Sections
History and Discovery | Pharmacological Profile | Pharmacokinetics and Disposition | Drug–Drug Interactions | Indications and Efficacy | Side Effects and Toxicology | Conclusion | References
Excerpt
Ziprasidone (CP-88059) is an atypical, or second-generation,
antipsychotic agent that has demonstrated activity for treating
positive, negative, cognitive, and affective symptoms of schizophrenia
and schizoaffective disorder and for treating mania and mixed states
in bipolar disorder, with limited adverse extrapyramidal, sedative,
anticholinergic, and cardiometabolic effects. Ziprasidone was first
synthesized on the Pfizer Central Research campus in Groton, Connecticut.
Both the oral and intramuscular formulations of this antipsychotic
were initially part of a new drug application for the treatment
of psychotic disorders submitted to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
under the product name Zeldox in 1997. Because of concerns regarding
an observed increase in the mean duration of the QT interval, an
electrocardiographic measure of the ventricular depolarization and
repolarization phases of cardiac conduction, the application was
not initially approved. Further studies, designed in collaboration with
the FDA, quantified the limited extent of this effect seen with
ziprasidone compared with the effect seen with other agents in wide
use; these studies established an approvable level of safety for
ziprasidone with respect to cardiac conduction and a benchmark for
the approach to evaluating drug effects on the QT interval that
has subsequently been applied to other agents evaluated by the FDA.
The FDA approved oral ziprasidone in February 2001 under the trade
name Geodon for the treatment of schizophrenia. The intramuscular
formulation received FDA approval in 2002 for the treatment of acute
agitation due to schizophrenia. In August 2004, oral ziprasidone
received FDA approval for the treatment of bipolar mania, including
manic and mixed episodes. At the time of writing, ziprasidone has
received regulatory approval and is available in over 70 countries,
usually under the trade name Zeldox, with more than 1.08 million
patient-years of drug exposure.