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Gastrocrom

Generic: cromolyn sodium

Verified·Apr 23, 2026
Manufacturer
Viatris Specialty LLC
NDC
0037-0678
RxCUI
831261
Route
ORAL
ICD-10 indication
D47.02

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About Gastrocrom

What is this medication? Gastrocrom is the brand name for an oral formulation of cromolyn sodium, which is a type of drug known as a mast cell stabilizer. It is primarily prescribed to treat systemic mastocytosis, a condition characterized by an excessive number of mast cells in various organs and tissues. These mast cells normally release chemicals like histamine to help the body fight infection, but in people with mastocytosis, they release these substances too easily. This leads to symptoms such as chronic diarrhea, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, skin flushing, and persistent itching.

The medication works by preventing mast cells from releasing the inflammatory chemicals that cause these systemic symptoms. By stabilizing the outer membrane of the mast cells, Gastrocrom reduces the severity and frequency of the allergic-like reactions associated with the disease. It is typically supplied as a concentrated liquid that must be diluted in water and taken several times a day, usually before meals and at bedtime. While it does not cure the underlying condition, it is a primary treatment option for managing the gastrointestinal and skin-related distress caused by mast cell overactivity.

Copay & patient assistance

  • Patient Copay Amount: Not Publicly Available
  • Maximum Annual Benefit Limit: Not Publicly Available
  • Core Eligibility Restrictions: Not Publicly Available
  • RxBIN, PCN, and Group numbers: Not Publicly Available

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Prescribing information

From the FDA-approved label for Gastrocrom. Official source: DailyMed (NLM) · Label effective Jun 26, 2024

Indications and usage
INDICATIONS AND USAGE GASTROCROM is indicated in the management of patients with mastocytosis. Use of this product has been associated with improvement in diarrhea, flushing, headaches, vomiting, urticaria, abdominal pain, nausea, and itching in some patients.
Dosage and administration
DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION NOT FOR INHALATION OR INJECTION. SEE DIRECTIONS FOR USE. The usual starting dose is as follows: Adults and Adolescents (13 Years and Older) Two ampules four times daily, taken one-half hour before meals and at bedtime. Children 2-12 Years One ampule four times daily, taken one-half hour before meals and at bedtime. Pediatric Patients Under 2 Years Not recommended. If satisfactory control of symptoms is not achieved within two to three weeks, the dosage may be increased but should not exceed 40 mg/kg/day. Patients should be advised that the effect of GASTROCROM therapy is dependent upon its administration at regular intervals, as directed. Maintenance Dose Once a therapeutic response has been achieved, the dose may be reduced to the minimum required to maintain the patient with a lower degree of symptomatology. To prevent relapses, the dosage should be maintained. Administration GASTROCROM should be administered as a solution at least 1/2 hour before meals and at bedtime after preparation according to the following directions: 1. Break open ampule(s) and squeeze liquid contents of ampule(s) into a glass of water. 2. Stir solution. 3. Drink all of the liquid.
Contraindications
CONTRAINDICATIONS GASTROCROM is contraindicated in those patients who have shown hypersensitivity to cromolyn sodium.
Warnings
WARNINGS The recommended dosage should be decreased in patients with decreased renal or hepatic function. Severe anaphylactic reactions may occur rarely in association with cromolyn sodium administration.
Drug interactions
Drug Interaction During Pregnancy In pregnant mice, cromolyn sodium alone did not cause significant increases in resorptions or major malformations at subcutaneous doses up to 540 mg/kg (approximately equal to the maximum recommended daily oral dose in adults on a mg/m 2 basis). Isoproterenol alone increased both resorptions and major malformations (primarily cleft palate) at a subcutaneous dose of 2.7 mg/kg (approximately 7 times the maximum recommended daily inhalation dose in adults on a mg/m 2 basis). The incidence of major malformations increased further when cromolyn sodium at a subcutaneous dose of 540 mg/kg was added to isoproterenol at a subcutaneous dose of 2.7 mg/kg. No such interaction was observed in rats or rabbits.
Adverse reactions
ADVERSE REACTIONS Most of the adverse events reported in mastocytosis patients have been transient and could represent symptoms of the disease. The most frequently reported adverse events in mastocytosis patients who have received GASTROCROM during clinical studies were headache and diarrhea, each of which occurred in 4 of the 87 patients. Pruritus, nausea, and myalgia were each reported in 3 patients and abdominal pain, rash, and irritability in 2 patients each. One report of malaise was also recorded. To report SUSPECTED ADVERSE REACTIONS, contact Meda Pharmaceuticals Inc. at 1-877-999-8406 or FDA at 1-800-FDA-1088 or www.fda.gov/medwatch . Other Adverse Events: Additional adverse events have been reported during studies in other clinical conditions and from worldwide postmarketing experience. In most cases the available information is incomplete and attribution to the drug cannot be determined. The majority of these reports involve the gastrointestinal system and include: diarrhea, nausea, abdominal pain, constipation, dyspepsia, flatulence, glossitis, stomatitis, vomiting, dysphagia, esophagospasm. Other less commonly reported events (the majority representing only a single report) include the following: Skin: pruritus, rash, urticaria/angioedema, erythema/ burning, photosensitivity Musculoskeletal: arthralgia, myalgia, stiffness/weakness of legs Neurologic: headache, dizziness, hypoesthesia, paresthesia, migraine, convulsions, flushing Psychiatric: psychosis, anxiety, depression, hallucinations, behavior change, insomnia, nervousness Heart Rate: tachycardia, premature ventricular contractions (PVCs), palpitations Respiratory: pharyngitis, dyspnea Miscellaneous: fatigue, edema, unpleasant taste, chest pain, postprandial lightheadedness and lethargy, dysuria, urinary frequency, purpura, hepatic function test abnormal, polycythemia, neutropenia, pancytopenia, tinnitus, lupus erythematosus (LE) syndrome
Use in pregnancy
Pregnancy In reproductive studies in pregnant mice, rats, and rabbits, cromolyn sodium produced no evidence of fetal malformations at subcutaneous doses up to 540 mg/kg in mice (approximately equal to the maximum recommended daily oral dose in adults on a mg/m 2 basis) and 164 mg/kg in rats (less than the maximum recommended daily oral dose in adults on a mg/m 2 basis) or at intravenous doses up to 485 mg/kg in rabbits (approximately 4 times the maximum recommended daily oral dose in adults on a mg/m 2 basis). There are, however, no adequate and well controlled studies in pregnant women. Because animal reproduction studies are not always predictive of human response, this drug should be used during pregnancy only if clearly needed.

Label text is reproduced as-is from the FDA-approved label. We do not paraphrase, summarize, or omit. Content above is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always consult your prescribing clinician or pharmacist before making decisions about your medication.

Conditions we've indexed resources for

Click a condition to see copay cards, grants, and PA rules specific to it. For the full list of FDA-approved indications, see Prescribing information above.

Medicare Part D coverage

How Gastrocrom appears across Medicare Part D plan formularies nationally. Source: CMS monthly Prescription Drug Plan file (2026-04-30).

Covered by plans

71%

3,930 of 5,509 plans

Most common tier

Tier 4

On 52% of covering formularies

Prior authorization required

0%

of covering formularies

TierFormularies on this tierShare
Tier 1 (preferred generic)65
20%
Tier 2 (generic)73
22%
Tier 3 (preferred brand)19
6%
Tier 4 (non-preferred brand)172
52%

Step therapy: 0% of formularies

Quantity limits: 0% of formularies

Coverage breadth: 329 of 65 formularies

How to read this:plans on the same formulary share tier + PA rules. Your specific plan's copay depends on (a) the tier above, (b) your plan's cost-share for that tier, (c) whether you're in the initial coverage phase or past the 2026 $2,000 out-of-pocket cap. For your exact plan, check its Summary of Benefits or log in to your Medicare.gov account. Copay cards don't apply to Medicare (federal law).

Prior authorization & coverage

PayerPAStep therapyCopay tier

Medicare Part D

Related drugs

How this page is sourced

  • Drug identity verified against openFDA NDC Directory.
  • Label text (when shown) originates from NLM DailyMed.
  • Copay and assistance URLs verified periodically; if you hit a broken link, tell us.

Rare-disease navigation (specialists, trials, patient communities)

Gastrocrom treats a rare condition. For in-depth disease pages on our sister site:

UniteRare.org is our sister site for rare-disease navigation — same editorial team, same accuracy standards.