contraindications).
• Patients with a history of hypersensitivity to sulfasalazine should be kept under close medical surveillance. In case of acute intolerance reactions, such as abdominal cramps, acute abdominal pain, fever, severe headache and rashes, treatment should be discontinued immediately.
• Patients with pulmonary diseases, particularly asthma, should be carefully monitored during treatment.
• Cardiac hypersensitivity reactions induced by mesalazine (myo- and pericarditis) have been rarely reported. Caution should be exercised when treating patients, with conditions that predispose them to myocarditis or pericarditis, with mesalazine. If there is a suspicion of a cardiac hypersensitivity reaction, products containing mesalazine should not be re-administered.
• In rare occasions, serious blood dyscrasias have been reported after treatment with mesalazine. Haematological investigations should be performed if patients suffer unexplained haemorrhages, bruises, purpura, anaemia, fever or pharyngolaryngeal pain. Treatment with Salcrozine should be discontinued in case of suspected blood dyscrasia (see sections 4.3 and 4.5).
• Caution is recommended when treating patients with active gastric or duodenal ulcer.
• Salcrozine gastro-resistant tablets should not be administered concomitantly with lactulose-type laxatives or the like, since it lowers the pH of the faeces and may prevent the release of the active ingredient.
• Blood tests (differential blood count; liver function tests such as ALT and serum creatinine) should be determined prior to and during treatment, at the discretion of the treating physician.
• Severe cutaneous adverse reactions (SCARs), including drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS), Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS) and toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN), have been reported in association with mesalazine treatment.
Mesalazine should be discontinued, at the first appearance of signs and symptoms of severe skin reactions, such as skin rash, mucosal lesions, or any other sign of hypersensitivity.
• Mesalazine may produce red-brown urine discoloration after contact with sodium hypochlorite bleach (e.g., in toilets cleaned with sodium hypochlorite contained in certain bleaches).
• Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (pseudotumor cerebri) has been reported in patients receiving mesalazine. Patients should be warned for signs and symptoms of idiopathic intracranial hypertension, including severe or recurrent headache, visual disturbances or tinnitus. If idiopathic intracranial hypertension occurs, discontinuation of mesalazine should be considered.
This medicinal product contains 49 mg sodium per gastro-resistant tablet, equivalent to 2.5 % of the WHO recommended maximum daily dietary intake of 2 g sodium for an adult.
The maximum daily dose of this product is equivalent to 20 % of the WHO recommended maximum daily intake for sodium.
Salcrozine is considered high in sodium. This should be particularly taken into account for those on a low salt diet.