Quetiapine and Falsely Elevated Nortriptyline Level
Ms. A was a 42-year-old woman with diagnoses of schizoaffective disorder and borderline personality disorder. She was hospitalized for acute exacerbation of schizoaffective disorder with psychosis, depression, and suicidal ideation. Quetiapine was added to her medication regimen (nortriptyline, 25 mg q.i.d.; levothyroxine, 0.1 mg/day; and lithium, 300 mg t.i.d.) and titrated up to 200 mg t.i.d. over several weeks.Her serum nortriptyline level, measured at admission, was noted to be 34 ng/ml. Several weeks later, a repeat serum level was noted to be 487 ng/ml. Ms. A, however, exhibited no signs of acute toxicity. Discussion with the reference laboratory revealed that the supratherapeutic level had been ascertained by using standard immunoassay. Repeat analysis of her blood with high-performance liquid chromatography demonstrated a blood level of nortriptyline of 216 ng/ml. Although high, this level was more consistent with her drug dose and clinical picture.Ms. A’s original serum drug level was assessed by using the Tricyclic Antidepressants Assay (Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, Ill.), a fluorescence polarization immunoassay run on the TDx/TDxFlx analyzer (Abbott Laboratories). Based on the competitive binding principle, this assay uses antibodies that detect a wide variety of tricyclic compounds in serum and plasma. Quetiapine, structurally similar to the tricyclic antidepressants, has been noted to interfere with immunoassays for tricyclic antidepressants (1, 2). Repeat analysis of Ms. A’s serum by using high-performance liquid chromatography demonstrated the presence of quetiapine and its metabolites. These were identified and differentiated from Ms. A’s serum levels of nortriptyline and nortriptyline metabolites.
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