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Rowasa
Clinical Pharmacology
Rowasa
Mesalamine administered rectally as ROWASA® (Mesalamine) Rectal Suspension Enema is poorly absorbed from the colon and is excreted principally in the feces during subsequent bowel movements. The extent of absorption is dependent upon the retention time of the drug product, and there is considerable individual variation. At steady state, approximately 10 to 30% of the daily 4-gram dose can be recovered in cumulative 24-hour urine collections. Other than the kidney, the organ distribution and other bioavailability characteristics of absorbed mesalamine in man are not known. It is known that the compound undergoes acetylation but whether this process takes place at colonic or systemic sites has not been elucidated.
Whatever the metabolic site, most of the absorbed mesalamine is excreted in the urine as the N-acetyl-5-ASA metabolite. The poor colonic absorption of rectally administered mesalamine is substantiated by the low serum concentration of 5-ASA and N-acetyl-5-ASA seen in ulcerative colitis patients after dosage with mesalamine. Under clinical conditions patients demonstrated plasma levels 10 to 12 hours post mesalamine administration of 2 µg/mL, about two-thirds of which was the N-acetyl metabolite. While the elimination half-life of mesalamine is short (0.5 to 1.5 h), the acetylated metabolite exhibits a half-life of 5 to 10 hours [U. Klotz, Clin. Pharmacokin. 10:285-302 (1985)]. In addition, steady state plasma levels demonstrated a lack of accumulation of either free or metabolized drug during repeated daily administrations.
Efficacy
In a placebo-controlled, international, multicenter trial of 153 patients with active distal ulcerative colitis, proctosigmoiditis or proctitis, ROWASA® (Mesalamine) Rectal Suspension Enema reduced the overall disease activity index (DAI) and individual components as follows:
EFFECT OF TREATMENT ON SEVERITY OF DISEASE
DATA FROM U.S.-CANADA TRIAL
COMBINED RESULTS OF EIGHT CENTERS
Activity Indices, mean
| N | Base- line | Day 22 | End Point | Change Baseline to End Point* | ||
| Overall DAI | ROWASA® | 76 | 7.42 | 4.05† | 3.37‡ | -55.07%‡ |
| Placebo | 77 | 7 40 | 6.03 | 5.83 | -21.58% | |
| Stool Frequency | ROWASA® | 1.58 | 1.11§ | 1.01† | -0.57§ | |
| Placebo | 1.92 | 1.47 | 1.50 | -0.41 | ||
| Rectal Bleeding | ROWASA® | 1.8? | 0.59‡ | 0.51† | -1.30‡ | |
| Placebo | 1.73 | 1.21 | 1.11 | -0.61 | ||
| Mucosal Inflammation | ROWASA® | 2.17 | 1.22† | 0.96‡ | -1.21† | |
| Placebo | 2.18 | 1.74 | 1.61 | -0.56 | ||
| Physician's Assessment Df Disease Severity | ROWASA® | 1.86 | 1.13‡ | 0.88‡ | -0.97‡ | |
| Placebo | 1.87 | 1.62 | 1.55 | -0.30 | ||
| Each parameter has a 4-point scale with a numerical rating:0
= normal, 1 = mild, 2 = moderate, 3 = severe. The four parameters are addedtogether
to produce a maximum overall DAI of 12. * Percent change for overall DAI only (calculated by taking the average of the change for each individual patient). † Significant ROWASA/placebo difference, p < 0.01 ‡ Significant ROWASA/placebo difference, p < 0.001 § Significant ROWASA/placebo difference, p < 0.05 |
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Generic Name: Mesalamine Rectal Suspension Enema
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