Prazosin: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 427: Line 427:
|storage=There is limited information regarding storage conditions of doxazosin in the drug label.
|storage=There is limited information regarding storage conditions of doxazosin in the drug label.
|fdaPatientInfo=(Patient Counseling Information)
|fdaPatientInfo=(Patient Counseling Information)
|alcohol=Alcohol-Prazosin interaction has not been established. Talk to your doctor about the effects of taking alcohol with this medication.
|alcohol=* [[Dizziness]] or [[drowsiness]] may occur after the first dose of prazosin. Avoid driving or performing hazardous tasks for the first 24 hours after taking prazosin or when the [[dose] is increased. [[Dizziness]], [[lightheadedness]], or [[fainting]] may occur, especially when rising from a lying or sitting position. Getting up slowly may help lessen the problem.
::* These effects may also occur if you drink [[alcohol]], stand for long periods of time, exercise, or if the weather is hot. While taking prazosin, be careful in the amount of [[alcohol]] you drink. Also, use extra care during exercise or hot weather, or if standing for long periods. Check with your physician if you have any questions.
|brandNames=* Minipress
|brandNames=* Minipress
|lookAlike=* (Paired Confused Name 1a) — (Paired Confused Name 1b)
|lookAlike=* (Paired Confused Name 1a) — (Paired Confused Name 1b)

Revision as of 16:10, 30 June 2014

{{DrugProjectFormSinglePage |authorTag=João André Alves Silva, M.D. [1] |genericName=prazosin hydrochloride |aOrAn=a |drugClass=alpha-adrenergic blocker |indication=treatment of hypertension |adverseReactions=orthostatic hypotension, palpitations, nausea, asthenia, dizziness, headache, lethargy and somnolence |blackBoxWarningTitle=Warning Title |blackBoxWarningBody=Condition Name: (Content) |fdaLIADAdult======Hypertension=====

  • Initial dose:
  • 1 mg two or three times a day
  • Maintenance dose:
  • Dosage may be slowly increased to a total daily dose of 20 mg given in divided doses. The therapeutic dosages most commonly employed have ranged from 6 mg to 15 mg daily given in divided doses. Doses higher than 20 mg usually do not increase efficacy, however a few patients may benefit from further increases up to a daily dose of 40 mg given in divided doses. After initial titration some patients can be maintained adequately on a twice daily dosage regimen.
  • Use with other drugs:

|offLabelAdultGuideSupport======Benign prostatic hyperplasia=====

  • Class of Recommendation: Class IIb[1]
  • Strength of Evidence: Category B[1]
  • Dosing Information/Recommendation
  • (Dosage)
Dream disorder - posttraumatic stress disorder
  • Class of Recommendation: Class IIb[1]
  • Strength of Evidence: Category B[1]
  • 1 to 4 mg/day
  • An 8-week open-label trial, with 4 patients, with history of combat trauma nightmares and chronic DSM-IV posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) with concomitant severe intractable combat trauma nightmares:[4]
  • 2 to 10 mg/day
Erectile dysfunction
  • Class of Recommendation: Class IIb[1]
  • Strength of Evidence: Category B[1]
  • Dosing Information/Recommendation
  • (Dosage)
Poisoning due to scorpion venom
  • Class of Recommendation: Class IIb[1]
  • Strength of Evidence: Category B[1]
  • Dosing Information/Recommendation
  • (Dosage)
Raynaud's phenomenon
  • Class of Recommendation: Class IIb[1]
  • Strength of Evidence: Category B[1]
  • Dosing Information/Recommendation
  • (Dosage)

|offLabelAdultNoGuideSupport======Condition 1=====

  • Dosing Information
  • (Dosage)
Condition 2
  • Dosing Information
  • (Dosage)
Condition 3
  • Dosing Information
  • (Dosage)

|fdaLIADPed======Condition 1=====

  • Dosing Information
  • (Dosage)
Condition 2
  • Dosing Information
  • (Dosage)

|offLabelPedGuideSupport======Condition 1=====

  • Developed by: (Organisation)
  • Class of Recommendation: (Class) (Link)
  • Strength of Evidence: (Category A/B/C) (Link)
  • Dosing Information/Recommendation
  • (Dosage)
Condition 2
  • Developed by: (Organisation)
  • Class of Recommendation: (Class) (Link)
  • Strength of Evidence: (Category A/B/C) (Link)
  • Dosing Information/Recommendation
  • (Dosage)

|offLabelPedNoGuideSupport======Condition 1=====

  • Dosing Information
  • (Dosage)
Condition 2
  • Dosing Information
  • (Dosage)
Condition 3
  • Dosing Information
  • (Dosage)

|contraindications=* Prazosin is contraindicated in patients with known sensitivity to:

|warnings=* Prazosin, as other alpha-blockers, may cause:

  • Syncope with sudden loss of consciousness:
  • May be due to an excessive postural hypotensive effect
  • Occasionally the syncopal episode has been preceded by a bout of severe tachycardia with heart rates of 120–160 beats per minute
  • Syncopal episodes have usually occurred within 30 to 90 minutes of the initial dose of the drug
  • These have often been reported in association with rapid dosage increases or the introduction of another antihypertensive drug into the regimen of a patient taking high doses of prazosin.
  • The incidence of syncopal episodes is approximately 1% in patients given an initial dose of 2 mg or greater.
  • Clinical trials conducted during the investigational phase of this drug suggest that syncopal episodes can be minimized by limiting the initial dose of the drug to 1 mg, by subsequently increasing the dosage slowly, and by introducing any additional antihypertensive drugs into the patient's regimen with caution.
  • If syncope occurs, the patient should be placed in the recumbent position and treated supportively as necessary. This adverse effect is self-limiting and in most cases does not recur after the initial period of therapy or during subsequent dose titration.
  • The patient should be cautioned about these possible adverse effects and advised what measures to take should they develop. The patient should also be cautioned to avoid situations where injury could result should syncope occur during the initiation of prazosin therapy.

|clinicalTrials=* Clinical trials were conducted on more than 900 patients. During these trials and subsequent marketing experience, the most frequent reactions associated with prazosin therapy are:

  • In most instances, side effects have disappeared with continued therapy or have been tolerated with no decrease in dose of drug.
  • Less frequent adverse reactions which are reported to occur in 1–4% of patients are:
Central Nervous System
Cardiovascular
Gastrointestinal
Miscellaneous
  • Fewer than 1% of patients have reported the following:
Gastrointestinal
Cardiovascular
Central Nervous System
Dermatologic
Genitourinary
EENT
Miscellaneous
  • Single reports of pigmentary mottling and serous retinopathy, and a few reports of cataract development or disappearance have been reported. In these instances, the exact causal relationship has not been established because the baseline observations were frequently inadequate.
  • In more specific slit-lamp and funduscopic studies, which included adequate baseline examinations, no drug-related abnormal ophthalmological findings have been reported.
  • Literature reports exist associating prazosin therapy with a worsening of pre-existing narcolepsy. A causal relationship is uncertain in these cases.

|postmarketing=======General======

Autonomic Nervous System
Cardiovascular
Endocrine
Psychiatric
Skin/Appendages
Vascular
Vision
Special Senses

|drugInteractions=* Prazosin has been administered without any adverse drug interaction in limited clinical experience to date with the following:

  • Addition of a diuretic or other antihypertensive agent to prazosin has been shown to cause an additive hypotensive effect. This effect can be minimized by reducing the prazosin dose to 1 to 2 mg three times a day, by introducing additional antihypertensive drugs cautiously, and then by retitrating prazosin based on clinical response.

|FDAPregCat=C |useInPregnancyFDA=* Prazosin has been shown to be associated with decreased litter size at birth, 1, 4, and 21 days of age in rats when given doses more than 225 times the usual maximum recommended human dose. No evidence of drug-related external, visceral, or skeletal fetal abnormalities were observed. No drug-related external, visceral, or skeletal abnormalities were observed in fetuses of pregnant rabbits and pregnant monkeys at doses more than 225 times and 12 times the usual maximum recommended human dose, respectively.

  • The use of prazosin and a beta-blocker for the control of severe hypertension in 44 pregnant women revealed no drug-related fetal abnormalities or adverse effects. Therapy with prazosin was continued for as long as 14 weeks. Prazosin has also been used alone or in combination with other hypotensive agents in severe hypertension of pregnancy by other investigators. No fetal or neonatal abnormalities have been reported with the use of prazosin.
  • There are no adequate and well controlled studies which establish the safety of prazosin in pregnant women. Prazosin should be used during pregnancy only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the mother and fetus.

|AUSPregCat=B2 |useInPregnancyAUS=There is no Australian Drug Evaluation Committee (ADEC) guidance on usage of prazosin in women who are pregnant. |useInNursing=* Prazosin has been shown to be excreted in small amounts in human milk. Caution should be exercised when prazosin is administered to a nursing woman. |useInPed=* Safety and effectiveness in children have not been established. |useInReproPotential=* No carcinogenic potential was demonstrated in an 18 month study in rats with prazosin at dose levels more than 225 times the usual maximum recommended human dose of 20 mg per day.

  • In a fertility and general reproductive performance study in rats, both males and females, treated with 75 mg/kg (225 times the usual maximum recommended human dose), demonstrated decreased fertility, while those treated with 25 mg/kg (75 times the usual maximum recommended human dose) did not.
  • In chronic studies (one year or more) of prazosin in rats and dogs, testicular changes consisting of atrophy and necrosis occurred at 25 mg/kg/day (75 times the usual maximum recommended human dose). No testicular changes were seen in rats or dogs at 10 mg/kg/day (30 times the usual maximum recommended human dose). In view of the testicular changes observed in animals, 105 patients on long term prazosin therapy were monitored for 17-ketosteroid excretion and no changes indicating a drug effect were observed. In addition, 27 males on prazosin for up to 51 months did not have changes in sperm morphology suggestive of drug effect.

|administration=Oral |monitoring======Hypotension=====

|IVCompat=There is limited information regarding the compatibility of Prazosin and IV administrations. |overdose=* Accidental ingestion of at least 50 mg of prazosin in a two year old child resulted in:

Acute Overdose

Hypotension

Management

  • If this measure is inadequate:
  • Shock should first be treated with volume expanders.
  • If necessary, vasopressors should then be used.

|drugBox=

Template:Px
Prazosin
Systematic (IUPAC) name
2-[4-(2-Furoyl)piperazin-1-yl]-6,7-dimethoxyquinazolin-4-amine
Identifiers
CAS number 19216-56-9
ATC code C02CA01
PubChem 4893
DrugBank DB00457
Chemical data
Formula Template:OrganicBox atomTemplate:OrganicBox atomTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBox atomTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBox atomTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBoxTemplate:OrganicBox 
Mol. mass 383.401 g/mol
SMILES eMolecules & PubChem
Pharmacokinetic data
Bioavailability ~60%
Protein binding 97%
Metabolism ?
Half life 2–3 hours
Excretion ?
Therapeutic considerations
Pregnancy cat.

?

Legal status

POM(UK)

Routes Oral

|mechAction=* The exact mechanism of the hypotensive action of prazosin is unknown:

  • Prazosin causes a decrease in total peripheral resistance and was originally thought to have a direct relaxant action on vascular smooth muscle.
  • Recent animal studies, however, have suggested that the vasodilator effect of prazosin is also related to blockade of postsynaptic alpha-adrenoceptors. The results of dog forelimb experiments demonstrate that the peripheral vasodilator effect of prazosin is confined mainly to the level of the resistance vessels (arterioles).
  • Unlike conventional alpha-blockers, the antihypertensive action of prazosin is usually not accompanied by a reflex tachycardia. Tolerance has not been observed to develop in long term therapy.

|structure=Prazosin, a quinazoline derivative, is the first of a new chemical class of antihypertensives. It is the hydrochloride salt of 1-(4-amino-6,7-dimethoxy-2-quinazolinyl)-4-(2-furoyl) piperazine and its structural formula is:

This image is provided by the National Library of Medicine.

Molecular formula C19H21N5O4•HCl It is a white, crystalline substance, slightly soluble in water and isotonic saline, and has a molecular weight of 419.87. Each 1 mg capsule of prazosin for oral use contains drug equivalent to 1 mg free base. Inert ingredients in the formulations are: hard gelatin capsules (which may contain Blue 1, Red 3, Red 28, Red 40, and other inert ingredients); magnesium stearate; sodium lauryl sulfate; starch; sucrose. |PD=* Hemodynamic studies have been carried out in man following acute single dose administration and during the course of long term maintenance therapy.

  • In clinical studies in which lipid profiles were followed, there were generally no adverse changes noted between pre- and post-treatment lipid levels.

|PK=* Following oral administration, human plasma concentrations reach a peak at about three hours with a plasma half-life of two to three hours. The drug is highly bound to plasma protein. Bioavailability studies have demonstrated that the total absorption relative to the drug in a 20% alcoholic solution is 90%, resulting in peak levels approximately 65% of that of the drug in solution.

|nonClinToxic=There is limited information regarding Nonclinical Toxicology of prazosin in the drug label. |clinicalStudies=There is limited information regarding Clinical Studies of prazosin in the drug label.

|howSupplied=

This image is provided by the National Library of Medicine.

|storage=There is limited information regarding storage conditions of doxazosin in the drug label. |fdaPatientInfo=(Patient Counseling Information) |alcohol=* Dizziness or drowsiness may occur after the first dose of prazosin. Avoid driving or performing hazardous tasks for the first 24 hours after taking prazosin or when the [[dose] is increased. Dizziness, lightheadedness, or fainting may occur, especially when rising from a lying or sitting position. Getting up slowly may help lessen the problem.

  • These effects may also occur if you drink alcohol, stand for long periods of time, exercise, or if the weather is hot. While taking prazosin, be careful in the amount of alcohol you drink. Also, use extra care during exercise or hot weather, or if standing for long periods. Check with your physician if you have any questions.

|brandNames=* Minipress |lookAlike=* (Paired Confused Name 1a) — (Paired Confused Name 1b)

  • (Paired Confused Name 2a) — (Paired Confused Name 2b)
  • (Paired Confused Name 3a) — (Paired Confused Name 3b)

|nlmPatientInfo=(Link to patient information page) |drugShortage=Drug Shortage }}

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 "PRAZOSIN".
  2. Raskind MA, Thompson C, Petrie EC, Dobie DJ, Rein RJ, Hoff DJ; et al. (2002). "Prazosin reduces nightmares in combat veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder". J Clin Psychiatry. 63 (7): 565–8. PMID 12143911.
  3. Taylor F, Raskind MA (2002). "The alpha1-adrenergic antagonist prazosin improves sleep and nightmares in civilian trauma posttraumatic stress disorder". J Clin Psychopharmacol. 22 (1): 82–5. PMID 11799347.
  4. Raskind MA, Dobie DJ, Kanter ED, Petrie EC, Thompson CE, Peskind ER (2000). "The alpha1-adrenergic antagonist prazosin ameliorates combat trauma nightmares in veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder: a report of 4 cases". J Clin Psychiatry. 61 (2): 129–33. PMID 10732660.