Firazyr

Firazyr

Generic Name

Firazyr

Mechanism

Firazyr blocks peripheral vasodilation by constricting cranial and meningeal blood vessels and inhibits the release of pro‑inflammatory neuropeptides (e.g., CGRP, PACAP).
• Acts on 5‑HT1B receptors → vasoconstriction.
• Acts on 5‑HT1D receptors → reduces trigeminal nerve neurotransmission.

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Pharmacokinetics

Firazyr is absorbed rapidly:
Oral: Cmax ~35 min, bioavailability 40 %.
SC: Cmax ~5 min, bioavailability 100 %.
Half‑life: 2–3 h (oral) / 1.5–2 h (SC).
Metabolism: N‑acetylation, reduction, and hydrolysis; renal and hepatic routes.
Elimination: ~70 % renal, 30 % via feces.
• No significant drug–drug interactions except with serotonergic agents (serotonin syndrome risk).

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Indications

Firazyr is approved for:
• Acute migraine attacks (with or without aura) in adults ≥12 yrs.
• Migraine associated with vestibular or visual symptoms.
• Patients when other therapies (NSAIDs, acetaminophen) fail or are contraindicated.

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Contraindications

Contraindications
• Uncontrolled hypertension or recent myocardial infarction.
• Known or suspected cerebrovascular accident within past 6 mo.
• History of ischemic heart disease.
• Pregnancy (Category X) & lactation.

Warnings
Serotonin syndrome: avoid when concomitant with MAO inhibitors, SSRIs, SNRIs, or other serotonergic drugs.
Cardiovascular: transient chest pain, ischemia, or dysrhythmias may occur.
Migraine with aura: increase cardiovascular risk; use with caution.

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Dosing

FormDoseFrequencyComments
Oral100 mg single tabletOn onset of attackMay repeat after >2 h, max 200 mg per attack
SC50 mg single injectionOn onsetSubcutaneous offers faster relief (t½ ~1.5 h)
Pediatric (12–15 yrs)0.4 mg/kg (max 100 mg)As aboveMonitor growth & development safety data

*Take with water; do not chew or crush.*

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Adverse Effects

Common (≥5 %)
• Flushing, warmth, tingling.
• Dizziness, headache, palpitations.
• Nausea, abdominal pain.
• Fatigue.

Serious (≤1 %)
• Chest pain or angina.
• Severe headache, transient ischemic attack (TIA).
• Serotonin syndrome: agitation, confusion, hyperthermia.
• Severe orthostatic hypotension (rare).

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Monitoring

  • Cardiovascular: vital signs (BP, HR) before and 30 min post‑dose; ECG if chest pain.
  • Renal/Hepatic: baseline LFTs & renal function for chronic users; adjust dose if severe impairment.
  • Pregnancy: avoid; if inadvertent exposure, discuss risk/benefit.
  • Drug interactions: review serotonergic medication history.

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Clinical Pearls

  • Rapid Onset: SC route halves the onset time—ideal for patients with high headache-aggressive migraine.
  • Timing Matters: complete pain relief is most likely when taken early (within 10 min of onset).
  • Avoid Over‑Dose: limit to 200 mg per 24‑h period; repeated dosing increases cardiovascular risk.
  • Seizure Precaution: sumatriptan is contraindicated in patients with seizure disorders due to potential seizure precipitant.
  • Pregnancy & Lactation: no FDA‑approved use; if exposure unavoidable, discontinue breastfeeding.
  • Drug‑Drug Alerts: combine sumatriptan with SSRIs/MAOIs cautiously; act as a red flag for serotonin syndrome.
  • Use in Chronic Migraine: consider prophylaxis with topiramate or propranolol if frequent attacks despite acute therapy.

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Firazyr provides a fast‑acting, effective option for acute migraine management—particularly in patients who need rapid relief and tolerate serotonergic stimulation.

Medical & AI Content Disclaimers
Medical Disclaimer: Medical definitions are provided for educational purposes and should not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

AI Content Disclaimer: Some definitions may be AI-generated and may contain inaccuracies. Always verify with authoritative medical references.

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