PMID: 8941167Jan 1, 1996Paper

Pharmacokinetics and drug interactions: update for new antipsychotics

The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry
L Ereshefsky

Abstract

Advances in our understanding of schizophrenia have led to a new generation of antipsychotic agents. These medications not only demonstrate reduced extrapyramidal symptoms but also possess pharmacologic profiles that can be especially advantageous in treating the negative symptoms of schizophrenia. The pharmacokinetics of many of the newer agents are compared and contrasted with typical neuroleptics. Changes in the pharmacokinetics and dosage of the newer agents are also reviewed. A particular emphasis is placed on the metabolism of the newer agents and their potential for drug-drug pharmacokinetic interactions. Clozapine, the archetypal atypical agent, has a complex pharmacokinetic profile with extremely large interpatient variability and many well-documented drug-drug interactions. Thus, clozapine presents special challenges in dose optimization and requires vigilant clinical monitoring for cardiovascular, neurologic, and hematologic adverse effects. Olanzapine demonstrates a very low potential for drug-drug interactions; it requires extremely high inhibitory concentrations at cytrochrome P450 (CYP) systems, typically 30-fold above the usual concentrations observed at steady-state oral high-dose therapy. The metabolic pathway...Continue Reading

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