Xtampza ER: Uses, Dosage, Side Effects, Warnings - Drugs.com (2024)

Generic name: oxycodone
Dosage form: extended-release capsules
Drug class: Opioids (narcotic analgesics)

Medically reviewed by Judith Stewart, BPharm. Last updated on Jan 23, 2024.

What is Xtampza ER?

Xtampza ER is:

  • A strong prescription pain medicine that contains an opioid (narcotic) that is used to manage pain severe enough to require daily, around-the-clock, long-term treatment with an opioid, when other pain treatments such as non-opioid pain medicines or immediate-release opioid medicines do not treat your pain well enough or you cannot tolerate them.
  • A long-acting (extended-release) opioid pain medicine that can put you at risk for overdose and death. Even if you take your dose correctly as prescribed by your healthcare provider, you are at risk for opioid addiction, abuse, and misuse that can lead to death.
  • Not for use to treat pain that is not around-the-clock.

Warnings

  • Get emergency help right away if you take too much Xtampza ER (overdose). When you first start taking Xtampza ER, when your dose is changed, or if you take too much (overdose), serious life-threatening breathing problems that can lead to death may occur.
  • Taking Xtampza ER with other opioid medicines, benzodiazepines, alcohol, or other central nervous system depressants (including street drugs) can cause severe drowsiness, decreased awareness, breathing problems, coma, and death.
  • Never give anyone else your Xtampza ER. They could die from taking it. Selling or giving away Xtampza ER is against the law.
  • Store this medicine securely, out of sight and reach of children, and in a location not accessible by others, including visitors to the home.

Who should not take Xtampza ER?

You should not take Xtampza ER if you have:

  • severe asthma, trouble breathing, or other lung problems.
  • a bowel blockage or have narrowing of the stomach or intestines.

Xtampza ER pregnancy and breastfeeding warnings (more detail)

Related/similar drugs

gabapentin, acetaminophen, cyclobenzaprine, tramadol, naproxen, oxycodone, Tylenol

Before taking Xtampza ER

Before taking Xtampza ER, tell your healthcare provider if you have a history of:

  • head injury, seizures
  • problems urinating
  • liver, kidney, thyroid problems
  • pancreas or gallbladder problems
  • abuse of street or prescription drugs, alcohol addiction, or mental health problems.

Tell your healthcare provider if you are:

  • pregnant or planning to become pregnant. Prolonged use of Xtampza ER during pregnancy can cause withdrawal symptoms in your newborn baby that could be life-threatening if not recognized and treated.
  • breastfeeding. Not recommended during treatment. It may harm your baby.
  • taking prescription or over-the-counter medicines, vitamins, or herbal supplements. Taking Xtampza ER with certain other medicines can cause serious side effects that could lead to death.

When taking Xtampza ER:

  • Do not change your dose. Take this medicine exactly as prescribed by your healthcare provider. Use the lowest dose possible for the shortest time needed.
  • Take your prescribed dose every 12 hours, at the same time every day. Do not take more than your prescribed dose. If you miss a dose, take your next dose at your usual time.
  • If you cannot swallow the capsules, see the detailed Instructions for Use.
  • Always take the capsules with approximately the same amount of food to ensure enough medicine is absorbed.
  • Swallow the capsule whole. Do not snort, or inject Xtampza ER because this may cause you to overdose and die.
  • The contents of the capsules may be sprinkled on soft food, sprinkled into a cup and then put directly into the mouth, or given through a nasogastric or gastrostomy tube.
  • Call your healthcare provider if the dose you are taking does not control your pain.
  • Do not stop taking Xtampza ER without talking to your healthcare provider.
  • Dispose of expired, unwanted, or unused Xtampza ER by promptly flushing down the toilet, if a drug take-back option is not readily available. Visit www.fda.gov/drugdisposal for additional information on disposal of unused medicines.

While taking Xtampza ER DO NOT:

  • Drive or operate heavy machinery, until you know how Xtampza ER affects you. Xtampza ER can make you sleepy, dizzy, or lightheaded.
  • Drink alcohol or use prescription or over-the-counter medicines that contain alcohol. Using products containing alcohol during treatment with Xtampza ER may cause you to overdose and die.

Xtampza ER side effects

The possible side effects of are:

  • constipation, nausea, sleepiness, vomiting, tiredness, headache, dizziness, abdominal pain. Call your healthcare provider if you have any of these symptoms and they are severe.

Get emergency medical help if you have:

  • trouble breathing, shortness of breath, fast heartbeat, chest pain, swelling of your face, tongue, or throat, extreme drowsiness, lightheadedness when changing positions, feeling faint, agitation, high body temperature, trouble walking, stiff muscles, or mental changes such as confusion.

These are not all the possible side effects. Call your doctor for medical advice about side effects. You may report side effects to the FDA at 1-800-FDA-1088.

Xtampza ER side effects (more detail)

Instructions for Use

Always take Xtampza ER with approximately the same amount of food.

If you cannot swallow the capsules, tell your healthcare provider. If your healthcare provider tells you that you can take Xtampza ER by sprinkling the capsule contents, follow these steps:

Xtampza ER can be opened and the contents inside the capsule can be sprinkled onto soft foods (such as, applesauce, pudding, yogurt, ice cream, or jam) as follows:

  1. Open the capsule and sprinkle the contents over about one tablespoon of the soft food listed above.
  2. Swallow all of the soft food and sprinkled capsule contents right away. Do not save any of the soft food and capsule contents for another dose.
  3. Rinse your mouth to make sure you have swallowed all of the capsule contents.
  4. Flush the empty capsule down the toilet right away.

The capsule contents can also be sprinkled into a cup and then put directly into the mouth.

Giving Xtampza ER through a nasogastric or gastrostomy tube: Use water, milk, or a liquid nutritional supplement to flush the tube when giving Xtampza ER.

  • Step 1: Flush the nasogastric or gastrostomy tube with liquid.
  • Step 2: Open a capsule and carefully pour the contents of the capsule directly into the tube. Do not pre-mix the capsule contents with the liquid used to flush the capsule contents through the tube.
  • Step 3: Draw up 15 mL of liquid into a syringe, insert the syringe into the tube, and flush the contents of the capsule through the tube to give the dose.
  • Step 4: Flush the tube two more times, each time with 10 mL of liquid, to ensure that none of the contents of the capsule are left in the tube.

Detailed Xtampza ER dosage information

Popular FAQ

Immediate-release oxycodone has a half-life of just under 4 hours which means the pain-relieving effects of one dose will be gone within 6 to 24 hours, but it can remain detectable in saliva, urine, and hair for much longer. In saliva, oxycodone is detectable within minutes of taking it and lasts for up to 48 hours (2 days). Oxycodone is detectable in urine within 1 to 3 hours and will stay detectable for 1 to 4 days. Like most other opioids, oxycodone is detectable in hair for up to 90 days. Continue reading

Any drug that is classified as an "opioid" can cause constipation. Examples of commonly prescribed opioids that may cause this side effect include morphine, tramadol, fentanyl, methadone, hydrocodone, codeine and oxycodone. Continue reading

How long opioid withdrawal lasts depends on the opioid you have been taking and whether it is a short-acting or long acting opioid.

If you have been using a short-acting opioid, acute opioid withdrawal lasts 4 to 10 days, with withdrawal symptoms starting 8 to 24 hours after last use.

If you have been using a long-acting opioid, acute opioid withdrawal lasts 10 to 20 days, with withdrawal symptoms starting 12 to 48 hours after last use. Continue reading

Immediate-release oxycodone starts to work quickly, within 10 to 30 minutes, but it may take up to 1 hour for it to be fully absorbed, and the full effects reached. Food can delay how quickly oxycodone takes to work, but not how much is absorbed. Continue reading

Oxycodone (also known as Oxy IR) and Oxycontin both contain oxycodone, but the main difference is that Oxycontin is the brand name of a long-acting form of oxycodone. Oxycontin releases oxycodone slowly and continuously over 12 hours and only needs to be given twice a day. Oxycodone is shorter-acting, with an average half-life of 3.2 hours, which means that half the dose of oxycodone is eliminated in 3.2 hours, which is why it is usually given four to six times a day to provide all-day pain relief. Oxycodone is usually given for acute pain, such as that following surgery or trauma, whereas Oxycontin may be given for chronic or long-term pain, such as that caused by cancer. Oxycontin should only be considered in those with chronic severe pain that have already found a trial of oxycodone to be beneficial. Continue reading

Withdrawal from oxycodone is likely to happen to people who have taken oxycodone consistently or misused oxycodone. Common symptoms of withdrawal include:

  • Anxiety
  • Cravings for oxycodone – these are one of the main symptoms that drive relapse
  • Diarrhea
  • Fast heartbeat
  • High blood pressure
  • Muscle aches
  • Nausea or vomiting
  • Sleep disturbances/Insomnia
  • Stomach cramps
  • Sweating.

Continue reading

More FAQ

  • Is Xtampza ER a controlled substance?
  • Oxycodone vs Hydrocodone - How do they compare?
  • Which painkiller should you use?

More about Xtampza ER (oxycodone)

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  • Side effects
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  • FDA approval history
  • Drug class: Opioids (narcotic analgesics)
  • Breastfeeding
  • En español

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Professional resources

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Related treatment guides

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Further information

Always consult your healthcare provider to ensure the information displayed on this page applies to your personal circ*mstances.

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Xtampza ER: Uses, Dosage, Side Effects, Warnings - Drugs.com (2024)
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