There have been only a few instances of deliberate or accidental overdosage with minoxidil tablets. One patient recovered after taking 50 mg of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) together with 500 mg of a barbiturate. When exaggerated hypotension is encountered, it is most likely to occur in association with residual sympathetic nervous system blockade from previous therapy (guanethidine-like effects or alpha-adrenergic blockage), which prevents the usual compensatory maintenance of blood pressure. Intravenous administration of normal saline will help to maintain blood pressure and facilitate urine formation in these patients. Sympathomimetic drugs such as norepinephrine or epinephrine should be avoided because of their excessive cardiac stimulating action. Phenylephrine, angiotensin ll, vasopressin, and dopamine all reverse hypotension due to minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) , but should only be used if underperfusion of a vital organ is evident.
Radioimmunoassay can be performed to determine the concentration of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) in the blood. At the maximum adult dose of 100 mg/day, peak blood levels of 1641 ng/mL and 2441 ng/mL were observed in two patients, respectively. Due to patient-to-patient variation in blood levels, it is difficult to establish an overdosage warning level. In general, a substantial increase above 2000 ng/mL should be regarded as overdosage, unless the physician is aware that the patient has taken no more than the maximum dose.
Oral LD50 in rats has ranged from 1321-3492 mg/kg; in mice, 2456-2648 mg/kg.
Minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) tablets are contraindicated in pheochromocytoma, because it may stimulate secretion of catecholamines from the tumor through its antihypertensive action. Minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) is contraindicated in those patients with a history of hypersensitivity to any of the components of the preparation.
Because of the potential for serious adverse effects, minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) tablets are indicated only in the treatment of hypertension that is symptomatic or associated with target organ damage and is not manageable with maximum therapeutic doses of a diuretic plus two other antihypertensive drugs. At the present time use in milder degrees of hypertension is not recommended because the benefit-risk relationship in such patients has not been defined. Minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) reduced supine diastolic blood pressure by 20 mm Hg or to 90 mm Hg or less in approximately 75% of patients, most of whom had hypertension that could not be controlled by other drugs.
Pregnancy Category C. Oral administration of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) has been associated with evidence of increased fetal resorption in rabbits, but not rats, when administered at five times the maximum recommended oral antihypertensive human dose. There was no evidence of teratogenic effects in rats and rabbits. Subcutaneous administration of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) to pregnant rats at 80 mg/kg/day was maternally toxic but not teratogenic. Higher subcutaneous doses produced evidence of developmental toxicity. There are no adequate and well controlled studies in pregnant women. Minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) should be used during pregnancy only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the fetus.
Minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) Tablets USP 2.5 mg are 9/32", scored, round, white tablets imprinted "DAN 5642" and "2.5" supplied in bottles of 100 and 500.
Minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) Tablets USP 10 mg are 9/32", scored, round, white tablets imprinted "DAN 5643" and "10" supplied in bottles of 100 and 500.
Dispense in a tight container with child-resistant closure.
Store at controlled room temperature 15°-30°C (59°-86°F).
Watson Laboratories, Inc. Corona, CA 92880, USA. Revised: October 2002. FDA Rev date: 6/8/2001
Congestive Heart Failure-concomitant use of an adequate diuretic is required-Minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) tablets must usually be administered concomitantly with a diuretic adequate to prevent fluid retention and possible congestive heart failure; a high ceiling (loop) diuretic is almost always required. Body weight should be monitored closely. If minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) is used without a diuretic, retention of several hundred milliequivalents of salt and corresponding volumes of water can occur within a few days, leading to increased plasma and interstitial fluid volume and local or generalized edema. Diuretic treatment alone, or in combination with restricted salt intake, will usually minimize fluid retention, although reversible edema did develop in approximately 10% of nondialysis patients so treated. Ascites has also been reported. Diuretic effectiveness was limited mostly by disease-related impaired renal function. The condition of patients with pre-existing congestive heart failure occasionally deteriorated in association with fluid retention although because of the fall in blood pressure (reduction of afterload), more than twice as many improved than worsened. Rarely, refractory fluid retention may require discontinuation of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets). Provided that the patient is under close medical supervision, it may be possible to resolve refractory salt retention by discontinuing minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) for 1 or 2 days and then resuming treatment in conjunction with vigorous diuretic therapy.
Concomitant Treatment to Prevent Tachycardia is Usually RequiredMinoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) increases the heart rate. Angina may worsen or appear for the first time during minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) treatment, probably because of the increased oxygen demands associated with increased heart rate and cardiac output. The increase in rate and the occurrence of angina generally can be prevented by the concomitant administration of a beta-adrenergic blocking drug or other sympathetic nervous system suppressant. The ability of beta-adrenergic blocking agents to minimize papillary muscle lesions in animals is further reason to utilize such an agent concomitantly. Round-the-clock effectiveness of the sympathetic suppressant should be ensured.
Pericarditis, Pericardial Effusion, and TamponadeThere have been reports of pericarditis occurring in association with the use of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets). The relationship of this association to renal status is uncertain. Pericardial effusion, occasionally with tamponade, has been observed in about 3% of treated patients not on dialysis, especially those with inadequate or compromised renal function. Although in many cases, the pericardial effusion was associated with a connective tissue disease, the uremic syndrome, congestive heart failure, or marked fluid retention, there have been instances in which these potential causes of effusion were not present. Patients should be observed closely for any suggestion of a pericardial disorder, and echocardiographic studies should be carried out if suspicion arises. More vigorous diuretic therapy, dialysis, pericardiocentesis, or surgery may be required. If the effusion persists, withdrawal of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) should be considered in light of other means of controlling the hypertension and the patient's clinical status.
Interaction with GuanethidineAlthough minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) does not itself cause orthostatic hypotension, its administration to patients already receiving guanethidine can result in profound orthostatic effects. If at all possible, guanethidine should be discontinued well before minoxidil is begun. Where this is not possible, minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) therapy should be started in the hospital and the patient should remain institutionalized until severe orthostatic effects are no longer present or the patient has learned to avoid activities that provoke them.
Hazard of Rapid Control of Blood PressureIn patients with very severe blood pressure elevation, too rapid control of blood pressure, especially with intravenous agents, can precipitate syncope, cerebrovascular accidents, myocardial infarction and ischemia of special sense organs with resulting decrease or loss of vision or hearing. Patients with compromised circulation or cryoglobulinemia may also suffer ischemic episodes of the affected organs. Although such events have not been unequivocally associated with minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) use, total experience is limited at present.
Any patient with malignant hypertension should have initial treatment with minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) carried out in a hospital setting, both to assure that blood pressure is falling and to assure that it is not falling more rapidly than intended.
PRECAUTIONS General PrecautionsThe patient should be fully aware of the importance of continuing all of his antihypertensive medications and of the nature of symptoms that would suggest fluid overload. A patient brochure has been prepared and is included with each minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) package. The text of this brochure is reprinted at the end of the insert.
Laboratory TestsThose laboratory tests which are abnormal at the time of initiation of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) therapy, such as urinalysis, renal function tests, EKG, chest x-ray, echocardiogram, etc., should be repeated at intervals to ascertain whether improvement or deterioration is occurring under minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) therapy. Initially such tests should be performed frequently, e.g., 1-3 month intervals; later as stabilization occurs, at intervals of 6-12 months.
Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, and Impairment of FertilityTwo-year carcinogenicity studies of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) have been conducted by the dermal and oral (dietary) routes of administration in mice and rats. There were no positive findings with the oral (dietary) route of administration in rats.
In the two-year dermal study in mice, an increased incidence of mammary adenomas and adenocarcinomas in the females at all dose levels (8, 25 and 80 mg/kg/day) was attributed to increased prolactin activity.
Hyperprolactinemia is a well-known mechanism in the enhancement of mouse mammary tumors, but has not been associated with mammary tumorigenesis in women. Additionally, topical minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) has not been shown to cause hyperprolactinemia in women on clinical trials. Absorption of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) through rodent skin is greater than would be experienced by patients treated topically with minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) for hair loss. Dietary administration of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) to mice for up to 2 years was associated with an increased incidence of malignant Iymphomas in females at all dose levels (10, 25 and 63 mg/kg/day) and an increased incidence of hepatic nodules in males (63 mg/kg/day). There was no effect of dietary minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) on the incidence of malignant liver tumors.
In the two-year dermal study in rats there were significant increases in incidence of pheochromocytomas in males and females and preputial gland adenomas in males. Changes in incidence of neoplasms found to be increased in the dermal or oral carcinogenicity studies were typical of those expected in rodents treated with other hypotensive agents (adrenal pheochromocytomas in rats), treatment-related hormonal alterations (mammary carcinomas in female mice; preputial gland adenomas in male rats) or representative of normal variations within the range of historical incidence for rodent neoplasms (malignant Iymphomas, liver nodules/adenomas in mice). Based on differences in absorption of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) and mechanisms of tumorigenesis in these rodent species, none of these changes were considered to be relevant to the safety of patients treated topically with minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) for hair loss.
There was no evidence of epithelial hyperplasia or tumorigenesis at the sites of topical application of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) in either species in the two-year dermal carcinogenesis studies. No evidence of carcinogenicity was detected in rats or rabbits treated topically with minoxidil for one year. Topical minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) (2% and 5%) did not significantly (p < 0.05) reduce the latency period of UV light-initiated skin tumors in hairless mice, as compared to controls, in a 12-month photocarcinogenicity study.
Minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) was not mutagenic in the Salmonella (Ames) test, the DNA damage alkaline elution assay, the in vitro rat hepatocyte unscheduled DNA synthesis (UDS) assay, the rat bone marrow micronucleus assay, or the mouse bone marrow micronucleus assay. An equivocal result was recorded in an in vitro cytogenetic assay using Chinese hamster cells at long exposure times, but a similar assay using human lymphocytes was negative.
In a study in which male and female rats received one or five times the maximum recommended human oral antihypertensive dose of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) (multiples based on a 50 kg patient) there was a dose-dependent reduction in conception rate.
Pregnancy Teratogenic EffectsPregnancy Category C. Oral administration of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) has been associated with evidence of increased fetal resorption in rabbits, but not rats, when administered at five times the maximum recommended oral antihypertensive human dose. There was no evidence of teratogenic effects in rats and rabbits. Subcutaneous administration of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) to pregnant rats at 80 mg/kg/day was maternally toxic but not teratogenic. Higher subcutaneous doses produced evidence of developmental toxicity. There are no adequate and well controlled studies in pregnant women. Minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) should be used during pregnancy only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the fetus.
Labor and deliveryThe effects on labor and delivery are unknown.
Nursing MothersThere has been one report of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) excretion in the breast milk of a woman treated with 5 mg oral minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) twice daily for hypertension. Because of the potential for adverse effects in nursing infants from minoxidil absorption, minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) should not be administered to a nursing woman.
Pediatric UseUse in pediatric patients has been limited to date, particularly in infants. The recommendations under DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION can be considered only a rough guide at present and a careful titration is essential.
Geriatric UseClinical studies of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) tablets did not include sufficient numbers of subjects aged 65 and over to determine whether they respond differently from younger subjects. Other reported clinical experience has not identified differences in responses between the elderly and younger patients. In general, dose selection for an elderly patient should be cautious, usually starting at the low end of the dosing range, reflecting the greater frequency of decreased hepatic, renal, or cardiac function, and of concomitant disease or other drug therapy.
Unapproved UseUse of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) tablets, in any formulation, to promote hair growth is not an approved indication. While clinical trials with minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) topical solution 2% demonstrated that formulation and dosage were safe and effective, the effects of extemporaneous formulations and dosages have not been shown to be safe or effective. Because systemic absorption of topically applied drug may occur and is dependent on vehicle and/or method of use, extemporaneous topical formulations made from minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) should be considered to share in the full range of CONTRAINDICATIONS, WARNINGS, PRECAUTIONS, and ADVERSE REACTIONS listed in this insert. In addition, skin intolerance to drug and/or vehicle may occur.
The recommended initial dosage of minoxidil tablets is 5 mg of minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) given as a single daily dose. Daily dosage can be increased to 10, 20 and then to 40 mg in single or divided doses if required for optimum blood pressure control. The effective dosage range is usually 10 to 40 mg per day. The maximum recommended dosage is 100 mg per day.
Patients under 12 years of ageThe initial dosage is 0.2 mg/kg minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) as a single daily dose. The dosage may be increased in 50 to 100% increments until optimum blood pressure control is achieved. The effective dosage range is usually 0.25 to 1 mg/kg/day. The maximum recommended dosage is 50 mg daily (see Pediatric Use under PRECAUTIONS). Dose frequency: The magnitude of within-day fluctuation of arterial pressure during therapy with minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) is directly proportional to the extent of pressure reduction. If supine diastolic pressure has been reduced less than 30 mm Hg, the drug need be administered only once a day; if supine diastolic pressure has been reduced more than 30 mm Hg, the daily dosage should be divided into two equal parts.
Frequency of dosage adjustmentDosage must be titrated carefully according to individual response. Intervals between dosage adjustments normally should be at least 3 days since the full response to a given dose is not obtained for at least that amount of time. Where a more rapid management of hypertension is required, dose adjustments can be made every 6 hours if the patient is carefully monitored.
Concomitant therapy: Diuretic and beta-blocker or other sympathetic nervous system suppressant.
Diuretics:Minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) must be used in conjunction with a diuretic in patients relying on renal function for maintaining salt and water balance. Diuretics have been used at the following dosages when starting therapy with minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) : hydrochlorothiazide (50 mg, b.i.d.) or other thiazides at equieffective dosage; chlorthalidone (50 to 100 mg, once daily); furosemide (40 mg, b.i.d.). If excessive salt and water retention results in a weight gain of more than 5 pounds, diuretic therapy should be changed to furosemide; if the patient is already taking furosemide, dosage should be increased in accordance with the patient's requirements.
Beta-blocker or other sympathetic nervous system suppressantsWhen therapy with minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) is begun, the dosage of a beta-adrenergic receptor blocking drug should be the equivalent of 80 to 160 mg of propranolol per day in divided doses.
If beta-blockers are contraindicated, methyldopa (250 to 750 mg, b.i.d.) may be used instead. Methyldopa must be given for at least 24 hours before starting therapy with minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) because of the delay in the onset of methyldopa's action. Limited clinical experience indicates that clonidine may also be used to prevent tachycardia induced by minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) ; the usual dosage is 0.1 to 0.2 mg twice daily.
Sympathetic nervous system suppressants may not completely prevent an increase in heart rate due to minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) but usually do prevent tachycardia. Typically, patients receiving a beta-blocker prior to initiation of therapy with minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) have a bradycardia and can be expected to have an increase in heart rate toward normal when minoxidil is added. When treatment with minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil (minoxidil tablets) tablets) tablets) and beta-blocker or other sympathetic nervous system suppressant are begun simultaneously, their opposing cardiac effects usually nullify each other, leading to little change in heart rate.
See "Interaction with Guanethidine" under WARNINGS.