New Release: Alpha testing version has been released.

Lurasidone

N05A - Antipsychotics ATC N05AE05 Small molecule approved 2010 Oral Natural product Black-box warning

JFDA label: Laroza

⚠ Black-Box Warning
  • Increased mortality in elderly patients with dementia-related psychosis:
  • Suicidal thoughts and behaviors:

Mechanism of Action

Lurasidone is a benzoisothiazol-derivative atypical antipsychotic with mixed serotonin-dopamine antagonist activity. It exhibits high affinity for D2, 5-HT2A, and 5-HT7 receptors; moderate affinity for alpha2C-adrenergic receptors; and is a partial agonist for 5-HT1A receptors. Lurasidone has no significant affinity for muscarinic M1 and histamine H1 receptors. The addition of serotonin antagonism to dopamine antagonism (classic neuroleptic mechanism) is thought to improve negative symptoms of psychoses and reduce the incidence of extrapyramidal side effects as compared to typical antipsychotics (Huttunen 1995).

Indications

Approved

  • Bipolar depression
  • Schizophrenia

Off-label

  • Major depressive disorder with mixed features
  • Psychosis/agitation associated with dementia

Contraindications

Source: Lexicomp

  • Hypersensitivity to lurasidone or any component of the formulation (including angioedema) Absolute
  • concomitant use with strong CYP3A4 inhibitors (eg, ketoconazole, clarithromycin, ritonavir, voriconazole, mibefradil) and inducers (eg, rifampin, avasimibe, St. John's wort, phenytoin, carbamazepine) Absolute

Adverse Reactions

Very Common >10%Common 1–10%Uncommon 0.1–1% Rare 0.01–0.1%Very Rare <0.01%Not Known

Cardiac disorders (3)

Common hypertension · orthostatic hypotension · Tachycardia

Nervous system disorders (10)

Very Common akathisia · drowsiness · Extrapyramidal reaction · insomnia · parkinsonian-like syndrome

Common agitation · anxiety · dizziness · Dystonia · restlessness

Renal and urinary disorders (2)

Common Increased serum creatinine · Urinary tract infection

Metabolism and nutrition disorders (5)

Very Common Increased serum glucose

Common increased serum cholesterol · increased serum prolactin · Increased serum triglycerides · weight gain

Gastrointestinal disorders (8)

Very Common Nausea

Common abdominal pain · decreased appetite · diarrhea · dyspepsia · sialorrhea · Vomiting · xerostomia

Skin and subcutaneous tissue disorders (2)

Common Pruritus · skin rash

Musculoskeletal and connective tissue disorders (3)

Common back pain · Dyskinesia · increased creatine phosphokinase

Eye disorders (1)

Common Blurred vision

Infections and infestations (2)

Very Common Viral infection

Common Influenza

Respiratory, thoracic and mediastinal disorders (3)

Common nasopharyngitis · oropharyngeal pain · Rhinitis

Dosing

Source: Lexicomp

Bipolar depression (monotherapy or as adjunct to lithium or divalproex): Oral: Initial: 20 mg once daily; increase dose further based on response and tolerability; maximum recommended dose: 120 mg/day. Note: Doses ≥80 mg/day during monotherapy study did not provide additional efficacy compared with lower doses (eg, 20 to 60 mg/day). Major depressive disorder with mixed features (off-label use): Initial: 20 mg once daily; after 1 week, may increase based on response and tolerability up to 60 mg/day. The mean dose studied was 36.2 mg/day (Suppes 2016) Schizophrenia: Oral: Initial: 40 mg once daily; increase dose further based on response and tolerability; maximum recommended dose: 160 mg/day Concomitant CYP3A4 inhibitors/inducers: CYP3A4 inhibitors: Concomitant administration with a strong CYP3A4 inhibitor (eg, ketoconazole, clarithromycin, ritonavir, voriconazole, mibefradil): Use is contraindicated. Concomitant administration with a moderate CYP3A4 inhibitor (eg, diltiazem, atazanavir, erythromycin, fluconazole, verapamil): Initial dose: 20 mg once daily; do not exceed 80 mg/day of lurasidone. Note: If moderate CYP3A4 inhibitor is added to therapy, reduce lurasidone dose to 50% of original dose. CYP3A4 inducers: Concomitant administration with a strong CYP3A4 inducer (eg, rifampin, avasimibe, St John's wort, phenytoin, carbamazepine): Use is contraindicated. Concomitant administration with a moderate CYP3A4 inducer: Lurasidone dose may need to be increased when combined with a moderate CYP3A4 inducer for ≥7 days. Discontinuation of therapy: The American Psychiatric Association (APA), Canadian Psychiatric Association (CPA), and World Federation of Societies of Biological Psychiatry (WFSBP) guidelines recommend gradually tapering antipsychotics to avoid withdrawal symptoms and minimize the risk of relapse (APA [Lehman 2004]; Cerovecki 2013; CPA [Addington 2005]; WFSBP [Hasan 2012]); risk for withdrawal symptoms may be highest with highly anti-cholinergic or dopaminergic antipsychotics (Cerovecki 2013). When stopping antipsychotic therapy in patients with schizophrenia, the CPA guidelines recommend a gradual taper over 6 to 24 months, and the APA guidelines recommend reducing the dose by 10% each month (APA [Lehman 2004]; CPA [Addington 2005]). Continuing anti-parkinsonism agents for a brief period after discontinuation may prevent withdrawal symptoms (Cerovecki 2013). When switching antipsychotics, 3 strategies have been suggested: cross-titration (gradually discontinuing the first antipsychotic while gradually increasing the new antipsychotic), overlap and taper (maintaining the dose of the first antipsychotic while gradually increasing the new antipsychotic, then tapering the first antipsychotic), and abrupt change (abruptly discontinuing the first antipsychotic and either increasing the new antipsychotic gradually or starting it at a treatment dose). Evidence supporting ideal switch strategies and taper rates is limited, and results are conflict
Schizophrenia: Adolescents ≤17 years: Oral: Initial: 40 mg once daily; increase dose further based on response and tolerability; maximum recommended dose: 80 mg/day Adolescents >17 years: Refer to adult dosing.
Refer to adult dosing. Psychosis/agitation associated with dementia (off-label use): Oral: Initial: One-third to one-half the usual dose to treat psychosis in younger adults or the smallest available dosage. In patients without a clinically significant response after 4 weeks, taper and withdraw therapy. In patients with an adequate response, attempt to taper and withdraw therapy within 4 months, unless symptoms recurred with a previous taper attempt. Assess symptoms at least monthly during taper and for at least 4 months after withdrawal of therapy (APA [Reus 2016]).
CrCl ≥50 mL/minute: No dosage adjustment necessary. CrCl
Mild impairment (Child-Pugh class A): No dosage adjustment necessary. Moderate impairment (Child-Pugh class B): Initial: 20 mg daily; maximum: 80 mg/day Severe impairment (Child-Pugh class C): Initial: 20 mg daily; maximum: 40 mg/day

Warnings & Precautions

Source: Lexicomp

Suicidal thinking/behavior

Antidepressants increased the risk of suicidal thoughts and behavior in pediatric and young adult patients in short-term studies; consider risk prior to prescribing. Lurasidone is not approved in the US for use in pediatric patients with depression. Closely monitor all antidepressant-treated patients for clinical worsening and for emergence of suicidal thoughts and behaviors, particularly during the initial 1 to 2 months of therapy or during periods of dosage adjustments (increases or decreases); the patient's family or caregiver should be instructed to closely observe the patient and communicate condition with healthcare provider. A medication guide concerning the use of antidepressants should be dispensed with each prescription. - The possibility of a suicide attempt is inherent in major depression and may persist until remission occurs. Worsening depression and severe abrupt suicidality that are not part of the presenting symptoms may require discontinuation or modification of drug therapy. Use caution in high-risk patients during initiation of therapy. - Prescriptions should be written for the smallest quantity consistent with good patient care. The patient's family or caregiver should be alerted to monitor patients for the emergence of suicidality and associated behaviors such as anxiety, agitation, panic attacks, insomnia, irritability, hostility, impulsivity, akathisia, hypomania, and mania; patients should be instructed to notify their healthcare provider if any of th

Altered cardiac conduction

Antipsychotics may alter cardiac conduction; life-threatening arrhythmias have occurred with therapeutic doses of antipsychotics (Haddad 2002). Relative to other antipsychotics, lurasidone has minimal effects on the QTc interval and therefore, risk for arrhythmias is low.

Blood dyscrasias

Leukopenia, neutropenia, and agranulocytosis (sometimes fatal) have been reported in clinical trials and postmarketing reports with antipsychotic use; presence of risk factors (eg, preexisting low WBC or history of drug-induced leuko-/neutropenia) should prompt periodic blood count assessment. Discontinue therapy at first signs of blood dyscrasias or if absolute neutrophil count 3.

CNS depression

May cause CNS depression, which may impair physical or mental abilities; patients must be cautioned about performing tasks that require mental alertness (eg, operating machinery, driving).

Dyslipidemia

Increases in total cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations have been observed with atypical antipsychotic use; incidence varies with product. During clinical trials of lurasidone, there were no significant changes in total cholesterol or triglycerides observed.

Esophageal dysmotility/aspiration

Antipsychotic use has been associated with esophageal dysmotility and aspiration; use with caution in patients at risk of pneumonia (eg, Alzheimer disease).

Extrapyramidal symptoms

May cause extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS), including pseudoparkinsonism, acute dystonic reactions, akathisia, and tardive dyskinesia (risk of these reactions is generally much lower relative to typical/conventional antipsychotics; frequencies reported are similar to placebo). Risk of dystonia (and probably other EPS) may be greater with increased doses, use of conventional antipsychotics, males, and younger patients. Factors associated with greater vulnerability to tardive dyskinesia include older in age, female gender combined with postmenopausal status, Parkinson disease, pseudoparkinsonism symptoms, affective disorders (particularly major depressive disorder), concurrent medical diseases such as diabetes, previous brain damage, alcoholism, poor treatment response, and use of high doses of antipsychotics (APA [Lehman 2004]; Soares-Weiser 2007). Consider therapy discontinuation with signs/symptoms of tardive dyskinesia.

Falls

May increase the risk for falls due to somnolence, orthostatic hypotension, and motor or sensory instability. Complete fall risk assessments at baseline and periodically during treatment in patients with diseases or on medications that may also increase fall risk.

Hyperglycemia

Atypical antipsychotics have been associated with development of hyperglycemia; in some cases, may be extreme and associated with ketoacidosis, hyperosmolar coma, or death. Incidence varies with product. Use with caution in patients with diabetes or other disorders of glucose regulation; monitor for worsening of glucose control.

Hyperprolactinemia

Use is associated with increased prolactin levels; clinical significance of hyperprolactinemia in patients with breast cancer or other prolactin-dependent tumors is unknown.

Neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS)

Use may be associated with neuroleptic malignant syndrome; monitor for mental status changes, fever, muscle rigidity, and/or autonomic instability (risk may be increased in patients with Parkinson disease or Lewy body dementia) (McKeith 2002).

Orthostatic hypotension

May cause orthostatic hypotension and syncope; use with caution in patients at risk of this effect (eg, concurrent medication use which may predispose to hypotension/bradycardia or presence of dehydration or hypovolemia) or in those who would not tolerate transient hypotensive episodes. Use caution with history of cerebrovascular or cardiovascular disease (myocardial infarction, heart failure, or ischemic disease).

Temperature regulation

Impaired core body temperature regulation may occur; caution with strenuous exercise, heat exposure, dehydration, and concomitant medication possessing anticholinergic effects.

Weight gain

Significant weight gain has been observed with antipsychotic therapy; incidence varies with product. Monitor waist circumference and BMI (ADA 2004; Lehman 2004; Marder 2004). Disease-related concerns:

Cardiovascular disease

Use with caution in patients with severe cardiac disease, hemodynamic instability, prior myocardial infarction or ischemic heart disease.

Dementia

Elderly patients with dementia-related psychosis treated with antipsychotics are at an increased risk of death. Most deaths appeared to be either cardiovascular (eg, heart failure, sudden death) or infectious (eg, pneumonia) in nature. Use with caution in patients with Lewy body dementia or Parkinson disease dementia due to greater risk of adverse effects, increased sensitivity to extrapyramidal effects, and association with irreversible cognitive decompensation or death. (APA [Reus 2016]). Lurasidone is not approved for the treatment of dementia-related psychosis.

Hepatic impairment

Use with caution in patients with hepatic disease or impairment; dosage reduction is recommended in moderate-to-severe impairment.

Parkinson disease

Use with caution in patients with Parkinson disease; antipsychotics may aggravate motor disturbances (APA [Lehman 2004]; APA [Reus 2016]).

Renal impairment

Use with caution in patients with renal disease; dosage reduction is recommended in moderate-to-severe impairment.

Seizures

Use with caution in patients at risk of seizures, including those with a history of seizures or conditions that lower the seizure threshold such as Alzheimer disease. Elderly patients may be at increased risk of seizures due to an increased prevalence of predisposing factors. 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. Other warnings/precautions:

Discontinuation of therapy

When discontinuing antipsychotic therapy, the American Psychiatric Association (APA), Canadian Psychiatric Association (CPA), and World Federation of Societies of Biological Psychiatry (WFSBP) guidelines recommend gradually tapering antipsychotics to avoid physical withdrawal symptoms, including anorexia, anxiety, diaphoresis, diarrhea, dizziness, dyskinesia, headache, myalgia, nausea, paresthesia, restlessness, tremulousness, and vomiting (APA [Lehman 2004]; CPA [Addington 2005]; Lambert 2007; WFSBP [Hasan 2012]). The risk of withdrawal symptoms is highest following abrupt discontinuation of highly anti-cholinergic or dopaminergic antipsychotics (Cerovecki 2013). Additional factors such as duration of antipsychotic exposure, the indication for use, medication half-life and risk for relapse should be considered. In schizophrenia, there is no reliable indicator to differentiate the minority who will not from the majority who will relapse with drug discontinuation. However, studies in which the medication of well-stabilized patients were discontinued indicate that 75% of patients relapse within 6 to 24 months. Indefinite maintenance antipsychotic medication is generally recommended, and especially for patients who have had multiple prior episodes or 2 episodes within 5 years (APA [Lehman 2004]).

Pregnancy & Lactation

Pregnancy

Antipsychotic use during the third trimester of pregnancy has a risk for abnormal muscle movements (extrapyramidal symptoms [EPS]) and/or withdrawal symptoms in newborns following delivery. Symptoms in the newborn may include agitation, feeding disorder, hypertonia, hypotonia, respiratory distress, somnolence, and tremor; these effects may be self-limiting or require hospitalization. Lurasidone may cause hyperprolactinemia, which may decrease reproductive function in both males and females. The ACOG recommends that therapy during pregnancy be individualized; treatment with psychiatric medications during pregnancy should incorporate the clinical expertise of the mental health clinician, obstetrician, primary healthcare provider, and pediatrician. Safety data related to atypical antipsychotics during pregnancy is limited and routine use is not recommended. However, if a woman is inadvertently exposed to an atypical antipsychotic while pregnant, continuing therapy may be preferable to s

Lactation

It is not known if lurasidone is excreted in breast milk. According to the manufacturer, the decision to continue or discontinue breast-feeding during therapy should take into account the risk of infant exposure, the benefits of breast-feeding to the infant, and benefits of treatment to the mother.

Monitoring

Clinical pearlMental status; vital signs (as clinically indicated); blood pressure (baseline; repeat 3 months after antipsychotic initiation, then yearly); weight, height, BMI, waist circumference (baseline; repeat at 4, 8, and 12 weeks after initiating or changing therapy, then quarterly; consider switching to a different antipsychotic for a weight gain ≥5% of initial weight); CBC (as clinically indicated; monitor frequently during the first few months of therapy in patients with preexisting low WBC or history of drug-induced leukopenia/neutropenia); electrolytes, renal and liver function (annually and as clinically indicated); personal and family history of obesity, diabetes, dyslipidemia, hypertension, or cardiovascular disease (baseline; repeat annually); fasting plasma glucose level/HbA1c (baseline; repeat 3 months after starting antipsychotic, then yearly); fasting lipid panel (baseline; repeat 3 months after initiation of antipsychotic; if LDL level is normal repeat at 2- to 5-year intervals or more frequently if clinically indicated); changes in menstruation, libido, development of galactorrhea, erectile and ejaculatory function (at each visit for the first 12 weeks after the antipsychotic is initiated or until the dose is stable, then yearly); abnormal involuntary movements or parkinsonian signs (baseline; repeat weekly until dose stabilized for at least 2 weeks after introduction and for 2 weeks after any significant dose increase); tardive dyskinesia (every 12 months; high-risk

Chemistry & Properties

2D structure
FormulaC28H36N4O2S
Molecular weight492.69 g/mol
IUPAC name(1R,2S,6R,7S)-4-[[(1R,2R)-2-[[4-(1,2-benzothiazol-3-yl)piperazin-1-yl]methyl]cyclohexyl]methyl]-4-azatricyclo[5.2.1.02,6]decane-3,5-dione
CAS367514-87-2
PubChem CID213046
InChIKeyPQXKDMSYBGKCJA-CVTJIBDQSA-N
logP4.26 (XLogP 5.4)
Polar surface area56.75 Ų
H-bond acceptors / donors6 / 0
Drug-likeness (QED)0.58
Lipinski violations0
SMILESO=C1[C@@H]2[C@H]3CC[C@H](C3)[C@@H]2C(=O)N1C[C@@H]1CCCC[C@H]1CN1CCN(c2nsc3ccccc23)CC1

Biology & Pharmacokinetics

Pharmacokinetics predicted

Bioavailability70.0%
Half-life0.709 h
Volume of distribution1.279 L/kg
Protein binding98.9%
BBB penetrantYes

Enzyme interactions

EnzymeRoleDetail
CYP1A2Substrate
CYP2B6Inhibitor
CYP2C19Substrate
CYP2C8Inhibitor
CYP2D6Substrate
CYP3A4Substrate

Receptor binding (top 1)

TargetActionAffinity
5-HT7 receptor (HTR7) Antagonist pKi 9.3

Transporters

BCRP (Inhibitor)BSEP (Inhibitor)MDR1 (Inhibitor)MRP1 (Inhibitor)OATP1B1 (Inhibitor)OATP1B3 (Inhibitor)P-gp (Inhibitor)MDR1 (Substrate)P-gp (Substrate)Transporter(unspecified) (Substrate)

Drug–drug interactions (100+, DDInter)

Interacting drugSeverityManagement
Apalutamide major
Aprepitant major
Bupropion major
Ceritinib major
Clarithromycin major
Cobicistat major
Codeine major
Crizotinib major
Enzalutamide major
Erythromycin major
Fedratinib major
Fluconazole major
Hydrocodone major
Idelalisib major
Imatinib major
Iohexol major
Iopamidol major
Ketoconazole major
Lumacaftor major
Metoclopramide major
Mitotane major
Morphine major
Morphine (liposomal) major
Ribociclib major
Abiraterone moderate
Acarbose moderate
Acetohexamide moderate
Acrivastine moderate
Albiglutide moderate
Alimemazine moderate
Alogliptin moderate
Alpelisib moderate
Aminoglutethimide moderate
Amyl Nitrite moderate
Atropine moderate
Azatadine moderate
Azelastine (nasal) moderate
Bexarotene moderate
Bicalutamide moderate
Brimonidine (ophthalmic) moderate

Showing 40 of 100+.

Registered Products (6)

BrandForm / strengthPackAgentCitizen (JOD)
Novus Tablet 40.0 mg 30 tab UNITED PHARM.MFG.CO.LTD(UPM)/JORDAN 38.810
Novus Tablet 80.0 mg 30 tab UNITED PHARM.MFG.CO.LTD(UPM)/JORDAN 38.810
Laroza Tablet 40 mg 30 tab Hikma Pharmaceuticals/Mushata 41.230
Laroza Tablet 20 mg 30 tab Hikma Pharmaceuticals 41.230
Laroza Tablet 80 mg 30 tab Hikma Pharmaceuticals 41.230
Laroza Tablet 120 mg 30 tab Hikma Pharmaceuticals 41.230