Pregnancy:
There are no clinical data from the use of topical forms of Nurofen Joint & Muscular Pain Relief 200mg Medicated Plaster during pregnancy. Even if systemic exposure is lower compared with oral administration, it is not known if the systemic Nurofen Joint & Muscular Pain Relief 200mg Medicated Plaster exposure reached after topical administration can be harmful to an embryo/foetus. With reference to experience from treatment with systemically applied NSAIDs, the following is recommended:
Inhibition of prostaglandin synthesis may adversely affect the pregnancy and/or the embryo/foetal development. Data from epidemiological studies suggest an increased risk of miscarriage and of cardiac malformation and gastroschisis after use of a prostaglandin synthesis inhibitor in early pregnancy. The risk is believed to increase with dose and duration of therapy. In animals, administration of a prostaglandin synthesis inhibitor has been shown to result in increased pre- and post-implantation loss and embryo-foetal lethality. In addition, increased incidences of various malformations, including cardiovascular, have been reported in animals given a prostaglandin synthesis inhibitor during the organogenetic period.
During the first and second trimester of pregnancy, Nurofen Joint & Muscular Pain Relief 200mg Medicated Plaster should not be given unless clearly necessary. If Nurofen Joint & Muscular Pain Relief 200mg Medicated Plaster is used during the first and second trimester of pregnancy, the dose should be kept as low and duration of treatment as short as possible.
During the third trimester of pregnancy, all prostaglandin synthesis inhibitors may expose the foetus to:
- cardiopulmonary toxicity (with premature closure of the ductus arteriosus and pulmonary hypertension);
- renal dysfunction, which may progress to renal failure with oligo-hydroamniosis;
the mother and the neonate, at the end of pregnancy, to:
- possible prolongation of bleeding time, an anti-aggregating effect which may occur even at very low doses.
- inhibition of uterine contractions resulting in delayed or prolonged labour.
Consequently, ibuprofen is contraindicated during the third trimester of pregnancy (see Section 4.3).
Breast-feeding:
After systemic application, only small amounts of ibuprofen and its metabolites pass into the breast milk. As no harmful effects to infants are known to date, it is not usually necessary to interrupt breast-feeding during short-term treatment with this medicated plaster at the recommended dose.
However, as a precautionary measure, this medicated plaster should not be applied directly onto the breast area of women who are breast-feeding.