The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics
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ISSUE
1752
In Brief: A Bumetanide Nasal Spray (Enbumyst) for Edema
PDF:   US English
Disclosures
Principal Faculty
  • Jean-Marie Pflomm, Pharm.D., Editor in Chief has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
Additional Contributor(s)
  • Michael Viscusi, Pharm.D., Associate Editor has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.
Objective(s)
Upon completion of this activity, the participant will be able to:
  1. Review the efficacy and safety of bumetanide nasal spray (Enbumyst) for treatment of edema.
 Select a term to see related articles  bumetanide   diuretics   edema   Enbumyst   Furoscix   furosemide   hydrochlorothiazide   Lasix ONYU   torsemide 
Med Lett Drugs Ther. 2026 Apr 13;68(1752):62-3   doi:10.58347/tml.2026.1752d

Enbumyst (Corstasis), a nasal spray formulation of the loop diuretic bumetanide, has been approved by the FDA for (short-term) treatment of edema associated with congestive heart failure, renal disease (including nephrotic syndrome), or hepatic disease in adults. It is the first diuretic nasal spray formulation to become available in the US. Bumetanide has been available for years in oral and IV formulations.

LOOP DIURETICS — Loop diuretics (e.g., furosemide, bumetanide, torsemide) are more effective for management of edema than thiazide-type diuretics (e.g., hydrochlorothiazide). They are often administered intravenously in patients who require rapid diuresis or have edema that is resistant to high doses of oral diuretics.1-3 IV loop diuretics are inexpensive, but they generally must be given by a healthcare professional.

Two subcutaneous formulations of furosemide administered via an on-body infusor (Furoscix and Lasix ONYU) are FDA-approved for short-term treatment of edema in adults with chronic heart failure. Furoscix is also approved for use in patients with edema due to chronic kidney disease (including nephrotic syndrome).4,5

CLINICAL STUDIES — No new efficacy trials were required for FDA approval of Enbumyst. In an open-label, crossover pharmacokinetic study, peak bumetanide plasma concentrations and overall drug exposure were similar with oral and intranasal bumetanide, and the diuretic, natriuretic, and kaliuretic effects of intranasal bumetanide were similar to those with the oral and IV formulations of the drug in 68 healthy subjects.6 No data are available on the use of intranasal bumetanide in patients with edema, but intranasal administration should be effective in patients with reduced absorption of oral diuretics due to gut edema.

ADVERSE EFFECTS — The most commonly reported adverse effects of intranasal bumetanide have been hypovolemia and headache.

DOSAGE, ADMINISTRATION, AND COST — Enbumyst is intended for short-term use; patients should be switched to oral diuretic therapy as soon as practical. The drug is supplied in cartons containing 12 nasal spray devices, each of which delivers a single spray containing 0.5 mg of bumetanide. The usual dosage is 0.5-2 mg (1-4 sprays) administered intranasally once daily. If multiple sprays are required for a single dose, alternating between nostrils is recommended. According to the label, one 0.5-mg spray can be substituted for 10 mg of IV furosemide. One carton of 12 devices costs $1197.7

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