Label: LAMOTRIGINE EXTENDED RELEASE tablet

  • NDC Code(s): 49884-561-01, 49884-561-05, 49884-561-11, 49884-562-01, view more
  • Packager: Endo USA, Inc.
  • Category: HUMAN PRESCRIPTION DRUG LABEL
  • DEA Schedule: None
  • Marketing Status: Abbreviated New Drug Application

Drug Label Information

Updated April 1, 2021

If you are a consumer or patient please visit this version.

  • HIGHLIGHTS OF PRESCRIBING INFORMATION
    These highlights do not include all the information needed to use LAMOTRIGINE EXTENDED-RELEASE TABLETS safely and effectively. See full prescribing information for LAMOTRIGINE EXTENDED-RELEASE ...
  • Table of Contents
    Table of Contents
  • BOXED WARNING (What is this?)

    WARNING: SERIOUS SKIN RASHES

    Lamotrigine extended-release can cause serious rashes requiring hospitalization and discontinuation of treatment. The incidence of these rashes, which have included Stevens-Johnson syndrome, is approximately 0.8% (8 per 1,000) in pediatric patients (aged 2 to 16 years) receiving immediate-release lamotrigine as adjunctive therapy for epilepsy and 0.3% (3 per 1,000) in adults on adjunctive therapy for epilepsy. In a prospectively followed cohort of 1,983 pediatric patients (aged 2 to 16 years) with epilepsy taking adjunctive immediate-release lamotrigine, there was 1 rash-related death. Lamotrigine extended-release is not approved for patients younger than 13 years. In worldwide postmarketing experience, rare cases of toxic epidermal necrolysis and/or rash-related death have been reported in adult and pediatric patients, but their numbers are too few to permit a precise estimate of the rate.

    The risk of serious rash caused by treatment with lamotrigine extended-release is not expected to differ from that with immediate-release lamotrigine. However, the relatively limited treatment experience with lamotrigine extended-release makes it difficult to characterize the frequency and risk of serious rashes caused by treatment with lamotrigine extended-release.

    Other than age, there are as yet no factors identified that are known to predict the risk of occurrence or the severity of rash caused by lamotrigine extended-release. There are suggestions, yet to be proven, that the risk of rash may also be increased by (1) coadministration of lamotrigine extended-release with valproate (includes valproic acid and divalproex sodium), (2) exceeding the recommended initial dose of lamotrigine extended-release, or (3) exceeding the recommended dose escalation for lamotrigine extended-release. However, cases have occurred in the absence of these factors.

    Nearly all cases of life-threatening rashes caused by immediate-release lamotrigine have occurred within 2 to 8 weeks of treatment initiation. However, isolated cases have occurred after prolonged treatment (e.g., 6 months). Accordingly, duration of therapy cannot be relied upon as means to predict the potential risk heralded by the first appearance of a rash.

    Although benign rashes are also caused by lamotrigine extended-release, it is not possible to predict reliably which rashes will prove to be serious or life-threatening. Accordingly, lamotrigine extended-release should ordinarily be discontinued at the first sign of rash, unless the rash is clearly not drug-related. Discontinuation of treatment may not prevent a rash from becoming life-threatening or permanently disabling or disfiguring [see WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS (5.1)].

    Close
  • 1 INDICATIONS AND USAGE
    1.1 Adjunctive Therapy - Lamotrigine extended-release is indicated as adjunctive therapy for primary generalized tonic-clonic (PGTC) seizures and partial-onset seizures with or without ...
  • 2 DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION
    Lamotrigine Extended-Release Tablets are taken once daily, with or without food. Tablets must be swallowed whole and must not be chewed, crushed, or divided. 2.1 General Dosing ...
  • 3 DOSAGE FORMS AND STRENGTHS
    3.1 Extended-Release Tablets - 25 mg, round, beige, biconvex, film-coated tablet debossed with “561” on one side and “Par” on the other - 50 mg, round, white, biconvex, film-coated tablet ...
  • 4 CONTRAINDICATIONS
    Lamotrigine extended-release is contraindicated in patients who have demonstrated hypersensitivity (e.g., rash, angioedema, acute urticaria, extensive pruritus, mucosal ulceration) to the drug or ...
  • 5 WARNINGS AND PRECAUTIONS
    5.1 Serious Skin Rashes (see BOXED WARNING) The risk of serious rash caused by treatment with lamotrigine extended-release is not expected to differ from that with the immediate-release ...
  • 6 ADVERSE REACTIONS
    The following serious adverse reactions are described in more detail in the Warnings and Precautions section of the labeling: Serious Skin Rashes [see WARNINGS AND ...
  • 7 DRUG INTERACTIONS
    Significant drug interactions with lamotrigine are summarized in this section. Additional details of these drug interaction studies, which were conducted using the immediate-release lamotrigine ...
  • 8 USE IN SPECIFIC POPULATIONS
    8.1 Pregnancy - Pregnancy Exposure Registry - There is a pregnancy exposure registry that monitors pregnancy outcomes in women exposed to AEDs, including lamotrigine extended-release, during ...
  • 10 OVERDOSAGE
    10.1 Human Overdose Experience - Overdoses involving quantities up to 15 g have been reported for immediate-release lamotrigine, some of which have been fatal. Overdose has resulted in ataxia ...
  • 11 DESCRIPTION
    Lamotrigine Extended-Release, an AED of the phenyltriazine class, is chemically unrelated to existing AEDs. Lamotrigine's chemical name is 3,5-diamino-6-(2,3-dichlorophenyl)-as-triazine, its ...
  • 12 CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
    12.1 Mechanism of Action - The precise mechanism(s) by which lamotrigine exerts its anticonvulsant action are unknown. In animal models designed to detect anticonvulsant activity, lamotrigine ...
  • 13 NONCLINICAL TOXICOLOGY
    13.1 Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, Impairment of Fertility - No evidence of carcinogenicity was seen in mice or rats following oral administration of lamotrigine for up to 2 years at doses up to ...
  • 14 CLINICAL STUDIES
    14.1 Adjunctive Therapy for Primary Generalized Tonic-Clonic Seizures - The effectiveness of Lamotrigine extended-release as adjunctive therapy in subjects with PGTC seizures was established in a ...
  • 15 REFERENCES
    1. French JA, Wang S, Warnock B, Temkin N. Historical control monotherapy design in the treatment of epilepsy. Epilepsia. 2010; 51 (10): 1936-1943.
  • 16 HOW SUPPLIED/STORAGE AND HANDLING
    Lamotrigine Extended-Release Tablets - 25 mg, round, beige, biconvex, film-coated tablet debossed with “561” on one side and “Par” on the other - 30 Tablets - (NDC 49884-561-11) 100 Tablets - (NDC ...
  • 17 PATIENT COUNSELING INFORMATION
    Advise the patient to read the FDA-approved patient labeling (Medication Guide). Rash - Prior to initiation of treatment with lamotrigine extended-release, inform patients that a rash or other ...
  • MEDICATION GUIDE
    Lamotrigine (la-MO-tri-jen) Extended-Release Tablets - What is the most important information I should know about Lamotrigine extended-release tablets? 1. Lamotrigine extended-release tablets ...
  • PRINCIPAL DISPLAY PANEL
    This is an image of Lamotrigine Extended-Release Tablets 25 mg 30 tablets.
  • PRINCIPAL DISPLAY PANEL
    This is an image of Lamotrigine Extended-Release Tablets 50 mg 30 tablets.
  • PRINCIPAL DISPLAY PANEL
    This is an image of Lamotrigine Extended-Release Tablets 100 mg 30 tablets.
  • PRINCIPAL DISPLAY PANEL
    This is an image of Lamotrigine Extended-Release Tablets 200 mg 30 tablets.
  • PRINCIPAL DISPLAY PANEL
    This is an image of Lamotrigine Extended-Release Tablets 250 mg 30 tablets.
  • PRINCIPAL DISPLAY PANEL
    This is an image of Lamotrigine Extended-Release Tablets 300 mg 30 tablets.
  • INGREDIENTS AND APPEARANCE
    Product Information