Effect of a dosing-time on quetiapine-induced acute hyperglycemia in mice

Although rare, second-generation antipsychotic drugs cause severe hyperglycemia within several days after the initiation of therapy. Because glucose tolerance exhibits circadian rhythmicity, we evaluated an effect of a dosing-time on quetiapine-induced acute hyperglycemia in mice. A single intraperi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of pharmacological sciences 2017-03, Vol.133 (3), p.139-145
Hauptverfasser: Kapse, Snehal, Ando, Hitoshi, Fujiwara, Yuki, Suzuki, Chisato, Ushijima, Kentaro, Kitamura, Hiroko, Hosohata, Keiko, Kotani, Kazuhiko, Shimba, Shigeki, Fujimura, Akio
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Although rare, second-generation antipsychotic drugs cause severe hyperglycemia within several days after the initiation of therapy. Because glucose tolerance exhibits circadian rhythmicity, we evaluated an effect of a dosing-time on quetiapine-induced acute hyperglycemia in mice. A single intraperitoneal dose of quetiapine dosing-time-independently induced insulin resistance in fasted C57BL/6J mice. However, acute hyperglycemic effect was detected only after dosing of the drug at the beginning of an active phase. Under the conditions in which hepatic glucose production was stimulated by pyruvate administration, hyperglycemic effect of quetiapine was dosing-time-independently observed. In addition, the dosing-time-dependent hyperglycemic effect of quetiapine disappeared in the liver-specific circadian clock-disrupted mice in which circadian rhythmicity in hepatic glucose production is deranged. Furthermore, the dosing-time had little impact on the pharmacokinetics of quetiapine in normal mice. These results suggest that quetiapine acutely causes hyperglycemia only when hepatic glucose production elevates. Therefore, quetiapine therapy with once daily dosing at a rest phase might be safer than that at an active phase. Further studies are needed to confirm the hypothesis.
ISSN:1347-8613
1347-8648
DOI:10.1016/j.jphs.2017.02.008