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Medicine overview

Indications of Neotack 300 mg

Neotack 300 mg Hydrochloride is a histamine H2-receptor antagonist (H2 blocker) indicated for the treatment and prevention of a range of acid-related gastrointestinal disorders. It works by reducing gastric acid secretion, allowing the healing of acid-damaged mucosa and relieving acid-related symptoms. Neotack 300 mg is indicated for the following conditions:

Duodenal Ulcer

Neotack 300 mg is indicated for the short-term treatment of active duodenal ulcers — peptic ulcers involving the first part of the small intestine (duodenum). Most duodenal ulcers heal within 4 weeks of therapy. Neotack 300 mg is also indicated for the maintenance therapy of healed duodenal ulcers at reduced doses to prevent relapse — a common problem with this condition.

Benign Gastric Ulcer

Neotack 300 mg is indicated for the short-term treatment of active benign gastric ulcers (stomach ulcers not associated with malignancy). Most gastric ulcers heal within 6–8 weeks of Neotack 300 mg therapy. Maintenance therapy at reduced doses is also indicated to reduce the frequency of gastric ulcer recurrence.

Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD)

Neotack 300 mg is indicated for the treatment of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) — a chronic condition characterized by the backward flow of stomach acid into the esophagus, causing heartburn, regurgitation, and esophageal irritation. It provides symptomatic relief and suppresses acid to promote mucosal healing in GERD.

Erosive Esophagitis

Neotack 300 mg is indicated for the healing and maintenance of erosive esophagitis — a more severe form of GERD where the esophageal lining has been damaged by chronic acid exposure. After initial healing, maintenance therapy reduces the risk of recurrence of esophageal erosions.

Pathological Hypersecretory Conditions

Neotack 300 mg is indicated for the long-term treatment of pathological hypersecretory conditions where the stomach produces excessive acid, including:

  • Zollinger-Ellison Syndrome — a rare condition caused by gastrin-secreting tumors (gastrinomas) that stimulate massive gastric acid overproduction
  • Systemic Mastocytosis — a disorder of abnormal mast cell proliferation with excessive histamine release
  • Multiple Endocrine Adenomas
  • Postoperative Hypersecretion and "short-gut" syndrome

Stress Ulcer Prophylaxis

Neotack 300 mg injection is used in hospitalized patients, particularly in intensive care settings, to prevent stress-related gastric mucosal damage and upper GI bleeding in critically ill patients (including those on mechanical ventilation, with severe burns, major trauma, or following major surgery).

Anaphylaxis — Adjunctive Use

Intravenous Neotack 300 mg may be used as an adjunct to epinephrine in the management of anaphylaxis for additional relief of histamine-mediated urticaria and hives. It should not be used as the primary or sole treatment of anaphylaxis, as it does not address airway obstruction or cardiovascular shock.

Theropeutic Class

H2 receptor antagonist

Pharmacology

Neotack 300 mg Hydrochloride is a competitive and reversible inhibitor of histamine action at the histamine H2-receptor, including those located on the basolateral membrane of gastric parietal cells. It belongs to the second generation of H2 blockers and offers greater potency and longer duration of action compared to cimetidine (the first H2 blocker).

Mechanism of Action

Gastric acid secretion by parietal cells is regulated by three primary stimulants — histamine, gastrin, and acetylcholine. Of these, histamine-mediated activation of H2 receptors plays the central and most important role:

  1. Histamine released from enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells in the gastric mucosa binds to H2 receptors on parietal cells.
  2. H2 receptor activation stimulates adenylyl cyclase, raising intracellular cyclic AMP (cAMP), which activates protein kinase A.
  3. This signalling cascade ultimately activates the H⁺/K⁺-ATPase proton pump, which pumps hydrogen ions into the gastric lumen in exchange for potassium ions — producing hydrochloric acid (HCl).

Neotack 300 mg competitively and reversibly blocks H2 receptors on parietal cells, inhibiting histamine-stimulated acid secretion. By blocking H2 receptors, Neotack 300 mg also indirectly reduces the amplifying effect of histamine on gastrin- and acetylcholine-stimulated acid secretion, producing a comprehensive reduction in acid output.

Pharmacological Properties

  • Not an anticholinergic agent — Neotack 300 mg does not block muscarinic receptors. It therefore does not produce the anticholinergic side effects associated with older agents (dry mouth, urinary retention, blurred vision, constipation).
  • Does not lower serum calcium — Neotack 300 mg does not affect serum calcium concentrations in hypercalcemic states.
  • Reduces all phases of acid secretion — Neotack 300 mg inhibits basal (fasting), nocturnal, and meal-stimulated acid secretion.
  • Nocturnal acid suppression is particularly effective — a single dose at bedtime significantly reduces overnight acid output, which is especially important for duodenal ulcer healing (which is primarily driven by nocturnal acid secretion).
  • Intrinsic factor — Neotack 300 mg does not significantly reduce intrinsic factor secretion at therapeutic doses.

Pharmacokinetics

  • Absorption: Oral Neotack 300 mg is approximately 50% absorbed following oral administration — not significantly affected by food or antacids. Peak plasma concentrations (Cmax) are achieved within 1 to 3 hours after an oral dose.
  • Distribution: Widely distributed in body tissues, including gastric secretions, bile, semen, and breast milk. Plasma protein binding is approximately 15%. Volume of distribution is approximately 1.4 L/kg.
  • Metabolism: Partially metabolized in the liver to N-oxide (primary metabolite), S-oxide, and desmethyl metabolites — all pharmacologically inactive or substantially less potent. Unlike cimetidine, Neotack 300 mg has a much lower affinity for cytochrome P450 enzymes, producing fewer clinically significant drug interactions.
  • Half-life: Approximately 2.5 to 3 hours in adults with normal renal function. Prolonged in patients with renal impairment and in elderly patients.
  • Elimination: Primarily renal — approximately 30–35% of an oral dose (and approximately 70% of an IV dose) is excreted unchanged in the urine via both glomerular filtration and active tubular secretion. Because renal excretion is the primary route of elimination, dose adjustment is required in renal impairment.

Dosage of Neotack 300 mg

Neotack 300 mg doses depend on the indication, route of administration, age, and renal function. Always follow your registered physician's prescribed dose. Do not self-medicate. Use the lowest effective dose for the shortest appropriate duration.

Adults — Oral

Indication Dose Frequency Duration
Active Duodenal Ulcer (treatment) 150 mg twice daily or 300 mg once daily at bedtime Twice daily or once at bedtime 4 weeks (up to 8 weeks if needed)
Duodenal Ulcer Maintenance 150 mg once daily at bedtime Once daily (bedtime) Long-term as required
Active Benign Gastric Ulcer 150 mg twice daily Twice daily 6–8 weeks
Gastric Ulcer Maintenance 150 mg once daily at bedtime Once daily (bedtime) Long-term as required
GERD (symptomatic) 150 mg twice daily Twice daily Up to 8 weeks; switch to PPI if insufficient response
Erosive Esophagitis (healing) 150 mg 4 times daily Four times daily Up to 12 weeks
Erosive Esophagitis (maintenance) 150 mg twice daily Twice daily Long-term as required
Zollinger-Ellison Syndrome 150 mg twice daily; titrate as needed (up to 6 g/day in severe disease) Twice daily or more frequently as needed Long-term; individualize dose

Pediatric Patients (1 Month to 16 Years) — Oral

Indication Dose Maximum Daily Dose
Duodenal and Gastric Ulcers 2–4 mg/kg twice daily 300 mg/day
Duodenal/Gastric Ulcer Maintenance 2–4 mg/kg once daily 150 mg/day
GERD and Erosive Esophagitis 5–10 mg/kg twice daily 600 mg/day

Adults — Parenteral (IM / IV)

Route Dose Administration
IM Injection 50 mg every 6–8 hours Undiluted, by deep intramuscular injection
IV Direct (Slow Bolus) 50 mg every 6–8 hours Dilute to ≥20 mL; inject over ≥5 minutes (rate ≤4 mL/min)
IV Intermittent Infusion 50 mg every 6–8 hours Dilute in ≥100 mL of 5% dextrose or compatible solution; infuse over 15–20 minutes
IV Continuous Infusion (Zollinger-Ellison / Stress Ulcer Prophylaxis) 6.25 mg/hour continuously; titrate as needed 150 mg diluted in 250 mL of 5% dextrose; infuse at 6.25 mg/hour over 24 hours

Maximum parenteral daily dose: 400 mg/day for most indications. Higher doses may be used for Zollinger-Ellison syndrome under close supervision.

Special Dosage Considerations

  • Renal Impairment (CrCl <50 mL/min): Reduce oral dose to 150 mg every 24 hours; for parenteral use, reduce to 50 mg every 18–24 hours. If clinically necessary, the frequency may be cautiously increased to every 12 hours. Hemodialysis reduces Neotack 300 mg levels — ideally schedule doses to coincide with the end of a dialysis session.
  • Hepatic Impairment: Neotack 300 mg is partially metabolized in the liver. Use with caution in patients with significant hepatic dysfunction; dose adjustment may be considered in severe hepatic impairment.
  • Elderly Patients: No routine dose adjustment based on age alone, but since elderly patients are more likely to have reduced renal function, renal function should be assessed and dose adjusted accordingly.

Administration of Neotack 300 mg

Oral Tablets and Syrup

  • Neotack 300 mg tablets and syrup may be taken with or without food. Absorption is not significantly affected by food.
  • Swallow tablets whole with a full glass of water. Do not crush or chew enteric-coated tablets.
  • For liquid formulations, measure carefully using the provided dosing syringe or a calibrated measuring device — do not use a regular kitchen spoon.
  • For once-daily dosing (maintenance therapy), the bedtime dose is preferred, as it most effectively suppresses nocturnal acid secretion — the primary driver of duodenal ulcer pathophysiology.
  • Antacids may be used concurrently for immediate pain relief while waiting for Neotack 300 mg to take effect; consult with your physician regarding timing.
  • If GERD does not respond adequately after 6–8 weeks, do not increase the Neotack 300 mg dose — consult your physician about switching to a proton pump inhibitor (PPI).
  • Continue taking Neotack 300 mg for the full prescribed duration, even if symptoms resolve early — healing requires continued acid suppression.

Intramuscular (IM) Injection

  • Administer Neotack 300 mg injection undiluted as a deep intramuscular injection into a large muscle mass.
  • Rotate injection sites if multiple doses are required.
  • IM administration may cause transient burning or pain at the injection site.

Intravenous (IV) Bolus Injection

  • Dilute 50 mg Neotack 300 mg in at least 20 mL of a compatible IV solution (0.9% Sodium Chloride, 5% Dextrose, or Ringer's Lactate) before injection.
  • Inject slowly over at least 5 minutes at a rate not exceeding 4 mL/minute.
  • Rapid IV injection must be avoided — it can cause bradycardia, hypotension, and cardiac arrhythmias.
  • Inspect visually for particulate matter and discoloration before use. Discard if discolored or contaminated.

Intravenous (IV) Intermittent Infusion

  • Dilute 50 mg Neotack 300 mg in at least 100 mL of compatible IV solution (5% Dextrose or 0.9% Sodium Chloride) to achieve a concentration ≤0.5 mg/mL.
  • Infuse over 15 to 20 minutes.

Intravenous (IV) Continuous Infusion

  • For Zollinger-Ellison syndrome or stress ulcer prophylaxis: dilute 150 mg in 250 mL of 5% Dextrose and infuse at 6.25 mg/hour over 24 hours.
  • Do not mix Neotack 300 mg injection with other medications in the same IV bag without confirming compatibility.
  • Switch to oral Neotack 300 mg as soon as the patient can tolerate oral medications.

Interaction of Neotack 300 mg

Neotack 300 mg affects drug bioavailability through multiple mechanisms — primarily by altering gastric pH (affecting pH-dependent absorption) and by competing with other drugs for renal tubular secretion. Unlike cimetidine, Neotack 300 mg has minimal inhibitory activity on hepatic cytochrome P450 enzymes at standard doses, making it a safer option in patients on multiple medications. However, the following interactions are clinically relevant:

Drugs with pH-Dependent Absorption — Reduced Efficacy

By raising intragastric pH, Neotack 300 mg can reduce the oral absorption and efficacy of drugs that require an acidic environment for dissolution or absorption:

  • Ketoconazole (oral): Neotack 300 mg can reduce oral ketoconazole exposure by up to 95% at high doses maintaining gastric pH above 6. Even at the standard Neotack 300 mg dose (150 mg twice daily), the interaction may be clinically significant. Alternative antifungal agents that are not pH-dependent should be considered.
  • Itraconazole: Similarly reduced absorption in an elevated gastric pH environment.
  • Erlotinib: Gastric pH elevation reduces erlotinib absorption, potentially compromising anti-cancer efficacy.
  • Sparsentan: H2 antagonists may decrease sparsentan exposure — avoid combination or use alternative acid-reducing therapy.
  • Atazanavir and Nelfinavir: Antiretroviral agents whose absorption is reduced by elevated gastric pH.

Midazolam and Triazolam (Benzodiazepines) — Increased Sedation

Oral Neotack 300 mg 150 mg twice daily increased oral midazolam exposure by up to 65% and triazolam exposure by approximately 30% in clinical pharmacokinetic studies. The proposed mechanism includes both reduced gastric acid-mediated midazolam metabolism and possible inhibition of intestinal CYP3A4 at higher gastric pH. Monitor patients for excessive or prolonged sedation when Neotack 300 mg is co-administered with oral benzodiazepines metabolized by CYP3A4. Note: the interaction was smaller (approximately 9% increase) with IV midazolam.

Warfarin — Enhanced Anticoagulant Effect

Neotack 300 mg may increase the serum concentration of warfarin — likely through inhibition of warfarin metabolism (minor CYP2C9 inhibition at standard doses). There have been reported cases of increased INR and bleeding in patients on warfarin and Neotack 300 mg. Monitor INR/prothrombin time when initiating, changing, or discontinuing Neotack 300 mg in patients on warfarin therapy.

Procainamide — Increased Drug Levels

Neotack 300 mg may reduce renal tubular secretion of procainamide (an antiarrhythmic agent), increasing its plasma concentration and potentially increasing the risk of procainamide toxicity (hypotension, arrhythmias, lupus-like syndrome). Monitor procainamide levels during concurrent use.

Antacids — Absorption Timing

Antacids may slightly reduce the rate (but not overall extent) of Neotack 300 mg absorption. Antacids may be used concurrently for breakthrough pain relief, but should ideally be administered at different times (approximately 1–2 hours apart) from Neotack 300 mg to minimize any reduction in Neotack 300 mg absorption.

Sotorasib and Defactinib — Reduced Efficacy

Neotack 300 mg may decrease the levels of sotorasib (a KRAS G12C inhibitor) and defactinib by increasing gastric pH, reducing their oral absorption and potentially compromising anti-cancer efficacy. Avoid concurrent use with these agents if possible; if unavoidable, follow specific timing guidelines as per current prescribing information.

Contraindications

Neotack 300 mg Hydrochloride is contraindicated in the following situations:

  • Known hypersensitivity to Neotack 300 mg Hydrochloride or to any excipient in the formulation. Hypersensitivity reactions may include urticaria, angioedema, fever, bronchospasm, and anaphylaxis.
  • Known hypersensitivity to other H2 receptor antagonists — cross-reactivity between H2 blockers (cimetidine, famotidine, nizatidine) has been reported, though documentation of cross-reactivity is limited. If hypersensitivity to any H2 blocker is known, Neotack 300 mg should be used with extreme caution or an alternative drug class considered.
  • Patients with a history of acute porphyria — rare reports suggest Neotack 300 mg may precipitate acute porphyric attacks. Neotack 300 mg should be avoided in patients with known acute porphyria.

Side Effects of Neotack 300 mg

Neotack 300 mg is generally well tolerated at recommended doses. Most adverse effects are mild and transient. The following adverse effects have been reported across clinical trials, post-marketing surveillance, and routine clinical use:

Common Side Effects

  • Headache — the most frequently reported adverse effect; sometimes severe but generally resolves with continued treatment
  • Abdominal discomfort, nausea, and vomiting
  • Constipation or diarrhoea
  • Dizziness and malaise

Central Nervous System Effects (Rare)

  • Somnolence (drowsiness) and insomnia
  • Vertigo
  • Confusion, agitation, and hallucinations — more commonly observed in severely ill elderly patients or those with renal or hepatic impairment; reversible upon discontinuation
  • Depression
  • Involuntary motor activity

Cardiovascular Effects

  • Bradycardia — particularly with rapid IV injection; this is why IV Neotack 300 mg must be infused slowly
  • Tachycardia
  • Atrioventricular (AV) block
  • Ventricular premature contractions
  • Vasculitis — rare

Gastrointestinal Effects

  • Constipation, diarrhoea, and abdominal pain
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Pancreatitis — rare
  • Necrotizing enterocolitis — very rare, reported in very low-weight neonates

Hepatic Effects

  • Elevated liver enzymes (ALT, AST, alkaline phosphatase) — typically transient; more likely with higher doses or prolonged IV therapy
  • Hepatitis (with or without jaundice) — rare; usually reversible upon discontinuation

Hematological Effects (Rare)

  • Thrombocytopenia (reduced platelet count)
  • Leukopenia (reduced white blood cell count)
  • Granulocytopenia and agranulocytosis
  • Pancytopenia — rare
  • Aplastic anaemia — rare but serious
  • Acquired immune haemolytic anaemia

Skin and Hypersensitivity Reactions

  • Skin rash and urticaria
  • Alopecia (hair loss) — rare
  • Erythema multiforme — rare
  • Anaphylaxis and anaphylactoid reactions — rare; require immediate emergency treatment with epinephrine

Endocrine and Metabolic Effects

  • Elevated serum prolactin — with IV doses; may cause breast tenderness or galactorrhoea rarely
  • Gynecomastia — breast enlargement in males; reported with prolonged use, though less commonly than with cimetidine
  • Vitamin B12 deficiency — prolonged treatment may lead to reduced vitamin B12 absorption through reduced gastric acid; risk is dose-related and higher in females and younger patients (under 30 years). Annual B12 monitoring is advisable with long-term Neotack 300 mg therapy.
  • Acute porphyria — rare precipitant in susceptible individuals

Injection Site Effects (Parenteral Use)

  • Transient burning sensation or pain at the injection site (IM)
  • Transient pruritus (itching) at the IV injection site

Laboratory Test Interference

  • False-positive urine protein tests — Neotack 300 mg may cause false-positive results when testing urine protein with the Multistix® reagent strip. Testing with sulfosalicylic acid is recommended as an alternative to confirm proteinuria in patients on Neotack 300 mg.

Pregnancy & Lactation

Pregnancy

The US FDA Pregnancy Category for Neotack 300 mg is Category B. Animal reproduction studies performed at doses substantially exceeding the human therapeutic dose have not demonstrated evidence of fetal malformations, teratogenicity, or impaired fertility. However, there are no adequate and well-controlled studies specifically in pregnant women. Because animal reproduction studies are not always predictive of human response, Neotack 300 mg should be used during pregnancy only if clearly necessary and when the potential benefit to the mother justifies any theoretical risk to the fetus.

Neotack 300 mg is considered one of the safer acid-suppressive agents during pregnancy when clinically indicated. It has been used by many pregnant women without evidence of harm, and the overall safety data in pregnancy are reassuring — but, as with all medications during pregnancy, use should be under physician supervision and limited to cases where treatment is genuinely required.

Lactation

Neotack 300 mg is secreted into human breast milk. Neotack 300 mg concentrations in breast milk can reach approximately two-thirds of corresponding plasma concentrations, suggesting meaningful infant exposure during breastfeeding. Caution should be exercised when Neotack 300 mg is administered to nursing mothers. The decision to continue breastfeeding while taking Neotack 300 mg should involve weighing the benefits of breastfeeding for the infant against the potential for drug exposure through breast milk. The physician should guide this decision on an individual basis.

Precautions & Warnings

Exclude Gastric Malignancy Before Treatment

Symptomatic response to Neotack 300 mg therapy does not exclude the presence of gastric malignancy. Neotack 300 mg relieves symptoms of gastric cancer as effectively as it relieves benign peptic ulcer symptoms, potentially masking the diagnosis and delaying appropriate treatment. When gastric ulcer is suspected, malignancy must be excluded before initiating Neotack 300 mg therapy. Any patient with alarm symptoms (unexplained weight loss, dysphagia, persistent vomiting, hematemesis, iron-deficiency anaemia, or a palpable abdominal mass) should undergo endoscopy before treatment.

Renal Impairment — Dose Adjustment Required

Since Neotack 300 mg is substantially excreted by the kidney, the risk of toxic reactions is significantly greater in patients with impaired renal function. Dose adjustment is mandatory in patients with creatinine clearance below 50 mL/min. Renal function should be assessed before initiating Neotack 300 mg and monitored regularly during treatment, particularly in elderly patients who are more likely to have occult renal impairment.

Hepatic Impairment

Neotack 300 mg is partially metabolized in the liver. Caution should be exercised in patients with hepatic dysfunction, as impaired hepatic metabolism may increase drug exposure. In severe hepatic impairment, dose adjustment may be necessary and liver function should be monitored. Rare cases of hepatitis with jaundice have been reported — discontinue Neotack 300 mg if significant liver injury is suspected or confirmed.

Acute Porphyria

Rare reports suggest that Neotack 300 mg may precipitate acute porphyric attacks in susceptible patients. Neotack 300 mg should be avoided in patients with a history of acute porphyria.

Rapid Intravenous Injection — Cardiac Risk

Rapid or bolus intravenous injection of Neotack 300 mg has been associated with bradycardia, hypotension, and cardiac arrhythmias. IV Neotack 300 mg must always be administered slowly — direct IV injection should be given over at least 5 minutes (rate ≤4 mL/min). Continuous or intermittent IV infusions should be administered over 15–20 minutes. Cardiac monitoring is advisable in patients with pre-existing cardiac disease receiving parenteral Neotack 300 mg.

CNS Effects in Elderly and Critically Ill Patients

Confusion, agitation, and hallucinations have been reported with Neotack 300 mg — predominantly in severely ill elderly patients and in those with hepatic or renal impairment. These CNS effects are reversible upon discontinuation. Extra vigilance is required in this patient population.

Pneumonia Risk

Use of Neotack 300 mg may increase the risk of developing pneumonia — potentially by raising gastric pH and allowing bacterial colonization of normally sterile gastric contents, with subsequent aspiration. Symptoms of pneumonia (chest pain, fever, shortness of breath, productive cough) should be reported to a physician promptly.

Vitamin B12 Monitoring with Long-Term Use

Prolonged Neotack 300 mg treatment may lead to reduced vitamin B12 absorption through suppression of gastric acid (which is required to cleave B12 from food proteins). The risk is dose-related and greater in younger female patients. Annual vitamin B12 testing is advisable in patients on long-term Neotack 300 mg therapy; supplementation may be required in those who develop B12 deficiency.

False-Positive Urine Protein Tests

Neotack 300 mg may cause false-positive results for urine protein using the Multistix® reagent strip. When testing for proteinuria in patients taking Neotack 300 mg, use the sulfosalicylic acid precipitation test as an alternative method to avoid false results.

NDMA Safety History — Important Regulatory Notice

In 2019–2020, the probable human carcinogen N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) was detected in Neotack 300 mg products from multiple manufacturers, leading to global market withdrawals including the US FDA's request in April 2020 and suspension across the EU and Australia. NDMA levels were found to increase in Neotack 300 mg products over time and at elevated temperatures. In November 2025, the FDA approved a reformulated Neotack 300 mg with improved manufacturing controls and stability testing demonstrating NDMA levels within internationally accepted limits. In countries where Neotack 300 mg is currently available (including Bangladesh), patients and physicians should ensure products are sourced from manufacturers with adequate quality controls. If in doubt, discuss alternative acid-suppressing medications (famotidine, proton pump inhibitors) with your physician.

Overdose Effects of Neotack 300 mg

Neotack 300 mg has a wide therapeutic margin. Clinical experience with intentional and accidental overdose suggests good tolerability even at very high doses. The following is known from overdose reports:

  • Single oral doses as high as 18 g have been reported without serious adverse consequences
  • Reported symptoms of Neotack 300 mg overdose have been generally mild and consistent with the known adverse effect profile:
    • Nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain
    • Headache and dizziness
    • Drowsiness and somnolence
    • Confusion and hallucinations (particularly in elderly patients)
    • Bradycardia and hypotension — particularly with IV overdose

Management of Overdose

  • There is no specific antidote for Neotack 300 mg overdose
  • Management is symptomatic and supportive:
    • Remove unabsorbed drug — activated charcoal if the patient presents within 1 hour of ingestion and can protect their airway
    • Monitor vital signs, cardiac rhythm, and mental status
    • Provide supportive care for specific symptoms
    • Monitor renal and liver function
  • Neotack 300 mg is removable by hemodialysis — this may be considered in cases of severe overdose, particularly in patients with renal impairment where Neotack 300 mg would not otherwise be cleared efficiently

In the event of suspected Neotack 300 mg overdose, contact a poison control center or seek emergency medical care immediately.

Storage Conditions

  • Store Neotack 300 mg tablets, capsules, and syrup below 25°C–30°C, in a cool, dry place protected from direct light, heat, and moisture.
  • Keep all formulations out of the reach of children.
  • Do not use any formulation after the expiry date printed on the packaging or label.
  • Store in original packaging — blister packs or tightly sealed bottles — to protect from humidity and light.
  • Critical storage note: NDMA formation in Neotack 300 mg has been shown to increase when products are stored at elevated temperatures. Do not store Neotack 300 mg above 25°C. Avoid storage in hot environments such as car gloveboxes, near kitchen stoves, or in direct sunlight.
  • Injection ampoules/vials: Store at room temperature, protected from light. Inspect solution for discoloration or particulate matter before use — discard if discolored (normally colorless to pale yellow). Single-use only; discard unused portions.
  • Do not freeze any Neotack 300 mg formulation.
  • Neotack 300 mg syrup — store at room temperature away from light. Use within the stated period after opening.

Use In Special Populations

Elderly Patients

Neotack 300 mg pharmacokinetics are altered in elderly patients due to age-related decline in renal function, reduced hepatic metabolic capacity, and increased volume of distribution. The plasma half-life is prolonged and total drug clearance is reduced. No routine dose adjustment is recommended based on age alone, but since elderly patients are more likely to have reduced renal function, renal function should be assessed before and during Neotack 300 mg therapy, with dosing adjusted accordingly. Elderly patients are at higher risk of CNS adverse effects (confusion, hallucinations) and should be monitored accordingly.

Pediatric Patients (1 Month to 16 Years)

The safety and effectiveness of Neotack 300 mg have been established in pediatric patients from 1 month to 16 years of age for the treatment of duodenal and gastric ulcers, GERD, and erosive esophagitis. Weight-based dosing (mg/kg) is required — see Dosage section for specific recommendations. The safety and effectiveness of Neotack 300 mg in neonates under 1 month of age have not been established. Very rare cases of necrotizing enterocolitis have been reported in very low-weight neonates receiving IV Neotack 300 mg, and its use in this group requires careful clinical judgement.

Patients with Renal Impairment

Since Neotack 300 mg is primarily excreted by the kidneys (approximately 30–70% of a dose is excreted unchanged in the urine), dose adjustment is mandatory in patients with creatinine clearance below 50 mL/min (see Dosage section). In hemodialysis patients, Neotack 300 mg is removed by dialysis — ideally schedule doses to coincide with the end of a dialysis session to restore therapeutic drug levels. Continuous IV infusion of Neotack 300 mg has not been adequately evaluated in patients with severe renal impairment.

Patients with Hepatic Impairment

Neotack 300 mg undergoes partial hepatic metabolism. In patients with severe hepatic dysfunction, reduced drug clearance may lead to accumulation and increased adverse effects — including CNS effects. Caution is advised, and dose adjustment may be necessary in severe hepatic impairment. Liver function should be monitored during Neotack 300 mg therapy in patients with significant hepatic disease.

Reconstitution

Slow IV inj: Neotack 300 mg 50 mg diluted to a concentration ≤2.5 mg/mL (e.g. total of 20 mL) with NaCl 0.9% inj or dextrose 5% or 10%, lactated Ringer's, Na bicarbonate 5% soln. Intermittent slow IV infusion: Neotack 300 mg 50 mg diluted to a concentration ≤0.5 mg/mL (e.g. total of 100 mL) of dextrose 5% inj or NaCl 0.9%, lactated Ringer's, Na bicarbonate 5% soln. Continuous IV infusion: Neotack 300 mg 150 mg diluted in 250 mL of dextrose 5% inj or NaCl 0.9%, lactated Ringer's, Na bicarbonate 5% soln. Patients with Zollinger-Ellison syndrome or other hypersecretory conditions: Neotack 300 mg should be diluted to a concentration ≤2.5 mg/mL with dextrose 5% or NaCl 0.9%, lactated Ringer's, Na bicarbonate 5% soln.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Neotack 300 mg used for?

Neotack 300 mg Hydrochloride is a histamine H2-receptor antagonist (H2 blocker) indicated for the treatment and prevention of a range of acid-related gastrointestinal disorders. It works by reducing gastric acid secretion, allowing the healing of acid-damaged mucosa and relieving acid-related symptoms. Neotack 300 mg is indicated for the following conditions: Duodenal Ulcer Neotack 300 mg is indic…

What is the dosage of Neotack 300 mg?

Neotack 300 mg doses depend on the indication, route of administration, age, and renal function. Always follow your registered physician's prescribed dose. Do not self-medicate. Use the lowest effective dose for the shortest appropriate duration. Adults — Oral Indication Dose Frequency Duration Active Duodenal Ulcer (treatment) 150 mg twice daily or 300 mg once daily at bedtime Twice daily or once…

What are the side effects of Neotack 300 mg?

Neotack 300 mg is generally well tolerated at recommended doses. Most adverse effects are mild and transient. The following adverse effects have been reported across clinical trials, post-marketing surveillance, and routine clinical use: Common Side Effects Headache — the most frequently reported adverse effect; sometimes severe but generally resolves with continued treatment Abdominal discomfort,…

Who should not take Neotack 300 mg?

Neotack 300 mg Hydrochloride is contraindicated in the following situations: Known hypersensitivity to Neotack 300 mg Hydrochloride or to any excipient in the formulation. Hypersensitivity reactions may include urticaria, angioedema, fever, bronchospasm, and anaphylaxis. Known hypersensitivity to other H2 receptor antagonists — cross-reactivity between H2 blockers (cimetidine, famotidine, nizatidi…

What precautions should be taken with Neotack 300 mg?

Exclude Gastric Malignancy Before Treatment Symptomatic response to Neotack 300 mg therapy does not exclude the presence of gastric malignancy. Neotack 300 mg relieves symptoms of gastric cancer as effectively as it relieves benign peptic ulcer symptoms, potentially masking the diagnosis and delaying appropriate treatment. When gastric ulcer is suspected, malignancy must be excluded before initiat…

Is Neotack 300 mg safe during pregnancy and breastfeeding?

Pregnancy The US FDA Pregnancy Category for Neotack 300 mg is Category B . Animal reproduction studies performed at doses substantially exceeding the human therapeutic dose have not demonstrated evidence of fetal malformations, teratogenicity, or impaired fertility. However, there are no adequate and well-controlled studies specifically in pregnant women. Because animal reproduction studies are no…

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.