Clotrimazole (clotrimazole) - Dosing, PA Forms & Info (2026)
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    1. Home
    2. Clotrimazole - Clotrimazole lozenge

    Get your patient on Clotrimazole - Clotrimazole lozenge (Clotrimazole)

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    Clotrimazole - Clotrimazole lozenge prescribing information

    • Indications & usage
    • Dosage & administration
    • Contraindications
    • Adverse reactions
    • Description
    • Pharmacology
    • How supplied/storage & handling
    • Data source
    • Indications & usage
    • Dosage & administration
    • Contraindications
    • Adverse reactions
    • Description
    • Pharmacology
    • How supplied/storage & handling
    • Data source
    Prescribing Information
    Indications & Usage

    INDICATIONS AND USAGE

    Clotrimazole lozenges are indicated for the local treatment of oropharyngeal candidiasis. The diagnoses should be confirmed by a KOH smear and/or culture prior to treatment.

    Clotrimazole lozenges are also indicated prophylactically to reduce the incidence of oropharyngeal candidiasis in patients immunocompromised by conditions that include chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or steroid therapy utilized in the treatment of leukemia, solid tumors, or renal transplantation. There are no data from adequate and well-controlled trials to establish the safety and efficacy of this product for prophylactic use in patients immunocompromised by etiologies other than those listed in the previous sentence. (See DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION .)

    Dosage & Administration

    DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION

    Clotrimazole lozenges must be slowly dissolved in the mouth. The recommended dose is one lozenge five times a day for fourteen consecutive days. Only limited data are available on the safety and effectiveness of the clotrimazole lozenge after prolonged administration; therefore, therapy should be limited to short term use, if possible.

    For prophylaxis to reduce the incidence of oropharyngeal candidiasis in patients immunocompromised by conditions that include chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or steroid therapy utilized in the treatment of leukemia, solid tumors, or renal transplantation, the recommended dose is one lozenge three times daily for the duration of chemotherapy or until steroids are reduced to maintenance levels.

    Contraindications

    CONTRAINDICATIONS

    Clotrimazole lozenges are contraindicated in patients who are hypersensitive to any of its components.

    Adverse Reactions

    ADVERSE REACTIONS

    Abnormal liver function tests have been reported in patients treated with clotrimazole lozenges; elevated SGOT levels were reported in about 15% of patients in the clinical trials (See Precautions section).

    Nausea, vomiting, unpleasant mouth sensations and pruritus have also been reported with the use of the lozenge.

    Description

    DESCRIPTION

    Each clotrimazole lozenge contains 10 mg clotrimazole [1-(o-chloro-α, α-diphenylbenzyl) imidazole], a synthetic antifungal agent, for topical use in the mouth.

    Structural Formula:

    Referenced Image

    Chemical Formula:

    C 22 H 17 ClN 2

    The lozenge dosage form is a large, slowly dissolving tablet (troche) containing 10 mg of clotrimazole dispersed in dextrose, microcrystalline cellulose, povidone, and magnesium stearate.

    Pharmacology

    CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY

    Clotrimazole is a broad-spectrum antifungal agent that inhibits the growth of pathogenic yeasts by altering the permeability of cell membranes. The action of clotrimazole is fungistatic at concentrations of drug up to 20 mcg/mL and may be fungicidal in vitro against Candida albicans and other species of the genus Candida at higher concentrations. No single-step or multiple-step resistance to clotrimazole has developed during successive passages of Candida albicans in the laboratory; however, individual organism tolerance has been observed during successive passages in the laboratory. Such in vitro tolerance has resolved once the organism has been removed from the antifungal environment.

    After oral administration of a 10 mg clotrimazole lozenge to healthy volunteers, concentrations sufficient to inhibit most species of Candida persist in saliva for up to three hours following the approximately 30 minutes needed for a lozenge to dissolve. The long term persistence of drug in saliva appears to be related to the slow release of clotrimazole from the oral mucosa to which the drug is apparently bound. Repetitive dosing at three hour intervals maintains salivary levels above the minimum inhibitory concentrations of most strains of Candida; however, the relationship between in vitro susceptibility of pathogenic fungi to clotrimazole and prophylaxis or cure of infections in humans has not been established.

    In another study, the mean serum concentrations were 4.98 ± 3.7 and 3.23 ± 1.4 nanograms/mL of clotrimazole at 30 and 60 minutes, respectively, after administration as a lozenge.

    How Supplied/Storage & Handling

    HOW SUPPLIED

    Clotrimazole lozenges, 10 mg, white discoid, uncoated tablets, debossed with "PAD" over "0107" on one side and plain on the other, are supplied as follows:

    Strength NDC Code Lozenge Identification

    Bottles of 70:

    10 mg

    0574-0107-70

    PAD 0107

    Bottles of 140:

    10 mg

    0574-0107-14

    PAD 0107

    Boxes of 70 foil packs:

    10 mg

    0574-0107-77

    PAD 0107

    Store at 20° to 25°C (68° to 77°F) [see USP Controlled Room Temperature]

    Avoid freezing.

    Rx Only

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