KETOROLAC
KETOROLAC
KETOROLAC
Ketorolac Trometamol
PL 18157/0012
Table of Contents
Page
Lay Summary 2
Scientific Discussion 3
Lay Summary
The MHRA has granted Beacon Pharmaceuticals a Market Authorisation (licence) for
the medicinal product Ketorolac trometamol 30mg/ml Solution for Injection (PL
18257/0012) on 30/04/2007. This is a prescription only medication. The active
substance is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) with analgesic activity.
It is indicated for short-term management of moderate to severe acute postoperative
pain.
The test product was considered the same as the reference product Toradol, which
contains the same amount of ketorolac trometamol active substance in the same
pharmaceutical form. No new or unexpected safety concerns arose from these
applications and it was therefore judged that the benefits of taking Ketorolac
trometamol 30mg/ml Solution for Injection outweigh the risks, hence a Marketing
Authorisation was granted.
Scientific Discussion
INTRODUCTION
Based on the review of the data on quality, safety and efficacy, the UK granted
marketing authorisations for the medicinal product Ketorolac Trometamol 30mg/ml
Solution for Injection (PL 18257/0012) on 30/04/2007. This is a prescription only
medicine.
The application was a complex abridged application which successfully claimed that
the product was a generic medical product of Toradol, which contains the same
amount of ketorolac trometamol active substance in the same pharmaceutical form,
under Article 10.1 of Directive 2001/83/EC. The reference product PL 00286 / 0111
was held by Syntex Pharmaceuticals Limited, granted 08/06/1990. The reference
product was subsequently transferred by Change of Ownership to Roche Products
Limited on 31 May 1996, under PL 00031/0481.
PHARMACEUTICAL ASSESSMENT
DRUG SUBSTANCE
An appropriate specification based on the European Pharmacopoeia has been provided.
Analytical methods have been appropriately validated and are satisfactory for ensuring
compliance with the relevant specifications.
Batch analysis data are provided and comply with the proposed specification.
Satisfactory certificates of analysis have been provided for working standards used by the
active substance manufacturer and finished product manufacturer during validation studies.
Appropriate stability data have been generated supporting a retest period of 3 years, with no
specific storage instructions.
DRUG PRODUCT
Other Ingredients
The other ingredients of the drug product are ethanol, sodium chloride, sodium hydroxide
and water for injection. All excipients used comply with their respective European
Pharmacopoeial monograph. Satisfactory certificates of analysis have been provided for all
excipients.
Impurity profiles
Impurity profiles for both strengths of drug product were found to be similar to those for the
reference product.
Manufacture
A description and flow-chart of the manufacturing method has been provided.
In-process controls are appropriate considering the nature of the product and the method of
manufacture. Process validation has been carried out on batches of the drug product. The
results are satisfactory.
Stability
Finished product stability studies have been conducted in accordance with current
guidelines. Based on the results, a shelf-life of 2 years has been set, which is
satisfactory. Storage conditions are “Keep container in original carton”, “Do not store
above 30°C” and “Protect from light”..
PRE-CLINICAL ASSESSMENT
No new preclinical data have been supplied with these applications and none are
required for an application of this type.
MEDICAL ASSESSMENT
CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Pharmacodynamics
Ketorolac is a potent analgesic agent of the non-steroidal, anti-inflammatory class
(NSAID). It is not an opioid and has no known effects on opioid receptors. Its mode
of action is to inhibit the cyclo-oxygenase enzyme system and hence prostaglandin
synthesis and it demonstrates a minimal anti-inflammatory effect at its analgesic dose.
Pharmacokinetics
Intramuscular
Following intramuscular administration, ketorolac was rapidly and completely
absorbed. A mean peak plasma concentration of 2.2µg/ml occurred an average of 50
minutes after a single 30mg dose. Age, kidney and liver function affect terminal
plasma half-life and mean total clearance as outlined in the table below (estimated
from a single 30mg IM dose of ketorolac).
Intravenous
Intravenous administration of a single 10mg dose of ketorolac resulted in a mean peak
plasma concentration of 2.4µg/ml at an average of 5.4 minutes after dosing. The
terminal plasma elimination half-life was 5.1 hours, average volume of distribution
0.15 l/kg, and total plasma clearance 0.35ml/min/kg.
More than 99% of the ketorolac in plasma is protein-bound over a wide concentration
range.
Bioequivalence Study
This application does not require the inclusion of a bioequivalence study as it is an
application claiming essential similarity for a parenteral drug containing the same
active substance in the same concentration as the reference product.
Quality
The important quality characteristics of Ketorolac trometamol 30mg/ml Solution for
Injection are well defined and controlled. The specifications and batch analytical
results indicate consistency from batch to batch. There are no outstanding quality
issues that would have a negative impact on the benefit/risk balance.
Pre-Clinical
No new preclinical data were submitted and none are required for applications of this
type.
Clinical
A bioequivalence study was not required for this application. No new or unexpected
safety concerns arise from these applications.
The SPC, PIL and labelling are satisfactory and consistent with that for Toradol.
Risk/Benefit Analysis
The quality of the product is acceptable and no new preclinical or clinical safety
concerns have been identified. The risk benefit is, therefore, considered to be positive.
2 Following standard checks and communication with the applicant the MHRA
considered the application valid on 15/10/2003.
3 PHARMACEUTICAL FORM
4 CLINICAL PARTICULARS
Dosage should be adjusted according to the severity of the pain and the patient
response. Undesirable effects may be minimised by using the lowest effective
dose for the shortest
duration necessary to control symptoms (see section 4.4).
Adults
Elderly
For patients over 65 years, the lower end of the dosage range is recommended
and a total daily dose of 60mg should not be exceeded (see section 4.4 Special
warnings and special precautions for use).
Children
Renal impairment
4.3 Contraindications
Physicians should be aware that in some patients pain relief might not occur
until 30 minutes or more after IV or IM administration.
Use in the elderly: in common with other NSAIDs, patients over the age of 65
years may be at an increased risk of experiencing adverse events compared to
younger patients. The elderly have an increased plasma half-life and reduced
Undesirable effects may be minimised by using the lowest effective dose for
the shortest duration necessary to control symptoms (see section 4.2, and GI
and cardiovascular risks below).
Clinical trial and epidemiological data suggest that use of some NSAIDs
(particularly at high doses and in long term treatment) may be associated with
a small increased risk of arterial thrombotic events (for example myocardial
infarction or stroke). There are insufficient data to exclude such a risk for
ketorolac.
Patients with impaired renal function: since ketorolac and its metabolites are
excreted primarily by the kidney, patients with moderate to severe impairment
of renal function (serum creatinine greater than 160 micromol/l) should not
receive Ketorolac Injection. Patients with lesser renal impairment should
receive a reduced dose of ketorolac (not exceeding 60mg/day IM or IV) and
their renal status should be closely monitored.
Female fertility: the use of ketorolac may impair female fertility and is not
recommended in women attempting to conceive. In women who have
difficulties conceiving or who are undergoing investigation for infertility,
withdrawal of ketorolac should be considered.
Fluid retention and oedema have been reported with the use of ketorolac and it
should therefore be used with caution in patients with cardiac decompensation,
hypertension or similar conditions.
Patients with impaired hepatic function from cirrhosis do not have any
clinically important changes in ketorolac clearance or terminal half-life.
Borderline elevations of one or more liver function tests may occur. These
abnormalities may be transient, may remain unchanged, or may progress with
continued therapy. Meaningful elevations (greater than three times normal) of
serum glutamate pyruvate transaminase (SGPT/ALT) or serum glutamate
oxaloacetate transaminase (SGOT/AST) occurred in controlled clinical trials
in less than 1% of patients. If clinical signs and symptoms consistent with liver
disease develop, or if systemic manifestations occur, ketorolac should be
discontinued.
4.5 Interaction with other medicinal products and other forms of interaction
Ketorolac is highly bound to human plasma protein (mean 99.2%) and binding
is concentration-independent.
Ketorolac did not alter digoxin protein binding. In vitro studies indicated that
at therapeutic concentrations of salicylate (300µg/ml) and above, the binding
of ketorolac was reduced from approximately 99.2% to 97.5%. Therapeutic
concentrations of digoxin, warfarin, paracetamol, phenytoin and tolbutamide
did not alter ketorolac protein binding. Because ketorolac is a highly potent
drug and present in low concentrations in plasma, it would not be expected to
displace other protein-bound drugs significantly.
Ketorolac and other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs can reduce the anti-
hypertensive effect of beta-blockers and may increase the risk of renal
impairment when administered concurrently with ACE inhibitors, particularly
in volume depleted patients.
NSAIDs may exacerbate cardiac failure, reduce GFR and increase plasma
cardiac glycoside levels when co-administered with cardiac glycosides.
NSAIDs should not be used for eight to twelve days after mifepristone
administration as NSAIDs can reduce the effects of mifepristone.
Gastro-intestinal:
Renal:
Nephrotoxicity including increased urinary frequency, oliguria, acute renal
failure, hyponatraemia, hyperkalaemia, haemolytic uraemic syndrome, flank
pain (with or without haematuria), raised serum urea and creatinine, interstitial
nephritis, urinary retention, nephrotic syndrome.
Cardiovascular/haematological:
Flushing, bradycardia, pallor, purpura, thrombocytopenia, neutropenia,
agranulocytosis, aplastic anaemia, haemolytic anaemia, hypertension,
palpitations, chest pain.
Clinical trial and epidemiological data suggest that use of some NSAIDs
(particularly at high doses and in long term treatment) may be associated with
an increased risk of arterial thrombotic events (for example myocardial
infarction or stroke) (see section 4.4).
Oedema, hypertension, and cardiac failure, have been reported in association
with NSAID treatment.
Respiratory:
Dyspnoea, asthma, pulmonary oedema.
Dermatological:
Pruritus, urticaria, skin photosensitivity, Lyell's syndrome, Stevens-Johnson
syndrome, exfoliative dermatitis, maculopapular rash.
Hypersensitivity reactions:
Anaphylaxis, bronchospasm, laryngeal oedema, hypotension, flushing and
rash. Such reactions may occur in patients with or without known sensitivity
to ketorolac or other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.
Bleeding:
Post-operative wound haemorrhage, haematomata, epistaxis, increased
bleeding time.
Reproductive, female:
Infertility
Other:
Asthenia, oedema, weight gain, abnormalities of liver function tests, hepatitis,
liver failure, jaundice, fever. Injection site pain has been reported in some
patients.
4.9 Overdose
Doses of 360mg given intramuscularly over an eight hour interval for five
consecutive days have caused abdominal pain and peptic ulcers that have
healed after discontinuation of dosing. Two patients recovered from
unsuccessful suicide attempts. One patient experienced nausea after 210mg
ketorolac, and the other hyperventilation after 300mg ketorolac.
5 PHARMACOLOGICAL PROPERTIES
Intramuscular
Following intramuscular administration, ketorolac was rapidly and completely
absorbed. A mean peak plasma concentration of 2.2µg/ml occurred an
average of 50 minutes after a single 30mg dose. Age, kidney and liver
function affect terminal plasma half-life and mean total clearance as outlined
in the table below (estimated from a single 30mg IM dose of ketorolac).
clearance half-life
(l/hr/kg) (hrs) mean
mean (range) (range)
Intravenous
Intravenous administration of a single 10mg dose of ketorolac resulted in a
mean peak plasma concentration of 2.4µg/ml at an average of 5.4 minutes
after dosing. The terminal plasma elimination half-life was 5.1 hours, average
volume of distribution 0.15 l/kg, and total plasma clearance 0.35ml/min/kg.
Ketorolac trometamol was not mutagenic in the Ames test, unscheduled DNA
synthesis and repair, and in forward mutation assays. Ketorolac trometamol
did not cause chromosome breakage in the in vivo mouse micronucleus assay.
Impairment of fertility did not occur in male or female rats at oral doses of
9mg/kg (0.9 times the human AUC) and 16mg/kg (1.6 times the human AUC)
of ketorolac trometamol, respectively.
6 PHARMACEUTICAL PARTICULARS
6.2 Incompatibilities
Two years
Do not store above 30°C. Keep container in the outer carton and protect from
light.
PL 18157/0012
30/04/2007