| Literature DB >> 25530900 |
Xian-Bin Li1, Yi-Lang Tang2, Wei Zheng3, Chuan-Yue Wang1, Jose de Leon4.
Abstract
Intramuscular (IM) ziprasidone has been associated with QTc interval prolongations in patients with preexisting risk factors. A 23-year-old male Chinese schizophrenia patient experienced an increase of QTc interval of 83 milliseconds (ms) after receiving 20 mg IM ziprasidone (baseline and increased QT/QTc were, respectively, 384/418 and 450/501). This was rated as a probable adverse drug reaction (ADR) by the Liverpool ADR causality assessment tool. A systematic review including all types of trials reporting the effect of IM ziprasidone on the QTc interval prolongation identified 19 trials with a total of 1428 patients. Mean QTc change from baseline to end of each study was -3.7 to 12.8 ms after IM ziprasidone. Four randomized trials (3 of 4 published in Chinese) were used to calculate a meta-analysis of QTc interval prolongation which showed no significant differences between IM ziprasidone and IM haloperidol groups (risk ratio 0.49 to 4.31, 95% confidence interval 0.09 to 19.68, P = 0.06 to 0.41). However, our review included two cases of patients who experienced symptoms probably related to QTc prolongation after IM ziprasidone. Thus, careful screening and close monitoring, including baseline ECG, should be considered in patients receiving IM ziprasidone for the first time.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25530900 PMCID: PMC4235192 DOI: 10.1155/2014/489493
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Psychiatry ISSN: 2090-6838
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Summary of IM ziprasidone trials.
| Study | Design | Subjects ( | Dose1 | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brook et al., 2000 [ | International multicenter RCT | (90 versus 42) | 10–80 | No pt in any group had QTc >500 ms |
|
| ||||
| Brook et al., 2005 [ | International multicenter RCT | (427 versus 138) | 10–20 | No pt in any group had QTc >500 ms |
|
| ||||
| Chen et al., 20103 [ | 7 d open parallel RCT | (40 versus 40) | 10–60 | 1 ZIP pt withdrew after a QTc prolongation |
|
| ||||
| Daniel et al., 2001 [ | 24 h double-blind RCT | (38 versus 41) | 2, 20 | Mean QTc change3 in ms: 3.5 (2 mg) and −1.3 (20) |
|
| ||||
| Daniel et al., 2004 [ | Multicenter RCT | (69, 71, 66, 100 HAL) | 20, 40, 80 | No pt in any group had QTc >500 ms |
|
| ||||
| Emul et al., 2009 [ | Open-label prospective trial | (11 versus 11) | 20 | IM ZIP did not appear to influence atrial and |
|
| ||||
| Jiang et al., 20084 [ | 3 d open parallel-group RCT | (36 versus 35) | 10–40 | No pt in any group had QTc >500 ms |
|
| ||||
| Lesem et al., 2001 [ | 24 h double-blind RCT | (54 versus 63) | 2, 10 | Mean QTc change3 in ms: −3.7 (2 mg) and −1.8 (10) |
|
| ||||
|
Li et al., 20104 [ | 5 d double-blind parallel-group | (38 versus 37) | 10–30 | 3 pts experienced QTc prolongation (ms): 430, 450 and, 510 |
|
| ||||
|
Mautone and Scarone, 2011 [ | Phase IIIb noncomparative(3 d IM then PO for 8 w) | (150) | 10 | Mean QTc change3 in ms in 3 pts: 110 (2 d), 70 (5 d), and 55 (10 d). 2 pts discontinued due to QTc prolongation |
|
| ||||
| Micelli et al., 2005 [ | Phase I study in healthy volunteers: single 5, 10, | (24) | 5–20 | ZIP and HAL were associated with modest QTc increases |
|
| ||||
| Miceli et al., 2010 [ | 3 d single-blind parallel-group | (31 versus 27) | 20–30 | Mean QTc change (ms):3 1st IV 4.6 (ZIP) and 6.0 (HAL) |
|
| ||||
| Preval et al., 2005 [ | Naturalistic study (IM ZIP versus first-generation antipsychotics) | (19 versus 80) | 20 | No patient in the IM ZIP group had QTc >460 ms |
|
| ||||
| Rais et al., 2010 [ | A 24 h open-label prospective | (16) | 10–20 | Mean QTc range in ms: baseline 382.0–429.5 |
|
| ||||
|
Tambyraja and Strawn, 2011 [ | Case report (70 yo vascular dementia) | (1♀) | 20 | Patient lost consciousness within 45 min of ZIP IM |
|
| ||||
|
Li et al., 20104 [ | 3 d double- or single-blind parallel-group RCT (IM ZIP versus HAL2) | (16 versus 16) | 20–40 | No significant QTc prolongations in ZIP or HAL |
|
| ||||
| Witsil et al., 2012 [ | Case report (history of substance abuse) | (1♂) | 20 | Baseline ECG showed QT/QTc of 484/475 ms. Palpitations and weakness 45 min after IM ZIP |
|
| ||||
| Yin and Wang, 20124 [ | 3 d open parallel-group RCT (IM ZIP versus HAL2) | (30 versus 30) | 10–40 | Maximum QTc in ZIP: 461 ms. |
|
| ||||
|
Zhang et al., 20134 [ | 3 d rater-blind, actively-controlled parallel group multicenter RCT (IM ZIP versus HAL2) | (189 versus 187) | 10–40 | ZIP mean QTc change3 in ms: 0.7 (versus −1.6 HAL)5
|
bpm: beats per minute; d: day; ECG: electrocardiogram; h: hour; HAL: haloperidol; inpts: inpatients; IM: intramuscular;
IV: intravenous; min: minutes; ms: milliseconds; PO: by mouth; pt: patient; RCT: randomized controlled trial; QTc: QTc interval; wk: week; yo: year-old; ZIP: ziprasidone.
1Ziprasidone dose in mg/day.
2HAL dose ranged from 5 to 20 mg/day in the various studies.
3QTc change from baseline to end of treatment.
4In Chinese.
5Effect size of the mean difference = 0.009. It was calculated using Cohen's method [23].
Figure 2Meta-analysis comparing QTc in patients with intramuscular ziprasidone versus haloperidol.