Classes
DEA Class; Rx
Common Brand Names; ReVia, Vivitrol, Depade
- Opioid Antagonists
Description
Opiate antagonist.
Used as an aid in relapse prevention in alcohol and/or opiate dependence; has been used as part of rapid and ultrarapid detoxification techniques.
Better bioavailability and longer duration of action than naloxone; will not prevent opiate withdrawal.
Indications
Indicated for the maintenance treatment of alcohol dependence.
Contraindications
Patients who are on opioid analgesics, are opioid-dependent (eg, opioid agonists [methadone], opioid partial agonists [buprenorphine]), are in acute opioid withdrawal, have positive urine test for opioids, or fail to pass naloxone challenge
Hypersensitivity
Adverse Effects
- Injection site reaction (69%; includes bruising, induration, nodules, pain, pruritus, swelling, tenderness)
- Nausea (33%)
- Headache (25%)
- Decreased appetite (14%)
- Insomnia (14%)
- Vomiting (14%)
- Diarrhea (13%)
- Dizziness (13%)
- Upper respiratory tract infection (URTI) (13%)
- Anxiety (12%)
- Arthralgia (12%)
- Increased creatine phosphokinase (11%)
- Pharyngitis (11%)
- Depression (8%)
- Muscle cramps (8%)
- Back pain (6%)
- Rash (6%)
- Dry mouth (5%)
- Somnolence (4%)
- Increased aspartate aminotransferase (AST) (2%)
- Alopecia
- Dyspnea
- Edema
- Hepatocellular injury
- Increased systolic and diastolic blood pressures
- Liver function abnormalities
- Labored breathing
- Nonspecific electrocardiographic (ECG) changes
- Opiate withdrawal (mild to severe signs and symptoms, including drug craving, confusion, drowsiness, visual hallucinations, abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea)
- Palpitation
- Phlebitis
- Tachycardia
Warnings
Administer as a deep intramuscular gluteal injection; inadvertent subcutaneous injection may increase likelihood of severe injection site reactions; the needles provided in the carton are customized needles
Depression, suicide, and suicidality cited in postmarketing reports; causal relation not demonstrated
Vulnerability to opioid overdose: Patients should be alerted that they may be more sensitive to opioids, even at lower doses, after discontinuance of naltrexone
Opioid withdrawal precipitated abruptly by administration of opioid antagonist to opioid-dependent patient may result in withdrawal syndrome severe enough to necessitate hospitalization (see Contraindications)
Risk of hepatotoxicity with increasing doses; dose related hepatocellular injury; discontinue therapy if signs/symptoms of acute hepatitis develop
Injection may cause severe injection-site reactions (eg, cellulitis, necrosis, hematoma); may be followed by pain, tenderness, induration, swelling, erythema, bruising, or pruritus; however, in some cases injection site reactions may be very severe andmay last for several weeks following administration
Injectable microspheres are for IM use only; inadvertent SC/IV administration may increase risk of severe injection-site reactions
Cases of eosinophilic pneumonia reported; consider in patients with symptoms of progressive hypoxia and dyspnea
Use caution in patients with hepatic failure or with bleeding disorder including thrombocytopenia and hemophilia, or patients taking anticoagulant therapy; beeding hematoma may occur from IM administration
Use caution in renal impairment or hepatic impairment
Patients should be opioid free for a minimum of 7-10 days before initiating therapy; a naltrexone challenge test recommended to confirm opioid-free status
Pregnancy and Lactation
The available data from published case series with use in pregnant women are insufficient to identify a drug-associated risk of major birth defects, miscarriage or adverse maternal or fetal outcomes
The drug and metabolites, are present in human milk; there are no data on effects on breastfed infant or on milk production
Maximum Dosage
150 mg/day PO; 380 mg/dose IM.
150 mg/day PO; 380 mg/dose IM.
Safety and efficacy have not been established.
Safety and efficacy have not been established.
How supplied
Naltrexone hydrochloride
tablet
- 50mg
microspheres for IM injection
- 380mg