Literature DB >> 8451775

Citalopram: interaction studies with levomepromazine, imipramine, and lithium.

L F Gram1, M G Hansen, S H Sindrup, K Brøsen, J H Poulsen, T Aaes-Jørgensen, K F Overø.   

Abstract

The pharmacokinetic interactions between the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor citalopram, given as an oral dose of 40 mg/day for 10 days, and (1) levomepromazine (50 mg single oral dose), (2) imipramine (100 mg single oral dose), and (3) lithium (30 mmol/day orally for 5 days) were examined in three panels each of 8 healthy young male volunteers (age 20-31). All volunteers were classified as extensive metabolizers of sparteine and mephenytoin. Each subject completed three study phases--one with citalopram alone, one with one of the three other drugs, alone, and one with citalopram combined with the corresponding other drug. For citalopram and its metabolites, a non-enantioselective analytical method (high-performance liquid chromatography) was used. Only two statistically significant interactions were indicated. First, levomepromazine caused a 10-20% increase from the initial steady-state levels of the primary citalopram metabolite, desmethylcitalopram. Second, citalopram caused approximately 50% increase in the single-dose area under the serum concentration/time curve of desipramine (primary metabolite or imipramine) and a corresponding reduction in the level of the subsequently formed metabolite 2-hydroxydesipramine. These findings are in agreement with the recent observations that (1) the demethylation of desmethylcitalopram (to didesmethylcytalopram) is partly mediated via the sparteine/debrisoquine oxygenase (CYP2D6) and that levomepromazine is a potent inhibitor of CYP2D6, and (2) that desmethylcitalopram has a somewhat stronger affinity for CYP2D6 than desipramine, and therefore may inhibit the hydroxylation of desipramine, which is also a substrate of CYP2D6.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8451775

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ther Drug Monit        ISSN: 0163-4356            Impact factor:   3.681


  19 in total

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Review 7.  Clinical relevance of drug interactions with lithium.

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