Induced next-day somnolence in an elderly patient taking suvorexant concomitantly with diltiazem
To present the first case of induced next-day somnolence in a patient taking suvorexant concomitantly with diltiazem. The patient was an 88-year-old female who had suffered from insomnia and anorexia, for which a psychiatric clinic had prescribed 1.5 mg/day aripiprazole and 15 mg/day suvorexant (bot...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of clinical pharmacology and therapeutics 2016-08, Vol.54 (8), p.645-648 |
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Zusammenfassung: | To present the first case of induced next-day somnolence in a patient taking suvorexant concomitantly with diltiazem.
The patient was an 88-year-old female who had suffered from insomnia and anorexia, for which a psychiatric clinic had prescribed 1.5 mg/day aripiprazole and 15 mg/day suvorexant (both once daily at bedtime), which cured her insomnia. Subsequently, a different hospital prescribed diltiazem hydrochloride (100 mg, sustained-release, daily after breakfast) for treatment of hypertension. After starting diltiazem, the patient was unable to wake up in the morning and overslept by ~ 3 hours. On the third day of taking diltiazem, the patient, on the basis of her own judgment, took only half a tablet of suvorexant, and found that she was able to sleep, and there was no somnolence the following morning. As halving suvorexant tablets is an off-label usage, and lower-dose tablets are not available, her prescription was switched to 1-mg rilmazafone hydrochloride. Since then, her sleep disorder has not recurred.
Because suvorexant is metabolized by CYP3A4, next-day somnolence could have occurred as a result of increased plasma suvorexant concentration due to CYP3A4 inhibition by diltiazem.
Elderly patients may suffer next-day somnolence if they concomitantly take suvorexant and sustained-release diltiazem hydrochloride, even if the diltiazem dose is low and there is a significant interval between the administration times of the two drugs. In order to avoid drug interaction, it may be desirable to switch from suvorexant to a different soporific that is not metabolized by CYP3A4. |
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ISSN: | 0946-1965 |
DOI: | 10.5414/CP202624 |