Will Routine Therapeutic Drug Monitoring Have a Place in Clozapine Therapy?

SummaryClozapine is an atypical antipsychotic medication with proven efficacy in the management of refractory schizophrenia. It is also recommended for patients who do not tolerate the extrapyramidal adverse effects of traditional antipsychotic medications. However, the therapeutic promise of clozapine has been limited by a higher incidence of agranulocytosis.Currently, plasma clozapine concentrations are not routinely used in clinical management. Therapeutic effects are monitored empirically during a 6 to 8 week titration period in which the dosage is raised to 300 to 450 mg/day. Clozapine nevertheless fulfils a number of criteria which make it a candidate for therapeutic monitoring. These include an identifiable therapeutic range, an unpredictable dose-concentration relationship between patients, a potential for clinically relevant pharmacokinetic interaction with other drugs and a high probability of patient noncompliance.The therapeutic threshold plasma concentration appears to be about 400 μg/L. Concentrations above 1000 μg/L increase the risk of adverse effects on the central nervous system (confusion, delirium and generalised seizures). There is no evidence to link increased concentrations of clozapine or its metabolite to the development of agranulocytosis.We conclude that therapeutic drug monitoring can play a useful role in the clinical management of patients treated with clozapine. The clinician is advised to primarily use clinical judgement during dosage escalation, but intermittent monitoring is recommended to quickly optimise a therapeutic dosage for each patient. At steady state, occasional measurements could be made when clinical signs indicate possible toxicity or lack of effect (possibly caused by a lack of compliance or drug interaction). Long term monitoring would, in our view, not be necessary.

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