Mycelex

Last updated on RxList: 5/21/2021

Drug Summary

What Is Mycelex?

Mycelex (clotrimazole) is an antifungal medication used to treat and prevent yeast infections of the mouth and throat. Mycelex is available in generic form.

What Are Side Effects of Mycelex?

Common side effects of Mycelex include:

  • nausea,
  • vomiting,
  • mild itching, or
  • an unpleasant sensation in the mouth.

A very serious allergic reaction to Mycelex is unlikely, but seek immediate medical attention if you have rash, itching, swelling (especially of the face/tongue/throat), severe dizziness, or trouble breathing.

Dosage for Mycelex

Mycelex Troches are administered only as a lozenge that must be slowly dissolved in the mouth. The recommended dose is one troche five times a day for fourteen consecutive days.

What Drugs, Substances, or Supplements Interact with Mycelex?

Since Mycelex is not absorbed by your body, drug interactions are not expected. Talk to your doctor before taking any other prescription or over-the-counter medicines.

Mycelex During Pregnancy or Breastfeeding

During pregnancy, Mycelex should be used only when prescribed. It is not known whether this drug passes into breast milk. Consult your doctor before breastfeeding.

Additional Information

Our Mycelex (clotrimazole) Side Effects Drug Center provides a comprehensive view of available drug information on the potential side effects when taking this medication.

Description for Mycelex

Each Mycelex® Troche contains 10 mg clotrimazole [1 -(o-chloro-a,a-diphenylbenzyl) imidazole], a synthetic antifungal agent, for topical use in the mouth.

Structural Formula:

Mycelex® Troche (clotrimazole) structural formula illustration

Chemical Formula: C22H17CIN2

The troche dosage form is a large, slowly dissolving tablet (lozenge) containing 10 mg of clotrimazole dispersed in dextrose, microcrystalline cellulose, povidone, and magnesium stearate.

Uses for Mycelex

Mycelex® Troches are indicated for the local treatment of oropharyngeal candidiasis.The diagnosis should be confirmed by a KOH smear and/or culture prior to treatment.

Mycelex® Troches are also indicated prophylactically to reduce the incidence of oropharyngeal candidiasis in patients immunocompromised by conditions that include chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or steroid therapy utilized in the treatment of leukemia, solid tumors, or renal transplantation. There are no data from adequate and well-controlled trials to establish the safety and efficacy of this product for prophylactic use in patients immunocompromised by etiologies other than those listed in the previous sentence. (See DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION.)

Dosage for Mycelex

Mycelex® Troches are administered only as a lozenge that must be slowly dissolved in the mouth. The recommended dose is one troche five times a day for fourteen consecutive days. Only limited data are available on the safety and effectiveness of the clotrimazole troche after prolonged administration; therefore, therapy should be limited to short term use, if possible.

For prophylaxis to reduce the incidence of oropharyngeal candidiasis in patients immunocompromised by conditions that include chemotherapy, radiotherapy, or steroid therapy utilized in the treatment of leukemia, solid tumors, or renal transplantation, the recommended dose is one troche three times daily for the duration of chemotherapy or until steroids are reduced to maintenance levels.

HOW SUPPLIED

Mycelex® Troches, white discoid, uncoated tablets are supplied in bottles of 70 and 140. Mycelex® Troches are also available for institutional use in foil packages of 70 tablets. Each tablet will be identified with the following: Mycelex 10.

  Strength NDC Code Tablet Identification
Bottles of 70: 10 mg NDC 17314-9400-1 MYCELEX 10
Bottles of 140: 10 mg NDC 17314-9400-3 MYCELEX 10
Unit Dose Package of 70: 10 mg NDC 17314-9400-2 MYCELEX 10

Store below 86°F (30°C).
Avoid freezing.

Manufactured by: Bayer Corporation West Haven, CT 06516. Distributed by ALZA Pharmaceuticals A Division of ALZA Corporation Mountain View, CA 94043

Side Effects for Mycelex

Abnormal liver function tests have been reported in patients treated with clotrimazole troches; elevated SGOT levels were reported in about 15% of patients in the clinical trials (See PRECAUTIONS section).

Nausea, vomiting, unpleasant mouth sensations and pruritus have also been reported with the use of the troche.

Drug Abuse And Dependence

No data available.

Drug Interactions for Mycelex

No information provided.

Warnings for Mycelex

Mycelex® Troches are not indicated for the treatment of systemic mycoses including systemic candidiasis.

Precautions for Mycelex

Abnormal liver function tests have been reported in patients treated with clotrimazole troches; elevated SGOT levels were reported in about 15% of patients in the clinical trials. In most cases the elevations were minimal and it was often impossible to distinguish effects of clotrimazole from those of other therapy and the underlying disease (malignancy in most cases). Periodic assessment of hepatic function is advisable particularly in patients with pre-existing hepatic impairment.

Since patients must be instructed to allow each troche to dissolve slowly in the mouth in order to achieve maximum effect of the medication, they must be of such an age and physical and/or mental condition to comprehend such instructions.

Carcinogenesis

An 18 month dosing study with clotrimazole in rats has not revealed any carcinogenic effect.

Usage in Pregnancy

Pregnancy Category C: Clotrimazole has been shown to be embryotoxic in rats and mice when given in doses 100 times the adult human dose (in mg/kg), possibly secondary to maternal toxicity. The drug was not teratogenic in mice, rabbits, and rats when given in doses up to 200, 180, and 100 times the human dose.

Clotrimazole given orally to mice from nine weeks before mating through weaning at a dose 120 times the human dose was associated with impairment of mating, decreased number of viable young, and decreased survival to weaning. No effects were observed at 60 times the human dose. When the drug was given to rats during a similar time period at 50 times the human dose, there was a slight decrease in the number of pups per litter and decreased pup viability.

There are no adequate and well controlled studies in pregnant women. Clotrimazole troches should be used during pregnancy only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the fetus.

Pediatric Use

Safety and effectiveness of clotrimazole in children below the age of 3 years have not been established; therefore, its use in such patients is not recommended.

The safety and efficacy of the prophylactic use of clotrimazole troches in children have not been established.

Geriatric Use

Clinical studies of clotrimazole did not include sufficient numbers of subjects aged 65 and over to determine whether they responsd differently from younger subjects. Other reported clinical experience has not identified differences in responses between the elderly and younger patients.

Overdose Information for Mycelex

No data available.

Contraindications for Mycelex

Mycelex® Troches are contraindicated in patients who are hypersensitive to any of its components.

Clinical Pharmacology for Mycelex

Clotrimazole is a broad-spectrum antifungal agent that inhibits the growth of pathogenic yeasts by altering the permeability of cell membranes. The action of clotrimazole is fungistatic at concentrations of drug up to 20 mcg/mL and may be fungicidal in vitro against Candida albicans and other species of the genus Candida at higher concentrations. No single-step or multiple-step resistance to clotrimazole has developed during successive passages of Candida albicans in the laboratory; however, individual organism tolerance has been observed during successive passages in the laboratory. Such in vitro tolerance has resolved once the organism has been removed from the antifungal environment.

After oral administration of a 10 mg clotrimazole troche to healthy volunteers, concentrations sufficient to inhibit most species of Candida persist in saliva for up to three hours following the approximately 30 minutes needed for a troche to dissolve. The long term persistence of drug in saliva appears to be related to the slow release of clotrimazole from the oral mucosa to which the drug is apparently bound. Repetitive dosing at three hour intervals maintains salivary levels above the minimum inhibitory concentrations of most strains of Candida; however, the relationship between in vitro susceptibility of pathogenic fungi to clotrimazole and prophylaxis or cure of infections in humans has not been established. In another study, the mean serum concentrations were 4.98 ± 3.7 and 3.23 ± 1.4 nanograms/mL of clotrimazole at 30 and 60 minutes, respectively, after administration as a troche.

Patient Information for Mycelex

No information provided. Please refer to the WARNINGS and PRECAUTIONS sections.

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