Longitudinal trends in blood concentrations of clozapine and norclozapine, inflammatory markers, and clinical outcomes in Japanese patients: a 12-week prospective study
Masaru Nakamura, Takahiko Nagamine, Honami Yokoe, Yusuke Shimomura

TL;DR
This study tracks clozapine and norclozapine levels and their effects in schizophrenia patients over 12 weeks, finding higher concentrations in females and no strong link to inflammation or symptoms.
Contribution
The study reveals sex-based differences in clozapine metabolism and challenges the need for real-time drug monitoring in titration.
Findings
Clozapine and norclozapine concentrations increased over 12 weeks.
Females had significantly higher clozapine concentration-to-dose ratios than males from week 2.
Positive psychiatric symptoms improved, but no correlation was found between drug levels and inflammation or metabolic markers.
Abstract
Clozapine (CLZ) is the gold standard for treatment-resistant schizophrenia (TRS), but its use in Japan is limited by strict monitoring and titration-phase adverse events. This prospective 12-week study evaluated longitudinal trends in CLZ/norclozapine (NCLZ) levels, inflammatory markers, metabolic indices, and psychiatric symptoms. Twenty-one inpatients with TRS were analyzed. To focus on standard titration, patients with inflammatory symptoms (e.g., fever) requiring discontinuation were excluded. Serum CLZ and NCLZ were measured weekly via LC-MS/MS. Clinicians were blinded to these levels; dosing was guided solely by clinical observation. IL-6, HOMA-IR, TG/HDL-C ratios, and PANSS scores were assessed at baseline and designated intervals. CLZ and NCLZ concentrations increased throughout the 12-week period. Significant sex differences emerged in CLZ concentration-to-dose (C/D) ratios,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSchizophrenia research and treatment · Tryptophan and brain disorders · Bipolar Disorder and Treatment
