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Peter F. Buckley, Adriana E. Foster: Chapter 30. Quetiapine, in The American Psychiatric Publishing Textbook of
Psychopharmacology, 4th Edition. Edited by Alan F. Schatzberg, Charles B. Nemeroff. Copyright ©2009 American
Psychiatric Publishing, Inc. DOI: 10.1176/appi.books.9781585623860.430073. Printed 5/10/2009 from
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Textbook of Psychopharmacology >
Chapter 30. Quetiapine
HISTORY AND DISCOVERY
Quetiapine is a second-generation antipsychotic (SGA) developed and subsequently marketed by
AstraZeneca. In preclinical trials, quetiapine showed both the features associated with
antipsychotic efficacy and a low rate of motor effects (Goldstein 1999; Nemeroff et al. 2002). The
Phase III placebo-controlled clinical trials necessary for product registration confirmed this
preclinical impression and demonstrated that quetiapine was efficacious in treating the
manifestations of psychosis (Arvanitis and Miller 1997; Small et al. 1997). Of note, these studies
also reported a low rate of treatment-emergent extrapyramidal side effects (EPS) with quetiapine
use across a wide range of dosages that was comparable to the rate among placebo recipients.
Quetiapine was approved in 1997 by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment
of schizophrenia. Approval for use in Europe and in other countries worldwide has followed. Further
clinical trials in patients with mania (McIntyre et al. 2005; Vieta et al. 2005) and patients with
bipolar depression (Calabrese et al. 2005; Thase et al. 2006) led the FDA to approve additional
indications for quetiapine’s use in the acute and maintenance treatment of bipolar disorder. Most
recently, the FDA has also approved a slow-release formulation of quetiapine for the treatment of
schizophrenia (Kahn et al. 2007; Möller et al. 2007; Peuskens et al. 2007). Quetiapine is an
established antipsychotic with broad efficacy and good tolerability, particularly with respect to EPS
(Miodownik and Lerner 2006).
STRUCTURE–ACTIVITY RELATIONS
Quetiapine is an SGA of the dibenzothiazepine class. It has a complex neuropharmacology, with
binding at brain receptors of several classes (Goldstein 1999). Its binding profile, in comparison
with that of several other antipsychotics, is shown in Table 30–1. Of considerable interest is the
fact that quetiapine has a relatively low binding profile for dopamine type 2 (D2) receptors (Kapur
et al. 2000a, 2000b; Kufferle et al. 1997; Seeman and Tallerico 1998; Stephenson et al. 2000).
Indeed, considering the idea that an antipsychotic needs to occupy 60% or more of D2 receptors in
order to be clinically efficacious (Kapur et al. 2000b), quetiapine’s low D2 binding—typically
approximately 30%—is noteworthy.
TABLE 30–1. Comparative receptor binding profile of quetiapinea
Quetiapinea Ziprasidonea Risperidonea Olanzapinea Clozapinea Aripiprazoleb
D2
+ +++ +++ ++ +
+++b
5-HT2A
+ ++++ ++++ +++ +++ +++
5-HT2C
– ++++ +++ +++ ++ ++
5-HT1A
+
+++b
+ – +
+++b
5-HT1D c
– +++ + + – –
1-adrenergic ++ ++ +++ ++ +++ ++
M1
++ – – +++ +++ –
H1
+++ ++ ++ +++ +++ ++
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Quetiapinea Ziprasidonea Risperidonea Olanzapinea Clozapinea Aripiprazoleb
5-HT
– ++ – – – ++
NE
+ ++ – – + —
Note. ++++ = Very high affinity; +++ = high affinity; ++ = moderate affinity; + = low affinity; – =
negligible affinity; D2 = dopamine type 2 receptors; H1 = histaminergic type 1 receptors; 5-HT =
5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin); 5-HT2A = serotonin type 2A receptors; M1 = muscarinic type 1 receptors;
NE = norepinephrine.
aAll information from human studies unless noted otherwise.
b Partial agonist.
cBovine binding affinity.
d In rat synaptosomes.
Source. Schmidt AW, Lebel LA, Howard HR Jr, et al: “Ziprasidone: A Novel Antipsychotic Agent With a Unique
Human Receptor Binding Profile.” European Journal of Pharmacology 425:197–201, 2001. Otsuka
Pharmaceutical Co: Abilify (aripiprazole) full prescribing information. August 2008.
In attempting to reconcile this apparently subtherapeutic D2 receptor antagonism with the
well-recorded efficacy of quetiapine as an antipsychotic, Kapur and colleagues proposed an elegant
kiss and run hypothesis for quetiapine’s mechanisms of action (Kapur et al. 2000a). In a series of
studies, they found that when D2 receptor occupancy with quetiapine was measured with positron
emission tomography (PET) at shorter intervals (4 hours and 6 hours) than the conventional 12
hours after the last dose was taken, quetiapine did indeed show high D2 occupancy. They found that
in contrast to other antipsychotics, quetiapine had a more rapid “run-off” from D2 receptors; that is,
there was rapid dissociation of the D2 receptors (Kapur et al. 2000a). This was proposed to account
for the discrepancy between observations of clinical potency and pharmacodynamic subthreshold
receptor binding. This kiss-and-run theory is also put forward to explain the consistent observation
of low rates of EPS and lack of increased prolactin levels during treatment with quetiapine
(Nemeroff et al. 2002).
Quetiapine also, like clozapine, has strong binding at 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) type 2
receptors (5-HT2 receptors). This profile contrasts with its relatively weak affinity for other
subclasses of the serotonin receptor family (Goldstein 1999). Quetiapine also has strong affinity for
1-noradrenergic receptors. This antagonism may relate to its propensity to induce postural
hypotension—especially during rapid dose titration. Additionally, quetiapine has strong antagonism
at histamine type 1 (H1) receptors. This most likely relates to its sedative effect. Weight gain
during quetiapine therapy may also emanate from H1 receptor antagonism. However, this
structure–activity relationship is less clear than the association between H1 antagonism and
sedation.
Relatively less is known about quetiapine’s effects on other aspects of neurochemistry that are
thought to be of relevance (but not central) to antipsychotic activity. Some studies have shown that
SGAs can induce brain cell proliferation (neurogenesis) in experimental animals (Lieberman et al.
2006). The evidence for quetiapine in this regard is sparse. Also, little is known about the effect of
quetiapine on brain neurotrophins. One study (Xu et al. 2002) reported that quetiapine could
reverse reductions in levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor in an animal model. There is
accumulating evidence that other SGAs may also increase brain neurotrophins (Buckley et al.
2007).
PHARMACOKINETICS AND DISPOSITION
Quetiapine is absorbed in the gastrointestinal tract, and its absorption is unaffected by food. Peak
blood levels are achieved in about 2 hours, and effective plasma levels are sustained for
approximately 6 hours (DeVane and Nemeroff 2001). This provides the basis for the usual clinical
regimen of twice-daily dosing. However, Chengappa et al. (2003b) conducted a short-term trial
comparing once-daily dosing versus twice-daily dosing in patients with schizophrenia orPrint: Chapter 30. Quetiapine
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schizoaffective disorder. The dosing profiles were equivalent in terms of efficacy and tolerability.
Using PET, Mamo et al. (2008) found comparable plasma levels and D2 receptor occupancy between
the immediate-release and the extended-release formulation.
Quetiapine is metabolized by cytochrome P450 (CYP) 3A4 to inactive metabolites. Although genetic
variations are not clearly described for the CYP3A4 enzyme, drug interactions with inhibitors and
inducers of CYP3A4 are likely to be clinically significant. The anticonvulsants carbamazepine and
phenytoin are common examples of CYP3A4 inducers, and in their presence quetiapine doses may
need to be increased due to accelerated drug clearance (Potkin et al. 2002a, 2002b; Strakowski et
- 2002). Ritonavir, erythromycin, ketoconazole, and nefazodone are potent inhibitors of CYP3A4,
and their use requires caution when they are coadministered with quetiapine; while they are used,
doses of quetiapine should be lowered (de Leon et al. 2005; Wong et al. 2001).
In 2007, the FDA approved an extended-release (XR) formulation of quetiapine for the treatment of
schizophrenia on the basis of results from clinical trials (Kahn et al. 2007; Lindenmayer et al.
2008). These studies compared the efficacy and tolerability of XR and regular immediate-release
(IR) formulations. Overall, the results of these studies indicate that quetiapine XR given once daily
(at dosages of 400–800 mg/day) is effective for the treatment of schizophrenia. The XR
formulation appears to have efficacy comparable to that of the IR formulation. The XR formulation
was also similar in tolerability to the IR formulation in clinical trials, with perhaps some marginal
benefit in causing less sedation. Quetiapine is excreted in the kidneys and is not affected by gender
or smoking status (Thyrum et al. 2000). The metabolism of quetiapine is reduced by approximately
30% with advancing age (Goldstein 1999).
INDICATIONS AND EFFICACY
Quetiapine currently has the following FDA-approved indications:
Schizophrenia
Bipolar disorder
There are also reports of quetiapine’s efficacy in treating other conditions, such as mood disorders
in children and anxiety disorders, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and Parkinson’s disease in
adults. These uses have not been approved by the FDA. As a result of its use in the FDA indications
and also in several unapproved circumstances, quetiapine is the most frequently prescribed
antipsychotic in the United States at the time of writing. In this section of the chapter, we describe
results of pivotal and recent studies of quetiapine for its FDA-approved indications. For
completeness’s sake and in recognition of quetiapine’s use in nonapproved conditions, we also
provide an account of some studies of subjects with other conditions. The use of any medication (in
this case quetiapine) in situations that are not FDA-approved indications is not recommended for
clinical practice.
Schizophrenia
The pivotal product registration trials and early trials of quetiapine (Arvanitis and Miller 1997;
Borison et al. 1996; Copolov et al. 2000; King et al. 1998; Peuskens and Link 1997; Small et al.
1997) demonstrated that quetiapine is an efficacious antipsychotic for the treatment of
schizophrenia. In the United States, short-term (6-week) trials compared quetiapine and placebo
using quetiapine dosages of either 250 mg/day or 750 mg/day (Small et al. 1997) or daily dosages
of 75 mg, 150 mg, 300 mg, or 750 mg (Arvanitis and Miller 1997); the latter trial also compared
quetiapine and haloperidol. Similar to registration trials of other antipsychotics, these studies
established a range of effective dosages for quetiapine. However, they provided no clear evidence
of a dose-dependent increase in efficacy (although post hoc analyses have suggested that higher
doses of quetiapine are more efficacious). Additionally, because of the wide range of dosages used
in these studies, the initial dosing recommendations for quetiapine in schizophrenia patients were
unclear and were further complicated by a slow titration pattern. As a result, clinicians tended to
favor the lower end of the quetiapine dosing range.
Subsequent studies helped refine quetiapine dosing strategies. Clinicians are also now using higherPrint: Chapter 30. Quetiapine
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doses of quetiapine that are, on average, more consistent with those used in recent studies. Emsley
et al. (2000) conducted a fixed-dose comparison trial of quetiapine at 600 mg/day versus
haloperidol at 20 mg/day. The drugs had similar efficacy in this 8-week trial of patients who were a
priori deemed “partial responders.” More recent studies have shown that the titration of quetiapine
can be quicker than heretofore considered. Pae et al. (2007) compared a rapid titration strategy
(beginning at 200 mg/day, increasing to 800 mg/day by day 4) with a more conventional dosing
strategy (50 mg/day on day 1, up to 400 mg/day by day 5). The two groups fared equally well in
terms of tolerability during this 14-day study. The higher-dose, more rapid titration strategy had a
marginal advantage in overall efficacy. Information on the use of high dosages (>800 mg/day) of
quetiapine is very limited. Pierre et al. (2005) reported on quetiapine’s efficacy in a sample of
treatment-refractory schizophrenic patients at dosages of up to 1,200 mg/day. More fixed-dose
comparison studies with quetiapine are needed to assist clinicians in further refining their dosing
strategies with this agent.
Although two meta-analyses cast doubt on quetiapine’s efficacy with respect to first-generation
antipsychotics (FGAs; Davis et al. 2003; Geddes et al. 2000), most studies comparing quetiapine
with haloperidol or chlorpromazine report that the agents have similar efficacy in treating
schizophrenia (Emsley et al. 2000; Peuskens and Link 1997; Small et al. 1997). Given that today
most clinicians in the United States select one of the SGAs, comparisons between quetiapine and
other SGAs are perhaps more meaningful. Several studies have been published that inform this
consideration. A 4-month open-label trial of quetiapine and risperidone in a heterogeneous patient
population—although predominantly subjects with schizophrenia and related psychotic
disorders—showed overall comparability between the two agents (Mullen et al. 2001). Zhong et al.
(2006) reported on an 8-week comparative trial of quetiapine and risperidone in a chronic
schizophrenia patient population. The average quetiapine dosage was 525 mg/day and the average
risperidone dosage was 5.2 mg/day. The drugs proved similar in efficacy. Quetiapine-treated
patients had fewer EPS, lower prolactin levels, and fewer sexual side effects. Weight gain was
similar in both treatment groups. Quetiapine was more sedating and was more frequently
associated with dry mouth than was risperidone. Another study comparing quetiapine and
risperidone, a 6-month study, reported better efficacy with risperidone (Potkin et al. 2006).
Quetiapine was associated with more polypharmacy in that study. Kinon et al. (2006) reported on a
6-month double-blind comparative trial of quetiapine and olanzapine. Quetiapine-treated patients
were less likely to complete the study. Relapse rates were comparable overall in the two treatment
groups. More weight gain occurred in olanzapine recipients. As yet, no studies have directly
compared quetiapine with either ziprasidone or aripiprazole in the treatment of schizophrenia.
The most extensive comparative evaluation of quetiapine and other SGAs comes from the Clinical
Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness (CATIE) schizophrenia studies. In the phase 1
study, in which the effectiveness of several antipsychotics was examined over 18 months, more
quetiapine-treated patients than olanzapine-treated patients had discontinued treatment by 18
months (78% vs. 64%), and a similar (not statistically significant) trend was seen in comparisons
of quetiapine versus risperidone, ziprasidone, or perphenazine (Lieberman et al. 2005). In the
phase 2 study of efficacy pathways for patients with persistent symptoms, discontinuation rates
favored clozapine and olanzapine over risperidone and quetiapine (McEvoy et al. 2006). The results
from the tolerability pathways were more mixed, with similar efficacy observed between quetiapine
and other agents (Stroup et al. 2007). The findings relating to quetiapine’s relative adverse-effects
profile in this formative study are presented later in this chapter (see “Side Effects and
Toxicology”). Another interesting analysis from the CATIE schizophrenia studies (Stroup et al.
2007) examined how those patients originally assigned to the perphenazine arm of the phase 1
study fared. In this analysis, switching to quetiapine was more efficacious than switching to any of
the other agents. Much of the efficacy and tolerability differences among agents observed in the
CATIE schizophrenia studies have been attributed to differential dosing profiles.
An analogous comparative trial of quetiapine, risperidone, and olanzapine was conducted with
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Psychosis (CAFÉ) study. Here, discontinuation rates were similar with all three drugs over the
course of the 1-year trial (McEvoy et al. 2007). The comparative dosing profiles for quetiapine,
risperidone, and olanzapine in the CAFÉ study and the CATIE schizophrenia study, referenced
against the FDA-approved dosages, are shown in Table 30–2.
TABLE 30–2. Antipsychotic dosages used in CATIE and CAFÉ studies versus FDA-approved dosages:
quetiapine, olanzapine, and risperidone
CATIE (chronic) mean
modal dosage (mg/day)
CAFÉ (first episode) mean
modal dosage (mg/day)
FDA-approved dosage
range (mg/day)
Olanzapine 20.1 11.7 5–20
Risperidone 3.9 2.4 1–16
Quetiapine 543.4 506.0 25–800
Higher dosages may be required to achieve efficacy in chronic versus first-episode schizophrenia.
Note. CAFÉ = Comparison of Atypicals in First Episode Psychosis; CATIE = Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of
Intervention Effectiveness; FDA = U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
Source. Data derived from McEvoy et al. 2007 (CAFÉ) and Lieberman et al. 2005 (CATIE).
The use of quetiapine in patients with prodromal features of schizophrenia has not yet been
studied. Little is known about quetiapine’s efficacy in treatment-refractory patients. In a
subanalysis of more severely ill patients in an 8-week comparative trial of quetiapine and
haloperidol, quetiapine showed a small benefit over haloperidol (Buckley et al. 2004). The
open-label observational study by Pierre et al. (2005) also showed some benefit for quetiapine at
high doses in treatment-refractory patients. Sacchetti et al. (2004) reported a 50% response rate
in a small sample of patients who had been refractory to prior treatment with FGAs.
Information on the long-term efficacy of quetiapine is limited. Open-label follow-up in extension
studies for up to 4 years has shown sustained efficacy, with the average dosage of quetiapine
recorded at 450 mg/day (Buckley et al. 2004). A recently conducted 6-month placebo-controlled
study of quetiapine (the new XR formulation) in schizophrenia patients showed a clinically
beneficial effect on relapse prevention (Peuskens et al. 2007). Several studies have demonstrated
improvements in cognitive performance during quetiapine therapy in patients with schizophrenia
(Sax et al. 1998; Velligan et al. 2002, 2003).
Mood Disorders
There is evidence that quetiapine is an effective and well-tolerated antipsychotic for treating
patients with bipolar mania and bipolar depression. Initial evidence for mood effects were derived
from observations on mood assessment items in the pivotal schizophrenia trials. In one of the
pivotal product registration trials evaluating quetiapine (Small et al. 1997), both high and low
doses of quetiapine were significantly better than placebo in improving Brief Psychiatric Rating
Scale (BPRS) measures of mood disturbance in patients with schizophrenia (Goldstein 1999). In an
analysis of another pivotal trial comparing five dosages of quetiapine in patients with schizophrenia
(Arvanitis and Miller 1997), patients receiving 150 mg/day showed significant improvement in
BPRS-derived measures of mood. In the Quetiapine Experience with Safety and Tolerability
(QUEST) study, quetiapine was compared with risperidone in a 4-month open-label, flexible-dose
trial (Mullen et al. 2001). This study included patients with schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder,
bipolar disorder, and depression. At week 16 the mean dosage of quetiapine was 317 mg/day, and
the mean dosage of risperidone was 4.5 mg/day. Mean improvement on the Hamilton Rating Scale
for Depression was significantly greater in quetiapine recipients than in risperidone recipients.
More recent studies have confirmed that quetiapine is efficacious for the acute treatment of mania
and bipolar depression. In short-term placebo-controlled trials, quetiapine as a monotherapy
reduced symptoms of mania. Quetiapine has also been assessed as an add-on agent with either
lithium or valproic acid. Calabrese et al. (2005) and Thase et al. (2006) have studied quetiapine in Print: Chapter 30. Quetiapine
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patients with bipolar depression. In an 8-week trial, Calabrese et al. (2005) compared two dosages
of quetiapine (300 mg/day and 600 mg/day) versus placebo. Both dosages were efficacious, with
improvements observed across the full range of depressive and anxiety symptoms. Fifty-eight
percent of patients met a priori criteria for treatment response. Additionally, this antidepressant
effect was observed with a once-daily dosage regimen. In a subsequent similar study of the same
two dosages (300 mg/day and 600 mg/day; Thase et al. 2006), quetiapine was again compared
with placebo in an 8-week trial in patients with bipolar depression. Again, both dosages of
quetiapine showed efficacy across a broad range of depressive symptoms. These two studies led to
FDA approval of quetiapine for treating bipolar depression. Furthermore, Dorée et al. (2007)
recently reported that in a pilot study (n = 20) quetiapine was an efficacious augmenting agent for
major depression. There is also emerging information that quetiapine’s metabolite may have
mood-regulating effects (Goldstein et al. 2007).
Other Conditions and Patient Populations
The two studies on bipolar depression cited above (Calabrese et al. 2005; Thase et al. 2006) also
showed improvements in anxiety symptoms with quetiapine. Additionally, the sedative/calming
effect of quetiapine is well described in a variety of product registration trials (Buckley et al. 2007;
Chengappa et al. 2003a). Thus, there is interest in whether quetiapine may be helpful in treating
anxiety states, and off-label use of quetiapine in patients with anxiety disorders has been reported.
This is a complicated issue. A clinical trial of quetiapine to treat anxiety disorders is ongoing
(www.clinicaltrials.gov). There is also published information from a small study showing that
quetiapine reduces symptoms of both anxiety and posttraumatic stress disorder (Hamner et al.
2003).
Information has also been published on the use of quetiapine as an augmenting agent with
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors in treating OCD (Dell’Osso et al. 2006; Denys et al. 2007).
Dell’Osso et al. (2006) showed that quetiapine provided benefit in a small case series of patients
with OCD. Denys et al. (2007) analyzed published augmentation studies in OCD patients and found
that quetiapine augmentation was efficacious and, interestingly, was more efficacious in patients
who were receiving lower doses of a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) than in those
receiving higher SSRI doses.
Quetiapine appears to be an effective treatment for children with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder
(Barzman et al. 2006; DelBello et al. 2007; McConville et al. 2000). DelBello et al. (2007) recently
reported therapeutic effects of quetiapine in a cohort of children who showed subsyndromal
symptoms and were at risk for bipolar disorder but who did not actually meet diagnostic threshold
criteria for a bipolar diagnosis. Quetiapine is also used more broadly for treating agitation in
children (Findling et al. 2007).
Quetiapine has also been used in the elderly. McManus et al. (1999) reported baseline and 12-week
data for 151 elderly patients (mean age, 76.8 years) who were treated in a 1-year open-label trial
of quetiapine. Seventy percent of patients had some organic condition, predominantly Alzheimer’s
disease, with the majority of remaining patients having a diagnosis of a functional psychosis such
as schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, or delusional disorder. Fifty-two percent of all patients
achieved a 20% or greater decline in BPRS total score. Quetiapine was well tolerated at a mean
dosage of 100 mg/day. Zhong et al. (2007) reported a 10-week study comparing two dosages of
quetiapine (100 mg/day and 200 mg/day) versus placebo in nursing home residents with dementia
and agitation. Quetiapine at 100 mg/day was not efficacious, whereas quetiapine at 200 mg/day
was efficacious for treating agitation. Quetiapine (100 mg/day) was also compared with
risperidone (1.0 mg/day), olanzapine (5.5 mg/day), and placebo over 36 weeks in the CATIE
Alzheimer’s disease study (Schneider et al. 2006). This is the largest comparative study to date of
the relative efficacy and tolerability of antipsychotics in elderly patients with Alzheimer’s disease
and related dementias. Overall, no effect was seen with any of the agents, and no differences were
seen between the agents in terms of time to discontinuation of treatment for any reason.
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with the emergence of transient or sometimes persistent psychotic symptoms (Juncos 1999). The
management of Parkinson’s disease is further complicated by hallucinations associated with
levodopa therapy. Older antipsychotics were effective in relieving psychotic symptoms in these
patients, but their use also aggravated the disease. Quetiapine may be a preferred treatment in
patients with Parkinson’s disease (Friedman 2003; Friedman et al. 1998; Juncos 1999; Targum and
Abbott 2000). In a 24-week study of quetiapine in 29 patients with Parkinson’s disease (mean age,
73 years), Juncos (1999) observed that treatment with quetiapine at a mean dosage of 62.5
mg/day improved psychosis without causing deterioration in motor function. Menza et al. (1999)
reported similar results using quetiapine at dosages of 12.5–150 mg/day in three patients with
Parkinson’s disease whose medication was switched from clozapine to quetiapine. In another
study, 25 patients with Parkinson’s disease were switched from either clozapine or olanzapine to
quetiapine; 17 (68%) of the patients were switched to quetiapine without a worsening of psychosis
(Friedman et al. 1998). Targum and Abbott (2000) reported that quetiapine stopped visual
hallucinations in 6 of 10 patients with Parkinson’s disease, but delusions were less responsive to
treatment. In a study by Merims et al. (2006), both clozapine and quetiapine showed efficacy in
treating psychosis in Parkinson’s disease patients. Clozapine was marginally more efficacious but
was associated with a high adverse-effect burden.
Agitation is a core aspect of several conditions. There is, of course, no FDA-approved drug for
treating agitation, and use of antipsychotics for nonapproved clinical indications is strongly
discouraged. Nevertheless, antipsychotics have been used to manage agitation in a variety of
circumstances. Currier et al. (2006) reported an interesting study of quetiapine in agitated patients
in the emergency room. Here, Currier and colleagues reported that quetiapine could be used as an
acute antiagitation agent if the dose titration is judicious. Postural hypotension was observed in
this study. Other studies of quetiapine and agitation reflect post hoc analyses of clinical trials and
report benefits in treating hostility both in adults with schizophrenia (Chengappa et al. 2003a) or
bipolar disorder (Buckley et al. 2007) and in children with conditions associated with disruptive,
hostile behaviors (Barzman et al. 2006; Findling et al. 2007).
SIDE EFFECTS AND TOXICOLOGY
To illustrate the profile of adverse effects that are typically seen with quetiapine, we have
reproduced herein the results from a recent clinical trial of 8 weeks’ duration (Zhong et al. 2006) in
which schizophrenic patients received an average quetiapine dosage of 525 mg/day (Table 30–3).
Overall, quetiapine was well tolerated in this study, and only 6% of patients discontinued treatment
due to adverse effects. The most commonly recorded side effects of quetiapine treatment in this
study were somnolence (26% of patients), headache (15%), weight gain (14%), dizziness (14%),
and dry mouth (12%).
TABLE 30–3. Comparative side-effect profile of quetiapine versus risperidone: adverse effects
present in 5% of patients in an 8-week study
Quetiapine (n = 338; median
dosage, 525 mg/day)
Risperidone (n = 334; median dosage,
= 5.2 mg/day)
Adverse
effect
n (%)
n (%)
P
valuea
Somnolence 89 (26.3) 66 (19.7)
0.044
Headache 51 (15.1) 56 (16.7)
0.599
Weight gain 48 (14.2) 45 (13.4)
0.824
Dizziness 48 (14.2) 32 (9.6)
0.0737
Dry mouth 41 (12.1) 17 (5.1)
<0.01
Dyspepsia 22 (6.5)
26 (7.8)
0.552
Nausea 21 (6.2)
22 (6.6)
0.876Print: Chapter 30. Quetiapine
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Quetiapine (n = 338; median
dosage, 525 mg/day)
Risperidone (n = 334; median dosage,
= 5.2 mg/day)
Adverse
effect
n (%)
n (%)
P
valuea
Pain 21 (6.2)
24 (7.2)
0.536
Asthenia 17 (5.0)
14 (4.2)
0.714
Agitation 17 (5.0)
10 (3.0)
0.238
Pharyngitis 15 (4.4)
24 (7.2)
0.140
Akathisia 13 (3.8)
28 (8.4)
0.016
Vomiting 13 (3.8)
18 (5.4)
0.364
Dystonia 01 (0.3)
18 (5.4)
<0.001
a Fisher exact test, unadjusted.
Source. Adapted from Zhong KX, Sweitzer DE, Hamer RM, et al: “Comparison of Quetiapine and Risperidone
in the Treatment of Schizophrenia: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Flexible-Dose, 8-Week Study.” Journal of
Clinical Psychiatry 67:1093–1103, 2006.
Somnolence is a common side effect of quetiapine that most likely relates to its antihistaminergic
effects. It occurs early in treatment and generally decreases over time. It may persist in some
patients, however. It may also cause patients to stop taking their medication, because sedation is
generally a poorly tolerated side effect. In the bipolar depression study by Calabrese et al. (2005),
somnolence was observed in 24% of patients receiving quetiapine at a dosage of 300 mg/day and
in 27% of patients receiving 600 mg/day. Dizziness is another troublesome side effect when it
occurs. It may be associated with postural hypotension—an effect that is of even greater concern.
Sometimes, like sedation, this can cause discontinuation of quetiapine therapy.
There is growing concern about antipsychotic-induced weight gain and metabolic disturbances
(Allison et al. 1999; Brooke et al. 2009; Newcomer et al. 2002). Quetiapine is associated with
weight gain, although current evidence indicates that neither the frequency nor the magnitude of
the weight gain effect is as great as that seen with clozapine or olanzapine. On the other hand, the
weight-effects profile of quetiapine is not as favorable as that of either ziprasidone or aripiprazole
(Brooke et al. 2009). The lack of data on long-term maintenance treatment with quetiapine makes
it hard to quantify its weight-effects liability with robust objectivity over the course of illness
(Brooke et al. 2009).
In a report of open-label extension studies of patients with schizophrenia who continued taking
quetiapine for up to 18 months, patients experienced on average a 1.74-kg increase over their
baseline weight (Brecher et al. 2000). Weight gain was most pronounced—and, conversely, least
pronounced—in those who were underweight and markedly obese, respectively. This is consistent
with a lower body mass index being a predictor for weight gain in genetic studies of weight gain in
schizophrenic patients (Müller and Kennedy 2006). In the 8-week comparative study by Zhong et
- (2006), weight gain that was clinically significant (a 7.7% increase above baseline weight) was
observed in 10.4% of patients receiving quetiapine and in 10.5% of patients receiving risperidone.
The average weight gain was 1.6 kg for quetiapine recipients and 2.12 kg for risperidone recipients.
In the phase 1 CATIE schizophrenia study, quetiapine had a moderate effect on weight (and other
aspects of the metabolic profile) compared with the other agents in that major study (Lieberman et
- 2005). Those data are shown in Table 30–4. In the first-episode CAFÉ study, quetiapine had a
more favorable weight-effects profile than did olanzapine or risperidone. Fifty percent of patients
taking quetiapine gained weight, compared with 80% of those taking olanzapine and 58% of those
taking risperidone. Interestingly, females taking quetiapine were less likely than males to gain
weight in this 1-year study of patients treated for their first episode of psychosis (J. K. Patel, P. F.
Buckley, S. Woolson, et al., “Metabolic Profiles of Second-Generation Antipsychotics in EarlyPrint: Chapter 30. Quetiapine
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Psychosis: Findings From the CAFE Study” (submitted for publication), October 2008). It is also
important to consider quetiapine’s propensity to induce weight gain among bipolar patients
(especially because these patients may also be taking lithium or valproic acid). In the BOLDER
(BipOLar DEpRession) study of patients with bipolar depression (Calabrese et al. 2005), 9% of
patients receiving quetiapine at a dosage of 600 mg/day and 8.5% of patients receiving 300
mg/day had a 7% or greater increase in weight. The average weight gains for quetiapine-treated
patients in this study were 1.6 kg and 1.0 kg for the 600-mg/day and 300-mg/day groups,
respectively.
TABLE 30–4. Comparative metabolic profiles of antipsychotics in the phase 1 CATIE schizophrenia
trial: change from baseline
Olanzapine Quetiapine Perphenazine Risperidone Ziprasidone P
value
Weight gain >7%, n/total N
(%)
92/307 (30) 49/305
(16)
29/243 (12) 42/300 (14) 12/161 (7) <0.001
Weight change (lb), mean ±
SE
9.4 ± 0.9 1.1 ± 0.9 –2.0 ± 1.10 0.8 ± 0.9 –1.6 ± 1.10 <0.001
Blood glucose change
(mg/dL), exposure-adjusted
mean ± SE
13.7 ± 2.50 7.5 ± 2.5 5.4 ± 2.8 6.6 ± 2.5 2.9 ± 3.4 0.59
Glycosylated Hb (%),
exposure-adjusted mean ±
SE
0.40 ± 0.07 0.04 ± 0.08 0.09 ± 0.09 0.07 ± 0.08 0.11 ± 0.09 0.01
Cholesterol (mg/dL),
exposure-adjusted mean ±
SE
9.4 ± 2.4 6.6 ± 2.4 1.5 ± 2.7 –1.3 ± 2.40 –8.2 ± 3.20 <0.001
Triglycerides (mg/dL),
exposure-adjusted mean ±
SE
40.5 ± 8.90 21.2 ± 9.20 09.2 ± 10.1 –2.4 ± 9.10 –16.5 ±
12.20
<0.001
Note. Hb = hemoglobin; SE = standard error. P values for laboratory values and for the change in weight are
based on ranked analysis of covariance with adjustment for whether patient had an exacerbation in the
preceding 3 months and the duration of exposure to the study drug in phase 1. Mean values for metabolic
factors (other than weight change) were also adjusted for duration of exposure to study drug.
Source. Adapted from Lieberman JA, Stroup TS, McEvoy JP, et al, Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention
Effectiveness (CATIE) Investigators: “Effectiveness of Antipsychotic Drugs in Patients With Chronic
Schizophrenia.” New England Journal of Medicine 353:1209–1223, 2005.
We have less information on other aspects of quetiapine’s metabolic effects, in part because only
recently conducted studies have included careful measurements of fasting glucose and lipid levels.
In the bipolar depression study by Calabrese et al. (2005), the mean increases in glucose levels at
study endpoint were 6 mg/dL and 3 mg/dL with quetiapine dosages of 600 mg/day and 300
mg/day, respectively. In the comparative study of quetiapine and risperidone in the treatment of
schizophrenia (Zhong et al. 2006), the mean increases in fasting glucose levels from baseline to
study endpoint were 1.8 mg/dL with quetiapine and 5.6 mg/dL with risperidone. The metabolic
profile of quetiapine appeared moderate in the phase 1 CATIE schizophrenia study (see Table
30–4). Meyer and Stahl (2009) examined the biology of and reviewed the available data concerning
distinct metabolic profiles in the context of antipsychotic therapy. Newcomer et al. (2009) have
presented data from a euglycemic clamp study of quetiapine. They found little evidence of insulin
insensitivity, although it was noteworthy that there was a small signal of raised triglyceride levels
in this study. This was also found in another recent naturalistic study (de Leon et al. 2007). Overall,
quetiapine appears to carry a risk of causing weight gain and other metabolic disturbances. ThisPrint: Chapter 30. Quetiapine
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risk appears to be variable in patients, and it is not as pronounced as the risk with either clozapine
or olanzapine. The results of an intriguing study in which the addition of quetiapine to clozapine
resulted in lower rates of diabetes (Reinstein et al. 1999) have not been replicated.
Two side-effect characteristics that distinguish quetiapine from other SGAs and from FGAs are its
low rates of prolactin elevation and low rates of EPS. Consistently, quetiapine is associated with a
low risk of raising prolactin levels (Hamner et al. 1996; Lieberman et al. 2005; Small et al. 1997;
Zhong et al. 2006). In the quetiapine versus risperidone schizophrenia study (Zhong et al. 2006),
mean prolactin levels were reduced by 11.5 mg/mL in quetiapine-treated patients, whereas they
were increased by 35.5 mg/mL in risperidone-treated patients. Similar effects on prolactin levels
were observed with quetiapine in both the CATIE and CAFÉ schizophrenia studies (Lieberman et al.
2005; McEvoy et al. 2007).
The low-EPS advantage of quetiapine is compelling and consistent across studies. Indeed, in the
SPECTRUM switch study (Larmo et al. 2005), switching to quetiapine from either an FGA or an SGA
was associated with a robust reduction in EPS. This low propensity for EPS was also seen in the
bipolar depression studies (Calabrese et al. 2005; Thase et al. 2006). Moreover, quetiapine’s EPS
advantage has propelled it to the status of being the agent of choice among neurologists who treat
psychosis in patients with Parkinson’s disease.
The potential of quetiapine to induce cataracts is still unknown. The relationship of antipsychotic
therapy in general to cataract formation is unclear (Isaac et al. 1991; Johnson 1998). A large
pragmatic trial that includes regular specialist ophthalmological examinations to investigate the
incidence of cataract formation during therapy with quetiapine is nearing completion
(www.clinicaltrials.gov). It is hoped that this study will shed new light on the issue. At present it
appears that most clinicians do not obtain specialist eye examinations when prescribing quetiapine.
Abnormalities in thyroid hormone levels were a concern that emanated from early trials of
quetiapine (Arvanitis and Miller 1997). This no longer appears to be a clinically meaningful risk, and
recent studies have not shown any consistent evidence of thyroid dysfunction with quetiapine use
(Kelly and Conley 2006).
Quetiapine’s prescribing information (AstraZeneca 2008a, 2008b) possesses a warning similar to
that required in the prescribing information of many other antipsychotics concerning cardiovascular
risks. These potential cardiac risks, especially prolongation of the QTc interval (the ventricular
depolarization and repolarization phase, or QT phase, of the electrocardiogram corrected for heart
rate), have been comprehensively reviewed by Glassman and Bigger (2001). However, there is no
evidence of any heightened QTc risk with quetiapine (Lieberman et al. 2005). It is also suggested
that quetiapine might have abuse potential (Pierre et al. 2005; Pinta and Taylor 2007). Given that it
is used more broadly than other SGAs, this observation merits further consideration and vigilance.
Overall, the adverse-effect profile of the XR formulation is similar to that of the IR formulation. As
is the case with all SGAs, there is little information about the effects of quetiapine during
pregnancy. A prospective study by McKenna et al. (2005) studied a sample of pregnant women in
Canada, Israel, and England treated with SGAs, which was matched to a comparison group of
pregnant women who were not exposed to these agents. Among them were 36 women treated with
quetiapine. The pregnancy outcomes in the exposed and comparison groups were not significantly
different, with the exceptions of the rate of low birthweight, which was 10% in exposed babies
versus 2% in the comparison group (P = 0.05), and the rate of therapeutic abortions, which was
9.9% in exposed women versus 1.3% in the comparison group (P = 0.003). Atypical antipsychotics
as a group did not appear to be associated with an increased risk for major malformations. Yaeger
et al. (2006) reported that among 39 prospectively identified cases of fetal exposure to quetiapine,
including the 36 in the study by McKenna et al. (2005), no congenital malformations were found.
CONCLUSION
Quetiapine is now a well-established and widely prescribed antipsychotic. There is strong evidence
for efficacy in all current FDA-approved indications: the treatment of schizophrenia and bipolarPrint: Chapter 30. Quetiapine
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disorder. This agent is also used extensively under circumstances not approved by the FDA
(off-label use), and evidence for efficacy in some of these uses is reviewed (but not endorsed
clinically) in this chapter. Major clinical trials of quetiapine for several unapproved uses are ongoing
(www.clinicaltrials.com). Quetiapine possesses a particularly favorable profile with respect to D2
receptor antagonism–related side effects. Its low propensity to cause EPS is well established, and
studies have consistently shown that quetiapine does not appear to elevate prolactin levels. These
two differential tolerability advantages are important when considering whether a patient might
benefit from switching from his or her current medication to quetiapine (Weiden and Buckley
2007). On the other hand, the weight-gain effects and metabolic profile of quetiapine are of
concern. However, the weight and metabolic risks have yet to be clearly determined for quetiapine
relative to other SGAs. Based on current evidence, it appears to have an intermediate position
among the SGAs with respect to metabolic risk. Overall, quetiapine represents a useful addition to
the psychopharmocological armamentarium, with established efficacy and a broadly favorable
tolerability profile.
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Copyright © 2009 American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Course Content
Introduction to Quetiapine: Pharmacology and Mechanism of Action
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Overview of Quetiapine
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Pharmacokinetics of Quetiapine
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Mechanism of Action: How Quetiapine Works
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Quiz: Understanding Quetiapine’s Pharmacology
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Clinical Implications of Quetiapine’s Pharmacology
Clinical Applications and Indications for Quetiapine Use
Dosage, Administration, and Monitoring of Quetiapine Therapy
Managing Side Effects and Drug Interactions with Quetiapine
Case Studies and Advanced Management Strategies in Quetiapine Treatment
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