Abstract

Purpose/BackgroundPharmacokinetics may be of relevance for the risk of clozapine discontinuation. We compared metabolite profiles, accounting for smoking habits, in patients switching versus maintaining clozapine treatment at therapeutic concentrations.Methods/ProceduresAdult patients with clozapine serum levels above 1070 nmol/L (350 ng/mL) were retrospectively included from a Norwegian therapeutic drug monitoring service during 2018–2020. Inclusion criteria were (1) known smoking habits, (2) blood sample drawn within 10 to 30 hours after last clozapine intake, and (3) detectable levels of N-desmethylclozapine, clozapine-N-oxide, clozapine-5N-glucuronide, or clozapine-N+-glucuronide. Patients comedicated with cytochrome P450 enzyme inducers, inhibitors, or valproic acid were excluded. The high-resolution mass spectrometry assay enabled detection of 21 clozapine metabolites. Metabolite profiles were compared between patients switching treatment (switchers), measured as clozapine being replaced by another antipsychotic drug in blood samples, versus maintaining clozapine treatment (nonswitchers) during the study period.Findings/ResultsOf the 84 patients fulfilling the study criteria, 7 patients (8.3%) were identified as clozapine switchers. After correcting for smoking habits, the clozapine-5N-glucuronide/clozapine ratio was 69% lower (P < 0.001), while the clozapine-N+-glucuronide/clozapine-5N-glucuronide ratio was 143% higher (P = 0.026), respectively, in switchers versus nonswitchers. The other metabolite ratios did not significantly differ between switchers and nonswitchers.Implications/ConclusionsThe present study found a significantly reduced 5N-glucuronidation phenotype in patients switching from clozapine at therapeutic serum concentrations (>1070 nmol/L) to other antipsychotic drugs. This may indicate that glucuronidation, as a potential detoxification mechanism, is related to clozapine tolerability. However, the causality of this observation needs to be investigated in future studies with larger patient populations.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call