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 Formulary Chapter 11: Eye - Full Chapter
Notes:

This chapter of the formulary is under continual development, please let the team know if you have any comments about the contents: mlcsu.lscformulary@nhs.net

For more information about the formulary development process, please see: https://www.lancsmmg.nhs.uk/lancashire-and-south-cumbria-icb-formulary-development/

 Details...
11.04.01  Expand sub section  Corticosteroids
 note  Topical corticosteroids should normally only be used under expert supervision
Betamethasone 0.1% with Neomycin 0.5% eye drops
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Formulary
Green

Eye/ear/nose drops betamethasone 0.1%/ neomycin 0.5%

 
 
Betamethasone eye drops
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Formulary
Amber 0

Eye/ear/nose drops 0.1%

Green in East Lancashire

*under review*

 
 
Dexamethasone eye drops
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Formulary
Amber 0

Eye drops preservative free 0.1%

Green in East Lancashire

*under review*

 

 
 
Dexamethasone eye drops (Maxidex®)
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Formulary
Amber 0

Eye drops 0.1%

Green in East Lancashire

*under review*

 
 
Dexamethasone eye drops single use
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Formulary
Red

Single dose - preservative free drops 0.1% - for use in theatre or clinic before a procedure if a single dose is needed.

 
 
Dexamethasone intravitreal implant (Ozurdex®)
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Formulary
Red
High Cost Medicine
CCG
BlueTeq

Intravitreal implant 700micrograms in disposable applicator

REQUIRES BLUETEQ APPROVAL

 
Link  NICE TA460: Adalimumab and dexamethasone for treating non-infectious uveitis
Link  NICE TA824: Dexamethasone intravitreal implant for treating diabetic macular oedema
 
Dexamethasone with Neomycin and Polymyxin B sulphate (Maxitrol®)
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Formulary
Amber 0

Eye drops dexamethasone 0.1%, neomycin 3500u/g, polymixin B sulfate 6000units/g

Eye ointment dexamethasone 0.1%, neomycin 3500u/g, polymixin B sulfate 6000units/g

Green in East Lancashire

*under review*

 
 
Dexamethasone with Tobramycin (Tobradex®)
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Amber 0

Eye drops -  dexamethasone 1mg/ml, tobramycin 3mg/ml

Restricted Item Restricted to post cataract surgery patients who are intolerant to Maxitrol

Morecambe bay only

 
 
Fluocinolone intravitreal implant (Iluvien®)
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Formulary
Red
High Cost Medicine
BlueTeq

Intravitreal implant 190micrograms in a disposable applicator

 
Link  NICE TA590: Fluocinolone acetonide intravitreal implant for treating recurrent non-infectious uveitis
Link  NICE TA953: Fluocinolone acetonide intravitreal implant for treating chronic diabetic macular oedema
 
Fluorometholone (FML®)
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Formulary
Amber 0

Eye drops fluoromethalone 0.1%, polyvinyl alcohol 1.4%

Green in East Lancashire

*under review*

 
 
Hydrocortisone sodium phosphate 3.35 mg/ml eye drops (Softacort)
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Formulary
Red

Red Eye drop - 2 week course only

1 ml eye drops, solution contains 3.35 mg of hydrocortisone sodium phosphate.

 
 
Intravitreal triamcinolone acetonide (Intracinol®)
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Formulary
Red
 
 
Loteprednol (Lotemax®)
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Formulary
Amber 0

Eye drops 0.5% (5mg/ml)

Restricted Item Restricted to second line use or if clinical condition warrants.

 
 
Prednisolone (Pred Forte®)
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Formulary
Amber 0

Eye drops 1%

 
 
Prednisolone eye drops
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Formulary
Amber 0

Eye drops 0.5%

Unit dose eye drops preservative free 0.5% - only for patients with a documented allergy to preservatives

Green in East Lancashire

*under review*

 
 
 ....
 Non Formulary Items
  
Key
note Notes
Section Title Section Title (top level)
Section Title Section Title (sub level)
First Choice Item First Choice item
Non Formulary Item Non Formulary section
Restricted Drug
Restricted Drug
Unlicensed Drug
Unlicensed
Track Changes
Display tracking information
click to search medicines.org.uk
Link to adult BNF
click to search medicines.org.uk
Link to children's BNF
click to search medicines.org.uk
Link to SPCs
SMC
Scottish Medicines Consortium
Cytotoxic Drug
Cytotoxic Drug
CD
Controlled Drug
High Cost Medicine
High Cost Medicine
Cancer Drugs Fund
Cancer Drugs Fund
NHSE
NHS England
Homecare
Homecare
CCG
CCG
Green Low Carbon

Low carbon footprint

Amber Medium Carbon

Medium carbon footprint

Red High carbon footprint

High carbon footprint

Traffic Light Status Information

Status Description

Green

Green: Appropriate for initiation and ongoing prescribing in both primary and secondary care. Generally, little or no routine drug monitoring is required.  

Green Restricted

Green (Restricted): Appropriate for initiation and ongoing prescribing in both primary and secondary care provided: Additional criteria specific to the medicine or device are met, or The medicine or device is used following the failure of other therapies as defined by the relevant LSCMMG pathway. Generally, little or no routine drug monitoring is required.   

Red

Red medicines: Medicine is supplied by the hospital for the duration of the treatment course. Primary care initiation or continuation of treatment is not recommended unless exceptional circumstances such as specialist GP. Red medicines are those where primary care prescribing is not recommended. These treatments should be initiated by specialists only and prescribing retained within secondary care. They require specialist knowledge, intensive monitoring, specific dose adjustments or further evaluation in use. If however, a primary care prescriber has particular specialist knowledge or experience of prescribing a particular drug for a particular patient it would not always be appropriate for them to expect to transfer that prescribing responsibility back to secondary care. There should be a specific reason and a specific risk agreement, protocol and service set up to support this. Primary care prescribers may prescribe RED medicines in exceptional circumstances to patients to ensure continuity of supply while arrangements are made to obtain ongoing supplies from secondary care.  

Amber 0

Amber level 0: Suitable for prescribing in primary care following recommendation or initiation by a specialist. Little or no specific monitoring required. Patient may need a regular review, but this would not exceed that required for other medicines routinely prescribed in primary care. Brief prescribing document or information sheet may be required. Primary care prescribers must be familiar with the drug to take on prescribing responsibility or must get the required information. When recommending or handing over care, specialists should ask primary care prescribers to take over prescribing responsibility, and should give enough information about the indication, dose, monitoring requirements, use outside product licence and any necessary dose adjustments to allow them to confidently prescribe.  

Amber 1

Amber level 1 (with shared care): Suitable for prescribing in primary care following recommendation or initiation by a specialist. Minimal monitoring required. Patient may need a regular review, but this would not exceed that required for other medicines routinely prescribed in primary care. Full prior agreement about patient’s on-going care must be reached under the shared care agreement. Primary care prescribers are advised not to take on prescribing of these medicines unless they have been adequately informed by letter of their responsibilities with regards monitoring, side effects and interactions and are happy to take on the prescribing responsibility. A copy of locally approved shared care guidelines should accompany this letter which outlines these responsibilities. Primary care prescribers should then tell secondary care of their intentions as soon as possible by letter so that arrangements can be made for the transfer of care.  

Amber 2

Amber level 2 (with shared care and enhanced service): Initiated by specialist and transferred to primary care following a successful initiation period. Significant monitoring required on an on-going basis. Full prior agreement about patient’s on-going care must be reached under the shared care agreement. Suitable for enhanced service. These medicines are considered suitable for GP prescribing following specialist initiation of therapy, as per shared care document which will be sent out with the request to prescribe, with on-going communication between the primary care prescriber and specialist. Amber Level 2 medicines require significant monitoring for which an enhanced service may be suitable. (Subject to local commissioning agreements).  

Do Not Prescribe

Do not prescribe: NOT recommended for use by the NHS in Lancashire and South Cumbria. Includes medicines that NICE has not recommended for use and terminated technology appraisals, unless there is a local need.  

Grey

Grey medicines: Medicines which have not yet been reviewed or are under the review process. GPs and specialists are recommended not to prescribe these drugs. This category includes drugs where funding has not yet been agreed.   

Multiple

Refer to local guidance.  

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