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Medicine overview

Indications of Filmet DS 800 mg

Filmet DS 800 mg is a broad-spectrum antimicrobial agent with potent activity against anaerobic bacteria and protozoa. It is indicated for a wide range of parasitic, protozoal, and anaerobic bacterial infections across multiple organ systems and medical specialties.

Anaerobic Bacterial Infections

  • Surgical Prophylaxis — prevention of postoperative infections due to anaerobic bacteria, particularly Bacteroides species and anaerobic streptococci. Filmet DS 800 mg is one of the most widely used agents for surgical prophylaxis in abdominal, pelvic, and colorectal surgery.
  • Septicemia and Bacteremia — systemic bloodstream infections caused by susceptible anaerobic organisms
  • Peritonitis — intra-abdominal infection and inflammation of the peritoneum caused by anaerobes
  • Brain Abscess — intracranial abscess caused by anaerobic bacteria, where Filmet DS 800 mg's excellent CNS penetration is a key clinical advantage
  • Pelvic Abscess — localized pelvic collections of pus caused by anaerobic organisms
  • Pelvic Cellulitis — spreading bacterial infection of pelvic soft tissues
  • Postoperative Wound Infections — anaerobic infections of surgical wounds
  • Anaerobically Infected Leg Ulcers and Pressure Sores — chronic wound infections with anaerobic organisms, including malodorous infected ulcers where Filmet DS 800 mg gel may be applied topically
  • Antibiotic-Associated Pseudomembranous Colitis — caused by Clostridioides difficile (formerly Clostridium difficile) toxin; Filmet DS 800 mg is used as first-line or alternative therapy for mild to moderate C. difficile-associated diarrhea (CDAD)

Protozoal and Parasitic Infections

  • Amoebiasis — All Forms
    • Intestinal amoebiasis — dysentery and colitis caused by Entamoeba histolytica
    • Extra-intestinal amoebiasis — hepatic amoebic abscess and other invasive forms
    • Asymptomatic cyst passers — treatment of carrier state to eradicate the organism and prevent spread
  • Giardiasis — intestinal infection with Giardia lamblia (Giardia intestinalis), causing chronic diarrhea, bloating, and malabsorption
  • Urogenital Trichomoniasis — sexually transmitted infection caused by Trichomonas vaginalis, causing vaginitis in women and urethritis in men; both sexual partners should be treated simultaneously to prevent reinfection

Gynecological Infections

  • Bacterial Vaginosis — also known as non-specific vaginitis, caused by the overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria (including Gardnerella vaginalis) in the vaginal flora; treated effectively with oral or vaginal Filmet DS 800 mg

Oral and Dental Infections

  • Acute Ulcerative Gingivitis — also known as necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis (NUG) or Vincent's angina; a painful bacterial infection of the gums caused by anaerobic oral flora including Fusobacterium and Spirochetes
  • Acute Dental Infections — periapical abscesses, periodontal infections, and other dental infections caused by anaerobic oral bacteria

Theropeutic Class

Amoebicides / Antiprotozoal Drugs / Anti-diarrhoeal Antimicrobials / Antibacterial Agents (Anaerobes)

Pharmacology

Filmet DS 800 mg is a synthetic 5-nitroimidazole antimicrobial agent that belongs to the imidazole class of antibacterial drugs. It is classified therapeutically as both an antiprotozoal agent and an antianaerobic antibacterial. It is unique among antimicrobials in its highly selective activity against obligate anaerobic organisms and certain protozoa — organisms that exist and thrive in low-oxygen or oxygen-free environments.

Mechanism of Action

Filmet DS 800 mg is a prodrug that requires intracellular activation to exert its antimicrobial effect. The activation mechanism is selective for anaerobic or microaerophilic organisms:

  1. Intracellular Reduction: The 5-nitro group of the Filmet DS 800 mg molecule is reduced intracellularly by electron transport proteins unique to anaerobic organisms — specifically by low-redox-potential electron carriers such as ferredoxin, flavodoxin, and pyruvate-ferredoxin oxidoreductase (PFOR). This reductive activation only occurs in cells with sufficiently low intracellular redox potential — which is characteristic of obligate anaerobes and certain protozoa, but not of aerobic mammalian cells.
  2. Formation of Cytotoxic Reactive Intermediates: Reduction generates short-lived, highly reactive nitro radical anions and other reduced toxic intermediates.
  3. DNA Strand Break and Disruption: These reduced metabolites interact directly with microbial DNA — causing single-strand and double-strand breaks in the DNA helix, inhibiting DNA synthesis and repair, and leading to rapid bacterial cell death. This mechanism produces a bactericidal and protozoicidal effect.

Key selectivity: Aerobic mammalian cells cannot reduce Filmet DS 800 mg's nitro group at physiologically normal redox potentials, explaining why the drug is selectively toxic to anaerobes and protozoa while being well tolerated in humans at therapeutic doses.


Spectrum of Activity

  • Anaerobic bacteria: Bacteroides fragilis and the entire Bacteroides group, Fusobacterium spp., Clostridium spp. (including C. difficile and C. perfringens), anaerobic streptococci (peptostreptococci), Veillonella spp., and other obligate anaerobes
  • Protozoa: Entamoeba histolytica, Giardia lamblia, Trichomonas vaginalis, Blastocystis hominis
  • Microaerophilic bacteria (off-label use): Helicobacter pylori (as part of combination regimens), Gardnerella vaginalis
  • Not active against: Aerobic bacteria, fungi, viruses, and spirochetes

Pharmacokinetics

  • Absorption: Filmet DS 800 mg is rapidly and almost completely absorbed following oral administration, with bioavailability approaching 100%. Food may delay but does not significantly reduce absorption. Peak plasma concentrations are reached within 1 to 2 hours after an oral dose.
  • Distribution: Filmet DS 800 mg distributes widely throughout body tissues and fluids. It achieves excellent concentrations in:
    • Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) — excellent CNS penetration, making it the drug of choice for brain abscesses and CNS anaerobic infections (CSF concentrations are approximately 100% of serum levels)
    • Saliva, bile, peritoneal fluid, vaginal secretions, seminal fluid, bone, and breast milk
    • Liver abscesses (achieving high intracavitary concentrations)
    Plasma protein binding is low — approximately 20%.
  • Metabolism: Extensively metabolized in the liver by oxidation and glucuronide conjugation. The major metabolite — hydroxy-Filmet DS 800 mg — retains significant antibacterial activity (approximately 30–65% of parent drug activity). Other metabolites are largely inactive. This hepatic metabolism is clinically important: significant hepatic impairment reduces drug clearance and requires dose reduction.
  • Half-life: Approximately 6 to 8 hours in adults with normal hepatic function — allowing three-times-daily or twice-daily dosing. The active hydroxy-metabolite has a similar half-life.
  • Elimination: Filmet DS 800 mg and its metabolites are excreted primarily in the urine (approximately 60–80% of the dose) and to a lesser extent in feces (6–15%). Only a small fraction of unchanged parent drug appears in the urine. Urine may appear dark or brown due to the presence of Filmet DS 800 mg metabolites — patients should be warned of this harmless discoloration.

Dosage of Filmet DS 800 mg

The dose of Filmet DS 800 mg depends on the indication, formulation, patient age, and weight. Always follow your registered physician's prescribed dose. Do not self-medicate.

Oral Tablets and Suspension

Trichomoniasis

Patient Group Dose / Regimen
Adults and children over 10 years
  • 200 mg three times daily (t.i.d.) for 7 days, OR
  • 400 mg twice daily (b.i.d.) for 7 days, OR
  • 800 mg in the morning + 1–2 g at night for 2 days, OR
  • 2 g as a single dose (single-dose regimen)
Children 7–10 years 100 mg three times daily
Children 3–7 years 100 mg twice daily
Children 1–3 years 50 mg three times daily

Intestinal Amoebiasis

Patient Group Dose Duration
Adults and children over 10 years 800 mg three times daily 5 days
Children 7–10 years 400 mg three times daily 5 days
Children 3–7 years 200 mg four times daily 5 days
Children 1–3 years 200 mg three times daily 5 days

Extra-Intestinal and Asymptomatic Amoebiasis

Patient Group Dose Duration
Adults and children over 10 years 400–800 mg three times daily 5–10 days
Children 7–10 years 200–400 mg three times daily 5–10 days
Children 3–7 years 100–200 mg four times daily 5–10 days
Children 1–3 years 100–200 mg three times daily 5–10 days

Giardiasis

Patient Group Dose Duration
Adults and children over 10 years 2 g once daily 3 days
Children 7–10 years 1 g once daily 3 days
Children 3–7 years 600–800 mg once daily 3 days
Children 1–3 years 500 mg once daily 3 days

Acute Ulcerative Gingivitis

Patient Group Dose Duration
Adults and children over 10 years 200 mg three times daily 3 days
Children 7–10 years 100 mg three times daily 3 days
Children 3–7 years 100 mg twice daily 3 days
Children 1–3 years 50 mg three times daily 3 days

Acute Dental Infections

Patient Group Dose Duration
Adults and children over 10 years 200 mg three times daily 3–7 days

Bacterial Vaginosis

Patient Group Dose / Regimen
Adults and children over 10 years
  • 400 mg twice daily for 7 days, OR
  • 2 g as a single oral dose

Anaerobic Infections and Leg Ulcers / Pressure Sores

Patient Group Dose Duration
Adults (anaerobic infections) 800 mg initially, then 400 mg three times daily 7 days
Adults (leg ulcers and pressure sores) 400 mg three times daily 7 days
Children 1–10 years (anaerobic infections) 7.5 mg/kg three times daily 7 days

Surgical Prophylaxis (Oral)

Patient Group Dose Timing
Adults and children over 10 years 400 mg three times daily Started 24 hours before surgery (single-day course)
Children 1–10 years 7.5 mg/kg three times daily Started 24 hours before surgery

Vaginal Gel

The recommended dose for bacterial vaginosis is one applicatorful of Filmet DS 800 mg 0.75% gel (approximately 5 g delivering approximately 37.5 mg Filmet DS 800 mg), administered intravaginally once or twice daily for 5 days. For once-daily dosing, Filmet DS 800 mg vaginal gel should be administered at bedtime to optimize retention and local drug contact time.

Suppositories (Rectal)

Indication Patient Group Dose Duration / Frequency
Anaerobic Infections Adults 1 g Every 8 hours for 3 days, then every 12 hours
Anaerobic Infections Children 5–10 years 500 mg Every 8 hours for 3 days, then every 12 hours
Anaerobic Infections Children over 10 years Adult dose As above
Surgical Prophylaxis Adults 1 g 2 hours before surgery; up to 3 further doses of 1 g every 8 hours for high-risk procedures
Surgical Prophylaxis Children 5–10 years 500 mg 2 hours before surgery; up to 3 further doses every 8 hours for high-risk procedures

Intravenous (IV) Infusion

Filmet DS 800 mg IV infusion requires no dilution and must not be mixed with any other drug prior to administration. Administer as a separate infusion.

Patient Group Dose Infusion Rate Maximum Daily Dose Duration
Adults and children over 12 years 500 mg every 8 hours 5 ml/minute 4 g/day 7 days (may extend if needed); for surgical prophylaxis: administer shortly before surgery followed by 8-hourly doses for 24 hours
Children under 12 years 7.5 mg/kg body weight every 8 hours 5 ml/minute 7 days or as clinically indicated

Administration of Filmet DS 800 mg

Oral Tablets

  • Filmet DS 800 mg tablets should be taken with or after food to reduce the risk of gastrointestinal side effects (nausea, stomach discomfort).
  • Swallow tablets whole with a full glass of water. Do not crush or chew film-coated tablets if applicable.
  • For twice-daily or three-times-daily regimens, space doses as evenly as possible throughout the day (e.g., every 8 hours for TID dosing) to maintain consistent blood levels.
  • Complete the full prescribed course even if symptoms improve early — incomplete courses may cause relapse and promote antimicrobial resistance.
  • Do not consume alcohol during treatment or for at least 24–48 hours after completing the course — a disulfiram-like reaction will occur (see Drug Interactions).

Oral Suspension

  • Shake the bottle well before each use to ensure uniform distribution.
  • Use the calibrated measuring device provided — do not use a regular household teaspoon.
  • May be given with or after food to minimize GI side effects.
  • Store as directed on the label — typically at room temperature; do not freeze.

Vaginal Gel

  • Use the applicator provided to administer the gel intravaginally. Fill the applicator as instructed and insert it into the vagina as far as it will comfortably go, then slowly push the plunger to deposit the gel.
  • For once-daily dosing, apply at bedtime to maximize retention and improve local drug contact time within the vagina.
  • A thin sanitary pad may be worn to protect clothing from any vaginal discharge.
  • Do not use tampons, douche, or use other vaginal products during treatment unless directed by a physician.
  • Wash hands thoroughly before and after use.
  • Do not use Filmet DS 800 mg vaginal gel for trichomoniasis — the vaginal route does not achieve adequate therapeutic levels in the urogenital tract for this infection; oral systemic therapy is required.

Suppositories (Rectal)

  • Wash hands before and after insertion.
  • If the suppository is too soft, refrigerate briefly before use.
  • Remove the foil wrapper and insert the suppository pointed end first, gently into the rectum.
  • Remain still for a few minutes after insertion to allow adequate absorption and retention.
  • Suppositories are useful when oral administration is not possible or when rectal absorption is preferred (e.g., vomiting patients or perioperative use).
  • Store suppositories below 25°C — avoid excessive heat.

IV Infusion

  • Filmet DS 800 mg IV infusion is for intravenous administration only and is ready to use — do not dilute the infusion solution further.
  • Must not be mixed with any other drug in the same infusion bag or line. Administer as a separate infusion through a dedicated line, or flush the line before and after administration.
  • Administer at a rate of 5 ml per minute (a 100 ml bag containing 500 mg should be infused over approximately 20 minutes).
  • Inspect the infusion solution for particulate matter and discoloration before use. Discard if the solution appears cloudy or contains visible particles.
  • Switch to oral Filmet DS 800 mg as soon as the patient can tolerate oral medication.
  • Discard any unused portion of an opened infusion bottle — single use only.

Interaction of Filmet DS 800 mg

Alcohol — Critical Interaction (Disulfiram-Like Reaction)

This is the most widely known and practically important drug interaction with Filmet DS 800 mg. Filmet DS 800 mg inhibits the enzyme acetaldehyde dehydrogenase, which is responsible for the second step in alcohol metabolism (conversion of acetaldehyde to acetate). When alcohol is consumed concurrently with Filmet DS 800 mg, acetaldehyde accumulates in the blood, causing a highly unpleasant and potentially dangerous disulfiram-like (Antabuse) reaction, including:

  • Severe flushing and facial redness
  • Intense nausea and vomiting
  • Tachycardia (rapid heart rate) and palpitations
  • Headache and dizziness
  • Hypotension and sweating
  • In severe cases: arrhythmias and cardiovascular collapse

Patients must not consume alcoholic beverages or any medications or preparations containing alcohol (including mouthwashes, cough syrups, and some liquid medications) during Filmet DS 800 mg treatment and for at least 24–48 hours after the last dose.

Disulfiram (Avoid Combination — Contraindicated)

The concurrent use of Filmet DS 800 mg and Disulfiram (a drug used to treat alcohol dependence) has been associated with psychotic reactions and confusion. This combination is clinically contraindicated. A washout period of at least 2 weeks between disulfiram and Filmet DS 800 mg is recommended.

Warfarin and Oral Anticoagulants (Important Interaction)

Filmet DS 800 mg significantly potentiates the anticoagulant effect of warfarin by inhibiting its hepatic catabolism (through CYP2C9 inhibition), leading to increased warfarin plasma levels and a substantially elevated risk of hemorrhagic events. This interaction can lead to life-threatening bleeding if not managed. In patients who must receive both drugs:

  • Monitor INR/prothrombin time more frequently — at least every 2–3 days during concurrent Filmet DS 800 mg treatment
  • Reduce the warfarin dose as clinically indicated based on INR monitoring
  • Resume normal anticoagulation monitoring after completing the Filmet DS 800 mg course

Lithium

Filmet DS 800 mg may increase plasma lithium concentrations, raising the risk of lithium toxicity (tremor, confusion, nausea, polyuria, cardiac arrhythmias). Serum lithium levels should be closely monitored when Filmet DS 800 mg is added to or removed from a lithium regimen.

Cyclosporin

When co-administration of Filmet DS 800 mg and cyclosporin is necessary, both serum cyclosporin and serum creatinine levels should be closely monitored. Filmet DS 800 mg may increase cyclosporin plasma concentrations, with potential nephrotoxic consequences in transplant recipients.

Phenytoin and Phenobarbital (CYP Enzyme Inducers)

Phenytoin and phenobarbital are potent inducers of hepatic cytochrome P450 enzymes that metabolize Filmet DS 800 mg. Co-administration results in increased elimination of Filmet DS 800 mg, leading to reduced Filmet DS 800 mg plasma concentrations and potentially insufficient therapeutic drug levels. If concurrent use is necessary, monitor clinical response and consider increasing the Filmet DS 800 mg dose.

5-Fluorouracil (5-FU)

Filmet DS 800 mg reduces the clearance of 5-fluorouracil, resulting in increased plasma levels and potentially significantly increased toxicity of 5-FU (myelosuppression, mucositis, diarrhea, nausea). This interaction requires careful dose adjustment and close monitoring when both drugs are used in oncology combination regimens.

Busulfan

Filmet DS 800 mg may increase plasma levels of busulfan (a chemotherapy agent used in conditioning regimens for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation). Elevated busulfan levels can lead to severe busulfan toxicity — including veno-occlusive disease of the liver, seizures, and severe myelosuppression. Co-administration should be avoided; if unavoidable, busulfan plasma levels must be closely monitored.

Contraindications

Filmet DS 800 mg is contraindicated in the following situations:

  • Known hypersensitivity to Filmet DS 800 mg or to any other nitroimidazole derivative (e.g., tinidazole, ornidazole, secnidazole, nimorazole). Cross-sensitivity among nitroimidazoles is possible, and all members of this drug class should be avoided in patients with confirmed nitroimidazole allergy.
  • Concurrent use with disulfiram — serious psychotic reactions have been reported (see Drug Interactions).
  • Use in the first trimester of pregnancy unless clearly necessary and no safer alternative exists. Use in the second and third trimesters should also only proceed when the benefit clearly outweighs the potential risk (see Pregnancy section).
  • Concurrent administration with alcohol or alcohol-containing preparations — the risk of a severe disulfiram-like reaction is absolute.

Side Effects of Filmet DS 800 mg

Filmet DS 800 mg is generally well tolerated at standard doses for usual treatment durations. Most adverse effects are dose-related and more likely with prolonged therapy. The following have been reported:

Gastrointestinal Effects (Most Common)

  • Metallic or bitter taste — one of the most frequently reported and characteristic adverse effects; usually mild and transient
  • Nausea — very common; taking Filmet DS 800 mg with food significantly reduces this
  • Vomiting
  • Diarrhea
  • Abdominal pain and cramping
  • Anorexia (loss of appetite)
  • Furring of the tongue and oral thrush (candidiasis) — particularly with prolonged therapy
  • Rarely: pancreatitis

Central Nervous System Effects

  • Drowsiness and sedation
  • Dizziness and vertigo
  • Headache
  • Rare: Peripheral neuropathy — numbness, tingling, burning, and paresthesia of the hands and feet; more common with prolonged or high-dose therapy. Usually reversible upon discontinuation, but may be irreversible in severe cases.
  • Rare: Central neuropathy — including ataxia (coordination problems), encephalopathy, confusion, and seizures/convulsions; associated with high doses or prolonged treatment. Discontinue Filmet DS 800 mg immediately if significant CNS effects occur.

Skin and Hypersensitivity Reactions

  • Skin rash, urticaria (hives), and pruritus (itching)
  • Flushing
  • Angioedema — rare
  • Anaphylaxis — very rare but has been reported

Urinary Effects

  • Dark or brownish discoloration of urine — due to the presence of Filmet DS 800 mg metabolites; harmless and reversible; patients should be warned in advance
  • Dysuria (painful urination) — reported occasionally
  • Rarely: cystitis (bladder inflammation)

Hematological Effects (Rare)

  • Leukopenia (decreased white blood cell count) — more common with prolonged therapy; usually reversible
  • Neutropenia — regular leucocyte count monitoring is recommended during extended treatment courses
  • Thrombocytopenia (rare)

Hepatic Effects (Rare)

  • Transient elevation of liver enzymes (ALT, AST, alkaline phosphatase)
  • Cholestatic hepatitis — rarely reported

Vaginal Gel-Specific Side Effects

  • Vaginal discharge, burning, and irritation at the application site
  • Vulvar or vaginal pruritus
  • Rarely: pelvic discomfort
  • Systemic side effects are significantly less frequent with vaginal gel due to lower systemic absorption compared to oral formulations

Important warning: If signs of significant central or peripheral neuropathy develop (ataxia, confusion, convulsions, severe paresthesia), Filmet DS 800 mg should be discontinued immediately and the patient evaluated.

Pregnancy & Lactation

Pregnancy

The US FDA Pregnancy Category of Filmet DS 800 mg is Category B. Animal reproduction studies have not demonstrated evidence of fetal harm, teratogenicity, or impaired fertility. However, there are no adequate and well-controlled studies of Filmet DS 800 mg in pregnant women. Because animal reproductive toxicology studies are not always predictive of human outcomes, Filmet DS 800 mg should be used during pregnancy only if clearly needed and when the clinical benefit to the mother outweighs any theoretical risk to the fetus.

First trimester: Use should be avoided unless no suitable alternative exists. Filmet DS 800 mg has been shown to be mutagenic in bacteria and carcinogenic in rodents at high doses — while human carcinogenicity has not been established, caution during organogenesis (first trimester) is prudent.

Second and third trimesters: Filmet DS 800 mg may be used when clinically necessary, particularly for systemic anaerobic infections and trichomoniasis (for which it remains the most effective oral treatment). For trichomoniasis specifically, treatment should be deferred to the second trimester where possible.

Pregnant women with trichomoniasis who receive Filmet DS 800 mg should be advised that the treatment is for symptomatic relief and infection clearance, and that their sexual partner must also be treated to prevent reinfection.

Lactation

Filmet DS 800 mg is excreted into human breast milk and achieves concentrations similar to maternal plasma levels. The estimated infant dose from breastfeeding is approximately 10–13% of the maternal weight-adjusted dose — which is below the typical therapeutic dose given to infants directly.

While no adverse effects on breastfed infants have been definitively established at the doses used to treat the mother, caution should be exercised when Filmet DS 800 mg is administered to a nursing woman. Options to consider include:

  • For short-course treatment (e.g., single 2 g dose for trichomoniasis): a feeding "pump and discard" strategy for 12–24 hours after the dose, while expressing and discarding breast milk, can reduce infant exposure. Resume breastfeeding after this washout period.
  • For prolonged courses: temporarily discontinuing breastfeeding for the duration of Filmet DS 800 mg treatment should be considered, with the physician weighing the significant benefits of breastfeeding for both mother and infant against the low but uncertain risk of infant exposure.
  • A clinical decision should always be made in consultation with the treating physician.

Precautions & Warnings

Prolonged and High-Dose Therapy — Neurological Monitoring

If Filmet DS 800 mg must be administered for longer than the usually recommended treatment duration — due to compelling clinical necessity — the following monitoring is mandatory:

  • Regular hematological monitoring — complete blood count with leucocyte count should be performed periodically, as neutropenia and leukopenia may develop
  • Neurological monitoring — patients should be closely monitored for signs of peripheral neuropathy (paresthesia, numbness, tingling) or central neuropathy (ataxia, dizziness, confusion, convulsions). If significant neurological adverse reactions develop, Filmet DS 800 mg should be discontinued immediately.

Hepatic Impairment — Dose Reduction Required

Filmet DS 800 mg is primarily metabolized by hepatic oxidation. In patients with advanced hepatic insufficiency, Filmet DS 800 mg clearance may be substantially impaired, leading to significant drug accumulation. In patients with hepatic encephalopathy, high plasma concentrations of Filmet DS 800 mg may worsen encephalopathic symptoms — creating a particularly dangerous cycle. Therefore:

  • Filmet DS 800 mg should be administered with caution in patients with hepatic impairment
  • The daily dosage should be reduced to one-third of the normal dose and administered as a single daily dose in patients with advanced hepatic disease
  • Liver function should be monitored during therapy

Alcohol — Absolute Prohibition

Patients must be explicitly and clearly warned that they must not consume any alcoholic beverages or alcohol-containing preparations (including certain mouthwashes, cough mixtures, and topical medications) during treatment with Filmet DS 800 mg and for at least 24–48 hours after the final dose. The disulfiram-like reaction can be severe and potentially dangerous.

Urine Discoloration

Patients should be warned that Filmet DS 800 mg may cause their urine to appear dark or brownish in color. This is caused by Filmet DS 800 mg metabolites excreted in the urine and is a harmless and reversible phenomenon — it does not indicate kidney damage or hematuria and requires no clinical action.

Treatment of Sexual Partners in Trichomoniasis

In trichomoniasis, treatment of the patient alone is often insufficient to achieve a cure. Both sexual partners must be treated simultaneously to eliminate the infection and prevent reinfection. If the partner is not treated concurrently, reinfection of the treated patient is highly likely.

Candida Superinfection

Filmet DS 800 mg may cause overgrowth of Candida species (oral or vaginal thrush) — particularly with prolonged use. Monitor for signs of candidiasis during extended therapy and treat appropriately with antifungal agents if needed.

Carcinogenicity Considerations

Filmet DS 800 mg has been shown to be mutagenic in bacteria (Ames test) and carcinogenic in rodents at doses substantially higher than those used therapeutically in humans. The clinical relevance of these findings to short-course human therapeutic use is uncertain, and no increased incidence of cancer has been definitively established from clinical or epidemiological data in humans. Nevertheless, unnecessary use of Filmet DS 800 mg should be avoided, and prolonged therapy should only be undertaken when clearly indicated and with appropriate clinical monitoring.

Overdose Effects of Filmet DS 800 mg

Filmet DS 800 mg has a relatively wide safety margin at commonly available doses. The following is known from reported overdose cases:

  • Single oral doses of Filmet DS 800 mg up to 12 g have been reported in suicide attempts and accidental overdoses in adults.
  • Symptoms observed in reported overdose cases were generally limited to:
    • Nausea and vomiting
    • Ataxia — difficulty with coordination and balance
    • Slight disorientation and confusion
    • Paresthesia (tingling/numbness) — reflecting the neurotoxic potential at high concentrations
    • In severe cases: convulsions and peripheral neuropathy

Management of Overdose

  • There is no specific antidote for Filmet DS 800 mg overdose
  • Management is symptomatic and supportive:
    • Gastric lavage or activated charcoal if presented within 1 hour of ingestion (and patient is conscious with intact airway protection)
    • Monitor and maintain vital signs, neurological status, and respiratory function
    • Convulsions should be managed with appropriate anticonvulsants (e.g., IV diazepam)
    • Maintain adequate hydration
  • Filmet DS 800 mg is dialyzable — hemodialysis can effectively reduce plasma Filmet DS 800 mg levels in cases of serious toxicity or in renally impaired patients

In the event of suspected Filmet DS 800 mg overdose, contact a poison control center or seek emergency medical care immediately.

Storage Conditions

  • Store tablets, suspension, and vaginal gel below 30°C, in a cool, dry place protected from direct light.
  • Keep all formulations out of the reach of children.
  • Do not use any formulation after the expiry date printed on the label or packaging.
  • Oral suspension: Store at room temperature below 30°C. Keep the bottle tightly closed. Do not refrigerate unless specifically stated on the label; chilling may cause the suspension to thicken. Shake well before each use and use within the stated shelf-life after opening or reconstitution (typically 7–14 days).
  • Vaginal gel: Store at room temperature below 25°C–30°C. Do not freeze. Keep the tube tightly closed after use. Discard within the period stated on the label after first opening.
  • IV infusion bottles: Store below 30°C, protected from light, in original packaging. Do not freeze. Inspect for clarity before use and discard if solution is discolored or contains visible particulates. Single-use only — discard any unused portion immediately after use.
  • Store all Filmet DS 800 mg products away from moisture and heat sources (avoid bathroom cabinets).

Use In Special Populations

Patients with Hepatic Impairment

Filmet DS 800 mg is primarily metabolized in the liver by oxidative pathways. In patients with advanced hepatic insufficiency or hepatic encephalopathy:

  • Substantial impairment of Filmet DS 800 mg clearance occurs, leading to significant drug accumulation
  • The resulting high plasma concentrations may worsen symptoms of hepatic encephalopathy
  • Filmet DS 800 mg should be administered with great caution in these patients
  • The daily dosage should be reduced to one-third of the normal dose, administered as a single daily dose
  • Liver function and clinical neurological status should be closely monitored during therapy
  • In mild to moderate hepatic impairment, no dose adjustment is usually required, but monitoring is advisable

Patients with Renal Impairment

The elimination half-life of Filmet DS 800 mg itself remains essentially unchanged in the presence of renal failure, as the parent drug is primarily eliminated via hepatic metabolism. Therefore, no dose adjustment is required for Filmet DS 800 mg in patients with renal failure based on conventional pharmacokinetic principles.

However, Filmet DS 800 mg metabolites (including the hydroxy-metabolite with residual antibacterial activity) are primarily renally excreted and accumulate in patients with renal failure. The clinical significance of this metabolite accumulation is not fully established, but caution is warranted in severe renal failure.

Hemodialysis: Filmet DS 800 mg and its metabolites are efficiently removed during an 8-hour hemodialysis session. Therefore, Filmet DS 800 mg should be re-administered immediately after each hemodialysis session to restore therapeutic plasma levels.

Peritoneal dialysis (IDP or CAPD): No routine dose adjustment or supplemental dosing is required in patients undergoing either intermittent peritoneal dialysis or continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis.

Elderly Patients

No specific age-based dose adjustment is recommended for elderly patients, as the pharmacokinetics of Filmet DS 800 mg are not significantly altered by aging alone. However, elderly patients are more likely to have reduced hepatic metabolic capacity, and liver function should be considered when prescribing Filmet DS 800 mg in this population. Use the lowest effective dose and be alert for accumulation effects — particularly neurological effects — in elderly patients with hepatic dysfunction.

Pediatric Patients

Filmet DS 800 mg is approved for use in children across a wide range of indications with age-appropriate and weight-based dosing. The suspension formulation is preferred for infants and young children. The safety and efficacy of Filmet DS 800 mg in children under 1 year of age are not as extensively studied — use in neonates and young infants should be under close specialist medical supervision, with awareness of the potential for CNS toxicity due to immature blood-brain barrier function in very young infants.

Drug Classes

Amoebicides, Anti-diarrhoeal Antiprotozoal

Mode Of Action

Filmet DS 800 mg is a member of the imidazole class of antibacterial drug and is classified therapeutically as an antiprotozoal agent. The 5-nitro group of Filmet DS 800 mg is reduced by anaerobes metabolically. Studies have demonstrated that the reduced form of this drug interacts with DNA and gives bactericidal action of Filmet DS 800 mg.

Pregnancy

US FDA Pregnancy Category of Filmet DS 800 mg is B. There are, however, no adequate and well-controlled studies in pregnant women. Because animal reproduction studies are not always predictive of human response, this drug should be used during pregnancy only if clearly needed. Filmet DS 800 mg have been shown to be excreted in human milk. So, caution should be exercised when Filmet DS 800 mg is administered to a nursing woman.

Pediatric Uses

Hepatic impairment: Filmet DS 800 mg is mainly metabolised by hepatic oxidation. Substantial impairment of Filmet DS 800 mg clearance may occur in the presence of advanced hepatic insufficiency. Significant cumulation may occur in patients with hepatic encephalopathy and the resulting high plasma concentrations of Filmet DS 800 mg may contribute to the symptoms of the encephalopathy. Filmet DS 800 mg should therefore, be administered with caution to patients with hepatic encephalopathy. The daily dosage should be reduced to one third and may be administered once daily. Patients should be warned that Filmet DS 800 mg may darken urine.Renal impairment: The elimination half-life of Filmet DS 800 mg remains unchanged in the presence of renal failure. The dosage of Filmet DS 800 mg therefore needs no reduction. Such patients however retain the metabolites of Filmet DS 800 mg. The clinical significance of this is not known at present. In patients undergoing haemodialysis Filmet DS 800 mg and metabolites are efficiently removed during an eight hour period of dialysis. Filmet DS 800 mg should therefore be re-administered immediately after haemodialysis. No routine adjustment in the dosage of Filmet DS 800 mg need be made in patients with renal failure undergoing intermittent peritoneal dialysis (IDP) or continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD).

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Filmet DS 800 mg used for?

Filmet DS 800 mg is a broad-spectrum antimicrobial agent with potent activity against anaerobic bacteria and protozoa. It is indicated for a wide range of parasitic, protozoal, and anaerobic bacterial infections across multiple organ systems and medical specialties. Anaerobic Bacterial Infections Surgical Prophylaxis — prevention of postoperative infections due to anaerobic bacteria, particularly …

What is the dosage of Filmet DS 800 mg?

The dose of Filmet DS 800 mg depends on the indication, formulation, patient age, and weight. Always follow your registered physician's prescribed dose. Do not self-medicate. Oral Tablets and Suspension Trichomoniasis Patient Group Dose / Regimen Adults and children over 10 years 200 mg three times daily (t.i.d.) for 7 days, OR 400 mg twice daily (b.i.d.) for 7 days, OR 800 mg in the morning + 1–2…

What are the side effects of Filmet DS 800 mg?

Filmet DS 800 mg is generally well tolerated at standard doses for usual treatment durations. Most adverse effects are dose-related and more likely with prolonged therapy. The following have been reported: Gastrointestinal Effects (Most Common) Metallic or bitter taste — one of the most frequently reported and characteristic adverse effects; usually mild and transient Nausea — very common; taking …

Who should not take Filmet DS 800 mg?

Filmet DS 800 mg is contraindicated in the following situations: Known hypersensitivity to Filmet DS 800 mg or to any other nitroimidazole derivative (e.g., tinidazole, ornidazole, secnidazole, nimorazole). Cross-sensitivity among nitroimidazoles is possible, and all members of this drug class should be avoided in patients with confirmed nitroimidazole allergy. Concurrent use with disulfiram — ser…

What precautions should be taken with Filmet DS 800 mg?

Prolonged and High-Dose Therapy — Neurological Monitoring If Filmet DS 800 mg must be administered for longer than the usually recommended treatment duration — due to compelling clinical necessity — the following monitoring is mandatory: Regular hematological monitoring — complete blood count with leucocyte count should be performed periodically, as neutropenia and leukopenia may develop Neurologi…

Is Filmet DS 800 mg safe during pregnancy and breastfeeding?

Pregnancy The US FDA Pregnancy Category of Filmet DS 800 mg is Category B . Animal reproduction studies have not demonstrated evidence of fetal harm, teratogenicity, or impaired fertility. However, there are no adequate and well-controlled studies of Filmet DS 800 mg in pregnant women. Because animal reproductive toxicology studies are not always predictive of human outcomes, Filmet DS 800 mg shou…

Disclaimer

The information provided is accurate to our best practices, but it does not replace professional medical advice. We cannot guarantee its completeness or accuracy. The absence of specific information about a drug should not be seen as an endorsement. We are not responsible for any consequences resulting from this information, so consult a healthcare professional for any concerns or questions.