Verapamil
JFDA label: Aver
Mechanism of Action
Inhibits calcium ion from entering the “slow channels” or select voltage-sensitive areas of vascular smooth muscle and myocardium during depolarization; produces relaxation of coronary vascular smooth muscle and coronary vasodilation; increases myocardial oxygen delivery in patients with vasospastic angina; slows automaticity and conduction of AV node.
Indications
Approved
- Acute coronary syndrome (ACS)
- Angina
- Atrial fibrillation (rate control)
- Chronic kidney disease (CKD) and hypertension
- Coronary artery disease (CAD) and hypertension
- Hypertension
- IV
- Immediate-release tablet
- Paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia prophylaxis
- Supraventricular tachycardia
- Supraventricular tachycardias
Off-label
- Cluster headaches
- Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Contraindications
Source: Lexicomp · Curated
- Additional contraindications: Complicated myocardial infarction (ventricular failure manifested by pulmonary congestion) Absolute
- Concomitant IV beta-blocker administration Absolute
- Oral: Hypersensitivity to verapamil or any component of the formulation Absolute
- Severe left ventricular dysfunction or congestive heart failure Absolute
- Sick sinus syndrome or second/third-degree AV block without pacemaker Absolute
- atrial flutter or fibrillation and an accessory bypass tract (WPW syndrome, Lown-Ganong-Levine syndrome) Absolute
- concurrent use of IV beta blocking agents Absolute
- concurrent use of ivabradine. IV: Hypersensitivity to verapamil or any component of the formulation Absolute
- hypotension (systolic pressure Absolute
- marked bradycardia Absolute
- second- or third-degree AV block (except in patients with a functioning artificial ventricular pacemaker) Absolute
- severe heart failure (unless secondary to a supraventricular tachycardia amenable to verapamil) Absolute
- severe hypotension or cardiogenic shock Absolute
- severe left ventricular dysfunction Absolute
- sick sinus syndrome (except in patients with a functioning artificial ventricular pacemaker) Absolute
- ventricular tachycardia Absolute
Adverse Reactions
Cardiac disorders (5)
Common atrioventricular block · bradycardia, dizziness, lethargy, pain, paresthesia, sleep disorder, confusion, drowsiness, alopecia, diaphoresis, erythema multiforme, hyperkeratosis, macular eruption, Stevens-Johnson syndrome, urti · cardiac failure · hypotension · Peripheral edema
Nervous system disorders (1)
Very Common Headache
Hepatobiliary disorders (1)
Common Increased liver enzymes
Renal and urinary disorders (2)
Common Impotence · Polyuria
Blood and lymphatic system disorders (2)
Common Bruise · purpuric vasculitis
Metabolism and nutrition disorders (4)
Common Galactorrhea · gynecomastia · hyperprolactinemia · spotty menstruation
Gastrointestinal disorders (8)
Very Common constipation · Gingival hyperplasia
Common abdominal distress · diarrhea · Dyspepsia · gastrointestinal distress · nausea · xerostomia
Musculoskeletal and connective tissue disorders (4)
Common arthralgia · muscle cramps · Myalgia · weakness
Eye disorders (1)
Common Blurred vision
Ear and labyrinth disorders (1)
Common Tinnitus
Respiratory, thoracic and mediastinal disorders (3)
Common dyspnea · Flu-like symptoms · pulmonary edema
Dosing
Source: Lexicomp
Warnings & Precautions
Source: Lexicomp
Conduction abnormalities
May cause first-degree AV block or sinus bradycardia. Higher degrees of AV block may also occur (rare) and in extreme cases, asystole; more likely to occur in patients with a sick sinus syndrome. If marked first degree block, progressive development to second- or third-degree AV block, or unifascicular, bifascicular, or trifascicular bundle branch block occurs, consider a dosage reduction or discontinue therapy.
Hepatic effects
Elevations of hepatic transaminases, alkaline phosphatase, and bilirubin have been reported; hepatocellular injury has been proven by rechallenge. Periodically monitor liver function. Some elevations have been transient and disappeared with continued therapy.
Hypotension/syncope
Symptomatic hypotension with or without syncope may occur; blood pressure must be lowered at a rate appropriate for the patient's clinical condition. Disease-related concerns:
Arrhythmia
Considered contraindicated in patients with wide complex tachycardias unless known to be supraventricular in origin; severe hypotension likely to occur upon administration (ACLS 2010).
Attenuated neuromuscular transmission
Decreased neuromuscular transmission has been reported; use with caution in patients with attenuated neuromuscular transmission (Duchenne muscular dystrophy, myasthenia gravis); dosage reduction may be required.
Heart failure
The ACCF/AHA heart failure guidelines recommend to avoid use in patients with heart failure due to lack of benefit and/or worse outcomes with calcium channel blockers in general (Yancy 2013).
Hepatic impairment
Use with caution in patients with hepatic impairment; dosage reduction may be required; monitor hemodynamics and possibly ECG in severe impairment. Avoid repeated injections of IV verapamil in patients with significant hepatic failure.
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM)
Use with caution in patients with HCM with outflow tract obstruction (especially those with high gradients, advanced heart failure, or sinus bradycardia); may be used in patients who cannot tolerate beta-blockade. Verapamil should not be used in those with systemic hypotension or severe dyspnea at rest (Gersh 2011; Nishimura 2004).
Increased intracranial pressure
IV verapamil has increased intracranial pressure in patients with supratentorial tumors at the time of anesthesia induction; use with caution in these patients.
Renal impairment
Use with caution in patients with renal impairment; monitor hemodynamics and possibly ECG in severe impairment, particularly if concomitant hepatic impairment. Avoid repeated injections of IV verapamil in patients with significant renal failure. Concurrent drug therapy issues:
Drug-drug interactions
Potentially significant interactions may exist, requiring dose or frequency adjustment, additional monitoring, and/or selection of alternative therapy. Consult drug interactions database for more detailed information Special populations:
Pediatric
In neonates and young infants, avoid IV use for SVT due to severe apnea, bradycardia, hypotensive reactions, and cardiac arrest; in older children, use IV with caution as myocardial depression and hypotension may occur (PALS [Kleinman 2010]).
Pregnancy & Lactation
Pregnancy
Adverse events have been observed in some animal reproduction studies in doses, which also caused maternal toxicity. Verapamil crosses the placenta. Use during pregnancy may cause adverse fetal effects (bradycardia, heart block, hypotension) (Tan 2001). Women with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy who are controlled with verapamil prior to pregnancy may continue therapy, but increased fetal monitoring is recommended (Gersh 2011). Verapamil may be used IV for the acute treatment of supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) in pregnant women when adenosine or beta-blockers are ineffective or contraindicated. Verapamil may also be used for the ongoing management of SVT in highly symptomatic patients. The lowest effective dose is recommended; avoid use during the first trimester if possible (Page [ACC/AHA/HRS 2015]). Untreated chronic maternal hypertension is associated with adverse events in the fetus, infant, and mother. If treatment for hypertension during pregnancy is needed, other agents are prefe
Lactation
Verapamil is excreted in breast milk; the estimated exposure to the nursing infant is
Monitoring
| Clinical pearl | Monitor blood pressure and heart rate; periodic liver function tests; ECG, especially with renal and/or hepatic impairment Consult individual institutional policies and procedures. |
|---|
Chemistry & Properties
| Formula | C27H38N2O4 |
|---|---|
| Molecular weight | 454.61 g/mol |
| IUPAC name | 2-(3,4-dimethoxyphenyl)-5-[2-(3,4-dimethoxyphenyl)ethyl-methylamino]-2-propan-2-ylpentanenitrile |
| CAS | 52-53-9 |
| PubChem CID | 2520 |
| InChIKey | SGTNSNPWRIOYBX-UHFFFAOYSA-N |
| logP | 5.09 (XLogP 3.8) |
| Polar surface area | 63.95 Ų |
| H-bond acceptors / donors | 6 / 0 |
| Drug-likeness (QED) | 0.42 |
| Lipinski violations | 1 |
SMILES
COc1ccc(CCN(C)CCCC(C#N)(c2ccc(OC)c(OC)c2)C(C)C)cc1OCBiology & Pharmacokinetics
Pharmacokinetics
| BBB penetrant | Yes (logBB -0.7) |
|---|
Enzyme interactions
| Enzyme | Role | Detail |
|---|---|---|
| CYP1A2 | Substrate | — |
| CYP2B6 | Substrate | — |
| CYP2C19 | Inhibitor | IC₅₀ 21.80000000000001 µM |
| CYP2C19 | Substrate | — |
| CYP2C8 | Inhibitor | Ki 17.5 µM |
| CYP2C9 | Substrate | — |
| CYP2D6 | Inhibitor | IC₅₀ 43.30000000000001 µM |
| CYP2D6 | Substrate | — |
| CYP3A4 | Inhibitor | IC₅₀ 6.051225653043531 µM |
| CYP3A4 | Substrate | — |
Receptor binding (top 6)
| Target | Action | Affinity |
|---|---|---|
| 5-HT2A (HTR2A) | Binding | pKi 6.9 |
| 5-HT Transporter (SLC6A4) | Binding | pKi 6.6 |
| Calcium channel verapamil binding site | Binding | pKi 6.5 |
| IKr | Binding | pKi 6.3 |
| CYP3A4 (CYP3A4) | Inhibitor | pKi 6.2 |
| TPC2 (TPCN2) | Channel blocker | pIC50 5.0 |
Transporters
ASBT (Inhibitor)BCRP (Inhibitor)BCRP (Inhibitor)BSEP (Inhibitor)BSEP (Inhibitor)MATE1 (Inhibitor)MATE2 (Inhibitor)MCT1 (Inhibitor)MDR1 (Inhibitor)MRP (Inhibitor)MRP1 (Inhibitor)MRP1 (Inhibitor)MRP2 (Inhibitor)MRP3 (Inhibitor)MRP4 (Inhibitor)MRP5 (Inhibitor)MRP6 (Inhibitor)MRP7 (Inhibitor)OATP (Inhibitor)OATP1A2 (Inhibitor)OATP1B1 (Inhibitor)OATP1B1 (Inhibitor)OATP1B3 (Inhibitor)OATP1B3 (Inhibitor)OATP2B1 (Inhibitor)OCT(unspecified) (Inhibitor)OCT1 (Inhibitor)OCT2 (Inhibitor)OCT3 (Inhibitor)OCTN1 (Inhibitor)OCTN2 (Inhibitor)P-gp (Inhibitor)PEPT (Inhibitor)PEPT1 (Inhibitor)Proton-coupled organic cation antiporter (Inhibitor)Transporter(unspecified) (Inhibitor)MATE1 (Substrate)MATE2 (Substrate)MDR1 (Substrate)OCT(unspecified) (Substrate)OCTN1 (Substrate)OCTN2 (Substrate)P-gp (Substrate)Transporter(unspecified) (Substrate)
Drug–drug interactions (100+, DDInter)
| Interacting drug | Severity | Management |
|---|---|---|
| Acalabrutinib | major | |
| Betrixaban | major | |
| Bosutinib | major | |
| Brigatinib | major | |
| Ceritinib | major | |
| Cilostazol | major | |
| Cisapride | major | |
| Cobimetinib | major | |
| Deflazacort | major | |
| Docetaxel | major | |
| Dolasetron | major | |
| Edoxaban | major | |
| Eliglustat | major | |
| Encorafenib | major | |
| Entrectinib | major | |
| Erythromycin | major | |
| Everolimus | major | |
| Fingolimod | major | |
| Halofantrine | major | |
| Hydrocodone | major | |
| Ibrutinib | major | |
| Ivacaftor | major | |
| Ivosidenib | major | |
| Loperamide | major | |
| Naloxegol | major | |
| Neratinib | major | |
| Olaparib | major | |
| Pazopanib | major | |
| Simvastatin | major | |
| Siponimod | major | |
| Sonidegib | major | |
| Talazoparib | major | |
| Venetoclax | major | |
| Abemaciclib | moderate | |
| Acetylsalicylic acid | moderate | |
| Afatinib | moderate | |
| Aldesleukin | moderate | |
| Alectinib | moderate | |
| Alimemazine | moderate | |
| Alpelisib | moderate |
Showing 40 of 100+.
Registered Products (5)
| Brand | Form / strength | Pack | Agent | Citizen (JOD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ISOPTIN | Tablet 80 mg | 20 tab | Sukhtian Group | 2.750 |
| ISOPTIN SR TAB | Tablet 240 mg | 20 tab | Sukhtian Group | 4.870 |
| Tarka Tab | Tablet 2 mg, 180 mg | 28 tab | Sukhtian Group | 14.960 |
| Aver | Vial 5.0 mg/2 ml | 5 vial | MS-pharma jordan | — |
| Verapamil Injection BP | Injection 5 mg/2 ml | 2 ml | مستودع أدوية جاودة الدولي | — |