Approved indication: allergic rhinoconjunctivitis, urticaria
Allertine (Menarini)
20 mg tablets
Bilastine is a long-acting antihistamine that has been
available in Europe for more than a decade. It is an
antagonist of peripheral H1
receptors, has no effect on
muscarinic receptors and probably has limited transit
across the blood–brain barrier. Bilastine therefore
adds to the choice of less-sedating antihistamines for
allergic conditions.1
Tablets of bilastine should not be taken with food or
fruit juice as its bioavailability may be reduced. There
is minimal metabolism with most of the drug being
excreted unchanged, mainly in the faeces. No dose
adjustment is recommended for patients with hepatic
or renal impairment. The mean elimination half-life is
14.5 hours so only one dose a day is needed.
The approval of bilastine includes both seasonal and
perennial allergic rhinitis. There have been several
trials of bilastine for allergic rhinitis and five of them
were included in a systematic review. These were
placebo-controlled trials, but four of them also
included other antihistamines for comparison. A total
of 3329 patients participated.2
Bilastine reduced the total symptom score more than
a placebo did. It had favourable effects on nasal and
non-nasal symptoms. These effects were similar to
those of cetirizine, desloratadine and fexofenadine.2
The main double-blind trial of bilastine in urticaria
involved 525 patients with chronic idiopathic urticaria.
They were randomised to take a daily dose of bilastine
20 mg, levocetirizine 5 mg or placebo for 28 days.
Both active treatments reduced pruritus and the
number and size of wheals.3
Most of the efficacy trials were short, but there
are now several years of experience with the drug
overseas. An open-label extension of a trial in
perennial allergic rhinitis followed 513 patients for a
year and found bilastine was well tolerated.4
Common
symptoms include headache, dizziness and abdominal
pain, but their incidence is similar to that seen with
other antihistamines and placebo. Somnolence can
occur, but in the systematic review there was no difference from placebo.2
Bilastine has been reported
not to enhance the effects of lorazepam or add to
the effects of alcohol on psychomotor performance.
Bilastine does not prolong the QT interval on the ECG.
While data in pregnancy are limited, animal studies
suggest only very high doses affect embryofetal
development. Bilastine does enter animal breast
milk. The drug is not yet approved for children under
12 years old.
There seems to be no difference in efficacy between
bilastine and other antihistamines. It may cause less
somnolence than cetirizine, but the incidence is similar
to that seen with desloratadine and fexofenadine.2
🅃 manufacturer provided the product information
The Transparency Score is explained in New drugs: transparency, Vol 37 No 1, Aust Prescr 2014;37:27.
At the time the comment was prepared, information about this drug was available on the websites of the Food and Drug Administration in the USA, the European Medicines Agency and the Therapeutic Goods Administration.