| Literature DB >> 28208695 |
Domenico de Berardis1,2, Michele Fornaro3,4, Laura Orsolini5,6,7, Felice Iasevoli8, Carmine Tomasetti9, Andrea de Bartolomeis10, Nicola Serroni11, Alessandro Valchera12,13, Alessandro Carano14, Federica Vellante15,16, Stefano Marini17,18, Monica Piersanti19, Giampaolo Perna20,21,22, Giovanni Martinotti23, Massimo Di Giannantonio24.
Abstract
Loxapine is a first generation antipsychotic, belonging to the dibenzoxazepine class. Recently, loxapine has been reformulated at a lower dose, producing an inhaled powder that can be directly administered to the lungs to treat the agitation associated with psychiatric disorders, such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Thus, the aim of this narrative and clinical mini-review was to evaluate the efficacy and tolerability of inhaled loxapine in the treatment of acute agitation in patients with psychiatric disorders. The efficacy of inhaled loxapine has been evaluated in one Phase II trial on patients with schizophrenia, and in two Phase III trials in patients with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Moreover, there are two published case series on patients with borderline personality disorder and dual diagnosis patients. Inhaled loxapine has proven to be effective and generally well tolerated when administered to agitated patients with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Two case series have suggested that inhaled loxapine may also be useful to treat agitation in patients with borderline personality disorder and with dual diagnosis, but further studies are needed to clarify this point. However, the administration of inhaled loxapine requires at least some kind of patient collaboration, and is not recommended in the treatment of severe agitation in totally uncooperative patients. Moreover, the drug-related risk of bronchospasm must always be kept in mind when planning to use inhaled loxapine, leading to a careful patient assessment prior to, and after, administration. Also, the higher costs of inhaled loxapine, when compared to oral and intramuscular medications, should be taken into account when selecting it for the treatment of agitation.Entities:
Keywords: agitation; antipsychotics; bipolar disorder; efficacy; inhaled; loxapine; schizophrenia; tolerability
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28208695 PMCID: PMC5343884 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18020349
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Characteristics of inhaled First Generation Antipsychotic (FGA) loxapine.
| Route of Administration | Inhalatory |
|---|---|
| Half Life | 6–8 h |
| Time to peak concentration | 2 min |
| Preparation instructions | Inhalation powder. 10 mg unit in a single-use inhaler |
| Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Indications | Acute treatment of agitation associated with schizophrenia or bipolar I disorder in adults |
| Available Dosage | 10 mg |
| Maximum Dosage | 10 mg/24 h |
| Average dose for tranquillization | 10 mg/24 h |
| Recommendations | Administration requires a somewhat, partial or fully cooperative patient. Contraindicated in patients with diagnosis or history of asthma, Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), other lung disease associated with bronchospasm or in patients with acute respiratory symptoms or signs and with current use of medications to treat airways disease. It is not approved for the treatment of patients with dementia-related psychosis |
| Costs | $174/dose in USA (EUR price not yet available) |
Published studies on inhaled FGA loxapine in healthy subjects.
| Authors | Year | Study Sample | Study Design | Number of Subject | Study Aims | Dose (mg/Day) | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spyker et al. | 2010 | Healthy subjects | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose escalation study | 50 | To determine the pharmacokinetic characteristics, safety, and tolerability of single doses of inhaled loxapine | 0.625, 1.25, 2.5, 5.0, or 10 mg of loxapine or placebo | The inhalation of loxapine represented a safe and well-tolerated route for rapidly achieving therapeutic plasma concentrations |
| Spyker et al. | 2014 | Healthy subjects | randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind crossover study | 48 | To evaluate effects of inhaled loxapine on the QTc interval | Inhaled loxapine 10 mg or inhaled placebo | No QTc prolongation was observed with the therapeutic dose of inhaled loxapine |
| Cassella et al. | 2015 | Healthy subjects | randomized, double-blind, active- and placebo-controlled, crossover, thorough QT study | 60 | To assessed the effect of two inhaled loxapine doses on cardiac repolarization as measured by QTc interval | inhaled loxapine (10 mg) 2 h apart+oral placebo, two doses of inhaled placebo+oral placebo, or two doses of inhaled placebo+oralmoxifloxacin (400 mg; positive control) | The two therapeutic doses of inhaled loxapine did not cause threshold QTc prolongation |
| Spyker et al. | 2015 | Healthy subjects | Randomized, double-blind, crossover study | 22 | Pharmacodynamic effects and safety of single-dose inhaled loxapine and IM lorazepam in combination versus each agent alone | lorazepam 1 mg IM, inhaled loxapine 10 mg, placebo IM (alone or combined) | Concomitant administration of inhaled loxapine and lorazepam in healthy volunteers showed no difference in its effect on respiration rate or pulse oximetry (primary endpoints) versus either drug alone |
Published studies on inhaled FGA loxapine in the treatment of agitation in psychiatric disorders.
| Authors | Year | Study Sample | Study Design | Number of Subject | Study Aims | Dose (mg/Day) | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Allen et al. | 2011 | Agitated patients with schizophrenia | Phase II, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study | 129 | To evaluate inhaled loxapine for acute treatment of agitation in schizophrenia | Single inhalation of 5 or 10 mg of loxapine or placebo | Inhaled loxapine was generally safe and well tolerated and produced rapid improvement in agitated patients with psychotic disorders |
| Lesem et al. | 2011 | Agitated patients with schizophrenia | Phase III, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group study | 344 | To evaluate inhaled loxapine for acute treatment of agitation in schizophrenia | Two or three doses of inhaled loxapine (5 or 10 mg) or placebo | Inhaled loxapine was a well-tolerated and effective treatment of agitation in schizophrenia |
| Kwentus et al. | 2012 | Agitated patients with bipolar I disorder | Phase III, randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group inpatient study | 314 | To evaluate inhaled loxapine for the acute treatment of agitation in patients with bipolar I disorder | Inhaled loxapine 5 mg or 10 mg or inhaled placebo | Inhaled loxapine provided a rapid, non-injection, well-tolerated acute treatment for agitation in patients with bipolar I disorder |
| Krüger et al. | 2015 | Agitated patients with borderline personality disorder | Case series | 5 | To evaluate inhaled loxapine for emergency treatment of agitated patients with borderline personality disorder | Inhaled loxapine 10 mg | Inhaled loxapine was safe, well tolerated and produced rapid improvement in agitated patients with borderline personality disorder |
| Roncero et al. | 2016 | Patients with dual diagnosis | Retrospective case Series | 14 | Efficacy of inhaled loxapine on episodes of psychotic agitation in patients with dual diagnosis | Inhaled loxapine 10 mg | Inhaled loxapine was rapid, effective, and well accepted in all dual-diagnosis patients presenting with acute agitation in the emergency setting |
Figure 1Management of acute agitation: the suggested position of intranasal FGA loxapine (adapted and modified from Schleifer [70].