Republished June 28, 2024
The story: Methotrexate is a medicine commonly used to treat cancer. Over the years, it has been found to be useful in treating other conditions. Doctors now use it to treat non-cancerous conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis and psoriasis. It works well for these other conditions if you take the medicine just once a week and in smaller doses. But if you take it every day by accident, you could be harmed. Sadly, some people have even died.
In several instances, this happened because people misread the directions on the prescription bottle. In one case, a man with arthritis mistakenly took one tablet of methotrexate each morning, but the directions said to take one tablet each Monday. In another case, the prescription label said to take the medicine every 12 hours for just three doses. But a woman took the medicine every 12 hours for 6 days. Another woman took extra doses to help relieve her arthritis pain - something that should never be done.
The rest of the story: There are just a few medicines that you might take only once or twice a week. Methotrexate is one, if it's used to treat conditions other than cancer. Another example is Fosamax (alendronate), a medicine used to prevent or treat osteoporosis (weakening of the bone). While the 5 mg or 10 mg tablets should be taken daily, the 35 mg or 70 mg tablets should be taken once a week. Harmful mistakes may happen because you, your doctor, and your pharmacist are more familiar with medicines that are taken daily, not weekly. You could develop an ulcer in your stomach if you take 35 mg or 70 mg tablets of Fosamax daily. Serious harm, even death, could occur if you take methotrexate daily for conditions other than cancer.
Lessons learned: In the future, we are likely to see more medicines that can be taken once weekly, or even less often. To avoid mistakes with medicines that should be taken weekly:
When receiving a prescription:
When dropping off a prescription:
When picking up your prescription:
When taking your medicine: