Acute Porphyria Drug Database

Monograph

L04AD01 - Ciclosporin
Propably not porphyrinogenic
PNP

Important Information
Patients on immunosuppressive therapy have an increased risk of infections. Since infections have a potential to trigger acute porphyric attacks vigilance is motivated regarding signs or symptoms of infection and/or possible symptoms of a porphyric attack. Side effects like nausea and vomiting may potentially be porphyrinogenic through reduction in carbohydrate intake.
Side effects
Infections are common in patients using immunosuppressants and since infections might trigger an acute porphyric attack, vigilance regarding signs and symptoms of an infection and/ or a porphyric attack is recommended. Common adverse reactions of ciclosporin that can be confused with an acute porphyric attack are nausea and vomiting. These side effects may potentially be porphyrinogenic if leading to a decrease in carbohydrate intake.
Rationale
Ciclosporin does not induce cytochrome P450 enzymes. It is an inhibitor of CYP 3A4, but no evidence point to irreversible inhibition.
Chemical description
Cyclic polypeptide.
Therapeutic characteristics
Ciclosporin is a calcineurin inhibitor, used to prevent transplant rejection. It is also used in the treatment of other conditions where immunosuppression is desired. It is administered orally or as an intravenous infusion.
Hepatic exposure
Significant
Metabolism and pharmacokinetics
Ciclosporin is metabolized by CYP3A4 and in vitro and interaction studies show that ciclosporin is an inhibitor of CYP 3A4. Listet by Zhou et al. as a possible mechanism-based inhibitor, but due to lacking evidence it is not suspected to be an irreversible inhibitor. Ciclosporin does not induce cytochrome P450 enzymes.
Preclinical data
Experimental data on mice point to porphyrogenicity in the same class as barbiturate, which probably is the cause for warning against the drug in other drug lists.
Personal communication
C. Andersson; patient report: tolerated (n=1).
Published experience
One report of activation of possible porfyric symptoms in a previously undiagnosed female AIP patient immediately after a kidney transplant, with improvement after discontinuing ciclosporin (Marsden et al. 2008). However, because the symptoms occurred in connection with a surgical procedure it is likely that a number of other factors could be responsible. It is also possible that some of the patients symptoms was due to common side effects of ciclosporin. Reports of uneventful use: Barone et al 2001, Field 2006 et al, Turton-Weeks et al 2001 and Warholm et al 2003.
IPNet drug reports
Uneventful use reported in 1 patient with acute porphyria.

References

# Citation details PMID
*Scientific articles
1. Niwa T, Yamamoto S, Saito M, Shiraga T, Takagi A, Effect of cyclosporin and tacrolimus on cytochrome p450 activities in human liver microsomes.
Yakugaku Zasshi. 2007 Jan;127(1):209-16
17202802
2. Watkins PB, The role of cytochromes P-450 in cyclosporine metabolism.
J Am Acad Dermatol. 1990 Dec;23(6 Pt 2):1301-9; discussion 1309-11.
2277139
3. Zhou ZW, Zhou SF, Application of mechanism-based CYP inhibition for predicting drugâ-drug interactions.
Expert Opin Drug Metab Toxicol. 2009 Jun;5(6):579-605
19466877
4. Zhou, S.F., Xue, C.C., et al. Clinically important drug interactions potentially involving mechanism-based inhibition of cytochrome P450 3A4 and the role of therapeutic drug monitoring. Ther Drug Monit 2007; 29(6):687:710.
5. The tolerability of newer immunosuppressive medications in a patient with acute intermittent porphyria. Journal of Clinical Pharmacology 2001; 41(1):113-115.
Barone GM, Gurley BJ, Anderson KE, Ketel BL, Abul-Ezz SR.
6. Immunosuppressive therapy for acute porphyria: Safety and efficacy in a patient with bone marrow failure. Pharmacotherapy 2006; 26(11): 1662-1666.
Field JJ, Giannone L, Bessler M, Blinder MA.
7. Acute intermittent porphyria and chronic renal failure.
Marsden JT, Chowdhury P, Wang J, Deacon A, Dutt N, Peters TJ, Macdougall IC. Clin Nephrol. 2008 May;69(5):339-46.
18538096
8. Renal transplantation for chronic renal failure in acute porphyria. Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation 1987; 2(4):271-274.
Nunez DJ, Williams PF, Herrick AL, Evans DB, McColl KEL.
9. Pretransplant evaluation of a patient with acute intermittent porphyria. Progress in Transplantation 2001; 11(3):214-216.
Turton-Weeks S, Barone GW, Gurley BJ, Ketel BL, Lightfoot ML, Abul-Ezz SR et al.
11949465
10. Renal transplantation in a case of acute intermittent porphyria. Journal of Clinical Pharmacology 2003; 43(10):1158-1160.
Warholm C, Wilczek H.
*Drug reference publications
11. Sweetman SC, editor. Martindale: The complete drug reference. Ciclosporin. Pharmaceutical Press 2009.
*Summary of Product Characteristics
12. Norwegian medicines agency. Summary of Product Characteristics (SPC). Sandimmun.
13. The electronic Medicines Compendium (emc). Summary of Product Characteristics (SPC). Sandimmun.

Similar drugs
Explore alternative drugs in similar therapeutic classes L04A / L04AD or go back.

Tradenames and packages
From some sources, we get a list of packages (United Kingdom, Ireland, Estonia). Other sources contain more or less "clean" versions of the trade name (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Lithuania, Norway). What you see here is the raw data we get from each country, so there will appear to be duplicates. The bold names are the searchable terms. The gray names that follow are all mapped to the bolded term.
Note: The cleaning is done automatically by a proprietary algorithm, and it may produce errors. We strive to improve it continuously.
Netherlands
Ciclosporine · Ciclosporine Aurobindo 100 mg, zachte capsules · Ciclosporine Aurobindo 25 mg, zachte capsules · Ciclosporine Aurobindo 50 mg, zachte capsules · Ciclosporine Medcor 100 mg, zachte capsules · Ciclosporine Teva 100 mg, zachte capsules · Ciclosporine Teva 25 mg, zachte capsules · Neoral · Neoral 100 mg, capsules · Neoral 100 mg/ml, drank · Neoral 25 mg, capsules · Sandimmune · Sandimmune, concentraat voor oplossing voor intraveneuze infusie 50 mg/ml
Belgium
Neoral-Sandimmun · Neoral-Sandimmun 10 mg caps. molle · Neoral-Sandimmun 100 mg caps. molle · Neoral-Sandimmun 100 mg/ml sol. buv. · Neoral-Sandimmun 25 mg caps. molle · Neoral-Sandimmun 50 mg caps. molle · Sandimmun · Sandimmun 250 mg/5 ml sol. perf. (à diluer) i.v. amp.
United Kingdom
Capimune · Capimune 100mg capsules · Capimune 25mg capsules · Capimune 50mg capsules · Capsorin · Capsorin 100mg capsules · Capsorin 100mg/ml oral solution · Capsorin 25mg capsules · Capsorin 50mg capsules · Ciclosporin · Ciclosporin 100mg capsules · Ciclosporin 25mg capsules · Ciclosporin 50mg capsules · Deximune · Deximune 100mg capsules · Deximune 25mg capsules · Deximune 50mg capsules · Neoral · Neoral 100mg capsules · Neoral 100mg/ml oral solution · Neoral 10mg capsules · Neoral 25mg capsules · Neoral 50mg capsules · Sandimmun · Sandimmun 100mg capsules · Sandimmun 100mg/ml oral solution · Sandimmun 250mg/5ml concentrate for solution for infusion ampoules · Sandimmun 25mg capsules · Sandimmun 50mg capsules · Sandimmun 50mg/1ml concentrate for solution for infusion ampoules · Vanquoral · Vanquoral 100mg capsules · Vanquoral 10mg capsules · Vanquoral 25mg capsules · Vanquoral 50mg capsules
Denmark
Ciqorin · Menelri · Sandimmun · Sandimmun Neoral
Norway
Sandimmun · Sandimmun Neoral
Poland
Cyclaid · Equoral · Sandimmun · Sandimmun Neoral
Luxembourg
Neoral-Sandimmun · Neoral-Sandimmun 100mg · Neoral-Sandimmun 100mg/ml · Neoral-Sandimmun 10mg · Neoral-Sandimmun 25mg · Neoral-Sandimmun 50mg · Sandimmun · Sandimmun 250mg/ml
Iceland
Ciqorin · Sandimmun · Sandimmun Neoral
Finland
Ciqorin · Sandimmun · Sandimmun Neoral
Latvia
Sandimmun Neoral
Serbia
Sandimmun · Sandimmun® · Sandimmun Neoral · Sandimmun Neoral® · Sigmasporin · Sigmasporin®
 
© NAPOS 2024
An unhandled error has occurred. Reload 🗙