Get your patient on Carprofen (Carprofen Soft Chewable)

Carprofen prescribing information

Dosage & Administration

DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION

Always provide Client Information Sheet with prescription. Carefully consider the potential benefits and risk of Carprofen Soft Chewable Tablets and other treatment options before deciding to use Carprofen Soft Chewable Tablets. Use the lowest effective dose for the shortest duration consistent with individual response. The recommended dosage for oral administration to dogs is 2 mg/lb of body weight daily. The total daily dose may be administered as 2 mg/lb of body weight once daily or divided and administered as 1 mg/lb twice daily. For the control of postoperative pain, administer approximately 2 hours before the procedure. Carprofen Soft Chewable Tablets are scored and dosage should be calculated in half-tablet increments. Tablets can be halved by placing the tablet on a hard surface and pressing down on both sides of the score. Carprofen Soft Chewable Tablets may be fed by hand or placed in food. Care should be taken to ensure that the dog consumes the complete dose.

Contraindications

CONTRAINDICATIONS

Carprofen Soft Chewable Tablets should not be used in dogs exhibiting previous hypersensitivity to carprofen.

Adverse Reactions

ADVERSE REACTIONS

During investigational studies for the caplet formulation with twice daily administration of 1 mg/lb, no clinically significant adverse reactions were reported. Some clinical signs were observed during field studies (n=297) which were similar for carprofen caplet- and placebo-treated dogs. Incidences of the following were observed in both groups: vomiting (4%), diarrhea (4%), changes in appetite (3%), lethargy (1.4%), behavioral changes (1%), and constipation (0.3%). The product vehicle served as control.

There were no serious adverse events reported during clinical field studies with once daily administration of 2 mg/lb. The following categories of abnormal health observations were reported. The product vehicle served as control.


Percentage of Dogs with Abnormal Health Observations Reported in Clinical Field Study
(2 mg/lb once daily)

Observation

Carprofen (n=129)

Placebo (n=132)

Inappetence

1.6

1.5

Vomiting

3.1

3.8

Diarrhea/Soft stool

3.1

4.5

Behavior change

0.8

0.8

Dermatitis

0.8

0.8

PU/PD

0.8

--

SAP increase

7.8

8.3

ALT increase

5.4

4.5

AST increase

2.3

0.8

BUN increase

3.1

1.5

Bilirubinuria

16.3

12.1

Ketonuria

14.7

9.1

Clinical pathology parameters listed represent reports of increases from pre-treatment values; medical judgment is necessary to determine clinical relevance.

During investigational studies of surgical pain for the caplet formulation, no clinically significant adverse reactions were reported. The product vehicle served as control.


Percentage of Dogs with Abnormal Health Observations Reported in Surgical Pain Field Studies with Caplets (2 mg/lb once daily)

Observation•

Carprofen (n=148)

Placebo (n=149)
Vomiting
10.1
13.4
Diarrhea/soft stool
6.1
6.0
Ocular disease
2.7
0
Inappetence
1.4
0
Dermatitis/Skin lesion
2.0
1.3
Dysrhythmia
0.7
0
Apnea
1.4
0
Oral/Periodontal disease
1.4
0
Pyrexia
0.7
1.3
Urinary tract disease
1.4
1.3
Wound drainage
1.4
0

• A single dog may have experienced more than one occurrence of an event.

During investigational studies for the chewable tablet formulation, gastrointestinal signs were observed in some dogs. These signs included vomiting and soft stools.

Post-Approval Experience:

Although not all adverse reactions are reported, the following adverse reactions are based on voluntary post-approval adverse drug experience reporting. The categories of adverse reactions are listed in decreasing order of frequency by body system.

Gastrointestinal: Vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, inappetence, melena, hematemesis, gastrointestinal ulceration, gastrointestinal bleeding, pancreatitis.

Hepatic: Inappetence, vomiting, jaundice, acute hepatic toxicity, hepatic enzyme elevation, abnormal liver function test(s), hyperbilirubinemia, bilirubinuria, hypoalbuminemia. Approximately one-fourth of hepatic reports were in Labrador Retrievers.

Neurologic: Ataxia, paresis, paralysis, seizures, vestibular signs, disorientation.

Urinary: Hematuria, polyuria, polydipsia, urinary incontinence, urinary tract infection, azotemia, acute renal failure, tubular abnormalities including acute tubular necrosis, renal tubular acidosis, glucosuria.

Behavioral: Sedation, lethargy, hyperactivity, restlessness, aggressiveness.

Hematologic: Immune-mediated hemolytic anemia, immune-mediated thrombocytopenia, blood loss anemia, epistaxis.

Dermatologic: Pruritus, increased shedding, alopecia, pyotraumatic moist dermatitis (hot spots), necrotizing panniculitis/vasculitis, ventral ecchymosis.

Immunologic or hypersensitivity: Facial swelling, hives, erythema.

In rare situations, death has been associated with some of the adverse reactions listed above.

Description

DESCRIPTION

Carprofen Soft Chewable Tablets are a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) of the propionic acid class that includes ibuprofen, naproxen, and ketoprofen. Carprofen is the nonproprietary designation for a substituted carbazole, 6-chloro-α-methyl-9H-carbazole-2-acetic acid. The empirical formula is C 15 H 12 ClNO 2 and the molecular weight 273.72. The chemical structure of carprofen is:

Referenced Image

Carprofen is a white, crystalline compound. It is freely soluble in ethanol, but practically insoluble in water at 25°C.

Pharmacology

CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY

Carprofen is a non-narcotic, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agent with characteristic analgesic and antipyretic activity approximately equipotent to indomethacin in animal models. 1

The mechanism of action of carprofen, like that of other NSAIDs, is believed to be associated with the inhibition of cyclooxygenase activity. Two unique cyclooxygenases have been described in mammals. 2 The constitutive cyclooxygenase, COX-1, synthesizes prostaglandins necessary for normal gastrointestinal and renal function. The inducible cyclooxygenase, COX-2, generates prostaglandins involved in inflammation. Inhibition of COX-1 is thought to be associated with gastrointestinal and renal toxicity while inhibition of COX-2 provides anti-inflammatory activity. The specificity of a particular NSAID for COX-2 versus COX-1 may vary from species to species. 3 In an in vitro study using canine cell cultures, carprofen demonstrated selective inhibition of COX-2 versus COX-1. 4 Clinical relevance of these data has not been shown. Carprofen has also been shown to inhibit the release of several prostaglandins in two inflammatory cell systems: rat polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) and human rheumatoid synovial cells, indicating inhibition of acute (PMN system) and chronic (synovial cell system) inflammatory reactions. 1

Several studies have demonstrated that carprofen has modulatory effects on both humoral and cellular immune responses. 5-9 Data also indicate that carprofen inhibits the production of osteoclast-activating factor (OAF), PGE 1 , and PGE 2 by its inhibitory effect in prostaglandin biosynthesis. 1

Based upon comparison with data obtained from intravenous administration, carprofen is rapidly and nearly completely absorbed (more than 90% bioavailable) when administered orally. 10 Peak blood plasma concentrations are achieved in 1-3 hours after oral administration of 1, 5, and 25 mg/kg to dogs. The mean terminal half-life of carprofen is approximately 8 hours (range 4.5-9.8 hours) after single oral doses varying from 1-35 mg/kg of body weight. After a 100 mg single intravenous bolus dose, the mean elimination half-life was approximately 11.7 hours in the dog. Carprofen is more than 99% bound to plasma protein and exhibits a very small volume of distribution.

Carprofen is eliminated in the dog primarily by biotransformation in the liver followed by rapid excretion of the resulting metabolites (the ester glucuronide of carprofen and the ether glucuronides of 2 phenolic metabolites, 7-hydroxy carprofen and 8-hydroxy carprofen) in the feces (70-80%) and urine (10-20%). Some enterohepatic circulation of the drug is observed.

How Supplied/Storage & Handling

HOW SUPPLIED

Carprofen Soft Chewable Tablets contain 25 mg, 75 mg, or 100 mg of carprofen per tablet.

Carprofen Soft Chewable Tablets are available as:

25 mg tablets: yellowish brown to dark yellowish brown, mottled, rounded, and square-shaped tablets that have a scoreline on one side and are plain on the other side.

75 mg tablets: reddish brown to dark reddish brown, mottled, and octagonal tablets that have a scoreline on one side and are plain on the other side.

100 mg tablets: brown to dark brown, mottled, rounded, and square-shaped tablets that are debossed with the letter "C" on one side and have a scoreline on the other side.

Each tablet size is packaged in bottles containing 30 tablets.



NDC Number

Tablet Size

Tablets/Bottle

86101-041-30

25 mg

30

86101-042-30

75 mg

30

86101-043-30

100 mg

30

Data SourceWe receive information directly from the FDA and PrescriberPoint is updated as frequently as changes are made available

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