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Bedfordshire and Luton Joint Formulary
Bedfordshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Bedfordshire, Luton and Milton Keynes ICB
Formulary Chapter: 8 - Malignant disease and immunosuppression 
Notes:

Any drug not listed on the Formulary should be considered Non-Formulary - Not recommended for prescribing

08.03.04.03 Somatostatin analogues

Lanreotide (Somatuline Autogel®)

Formulary

Octreotide (Olatuton®)
(Prolonged release suspension for injection)

Formulary

Funded by NHS England for certain licensed indications - see information on Somatostatin analogues and Integrated Care Board / NHS England (NHSE) Commissioning Arrangements per indication.

N.B. Please add a note on ePMA for the indication for this medicine to enable funding to be claimed.

 

Entry reviewed: July 2023

Octreotide (Sandostatin Lar®)

Formulary

Funded by NHS England for certain licensed indications - see information on Somatostatin analogues and Integrated Care Board / NHS England (NHSE) Commissioning Arrangements per indication.

 

N.B. Please add a note on ePMA for the indication for this medicine to enable funding to be claimed.

 

Entry reviewed: July 2023

Octreotide 50mcg, 100mcg, 500mcg (Sandostatin®)
(Injection)

Formulary

Funded by NHS England for certain licensed indications - see information on Somatostatin analogues and Integrated Care Board / NHS England (NHSE) Commissioning Arrangements per indication.

 

N.B. Please add a note on ePMA for the indication for this medicine to enable funding to be claimed.

 

Please note Red for prevention of complications following pancreatic surgery and emergency management to stop bleeding of gastro-oesophageal varices in patients with cirrhosis. 

 

Entry reviewed: July 2023

Classifications
May be initiated in any care setting
Specialist to advise therapy and provide first 28 days supply, continuation in Primary Care
Specialist to initiate and stabilise medicine prior to continuation in Primary Care
To be prescribed as per Shared Care Guidance. If no SCG in place status reverts to red.
Red medicines are designated as specialist only medicines which should only be prescribed by a specialist, usually within secondary care (either due to the requirement for specialist knowledge, long-term monitoring requirements, or restrictions that mean medicine supplies are only available to hospitals).
A decision has been made either locally and/or nationally not to routinely commission this preparation. Do not prescribe.
To be purchased over the counter. May be prescribed for chronic, long term conditions or on admission to hospital if essential.