Consumer medicine information

QUADRAMET

Samarium (153Sm) lexidronam

BRAND INFORMATION

Brand name

Quadramet

Active ingredient

Samarium (153Sm) lexidronam

Schedule

Unscheduled

 

Consumer medicine information (CMI) leaflet

Please read this leaflet carefully before you start using QUADRAMET.

What is this leaflet

This leaflet answers some common questions about Quadramet. It does not contain all the available information. It does not take the place of you talking to your nuclear medicine specialist.

All medicines have risks and benefits. Your physician has weighed the small risk of you being treated with Quadramet against the benefits it is expected that you will receive.

If you have any concerns about being given this injection, discuss them with your nuclear medicine specialist.

Keep this leaflet. You may need to read it again.

What Quadramet is used for

Quadramet is used to help in relieving the pain caused by tumour deposits in the bone. The drug is taken up particularly strongly in injured bone, which is often where the tumour is located. The radioactive component of the drug gives off radiation, which reduces tumour activity and associated pain.

The purpose of Quadramet is to relieve pain caused by tumour in bone. It is not a cure for cancer and will not have any effect upon tumour not in the bone.

How long the relief will last is unpredictable, and may vary from weeks to months. Not all pain is due to tumour in bone, and this drug will not help relieve pain caused by tumour outside the bone.

Quadramet is usually given following other treatments. Ask your specialist to explain why this treatment has been proposed for you.

For more information, ask for a copy of the booklet Nuclear Medicine - Answering Your Questions, available from the hospital, clinic or supplier.

Before you are given it

Tell the doctor who is to treat you if:

  1. You are pregnant or intend to become pregnant
    It is not know whether Quadramet is harmful to an unborn baby when administered to a pregnant woman.
    If you intend to become pregnant consult your doctor about the advised waiting period.
  2. You are breast-feeding
    Quadramet has a serious potential to harm breast-fed infants. You should stop breast-feeding before and during your treatment with Quadramet.
  3. You have had any chemotherapy or radiotherapy in the last 6 weeks
    Quadramet treatment may make worse unwanted side effects of previous chemotherapy or radiotherapy.

Preparation

You will be asked to drink at least 2 cups of fluid prior to the injection. You may eat or drink or take your usual medications.

How Quadramet is used

The person administering the dose will insert a small plastic tube into a vein in your arm to allow the Quadramet to be given. It may sting during insertion and for a short time after, but then the injection can be given through the tube. After a check that the tube is in position, the Quadramet will be injected followed by a little water to make sure all the Quadramet has been injected. The tube will then be removed.

Occasionally there may be some residual discomfort at the injection site and, rarely, some bleeding or bruising.

After being given the injection, you may need to wait in the clinic for about 2 hours to make sure that you have no problems with the treatment. Your physician may keep you in the hospital for one or two days after the treatment, if required.

After being given Quadramet

You should drink plenty of fluids in the first six hours after treatment, and empty your bladder frequently - at least every hour. For the first 24 hours after your treatment you should be careful when going to the toilet not to spill any urine and to flush the toilet well.

Whenever possible, use a toilet rather than a urinal. Clean up spilled urine complete and wash your hands thoroughly.

No other activity will be affected by this treatment. You should be able to do things that you could do before the injection.

Side effects

Tell the person treating you as soon as possible if you do not feel well after having had the injection of Quadramet.

About 10% of patients will experience a temporary increase in pain some time in the first week of treatment. The paint usually responds to an increase in pain killers and is temporary.

Treatment often produces a fall in the number of red cells and white cells produced in the bone marrow. This is usually temporary and does not pose a problem. You may need to have weekly blood tests, starting 2 weeks after treatment, until this effect has diminished.

In some patients, especially those who have received considerable chemotherapy or radiotherapy, the fall in the number of red cells and white cells may be severe with increase chances of bleeding, injection or anaemia developing. This may require transfusions with blood products to correct, and may be fatal in a very small number of cases. In the very unlikely event that the bone marrow should be severely affected, any further chemotherapy or radiotherapy may have to be delayed until it recovers.

Other less serious side effects experienced are diarrhoea, nausea and/or vomiting, fever and/or chills and dizziness. This is not a complete list. If you experience any of these or other side effects, consult with your doctor.

Overdosage

The usual dose will be calculated by a qualified nuclear medicine physician and the possibility of overdosing is minimal.

Storage

Quadramet is stored by the hospital or clinic in a freezer at -10 to -20°C inside a shielded container. The injection is thawed out before administration.

The Nuclear Medicine technologist or specialist will be responsible for checking the expiry date of the product before administering it to you.

Product description

What it looks like

Quadramet is a colourless or light amber aqueous FROZEN solution that comes in a 10 ml vial.

Ingredients

Active

Samarium (153Sm) Lexidronam Pentasodium

Inactive

  • Ethylenediaminetetramethylene (phosphonic acid monohydrate)
  • Calcium hydroxide
  • Sodium hydroxide
  • Hydrochloric acid
  • Water

Aust R 62521

Supplier

Quadramet is supplied in Australia by:

ANSTO Health
Locked Bag 2001
Kirrawee DC, NSW 2232
Telephone: 1800 251 572
Facsimile: 02 9543 6511

ANSTO Health is a commercial enterprise of the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO), which is located at Lucas Heights, in Sydney, NSW.

Date of Revision: January 2012
Date of Printing: January 2012

Published by MIMS May 2016

BRAND INFORMATION

Brand name

Quadramet

Active ingredient

Samarium (153Sm) lexidronam

Schedule

Unscheduled

 

Name of the medicine

Samarium (153Sm) lexidronam pentasodium.

Excipients.

Each mL of solution contains: less than 200 microgram of total Samarium; 35 mg EDTMP (calculated as the monohydrate); 2.9 mg calcium ion; 8.1 mg sodium ion and chloride ion as a result of the manufacturing process. It contains no antimicrobial agent.

Description

Quadramet is supplied in single dose vials, containing 6 GBq of radioactive Samarium-153 complexed with ethylenediaminetetramethylenephosphonic acid monohydrate (EDTMP) in 3 mL, as a frozen, sterile, colourless to light amber, preservative free, isotonic solution for intravenous injection. It contains no antimicrobial agent.
Each mL of solution contains: less than 200 microgram of total Samarium; 35 mg EDTMP (calculated as the monohydrate); 2.9 mg calcium ion; 8.1 mg sodium ion and chloride ion as a result of the manufacturing process. It contains no antimicrobial agent.
The radioactive concentration is between 1.8-2.2 GBq/mL at calibration. The pH of the solution is 7.0 to 8.5.
Due to the neutron flux limitations at the Australian nuclear reactor, Quadramet manufactured in Australia has a lower specific activity of total samarium (< 200 microgram/mL) compared with 20-46 microgram/mL for the USA and European products.

Physical characteristics of 153Sm.

Samarium-153 is produced in high yield and purity by neutron irradiation of isotopically enriched samarium-152 oxide. It emits both medium energy beta particles and an imageable gamma photon, and has a physical half-life of 46.7 hours. Samarium-153 has average and maximum beta particle ranges in water of 0.5 mm and 3.0 mm, respectively. The primary radiation emissions of samarium-153 are shown in Table 1.
See Table 2.

External radiation.

The specific gamma ray constant for samarium-153 is 2.44 x 10-5 mGy/MBq/hr at 1 metre. The half value thickness of lead (Pb) for samarium-153 is approximately 0.10 mm. The use of 1 mm of lead will decrease the external radiation exposure by a factor of approximately 1,000. Quadramet should be stored frozen in a shielded container until use.

Pharmacology

Quadramet has an affinity for skeletal tissue and concentrates in areas of bone turnover in intimate association with hydroxyapatite. Studies in rats have demonstrated that Quadramet is cleared rapidly from the blood and localises to growing areas of bone matrix, specifically the layer of osteoid undergoing mineralisation. In clinical studies employing planar imaging techniques, Quadramet accumulates with a lesion to normal bone ratio of approximately 5 and a lesion to soft tissue ratio of approximately 6. Lesion to normal bone ratios in animals were approximately 17. Thus, areas of metastatic involvement can accumulate significantly greater amounts of Quadramet than surrounding normal bone.

Pharmacokinetics.

In patients, Quadramet is rapidly cleared from the blood. Thirty minutes after injection of 37 MBq/kg of the agent to 12 patients, only 10.9 ± 6% (mean ± SD) of the administered dose remained in plasma. At 6 hours, plasma radioactivity had decreased to 0.5 ± 0.3% of the administered dose. Urinary excretion occurred predominantly during the first 6 hours (38.9 ± 24.4%). Analysis of urine samples from patients administered Quadramet in North America found the radioactivity to be present as the intact complex. Less urinary excretion occurred in patients who had extensive bony metastases, regardless of the amount of radiopharmaceutical administered.
Total skeletal uptake of Quadramet in international studies of 453 patients with a variety of primary malignancies was 65.5 ± 15.5% of the administered dose.
A positive correlation was found between skeletal uptake and the number of metastatic sites. In contrast, skeletal uptake was inversely proportional to plasma radioactivity at 30 minutes and was unaffected by the amount of Quadramet administered.

Indications

Quadramet is indicated for the relief of bone pain in patients with painful osteoblastic skeletal metastases as indicated by a positive bone scan. The presence of bone metastases should be confirmed prior to therapy.

Contraindications

Since Quadramet causes myelosuppression, its use is contraindicated in patients who have severely compromised bone marrow reserves (see also Precautions).
Quadramet should not be given concurrently with chemotherapy or external beam radiation therapy, because of potential for additive effects on bone marrow.
Quadramet may be given subsequent to either of the treatments after allowing for adequate marrow recovery.
Quadramet is contraindicated in patients who have known hypersensitivity to EDTMP or similar phosphonate compounds.

Precautions

General.

Radiopharmaceuticals should be used only by physicians who are qualified by specific training in the safe use and handling of radionuclides produced by nuclear reactor or particle accelerator and whose experience and training have been approved by the appropriate government agency authorised to licence the use of radionuclides.
To minimise radiation exposure to clinical personnel and other patients, the patient should be treated in a facility with appropriate shielding.
Due care and appropriate safety measures should always be practiced.

Use with caution in the following circumstances.

Use of Quadramet in patients with evidence of compromised bone marrow reserve from previous therapy or disease involvement is not recommended unless the potential benefit of the treatment outweighs its risks. Decreases in white blood cell (WBC) counts and platelet counts were observed in patients receiving Quadramet in clinical trials. Counts decreased to a nadir of approximately 40% to 50% of baseline in a predictable fashion 3 to 5 weeks after a dose, and generally returned to pretreatment levels by 8 weeks post-treatment. These changes were rarely clinically significant. A few patients who experienced grade 3 or 4 haematopoietic toxicity usually either had a history of recent external beam radiation therapy or chemotherapy or had rapidly progressive disease with probable bone marrow involvement. In general, repeat administration of Quadramet should be based on an individual patient's response to prior treatment, current symptoms and haematologic status. The treatment should not be repeated for at least 8 weeks after a previous dose and only then when WBC and platelet counts have sufficiently recovered.
Since Quadramet is myelosuppressive, it should be administered with caution in patients who may be candidates for other myelosuppressive therapies, including those patients with extensive soft tissue metastases.
Conditions that require urgent surgical treatment, such as impending pathological fracture and impending spinal cord compression, should be excluded before Quadramet is administered.

Renal impairment.

The use of Quadramet in patients with renal impairment has not been studied.

Check the following before use.

Verification of the dose to be administered and patient identification is necessary prior to administration of Quadramet.
Parenteral drug products should be inspected visually for particulate matter and discolouration prior to administration whenever solution and container permit. The solution should not be used if it is cloudy or if it contains particulate matter.
The product is supplied frozen; do not use if the solution is not frozen or thawed on receipt.
Quadramet contains calcium and may be incompatible with solutions that contain molecules that complex with and form calcium precipitates and, therefore, should not be diluted or mixed with other solutions.

Carcinogenesis, mutagenesis, impairment of fertility.

EDTMP alone caused metaphyseal osteosclerosis and osteosarcomas at oral doses of 50 mg/kg/day and greater in a 2 year study in rats. Nonradioactive samarium-EDTMP was not genotoxic in a battery of assays for gene mutations, chromosomal and DNA damage, but, in all the tests except the Salmonella typhimurium reverse mutation assay, the concentrations/ doses of drug employed were insufficient to cause toxicity and the results may have been invalid.
No studies have been done to assess the effect of Quadramet on fertility.

Use in pregnancy.

(Category D)
Quadramet may cause harm to the foetus if administered during pregnancy. There are no adequate and well controlled studies in pregnant women or animals. If this drug is used during pregnancy, or the patient becomes pregnant after taking this drug, the patient should be apprised of the potential hazard to the foetus.
Women of childbearing potential should be advised to avoid becoming pregnant.

Use in lactation.

It is not known whether Quadramet is excreted in human milk. As the drug has a serious potential to harm breastfed infants, Quadramet should not be used by lactating patients.

Paediatric use.

Safety and effectiveness in children below the age of 18 years have not been established.

Interactions

Quadramet should not be given concurrently with chemotherapy or external beam radiation therapy, because of potential additive effects on bone marrow.
Quadramet may be given subsequent to either of these treatments after allowing for adequate marrow recovery.

Adverse Effects

The toxicities of Quadramet result from predictable myelosuppression. In clinical trials, WBC and platelet nadirs were usually observed 3 to 5 weeks after treatment with values generally returning toward normal by week 8.
Thrombocytopenia and leucopenia were generally mild to moderate in nature. More profound marrow toxicity should be managed by conventional means.
One patient with rapidly progressive prostate cancer and evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation developed thrombocytopenia and experienced a fatal cerebrovascular accident 4 weeks after receiving Quadramet.
Flare reactions, i.e. worsening of pain shortly after treatment, occurred in a small number of patients who received Quadramet. The flare reactions generally occurred within 3 days after treatment and were usually mild, transient, self limiting and controllable with analgesics.
The most common adverse events observed in controlled clinical studies of Quadramet are given in Table 3 (Reference: US PI for Quadramet Feb 1997. - 513145-0297).
Any suspected adverse reaction should be reported to:
Office of Medicine Safety Monitoring
Therapeutic Goods Administration
PO Box 100, Woden ACT 2606
Fax: 02 6232 8180

Dosage and Administration

The recommended dose of Quadramet is 37 MBq/kg administered intravenously as a bolus through an established i.v. line over a period of one minute.
The patient dose should be measured by a suitable radioactivity calibration system, such as a radioisotope dose calibrator, immediately before administration.
To calibrate dose calibrators for Quadramet, an accurately measured secondary standard of samarium-153 can be obtained from the manufacturer.
The pH of the drug product should be between 7 and 8.5.
The patient should be encouraged to ingest (or receive by i.v. administration) a minimum of 500 mL (2 cups) of fluids prior to injection and should be encouraged to void as often as possible after injection to minimise radiation exposure to the bladder.
No data is available on the use of Quadramet in patients with renal impairment.
For incontinent patients, special precautions such as bladder catheterisation should be taken following administration to minimise the risk of radioactive contamination of clothing, bed linen and the patient's environment.
Urinary excretion of Quadramet is essentially complete by 6 hours.
The solution does not contain any antimicrobial agents; discard any residue.
Currently, there are no Australian regulations or guidelines about discharge of patients given Quadramet. Regulations in the United States state that a patient receiving Quadramet may be discharged providing the external exposure is < 0.05 mSv/hr at a distance of 1 metre. Measurements taken during US clinical trials indicated that such a level is only attained after administration of very large amounts of 153Sm (≈ 8 GBq). In general these limits are not exceeded even immediately after administration.
Blood counts should be monitored weekly, beginning 2 weeks after administration of Quadramet, for at least 8 weeks, or until recovery of adequate bone marrow function.

Radiation dosimetry.

The estimated absorbed radiation doses to an average adult patient from an i.v. injection of Quadramet are shown in Table 4. The dosimetry estimates were based on clinical biodistribution studies using methods developed for radiation dose calculations by the Medical Internal Radiation Dose (MIRD) Committee of the Society of Nuclear Medicine.
Because Quadramet is excreted in the urine, radiation exposure was based on a urinary voiding interval of 4.8 hours. Radiation dose estimates for bone and marrow assume that radioactivity is deposited on bone surfaces, in accordance with autoradiograms of bone samples taken from patients who received Quadramet. Although electron emissions from samarium-153 are abundant, with energies up to 810 keV, rapid blood clearance of Quadramet and low energy and abundant photon emissions generally result in low radiation doses to those parts of the body where the complex does not localise.
When blastic osseous metastases are present, significantly enhanced localisation of the radiopharmaceutical will occur, with correspondingly higher doses to the metastases compared with normal bone and other organs.
The maximum additional effective dose which may result from the administration of 37 MBq/kg to a 70 kg patient from the presence of impurity 154 Eu at the maximum permitted level is 0.5 mSv/year.

Overdosage

The absolute maximum amount of Quadramet that can be safely administered has not been determined. In early clinical trials, single doses as high as 111 MBq/kg were administered; the highest absolute dose received was 11 GBq. The maximum tolerated dose was 93 MBq/kg in patients with prostate cancer and 56 MBq/kg in patients with breast cancer who were heavily pretreated with chemotherapy. There is no known antidote for Quadramet overdose.
The anticipated complications of overdose would be secondary to bone marrow suppression.

Presentation

The product is supplied as a frozen sterile aqueous solution of Samarium [153Sm] Lexidronam pentasodium in a 10 mL vial (AUST R 62521).
The vial is contained in a 6 mm lead pot.

Storage

Store frozen at -10 to -20 degrees Celsius in a shielded container.
Storage and disposal of all radioactive wastes should be carried out in accordance with the NH and MRC 'Code of practice for the disposal of radioactive wastes by the user' (1985).
The product should be thawed and administered at 37 MBq/kg within 8 hours after thawing.

Expiry.

Quadramet expires after 48 hours of the calibration time and date given on the label, or 8 hours after thawing, whichever is earlier.

Poison Schedule

Unscheduled.