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Hi --

I am doing well. Unfortunately my Mom is in the hospital due to pain caused

by 6 ulcers in her esophagus. They were caused when one of the glass

" beads " escaped from her liver. She's been in the hospital for a week

today, but should go home in another day or two. Then a home health agency

will help her monitor the pain. The doctors want to let her esophagus rest

for a few weeks, so she will be fed through her portacath. Other than that,

she is doing pretty well. This was the second Therasphere treatment (one

per lobe in the liver). She had scans taken just before this treatment,

which showed there was tumor shrinkage in the lobe that was treated first.

She had virtually no side effects the first treatment, which was mid May.

Her oncologist was concerned about Celebrex causing liver damage and

therefore didn't recommend she take it. Have you (or anyone else) heard

anything about that?

Thanks,

!

>

> How are you and your Mom doing (well I hope!)? Did she try the

> radioactive spheres? What was the experience like?

>

> Best Wishes,

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi ,

I've been very interested in Therasphere for some time as a treatment

for " advanced " liver disease - seems like maybe it could be of great

benefit for such patients. I'd always kinda wondered how they " made

sure " none of the theraspheres got loose and went somewhere they

shouldn't though (still not sure!)

Sorry to hear about your mom - hope that she will get out of the

hospital soon! On the positive side, it sounds like the treatment

worked!

Glad you brought up the issue of Celebrex side effects...no drug

is " risk free " , there are ALWAYS side effects for somebody....but

overall I think Celebrex seems pretty mild as these things go.

One excellent source of information about Celebrex is the " package

insert " which may be found at

http://www.celebrex.com/us_prescribing_info.asp

(need adobe acrobat reader - free - to view)

It looks like they are a little concerned about effects in patients

with compromised liver and/or kidney function, so maybe that's why

they didn't want to give to your mom. I have been taking it for a

year now, I have regular liver and kidney function labs and nothing

has ever been " off "

Now the LOVASTATIN mentioned in the LEF article to be given with the

Celebrex is a different story. Statins in general are hard on the

liver, and my oncologist didn't want me to take them for a few months

after liver resection. I started taking Red Yeast Rice instead (just

took dose recommended on the bottle)

A quick summary of important points about Celebrex from the Package

Insert:

1) TAKE IT WITH FOOD - ESPECIALLY IMPORTANT FOR THE HIGH DOSE

REQUIRED FOR FAP AND EXPERIMENTALLY FOR COLON CANCER TREATMENT

When CELEBREX capsules were taken with a high fat meal,

peak plasma levels were delayed for about 1 to 2 hours with

an increase in total absorption (AUC) of 10% to 20%. Under

fasting conditions, at doses above 200 mg, there is less than

a proportional increase in Cmax and AUC, which is thought to

be due to the low solubility of the drug in aqueous media.

2) DON'T TAKE IT WITH ANTACIDS - DOESN'T ABSORB AS WELL

Coadministration of CELEBREX with an aluminum- and magnesium-

containing antacid resulted in a reduction in plasma

celecoxib concentrations with a decrease of 37% in Cmax and

10% in AUC. CELEBREX, at doses up to 200 mg BID can be

administered without regard to timing of meals. Higher doses

(400 mg BID) should be administered with food to improve

absorption.

3) NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PATIENTS WITH SEVERE LIVER IMPAIRMENT

Hepatic Insufficiency: A pharmacokinetic study in subjects

with mild (Child-Pugh Class I) and moderate (Child-Pugh Class

II) hepatic impairment has shown that steady-state celecoxib

AUC is increased about 40% and 180%, respectively, above

that seen in healthy control subjects. Therefore, the daily

recommended dose of CELEBREX capsules should be reduced by

approximately 50% in patients with moderate (Child-Pugh

Class II) hepatic impairment. Patients with severe hepatic

impairment have not been studied. The use of CELEBREX in

patients with severe hepatic impairment is not recommended.

Hepatic Effects: Borderline elevations of one or more liver

associated enzymes may occur in up to 15% of patients taking

NSAIDs, and notable elevations of ALT or AST (approximately

3 or more times the upper limit of normal) have been reported

in approximately 1% of patients in clinical trials with NSAIDs.

These laboratory abnormalities may progress, may remain

unchanged, or may be transient with continuing therapy. Rare

cases of severe hepatic reactions, including jaundice and fatal

fulminant hepatitis, liver necrosis and hepatic failure (some

with fatal outcome) have been reported with NSAIDs, including

CELEBREX (see ADVERSE REACTIONS — post-marketing

experience). In controlled clinical trials of CELEBREX, the incidence

of borderline elevations (greater than or equal to 1.2

times and less than 3 times the upper limit of normal) of liver

associated enzymes was 6% for CELEBREX and 5% for placebo,

and approximately 0.2% of patients taking CELEBREX and 0.3%

of patients taking placebo had notable elevations of ALT and

AST.

A patient with symptoms and/or signs suggesting liver dysfunction,

or in whom an abnormal liver test has occurred,

should be monitored carefully for evidence of the development

of a more severe hepatic reaction while on therapy with

CELEBREX. If clinical signs and symptoms consistent with liver

disease develop, or if systemic manifestations occur (e.g.,

eosinophilia, rash, etc.), CELEBREX should be discontinued.

4) NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PATIENTS WITH KIDNEY DISFUNCTION

Renal Insufficiency: In a cross-study comparison, celecoxib

AUC was approximately 40% lower in patients with chronic

renal insufficiency (GFR 35–60 mL/min) than that seen in

subjects with normal renal function. No significant relationship

was found between GFR and celecoxib clearance. Patients with

severe renal insufficiency have not been studied. Similar to

other NSAIDs, CELEBREX is not recommended in patients with

severe renal insufficiency (see WARNINGS — Advanced Renal

Disease).

Advanced Renal Disease

No information is available from controlled clinical studies

regarding the use of CELEBREX in patients with advanced

kidney disease. Therefore, treatment with CELEBREX is not recommended

in these patients with advanced kidney disease.

If CELEBREX therapy must be initiated, close monitoring of the

patient's kidney function is advisable (see PRECAUTIONS —

Renal Effects).

Renal Effects: Long-term administration of NSAIDs has

resulted in renal papillary necrosis and other renal injury.

Renal toxicity has also been seen in patients in whom renal

prostaglandins have a compensatory role in the maintenance

of renal perfusion. In these patients, administration of a

nonsteroidal

anti-inflammatory drug may cause a dose-dependent

reduction in prostaglandin formation and, secondarily, in renal

blood flow, which may precipitate overt renal decompensation.

Patients at greatest risk of this reaction are those with impaired

renal function, heart failure, liver dysfunction, those taking

diuretics and ACE inhibitors, and the elderly. Discontinuation

of NSAID therapy is usually followed by recovery to the pretreatment

state. Clinical trials with CELEBREX have shown

renal effects similar to those observed with comparator

NSAIDs.

Caution should be used when initiating treatment with

CELEBREX in patients with considerable dehydration. It is

advisable to rehydrate patients first and then start therapy with

CELEBREX. Caution is also recommended in patients with preexisting

kidney disease (see WARNINGS — Advanced Renal

Disease).

5) CELEBREX HAS BEEN PROVEN TO REDUCE THE NUMBER OF POLYPS IN

PATINETS WITH FAP AND THE GREATEST PERCENT REDUCTION OCCURRED AT THE

HIGHEST DOSE (400 MG TWICE A DAY). FAP IS NOT THE SAME AS METASTATIC

COLON CANCER, HOWEVER RECENT TRIALS REPORTED AT ASCO INDICATED

METASTATIC CC PATIENTS TAKING CELEBREX WITH XELODA HAD AN IMPROVED

TIME TO PROGRESSION.

Familial Adenomatous Polyposis (FAP): CELEBREX was evaluated

to reduce the number of adenomatous colorectal polyps.

A randomized double-blind placebo-controlled study was conducted

in 83 patients with FAP. The study population included

58 patients with a prior subtotal or total colectomy and 25

patients with an intact colon. Thirteen patients had the attenuated

FAP phenotype.

One area in the rectum and up to four areas in the colon

were identified at baseline for specific follow-up, and polyps

were counted at baseline and following six months of treatment.

The mean reduction in the number of colorectal polyps

was 28% for CELEBREX 400 mg BID, 12% for CELEBREX 100 mg

BID and 5% for placebo. The reduction in polyps observed with

CELEBREX 400 mg BID was statistically superior to placebo at

the six-month timepoint (p = 0.003). (See Figure 1.)

6) DID NOT APPEAR TO AFFECT BLOOD CLOTTING

Platelets: In clinical trials, CELEBREX at single doses up to

800 mg and multiple doses of 600 mg BID for up to 7 days

duration (higher than recommended therapeutic doses) had

no effect on platelet aggregation and bleeding time. Comparators

(naproxen 500 mg BID, ibuprofen 800 mg TID,

diclofenac 75 mg BID) significantly reduced platelet aggregation

and prolonged bleeding time.

7) CONTRAINDICATIONS - BE CAREFUL IF YOU ARE ALLERGIC TO SULFONAMIDES

CELEBREX is contraindicated in patients with known hypersensitivity

to celecoxib.

CELEBREX should not be given to patients who have demonstrated

allergic-type reactions to sulfonamides.

CELEBREX should not be given to patients who have experienced

asthma, urticaria, or allergic-type reactions after taking

aspirin or other NSAIDs. Severe, rarely fatal, anaphylactic-like

reactions to NSAIDs have been reported in such patients (see

WARNINGS — Anaphylactoid Reactions, and PRECAUTIONS —

Preexisting Asthma).

8) MAY REDUCE EFFECTS OF ACE INHIBITORS

ACE-inhibitors: Reports suggest that NSAIDs may diminish

the antihypertensive effect of Angiotensin Converting Enzyme

(ACE) inhibitors. This interaction should be given consideration

in patients taking CELEBREX concomitantly with ACEinhibitors.

9) MAY INCREASE RISK OF GI BLEEDING - SHOULD BE USED WITH CAUTION IN

PATIENTS WITH PRIOR HISTORY OF ULCERS OR GI BLEEDS - BUT THE ACTUAL

PERCENT OF PATIENTS EXPERIENCING THIS IS STILL SMALL

In a small number of patients with a history of ulcer disease,

the complicated and symptomatic ulcer rates in patients taking

CELEBREX alone or CELEBREX with ASA were, respectively, 2.56%

(n=243) and 6.85% (n=91) at 48 weeks. These results are to

be expected in patients with a prior history of ulcer disease

(see WARNINGS — Gastrointestinal (GI) Effects — Risk of GI

Ulceration, Bleeding, and Perforation).

NSAIDs should be prescribed with extreme caution in

patients with a prior history of ulcer disease or gastrointestinal

bleeding. Most spontaneous reports of fatal GI events are

in elderly or debilitated patients and therefore special care

should be taken in treating this population. To minimize the

potential risk for an adverse GI event, the lowest effective

dose should be used for the shortest possible duration. For

high risk patients, alternate therapies that do not involve

NSAIDs should be considered.

Studies have shown that patients with a prior history of

peptic ulcer disease and/or gastrointestinal bleeding and who

use NSAIDs, have a greater than 10-fold higher risk for developing

a GI bleed than patients with neither of these risk

factors. In addition to a past history of ulcer disease,

pharmacoepidemiological

studies have identified several other cotherapies

or co-morbid conditions that may increase the risk

for GI bleeding such as: treatment with oral corticosteroids,

treatment with anticoagulants, longer duration of NSAID

therapy, smoking, alcoholism, older age, and poor general

health status.

10) OVERALL, BAD SIDE EFFECTS APPEARED RARE AND EVEN HIGH DOSES SUCH

AS 400 MG BID ARE WELL TOLERATED

Adverse events from the controlled trial in familial adenomatous

polyposis: The adverse event profile reported for the

83 patients with familial adenomatous polyposis enrolled in

the randomized, controlled clinical trial was similar to that

reported for patients in the arthritis controlled trials. Intestinal

anastomotic ulceration was the only new adverse event

reported in the FAP trial, regardless of causality, and was

observed in 3 of 58 patients (one at 100 mg BID, and two at

400 mg BID) who had prior intestinal surgery.

No overdoses of CELEBREX were reported during clinical trials.

Doses up to 2400 mg/day for up to 10 days in 12 patients did

not result in serious toxicity. Symptoms following acute NSAID

overdoses are usually limited to lethargy, drowsiness, nausea,

vomiting, and epigastric pain, which are generally reversible

with supportive care. Gastrointestinal bleeding can occur.

Hypertension, acute renal failure, respiratory depression and

coma may occur, but are rare. Anaphylactoid reactions have

been reported with therapeutic ingestion of NSAIDs, and may

occur following an overdose.

> Hi --

>

> I am doing well. Unfortunately my Mom is in the hospital due to

pain caused

> by 6 ulcers in her esophagus. They were caused when one of the

glass

> " beads " escaped from her liver. She's been in the hospital for a

week

> today, but should go home in another day or two. Then a home

health agency

> will help her monitor the pain. The doctors want to let her

esophagus rest

> for a few weeks, so she will be fed through her portacath. Other

than that,

> she is doing pretty well. This was the second Therasphere

treatment (one

> per lobe in the liver). She had scans taken just before this

treatment,

> which showed there was tumor shrinkage in the lobe that was treated

first.

> She had virtually no side effects the first treatment, which was

mid May.

>

> Her oncologist was concerned about Celebrex causing liver damage and

> therefore didn't recommend she take it. Have you (or anyone else)

heard

> anything about that?

>

> Thanks,

>

>

>

>

> !

>

>

> >

> > How are you and your Mom doing (well I hope!)? Did she try the

> > radioactive spheres? What was the experience like?

> >

> > Best Wishes,

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest guest

Hi ,

I've been very interested in Therasphere for some time as a treatment

for " advanced " liver disease - seems like maybe it could be of great

benefit for such patients. I'd always kinda wondered how they " made

sure " none of the theraspheres got loose and went somewhere they

shouldn't though (still not sure!)

Sorry to hear about your mom - hope that she will get out of the

hospital soon! On the positive side, it sounds like the treatment

worked!

Glad you brought up the issue of Celebrex side effects...no drug

is " risk free " , there are ALWAYS side effects for somebody....but

overall I think Celebrex seems pretty mild as these things go.

One excellent source of information about Celebrex is the " package

insert " which may be found at

http://www.celebrex.com/us_prescribing_info.asp

(need adobe acrobat reader - free - to view)

It looks like they are a little concerned about effects in patients

with compromised liver and/or kidney function, so maybe that's why

they didn't want to give to your mom. I have been taking it for a

year now, I have regular liver and kidney function labs and nothing

has ever been " off "

Now the LOVASTATIN mentioned in the LEF article to be given with the

Celebrex is a different story. Statins in general are hard on the

liver, and my oncologist didn't want me to take them for a few months

after liver resection. I started taking Red Yeast Rice instead (just

took dose recommended on the bottle)

A quick summary of important points about Celebrex from the Package

Insert:

1) TAKE IT WITH FOOD - ESPECIALLY IMPORTANT FOR THE HIGH DOSE

REQUIRED FOR FAP AND EXPERIMENTALLY FOR COLON CANCER TREATMENT

When CELEBREX capsules were taken with a high fat meal,

peak plasma levels were delayed for about 1 to 2 hours with

an increase in total absorption (AUC) of 10% to 20%. Under

fasting conditions, at doses above 200 mg, there is less than

a proportional increase in Cmax and AUC, which is thought to

be due to the low solubility of the drug in aqueous media.

2) DON'T TAKE IT WITH ANTACIDS - DOESN'T ABSORB AS WELL

Coadministration of CELEBREX with an aluminum- and magnesium-

containing antacid resulted in a reduction in plasma

celecoxib concentrations with a decrease of 37% in Cmax and

10% in AUC. CELEBREX, at doses up to 200 mg BID can be

administered without regard to timing of meals. Higher doses

(400 mg BID) should be administered with food to improve

absorption.

3) NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PATIENTS WITH SEVERE LIVER IMPAIRMENT

Hepatic Insufficiency: A pharmacokinetic study in subjects

with mild (Child-Pugh Class I) and moderate (Child-Pugh Class

II) hepatic impairment has shown that steady-state celecoxib

AUC is increased about 40% and 180%, respectively, above

that seen in healthy control subjects. Therefore, the daily

recommended dose of CELEBREX capsules should be reduced by

approximately 50% in patients with moderate (Child-Pugh

Class II) hepatic impairment. Patients with severe hepatic

impairment have not been studied. The use of CELEBREX in

patients with severe hepatic impairment is not recommended.

Hepatic Effects: Borderline elevations of one or more liver

associated enzymes may occur in up to 15% of patients taking

NSAIDs, and notable elevations of ALT or AST (approximately

3 or more times the upper limit of normal) have been reported

in approximately 1% of patients in clinical trials with NSAIDs.

These laboratory abnormalities may progress, may remain

unchanged, or may be transient with continuing therapy. Rare

cases of severe hepatic reactions, including jaundice and fatal

fulminant hepatitis, liver necrosis and hepatic failure (some

with fatal outcome) have been reported with NSAIDs, including

CELEBREX (see ADVERSE REACTIONS — post-marketing

experience). In controlled clinical trials of CELEBREX, the incidence

of borderline elevations (greater than or equal to 1.2

times and less than 3 times the upper limit of normal) of liver

associated enzymes was 6% for CELEBREX and 5% for placebo,

and approximately 0.2% of patients taking CELEBREX and 0.3%

of patients taking placebo had notable elevations of ALT and

AST.

A patient with symptoms and/or signs suggesting liver dysfunction,

or in whom an abnormal liver test has occurred,

should be monitored carefully for evidence of the development

of a more severe hepatic reaction while on therapy with

CELEBREX. If clinical signs and symptoms consistent with liver

disease develop, or if systemic manifestations occur (e.g.,

eosinophilia, rash, etc.), CELEBREX should be discontinued.

4) NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PATIENTS WITH KIDNEY DISFUNCTION

Renal Insufficiency: In a cross-study comparison, celecoxib

AUC was approximately 40% lower in patients with chronic

renal insufficiency (GFR 35–60 mL/min) than that seen in

subjects with normal renal function. No significant relationship

was found between GFR and celecoxib clearance. Patients with

severe renal insufficiency have not been studied. Similar to

other NSAIDs, CELEBREX is not recommended in patients with

severe renal insufficiency (see WARNINGS — Advanced Renal

Disease).

Advanced Renal Disease

No information is available from controlled clinical studies

regarding the use of CELEBREX in patients with advanced

kidney disease. Therefore, treatment with CELEBREX is not recommended

in these patients with advanced kidney disease.

If CELEBREX therapy must be initiated, close monitoring of the

patient's kidney function is advisable (see PRECAUTIONS —

Renal Effects).

Renal Effects: Long-term administration of NSAIDs has

resulted in renal papillary necrosis and other renal injury.

Renal toxicity has also been seen in patients in whom renal

prostaglandins have a compensatory role in the maintenance

of renal perfusion. In these patients, administration of a

nonsteroidal

anti-inflammatory drug may cause a dose-dependent

reduction in prostaglandin formation and, secondarily, in renal

blood flow, which may precipitate overt renal decompensation.

Patients at greatest risk of this reaction are those with impaired

renal function, heart failure, liver dysfunction, those taking

diuretics and ACE inhibitors, and the elderly. Discontinuation

of NSAID therapy is usually followed by recovery to the pretreatment

state. Clinical trials with CELEBREX have shown

renal effects similar to those observed with comparator

NSAIDs.

Caution should be used when initiating treatment with

CELEBREX in patients with considerable dehydration. It is

advisable to rehydrate patients first and then start therapy with

CELEBREX. Caution is also recommended in patients with preexisting

kidney disease (see WARNINGS — Advanced Renal

Disease).

5) CELEBREX HAS BEEN PROVEN TO REDUCE THE NUMBER OF POLYPS IN

PATINETS WITH FAP AND THE GREATEST PERCENT REDUCTION OCCURRED AT THE

HIGHEST DOSE (400 MG TWICE A DAY). FAP IS NOT THE SAME AS METASTATIC

COLON CANCER, HOWEVER RECENT TRIALS REPORTED AT ASCO INDICATED

METASTATIC CC PATIENTS TAKING CELEBREX WITH XELODA HAD AN IMPROVED

TIME TO PROGRESSION.

Familial Adenomatous Polyposis (FAP): CELEBREX was evaluated

to reduce the number of adenomatous colorectal polyps.

A randomized double-blind placebo-controlled study was conducted

in 83 patients with FAP. The study population included

58 patients with a prior subtotal or total colectomy and 25

patients with an intact colon. Thirteen patients had the attenuated

FAP phenotype.

One area in the rectum and up to four areas in the colon

were identified at baseline for specific follow-up, and polyps

were counted at baseline and following six months of treatment.

The mean reduction in the number of colorectal polyps

was 28% for CELEBREX 400 mg BID, 12% for CELEBREX 100 mg

BID and 5% for placebo. The reduction in polyps observed with

CELEBREX 400 mg BID was statistically superior to placebo at

the six-month timepoint (p = 0.003). (See Figure 1.)

6) DID NOT APPEAR TO AFFECT BLOOD CLOTTING

Platelets: In clinical trials, CELEBREX at single doses up to

800 mg and multiple doses of 600 mg BID for up to 7 days

duration (higher than recommended therapeutic doses) had

no effect on platelet aggregation and bleeding time. Comparators

(naproxen 500 mg BID, ibuprofen 800 mg TID,

diclofenac 75 mg BID) significantly reduced platelet aggregation

and prolonged bleeding time.

7) CONTRAINDICATIONS - BE CAREFUL IF YOU ARE ALLERGIC TO SULFONAMIDES

CELEBREX is contraindicated in patients with known hypersensitivity

to celecoxib.

CELEBREX should not be given to patients who have demonstrated

allergic-type reactions to sulfonamides.

CELEBREX should not be given to patients who have experienced

asthma, urticaria, or allergic-type reactions after taking

aspirin or other NSAIDs. Severe, rarely fatal, anaphylactic-like

reactions to NSAIDs have been reported in such patients (see

WARNINGS — Anaphylactoid Reactions, and PRECAUTIONS —

Preexisting Asthma).

8) MAY REDUCE EFFECTS OF ACE INHIBITORS

ACE-inhibitors: Reports suggest that NSAIDs may diminish

the antihypertensive effect of Angiotensin Converting Enzyme

(ACE) inhibitors. This interaction should be given consideration

in patients taking CELEBREX concomitantly with ACEinhibitors.

9) MAY INCREASE RISK OF GI BLEEDING - SHOULD BE USED WITH CAUTION IN

PATIENTS WITH PRIOR HISTORY OF ULCERS OR GI BLEEDS - BUT THE ACTUAL

PERCENT OF PATIENTS EXPERIENCING THIS IS STILL SMALL

In a small number of patients with a history of ulcer disease,

the complicated and symptomatic ulcer rates in patients taking

CELEBREX alone or CELEBREX with ASA were, respectively, 2.56%

(n=243) and 6.85% (n=91) at 48 weeks. These results are to

be expected in patients with a prior history of ulcer disease

(see WARNINGS — Gastrointestinal (GI) Effects — Risk of GI

Ulceration, Bleeding, and Perforation).

NSAIDs should be prescribed with extreme caution in

patients with a prior history of ulcer disease or gastrointestinal

bleeding. Most spontaneous reports of fatal GI events are

in elderly or debilitated patients and therefore special care

should be taken in treating this population. To minimize the

potential risk for an adverse GI event, the lowest effective

dose should be used for the shortest possible duration. For

high risk patients, alternate therapies that do not involve

NSAIDs should be considered.

Studies have shown that patients with a prior history of

peptic ulcer disease and/or gastrointestinal bleeding and who

use NSAIDs, have a greater than 10-fold higher risk for developing

a GI bleed than patients with neither of these risk

factors. In addition to a past history of ulcer disease,

pharmacoepidemiological

studies have identified several other cotherapies

or co-morbid conditions that may increase the risk

for GI bleeding such as: treatment with oral corticosteroids,

treatment with anticoagulants, longer duration of NSAID

therapy, smoking, alcoholism, older age, and poor general

health status.

10) OVERALL, BAD SIDE EFFECTS APPEARED RARE AND EVEN HIGH DOSES SUCH

AS 400 MG BID ARE WELL TOLERATED

Adverse events from the controlled trial in familial adenomatous

polyposis: The adverse event profile reported for the

83 patients with familial adenomatous polyposis enrolled in

the randomized, controlled clinical trial was similar to that

reported for patients in the arthritis controlled trials. Intestinal

anastomotic ulceration was the only new adverse event

reported in the FAP trial, regardless of causality, and was

observed in 3 of 58 patients (one at 100 mg BID, and two at

400 mg BID) who had prior intestinal surgery.

No overdoses of CELEBREX were reported during clinical trials.

Doses up to 2400 mg/day for up to 10 days in 12 patients did

not result in serious toxicity. Symptoms following acute NSAID

overdoses are usually limited to lethargy, drowsiness, nausea,

vomiting, and epigastric pain, which are generally reversible

with supportive care. Gastrointestinal bleeding can occur.

Hypertension, acute renal failure, respiratory depression and

coma may occur, but are rare. Anaphylactoid reactions have

been reported with therapeutic ingestion of NSAIDs, and may

occur following an overdose.

> Hi --

>

> I am doing well. Unfortunately my Mom is in the hospital due to

pain caused

> by 6 ulcers in her esophagus. They were caused when one of the

glass

> " beads " escaped from her liver. She's been in the hospital for a

week

> today, but should go home in another day or two. Then a home

health agency

> will help her monitor the pain. The doctors want to let her

esophagus rest

> for a few weeks, so she will be fed through her portacath. Other

than that,

> she is doing pretty well. This was the second Therasphere

treatment (one

> per lobe in the liver). She had scans taken just before this

treatment,

> which showed there was tumor shrinkage in the lobe that was treated

first.

> She had virtually no side effects the first treatment, which was

mid May.

>

> Her oncologist was concerned about Celebrex causing liver damage and

> therefore didn't recommend she take it. Have you (or anyone else)

heard

> anything about that?

>

> Thanks,

>

>

>

>

> !

>

>

> >

> > How are you and your Mom doing (well I hope!)? Did she try the

> > radioactive spheres? What was the experience like?

> >

> > Best Wishes,

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...
Guest guest

We missed you and Kennedy! I will give you a call at the delta

chelsea if your still there on tuesday. I hope KK likes her

butterfly picture :)

KK is in my thoughts!

Chantelle

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