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chlorproPAMIDE
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(klor PROE pa mide)

Uses

Diabetes Mellitus

Used as monotherapy as an adjunct to diet and exercise for management of type 2 (noninsulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus in patients whose hyperglycemia cannot be controlled with diet and exercise alone.

Used as second-line therapy in combination with one or more other oral antidiabetic agents or insulin as an adjunct to diet and exercise in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus in whom adequate glycemic control cannot be achieved with oral antidiabetic agent monotherapy.

Alternative therapy in some type 2 diabetic patients being treated with insulin or other antidiabetic agent(s). Useful in combination with insulin to improve glycemic control and/or decrease insulin dosage in some type 2 diabetic patients.

Not effective as sole therapy in patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus or diabetic acidosis, ketosis, or coma; insulin is necessary. (See Contraindications under Cautions.)

Not routinely recommended in hospitalized patients with diabetes mellitus. Long duration of action precludes rapid dosage adjustments. Increased risk of hypoglycemia in hospitalized diabetic patients with irregular eating patterns.

Dosage and Administration

General

  • Adjust dosage according to severity of disease, tolerance, and blood glucose determinations.
  • Monitor regularly (e.g., blood glucose concentrations) to determine minimum effective dosage and to detect primary failure or secondary failure. (See Loss of Glycemic Control under Cautions.)
  • Monitor glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) to determine patient’s continued response to therapy.
  • Administration of loading dose is not recommended.
  • During transfer from insulin therapy, patients should test their blood glucose concentrations ≥3 times daily. (See Advice to Patients.) Early hypoglycemia (≤24 hours) following transfer from intermediate or long-acting insulins usually results from insulin carry-over rather than from chlorpropamide. In some patients, consider hospitalization during transition period.

Administration

Oral Administration

Administer orally as a single daily dose each morning with breakfast. May administer in 2 divided doses if GI intolerance occurs.

Dosage

Adults

Diabetes Mellitus

Initiation
Oral

Initially, 250 mg daily.

Initial Dosage in Patients Transferred from Other Oral Antidiabetic Agents
Oral

Initially, 250 mg daily. May abruptly discontinue the other oral antidiabetic agent.

Initial Dosage in Patients Transferred from Insulin
Oral

Insulin requirements ≤40 units daily: Initially, 250 mg daily. Abruptly discontinue insulin.

Insulin requirements >40 units daily: Initially, 250 mg daily; reduce daily insulin dosage by 50% for first few days. Subsequently, adjust insulin dosage according to therapeutic response.

Titration and Maintenance Dosage
Oral

5–7 days after initiating therapy, titrate dosage in increments or decrements of ≤50–125 mg daily at 3- to 5-day intervals to achieve adequate glycemic control; more frequent dosage adjustments usually undesirable.

Usual maintenance dosage is 100–500 mg daily. Patients not responding to 500 mg daily are unlikely to respond to higher dosages.

Prescribing Limits

Adults

Diabetes Mellitus

Oral

Maximum 750 mg daily.

Special Populations

Hepatic Impairment

Use conservative initial and maintenance dosages to avoid hypoglycemia. (See Hepatic Impairment under Cautions.)

Renal Impairment

Use conservative initial and maintenance dosages to avoid hypoglycemia. (See Renal Impairment under Cautions.)

Geriatric Patients

Initially, 100–125 mg daily. Use conservative initial and maintenance dosages to avoid hypoglycemia. (See Geriatric Use under Cautions.)

Debilitated or Malnourished Patients

Use conservative initial and maintenance dosages to avoid hypoglycemia.

Pituitary or Adrenal Insufficiency

Use conservative initial and maintenance dosages to avoid hypoglycemia.


Last Updated: July 01, 2008
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