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FDA Drug information

Cortrosyn

Read time: 3 mins
Marketing start date: 23 Nov 2024

Summary of product characteristics


Adverse Reactions

Adverse Reactions Since CORTROSYN™ (cosyntropin) for Injection is intended for diagnostic and not therapeutic use, adverse reactions other than a rare hypersensitivity reaction are not anticipated. A rare hypersensitivity reaction usually associated with a pre-existing allergic disease and/or a previous reaction to natural ACTH is possible. Symptoms may include slight whealing with splotchy erythema at the injection site. There have been rare reports of anaphylactic reaction. The following adverse reactions have been reported in patients after the administration of CORTROSYN™ and the association has been neither confirmed nor refuted: • bradycardia • tachycardia • hypertension • peripheral edema • rash

Contraindications

Contraindication The only contraindication to CORTROSYN™ (cosyntropin) for Injection is a history of a previous adverse reaction to it.

Description

Description FOR DIAGNOSTIC USE ONLY CORTROSYN™ (cosyntropin) for Injection is a sterile lyophilized powder in vials containing 0.25 mg of CORTROSYN™ and 10 mg of mannitol to be reconstituted with 1 mL of 0.9% Sodium Chloride Injection, USP. Administration is by intravenous or intramuscular injection. Cosyntropin is a 1 – 24 corticotropin, a synthetic subunit of ACTH. It is an open chain polypeptide containing, from the N terminus, the first 24 of the 39 amino acids of natural ACTH. The sequence of amino acids in the 1 – 24 compound is as follows: Ser Tyr Ser Met Glu His Phe Arg Trp Gly Lys 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Pro Val Gly Lys Lys Arg Arg Pro Val Lys Val 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Tyr Pro 23 24

Dosage And Administration

Dosage and Administration CORTROSYN™ (cosyntropin) for Injection may be administered intramuscularly or as a direct intravenous injection when used as a rapid screening test of adrenal function. It may also be given as an intravenous infusion over a 4 to 8 hour period to provide a greater stimulus to the adrenal glands. Doses of CORTROSYN™ 0.25 to 0.75 mg have been used in clinical studies and a maximal response noted with the smallest dose. A suggested method for a rapid screening test of adrenal function has been described by Wood and Associates (1). A control blood sample of 6 to 7 mL is collected in a heparinized tube. Reconstitute 0.25 mg of CORTROSYN™ with 1mL of 0.9% Sodium Chloride Injection, USP and inject intramuscularly. The reconstituted drug product should be inspected visually for particulate matter and discoloration prior to injection. Reconstituted CORTROSYN™ should not be retained. In the pediatric population, aged 2 years or less, a dose of 0.125 mg will often suffice. A second blood sample is collected exactly 30 minutes later. Both blood samples should be refrigerated until sent to the laboratory for determination of the plasma cortisol response by some appropriate method. If it is not possible to send them to the laboratory or perform the fluorimetric procedure within 12 hours, then the plasma should be separated and refrigerated or frozen according to need. Two alternative methods of administration are intravenous injection and infusion. CORTROSYN™ can be injected intravenously in 2 to 5 mL of saline over a 2-minute period. When given as an intravenous infusion: CORTROSYN™, 0.25 mg may be added to glucose or saline solutions and given at the rate of approximately 40 micrograms per hour over a 6-hour period. It should not be added to blood or plasma as it is apt to be inactivated by enzymes. Adrenal response may be measured in the usual manner by determining page 3 of 3 urinary steroid excretion before and after treatment or by measuring plasma cortisol levels before and at the end of the infusion. The latter is preferable because the urinary steroid excretion does not always accurately reflect the adrenal or plasma cortisol response to ACTH. The usual normal response in most cases is an approximate doubling of the basal level, provided that the basal level does not exceed the normal range. Patients receiving cortisone, hydrocortisone or spironolactone should omit their pre-test doses on the day selected for testing. Patients taking inadvertent doses of cortisone or hydrocortisone on the test day and patients taking spironolactone or women taking drugs which contain estrogen may exhibit abnormally high basal plasma cortisol levels. A paradoxical response may be noted in the cortisone or hydrocortisone group as seen in a decrease in plasma cortisol values following a stimulating dose of CORTROSYN™. In the spironolactone or estrogen group only a normal incremental response is to be expected. Many patients with normal adrenal function, however, do not respond to the expected degree so that the following criteria have been established to denote a normal response: 1. The control plasma cortisol level should exceed 5 micrograms/100 mL. 2. The 30-minute level should show an increment of at least 7 micrograms/100 mL above the basal level. 3. The 30-minute level should exceed 18 micrograms/100 mL. Comparable figures have been reported by Greig and co-workers (2). Plasma cortisol levels usually peak about 45 to 60 minutes after an injection of CORTROSYN™ and some prefer the 60-minute interval for testing for this reason. While it is true that the 60-minute values are usually higher than the 30-minute values, the difference may not be significant enough in most cases to outweigh the disadvantage of a longer testing period. If the 60-minute test period is used, the criterion for a normal response is an approximate doubling of the basal plasma cortisol value. In patients with a raised plasma bilirubin or in patients where the plasma contains free hemoglobin, falsely high fluorescence measurements will result. The test may be performed at any time during the day but because of the physiological diurnal variation of plasma cortisol the criteria listed by Wood cannot apply. It has been shown that basal plasma cortisol levels and the post CORTROSYN™ increment exhibit diurnal changes. However, the 30-minute plasma cortisol level remains unchanged throughout the day so that only this single criterion should be used (3). Parenteral drug products should be inspected visually for particulate matter and discoloration whenever solution and container permit. Reconstituted CORTROSYN™ should not be retained.

Indications And Usage

Indication and Usage CORTROSYN™ (cosyntropin) for Injection is intended for use as a diagnostic agent in the screening of patients presumed to have adrenocortical insufficiency. Because of its rapid effect on the adrenal cortex it may be utilized to perform a 30-minute test of adrenal function (plasma cortisol response) as an office or outpatient procedure, using only 2 venipunctures (seeDOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION section). Severe hypofunction of the pituitary - adrenal axis is usually associated with subnormal plasma cortisol values but a low basal level is not per se evidence of adrenal insufficiency and does not suffice to make the diagnosis. Many patients with proven insufficiency will have normal basal levels and will develop signs of insufficiency only when stressed. For this reason a criterion which should be used in establishing the diagnosis is the failure to respond to adequate corticotropin stimulation. When presumptive adrenal insufficiency is diagnosed by a subnormal CORTROSYN™ test, further studies are indicated to determine if it is primary or secondary. Primary adrenal insufficiency (Addison's disease) is the result of an intrinsic disease process, such as tuberculosis within the gland. The production of adrenocortical hormones is deficient despite high ACTH levels (feedback mechanism). Secondary or relative insufficiency arises as the result of defective production of ACTH leading in turn to disuse atrophy of the adrenal cortex. It is commonly seen, for example, as result of corticosteroid therapy, Sheehan's syndrome and pituitary tumors or ablation. The differentiation of both types is based on the premise that a primarily defective gland cannot be stimulated by ACTH whereas a secondarily defective gland is potentially functional and will respond to adequate stimulation with ACTH. Patients selected for further study as the result of a subnormal CORTROSYN™ test should be given a 3 or 4 day course of treatment with Repository Corticotropin Injection USP and then retested. Suggested doses are 40 USP units twice daily for 4 days or 60 USP units twice daily for 3 days. Under these conditions little or no increase in plasma cortisol levels will be seen in Addison's disease whereas higher or even normal levels will be seen in cases with secondary adrenal insufficiency.

Clinical Pharmacology

Clinical Pharmacology CORTROSYN™ (cosyntropin) for Injection exhibits the full corticosteroidogenic activity of natural ACTH. Various studies have shown that the biologic activity of ACTH resides in the N-terminal portion of the molecule and that the 1 – 20 amino acid residue is the minimal sequence retaining full activity. Partial or complete loss of activity is noted with progressive shortening of the chain beyond 20 amino acid residues. For example, the decrement from 20 to 19 results in a 70% loss of potency. The pharmacologic profile of CORTROSYN™ is similar to that of purified natural ACTH. It has been established that 0.25 mg of CORTROSYN™ will stimulate the adrenal cortex maximally and to the same extent as 25 units of natural ACTH. This dose of CORTROSYN™ will produce maximal secretion of 17-OH corticosteroids, 17- ketosteroids and / or 17 - ketogenic steroids. The extra-adrenal effects which natural ACTH and CORTROSYN™ have in common include increased melanotropic activity, increased growth hormone secretion and an adipokinetic effect. These are considered to be without physiological or clinical significance. Animal, human and synthetic ACTH (1–39) which all contain 39 amino acids exhibit similar immunologic activity. This activity resides in the C-terminal portion of the molecule and the 22–39 amino acid residues exhibit the greatest degree of antigenicity. In contrast, synthetic polypeptides containing 1–19 or fewer amino acids have no detectable immunologic activity. Those containing 1–26, 1–24 or 1–23 amino acids have very little immunologic although full biologic activity. This property of CORTROSYN™ assumes added importance in view of the known antigenicity of natural ACTH.

Effective Time

20231012

Version

3

Description Table

SerTyrSerMetGluHisPheArgTrpGlyLys
1234567891011
ProValGlyLysLysArgArgProValLysVal
1213141516171819202122
TyrPro
2324

Spl Product Data Elements

Cortrosyn Cortrosyn Cosyntropin Cosyntropin

Application Number

NDA016750

Brand Name

Cortrosyn

Generic Name

Cortrosyn

Product Ndc

0404-9839

Product Type

HUMAN PRESCRIPTION DRUG

Route

INTRAMUSCULAR,INTRAVENOUS,PARENTERAL

Package Label Principal Display Panel

Sample Package Label Label1.jpg

References

References 1. Wood, J.B. et al. LANCET 1.243, 1965. 2. Greig, W.R. et al. J. ENDOCR 34.411, 1966. 3. McGill, P.E. et al. ANN RHEUM DIS 26.123, 1967. Amphastar Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91730 U.S.A. REV. 9-10

How Supplied

How Supplied Box of 10 vials of CORTROSYN (cosyntropin) for Injection 0.25 mg NDC # 0548-5900-00 Storage Store at 1530°C (5986°F). CORTROSYN is intended as a single dose injection and contains no antimicrobial preservative. Any unused portion should be discarded. Rx only Product repackaged by: Henry Schein, Inc., Bastian, VA 24314 From Original Manufacturer/Distributor's NDC and Unit of Sale To Henry Schein Repackaged Product NDC and Unit of Sale Total Strength/Total Volume (Concentration) per unit NDC 0548-5900-00 Box of 10 vials NDC 0404-9839-99 1 Vial in a bag (Vial bears NDC 0548-5900-00) 0.25 mg

How Supplied Table

Product repackaged by: Henry Schein, Inc., Bastian, VA 24314
From Original Manufacturer/Distributor's NDC and Unit of SaleTo Henry Schein Repackaged Product NDC and Unit of SaleTotal Strength/Total Volume (Concentration) per unit
NDC 0548-5900-00 Box of 10 vialsNDC 0404-9839-99 1 Vial in a bag (Vial bears NDC 0548-5900-00) 0.25 mg

Precautions

Precautions General CORTROSYN™ (cosyntropin) for Injection exhibits slight immunologic activity, does not contain animal protein and is therefore less risky to use than natural ACTH. Patients known to be sensitized to natural ACTH with markedly positive skin tests will, with few exceptions, react negatively when tested intradermally with CORTROSYN™. Most patients with a history of a previous hypersensitivity reaction to natural ACTH or a pre-existing allergic disease will tolerate CORTROSYN™. Despite this however, CORTROSYN™ is not completely devoid of immunologic activity and hypersensitivity reactions including rare anaphylaxis are possible. Therefore, the physician should be prepared, prior to injection, to treat any possible acute hypersensitivity reaction. Drug Interactions Corticotropin may accentuate the electrolyte loss associated with diuretic therapy. Carcinogenesis, Mutagenesis, Impairment of Fertility Long term studies in animals have not been performed to evaluate carcinogenic or mutagenic potential or impairment of fertility. A study in rats noted inhibition of reproductive function like natural ACTH. Pregnancy Pregnancy Category C. Animal reproduction studies have not been conducted with CORTROSYN™ (cosyntropin) for Injection. It is also not known whether CORTROSYN™ can cause fetal harm when administered to a pregnant woman or can affect reproduction capacity. CORTROSYN™ should be given to a pregnant woman only if clearly needed. Nursing Mothers It is not known whether this drug is excreted in human milk. Because many drugs are excreted in human milk, caution should be exercised when CORTROSYN™ (cosyntropin) for Injection is administered to a nursing woman. Pediatric Use (See DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION section.)

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