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Clevidipine

    DEA Class; Rx

    Common Brand Names; Cleviprex

    • Calcium Channel Blockers; 
    • Calcium Channel Blockers, Dihydropyridine

    Intravenous dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker
    Used for hypertension when oral therapy is not feasible or desirable
    Delivered in a lipid emulsion vehicle

    Indicated for the treatment of hypertension when oral therapy is not feasible or desirable.

     

    Hypersensitivity to drug, soy or egg products

    Defective lipid metabolism

    Acute pancreatitis if accompanied by hyperlipidemia

    Severe aortic stenosis

    • AFib (21%)
    • Nausea (21%)
    • Acute renal failure (9%)
    • Headache (6%)
    • Vomiting (3%)
    • Cardiac arrest
    • Myocardial infarction
    • Increased blood triglycerides
    • Ileus
    • Nausea
    • Hypersensitivity
    • Hypotension
    • Reflex tachycardia
    • Decreased oxygen saturation (possible pulmonary shunting)

    Use aseptic technique and discard unused product within 12hr of stopper puncture

    May produce systemic hypotension and reflex tachycardia; if either occurs, decrease dose of drug; there is limited experience with short-duration therapy with beta-blockers as a treatment for drug-induced tachycardia; beta-blocker use for this purpose not recommended

    Drug contains approximately 0.2 g of lipid per mL (2.0 kcal); lipid intake restrictions may be necessary for patients with significant disorders of lipid metabolism; for these patients, a reduction in quantity of concurrently administered lipids may be necessary to compensate for amount of lipid infused as part of drug formulation

    Dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers can produce negative inotropic effects and exacerbate heart failure; monitor heart failure patients carefully

    Drug is not a beta-blocker, does not reduce heart rate, and gives no protection against effects of abrupt beta-blocker withdrawal; beta-blockers should be withdrawn only after gradual reduction in dose

    Patients who receive prolonged infusions and are not transitioned to other antihypertensive therapies should be monitored for possibility of rebound hypertension for at least 8 hr after infusion is stopped

    There is no information to guide use of drug in treating hypertension associated with pheochromocytoma

    Available data based on post-marketing reports with use in pregnant women are not sufficient to inform a drug-associated risk for major birth defects, miscarriage, or adverse maternal or fetal outcomes; there are risks to mother and fetus associated with poorly controlled hypertension in pregnancy

    There are no data on presence of drug in human milk, effects on breastfed infant, or on milk production

    Adults

    32 mg/hour IV (Max: 1,000 mL/24 hours due to lipid load restrictions).

    Geriatric

    32 mg/hour IV (Max: 1,000 mL/24 hours due to lipid load restrictions).

    Adolescents

    Safety and efficacy have not been established.

    Children

    Safety and efficacy have not been established.

    Infants

    Safety and efficacy have not been established.

    Neonates

    Safety and efficacy have not been established.

    Clevidipine

    infusion solution

    • 0.5mg/mL