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Patient wants clozaril and is on high dose seroquel at this time. ANC has been at 1.9 all year, am I justified in not starting a titration given the low baseline?
Patient wants clozaril and is on high dose seroquel at this time. ANC has been at 1.9 all year, am I justified in not starting a titration given the low baseline?
No, minimum to start is 1.5 unless they have known BEN in which case it is 1.0. I am amazed a patient is asking for Clozapine, that in and of itself is quite the story. Clozapine is SO much better a drug than anything else we have for schizophrenia, give your patient a chance at it, it's worth the extra headache to improve their life.
https://www.clozapinerems.com/CpmgClozapineUI/home.u
That site will give you all the guidelines and let you sign up if you have not already.
P.S. The draconian rules USA has over clozapine is such a huge impairment since the only psychiatrists prescribing it are willing to do a bunch of extra unpaid work to give their patient the most effective drug. Near #1 petpeeve of mine.
Thanks for the suggestion, he said he had side effects to lithiumYou can try it and see what happens to his ANC. You can also give low dose lithium (300mg) to increase his white count if he's close to the cutoff and responding very well to the clozapine.
I know minimum is 1.5, but I don't feel comfortable given he is already at 1.9 and at under 1.5 it is discontinued. Am I being too cautious?
Stupid question time.
How long does it take for clozaril to 'adversely' impact the Neutrophil count? Is it a matter of hours after taking medication? Days? Weeks?
P.S. The draconian rules USA has over clozapine is such a huge impairment since the only psychiatrists prescribing it are willing to do a bunch of extra unpaid work to give their patient the most effective drug. Near #1 petpeeve of mine.
#1 pet peeve of mine too. is there any systematic way to start loosening these regulations? is it through research? congress? organized medicine? creating a new drug that acts on the same receptors that clozapine does but not on neutrophils? I know they recently loosened regulations in 2015 when they lowered the ANC and allowed some physician ability to override that ANC recommendation. I will literally dedicate a portion of my time in residency doing so if there's a logical way to do so.
There was an attempt to bind clozapine to DHA so that it would act mostly in the brain lowering systemic side effects but it was discontinued (for reasons unknown to me):#1 pet peeve of mine too. is there any systematic way to start loosening these regulations? is it through research? congress? organized medicine? creating a new drug that acts on the same receptors that clozapine does but not on neutrophils? I know they recently loosened regulations in 2015 when they lowered the ANC and allowed some physician ability to override that ANC recommendation. I will literally dedicate a portion of my time in residency doing so if there's a logical way to do so.
Although deaths are rare and I continue to prescribe it due to its exceptional efficacy I think the need for a healthy respect for agranulocytosis remains. I will never forget an incident years ago on the acute unit involving a patient who was being tested weekly when their neutrophils tanked. The patient was quickly transferred to medicine and was dead within a few days. That tragedy although one of the rare cases gave me pause because I had erroneously believed monitoring labs provided a sufficient safety net which afforded me time to reduce or stop the med if things were going south.
Although deaths are rare and I continue to prescribe it due to its exceptional efficacy I think the need for a healthy respect for agranulocytosis remains. I will never forget an incident years ago on the acute unit involving a patient who was being tested weekly when their neutrophils tanked. The patient was quickly transferred to medicine and was dead within a few days. That tragedy although one of the rare cases gave me pause because I had erroneously believed monitoring labs provided a sufficient safety net which afforded me time to reduce or stop the med if things were going south.
Wow, that quick? ANC fell and less than a week later they're dead? I'm curious, how long had they been on clozaril before this happened?
Although deaths are rare and I continue to prescribe it due to its exceptional efficacy I think the need for a healthy respect for agranulocytosis remains. I will never forget an incident years ago on the acute unit involving a patient who was being tested weekly when their neutrophils tanked. The patient was quickly transferred to medicine and was dead within a few days. That tragedy although one of the rare cases gave me pause because I had erroneously believed monitoring labs provided a sufficient safety net which afforded me time to reduce or stop the med if things were going south.
Although deaths are rare and I continue to prescribe it due to its exceptional efficacy I think the need for a healthy respect for agranulocytosis remains. I will never forget an incident years ago on the acute unit involving a patient who was being tested weekly when their neutrophils tanked. The patient was quickly transferred to medicine and was dead within a few days. That tragedy although one of the rare cases gave me pause because I had erroneously believed monitoring labs provided a sufficient safety net which afforded me time to reduce or stop the med if things were going south.
I know minimum is 1.5, but I don't feel comfortable given he is already at 1.9 and at under 1.5 it is discontinued. Am I being too cautious?
Patient had been on it before with positive effect stopped due to noncompliance but was later in a group home setting where medications were administered and followups for labs etc. would be handled by staff. The plan was re-start due to the severity of psychosis and that other meds trialed were ineffective. It was within a couple of weeks of initiation. There was no other explanation offered that I was privy to during the ensuing investigation. I discussed it with the experienced and conscientious attending who cared for the patient and was left with the sentiment that it was one of those rare but horrific things than can happen.
On a side note, any one had any success with Clozaril for difficult to control mania?
Patient wants clozaril and is on high dose seroquel at this time. ANC has been at 1.9 all year, am I justified in not starting a titration given the low baseline?
Yes! And there is good literature on it too.
I don't see much literature on it. What are you referring to?
I'm also curious if there's literature showing that it's having any better outcomes relative to agranulocytosis rather than improving the way the ANC looks on a lab? My phone resumption is that it works by demarginalization so does this treat the condition or give us false security?
I don't see much literature on it. What are you referring to?
I'm also curious if there's literature showing that it's having any better outcomes relative to agranulocytosis rather than improving the way the ANC looks on a lab? My phone resumption is that it works by demarginalization so does this treat the condition or give us false security?
Lithium appears to actually promote erythropoesis selectively and lead to a true increase in production of neutrophils, so really not the kind of pseudoleukocytosis associated with steroids. In vitro studies show that Li actually promotes colony-stimulating factor secretion and maaaay directly promote preferential proliferation of specific granulocytic precursors.
Thanks. I'll take a peak. I was a little confused when I opened the first two links that had nothing to do with lithium, then I went back and realized you were saying there was good evidence for mania and was assuming the discussion was lithium.Not GREAT literature but the aggregate of literature including some open label studies that were rather well designed in terms of patient selection, randomization, etc suggest it works well
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10831480
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10450255
THIS. Too many people believe the myth that Li promotes demargination, but looking at the heme literature suggests otherwise. . So before the Clozapine guidelines changed, if one were to use Lithium to boost ANC, it would reflect a true leukopoesis. Here is a nice review of the subject
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18809733