Lercanidipine

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LERKA (Lercanidipine, Zanidip)
(lercanidipine tablets)

Lercanidipine hydrochloride. : a dihydropyridine derivative. It is a racemate due to the presence of a chiral carbon atom at position 4 of the 1,4-dihydropyridine ring.

Lercanidipine chemical structure

Chemical name: 3,5-pyridinedicarboxylic acid, 1,4- dihydro-2, 6-dimethyl-4-(3-nitrophenyl)-2-[(3,3-diphenylpropyl)methylamino]-1,1-dimethylethyl methyl ester hydrochloride. MW: 648.2 (free base: 611.7).

Lercanidipine hydrochloride (CAS: 132866-11-6) is a microcrystalline, odourless, citrine powder, readily soluble in chloroform and methanol, practically insoluble in water. Octanol:water partition coefficient (LogP):

LERKA (Lercanidipine, Zanidip) tablets also contain lactose, microcrystalline cellulose, sodium starch glycolate, povidone, magnesium stearate and the proprietary film coating ingredient Opadry OY-SR-6497 as excipients.
Pharmacology Pharmacodynamic Properties

Lercanidipine is a calcium antagonist of the dihydropyridine group and selectively inhibits the transmembrane influx of calcium into cardiac and vascular smooth muscle, with a greater effect on vascular smooth muscle than on cardiac smooth muscle. The antihypertensive action is due to a direct relaxant effect on vascular smooth muscle which lowers total peripheral resistance and hence blood pressure. Lercanidipine has a prolonged antihypertensive activity because of its high membrane partition coefficient. It is devoid of negative inotropic effects and its vascular selectivity is due to its voltage-dependent calcium antagonist activity. Since the vasodilatation induced by lercanidipine hydrochloride is gradual in onset, acute hypotension with reflex tachycardia has rarely been observed in hypertensive patients.

As for other asymmetric, 1,4-dihydropyridines, the antihypertensive activity of lercanidipine is mainly due to the (S) - enantiomer.

No significant effects on ECG have been seen.
Clinical Trials
Placebo-controlled studies

Lercanidipine has been compared to placebo in four 4 to 16-week studies, involving 671 patients with mild-moderate essential hypertension. All studies used a 3-week placebo run-in period. Endpoints were diastolic and systolic blood pressure 24 hours post dose. Both 10mg and 20mg once daily significantly lowered diastolic and systolic blood pressure compared to placebo, and the reduction in blood pressure was maintained throughout the 24 hour dosing period.

Diastolic blood pressure changes observed after 4-week treatment with 10-20 mg QD lercanidipine ranged between 8 and 13 mmHg, as compared to 3-6 mmHg induced by placebo.

Studies with 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring have documented that the antihypertensive effect of lercanidipine is maintained throughout the 24 hour dosing period, with limited variations between peak (5-7 hours post dosing) and trough blood pressure changes.
Active-controlled studies

Four clinical trials involving 538 patients with mild-moderate essential hypertension have compared lercanidipine with nifedipine SR, atenolol, hydrochlorothiazide and captopril. Trials included a 2-week washout period followed by a 3-week placebo run-in, and 12-16 weeks of active treatment. Diastolic and systolic blood pressure was measured 24 hours post-dose. Lercanidipine was as effective as the comparator drugs, and at least as well tolerated. 24-hour blood-pressure monitoring was used in a comparative, cross-over trial of lercanidipine versus amlodipine (n=16). The effect of lercanidipine paralleled that of amlodipine throughout the 24 hour period.
Patients with Isolated Systolic Hypertension

The effect of lercanidipine 10-20mg daily on isolated systolic hypertension was studied in a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled study in 83 elderly patients (sitting SBP>160mm Hg and sitting DBP<95mm Hg). The study consisted of 1 week wash-out, 3 weeks placebo run-in, and 8 weeks of active treatment. Systolic and diastolic blood pressure was measured 24 hours post dose. Lercanidipine 10 to 20 mg was efficacious in lowering systolic blood pressure from the initial values of 172.6 ± 5.6 mmHg to 140.2 ± 8.7mmHg (mean±SD, per protocol population in all patients completing the whole 8 weeks of double-blind treatment), as compared to the changes in the placebo group (from 172.4±6.3 to 162.8±9.7 mmHg). Therefore,at study endpoint, patients treated with lercanidipine experienced a significantly greater decrease (-22.6mm Hg, p<0.001) in sitting systolic blood pressure in comparison to placebo. The diastolic blood pressure was within normal range.
Long-term studies

In long term studies, 399 patients were followed for 12 months, with dose titration allowed every 4 weeks, to 30mg daily. Development of tolerance was not seen. The antihypertensive effect was maintained, and the heart rate was not significantly affected. A further fall in blood pressure was seen after the first and second month, with blood pressure stabilising in the third month. The majority of patients remained on 10mg once daily.
Pharmacokinetics
Absorption

Lercanidipine is completely absorbed after oral administration. Peak plasma levels of 3.30ng/mL ± 2.09 s.d and 7.66 ng/mL ± 5.90 s.d occur 1.5-3 hours after dosing with 10mg and 20mg, respectively.

The absolute bioavailability of lercanidipine is about 10%, because of high first pass metabolism. The bioavailability increases 4-fold when lercanidipine is ingested up to 2 hours after a high fat meal, and about 2-fold when taken immediately after a carbohydrate-rich meal. Consequently, lercanidipine should be taken at least 15 minutes before a meal.

With oral administration, lercanidipine exhibits non-linear kinetics. After 10, 20 or 40mg, peak plasma concentrations observed were in the ratio 1:3:8 and areas under plasma concentration-time curves in the ratio 1:4:18, showing a progressive saturation of first pass metabolism. Accordingly, bioavailability increases as dosage increases.The two enantiomers of lercanidipine have a similar time to peak plasma concentration. The peak plasma concentration and AUC are, on average, 1.2-fold higher for the (S) enantiomer. No in vivo interconversion of enantiomers is observed.
Distribution

Distribution of lercanidipine from plasma to tissues and organs is rapid and extensive. Serum protein binding exceeds 98%. The free fraction of lercanidipine may be increased in patients with renal or hepatic impairment as plasma protein levels are decreased in these disease states.
Metabolism : As for other dihydropyridine derivatives, lercanidipine is extensively metabolised by CYP3A4. It is predominantly converted to inactive metabolites; no parent drug is found in the urine or faeces. About 50% of the dose is excreted in the urine.
Elimination

The mean terminal elimination half-life of S- and R-lercanidipine enantiomers is 5.8 ± 2.5 and 7.7 ± 3.8 hours, respectively. No accumulation was seen upon repeated administration. The therapeutic activity of lercanidipine lasts for 24 hours, due to its high binding to lipid membranes.
In elderly patients, the pharmacokinetics of lercanidipine is similar to that observed in the general population.
A study in patients with mild hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh class A) showed that the pharmacokinetic behaviour of the drug is similar to that observed in the general population. No studies have been undertaken in patients with moderate or severe hepatic impairment.In patients with severe renal dysfunction (creatinine clearance < 12mL/min) or dialysis-dependent patients, plasma levels were increased by about 70%. As a consequence, the drug should be contraindicated in severe renal impairment.LERKA (Lercanidipine, Zanidip) is indicated for the treatment of mild to moderate hypertension.
Contraindications

* Hypersensitivity to any dihydropyridine or any ingredient of LERKA (Lercanidipine, Zanidip);

* Severe renal impairment (creatinine clearance < 12 mL/min).

* Concomitant treatment of LERKA (Lercanidipine, Zanidip) with cyclosporin should be avoided

Precautions : Ischaemic heart disease .It has been suggested that some short-acting dihydropyridines may be associated with increased cardiovascular risk in patients with ischaemic heart disease. Although lercanidipine is long-acting, caution should be required in such patients.
Outflow obstruction (aortic stenosis)

Lercanidipine should be administered with caution in patients with left ventricular outflow obstruction (aortic stenosis).
Congestive heart failure

In general calcium channel blockers should be used with caution in patients with heart failure. Although animal data and acute haemodynamic evaluation in patients with preserved left ventricular function have not demonstrated that lercanidipine exerts a direct negative inotropic effect, safety in patients with congestive heart failure has not been established. Therefore, as for other calcium channel blockers, lercanidipine should be used with caution in such patients, especially if untreated.
Unstable angina pectoris or within one month of a myocardial infarction

Rarely patients have developed documented increased frequency, duration and/or severity of angina on starting calcium channel blocker therapy or at the time of dosage increase (particularly those with severe obstructive coronary artery disease). The mechanism of this effect has not been elucidated, however the possibility of an exacerbation of angina and/or cardiac ischaemia exists. It is therefore suggested that the use of calcium channel blockers is not advisable in patients with unstable angina pectoris or recent myocardial infarction.
Carcinogenesis, mutagenesis, impairment of fertility

No evidence for genotoxic activity was observed with lercanidipine in in vitro

Use in pregnancy: Category C

There is no clinical experience with lercanidipine in pregnancy, but other dihydropyridine compounds have been found to cause irreversible malformations in animals. Therefore, lercanidipine should not be administered during pregnancy or to women with child-bearing potential unless effective contraception is used.

In animal studies, pregnant rats given lercanidipine orally at doses = 2.5 mg/kg/day, beginning prior to mating, or 12 mg/kg/day, beginning from early gestation, showed signs of distocia and had a increased incidence of still births and a lower neonatal survival index. The no-effect dose for effects on parturition and neonatal survival was 0.5 mg/kg/day (associated with lercanidipine concentration (AUC) about 50% of the expected human AUC) when dosing started before pregnancy or 2.5 mg/kg/day (about 3 times the human AUC) when dosing started during early gestation. Administration with lercanidipine at doses of 2.5 mg/kg/day during gestation also caused a higher incidence of fetal visceral abnormalities (mono/bilateral renal pelvic and/or ureteric dilatation) and skeletal abnormalities (mainly delayed ossification) at all dose levels. A no-effect dose was not established. The effects of lercanidipine during pregnancy have not been investigated adequately in a non-rodent species.
Use in Lactation

There is no clinical experience with lercanidipine in lactation. Distribution into milk may be expected, due to the high lipophilicity of lercanidipine. Therefore, lercanidipine should not be administered to lactating women.
Use in the Elderly

Although the pharmacokinetic data and clinical experience suggest that no adjustment of the daily dose is required, special care should be exercised when initiating treatment in the elderly.
Use in Children

Due to lack of clinical experience, lercanidipine is not recommended for use in patients under the age of 18.
Use in Hepatic Impairment

The pharmacokinetics of lercanidipine in patients with mild hepatic impairment are similar to those observed in the general population. However, there are no studies in patients with moderate hepatic impairment and dosage recommendations have not been established. Lercanidipine should therefore be used with caution in this patient group and careful monitoring undertaken during treatment, since the bioavailability and hypotensive effect may be increased. The use of lercanidipine in patients with moderate hepatic impairments should only be undertaken if the benefits are considered to outweigh the risks. Lercanidipine is contraindicated, in patients with severe hepatic disease.
Use in Renal Impairment

Although the pharmacokinetics of lercanidipine in patients with mild to moderate renal impairment are similar to those observed in the general population, special care should be exercised when commencing the treatment in such patients. The usual recommended dose of 10mg daily may be tolerated; however, an increase to 20mg daily should be approached with caution.
Interaction with other Drugs

Lercanidipine has been safely administered with diuretics and ACE inhibitors. It may also be administered safely with beta-blockers which are eliminated unchanged (such as atenolol).
Inhibitors or inducers of Cytochrome CYP3A4

Since the main metabolic pathway of lercanidipine involves the enzyme CYP3A4, drugs that inhibit or induce this enzyme have the potential to alter the plasma concentration of the compound.

Therefore, inhibitors of CYP3A4 (such as ketoconazole, itraconazole, erythromycin, ritonavir and fluoxetine) may increase the plasma concentration of lercanidipine, and such combinations should be used with caution. An interaction study with fluoxetine in volunteers over the age of 65 years, showed no clinically relevant changes to the pharmacokinetics of lercanidipine.

When co-administered with CYP3A4 inducers, such as anticonvulsants (eg, phenytoin, carbamazepine) and rifampicin, the antihypertensive effect of lercanidipine may be reduced and, therefore, blood pressure should be monitored when the co-administration is foreseen.
CYP3A4 and CYP2D6 substrates

The potential for in vivo inhibition of CYP3A4 by lercanidipine is negligible, as confirmed by an interaction study with midazolam in healthy volunteers. After repeated co-administration with lercanidipine, midazolam (a probe for CYP3A4 activity) was found to be essentially bioequivalent to the drug administered alone. However, unless specific data are available, caution should also be exercised when lercanidipine is co-prescribed with other substrates of CYP3A4 which have a narrow therapeutic index, such as cyclosporin, and class III antiarrhythmic drugs (e.g. amiodarone and quinidine).

Co-administration of lercanidipine with cyclosporin resulted in a 3 fold increase in the plasma levels of lercanidipine and a 21% increase in the bioavailability of cyclosporin. However, when cyclosporin was administered 3 hours after lercanidipine, while the bioavailability of cyclosporin increased by 27%. Therefore, cyclosporin and lercanidipine should not be administered together.

Moreover, interaction studies in humans have shown that lercanidipine did not modify the plasma levels of metoprolol, (a typical substrate of CYP2D6). Therefore, at therapeutic doses it is unlikely that lercanidipine will inhibit the biotransformation of drugs

These findings confirm that the inhibition of cytochrome P450 isoenzymes observed in vitro with lercanidipine is devoid of any clinical significance . In vitro experiments with human liver microsomes demonstrated that lercanidipine inhibits CYP3A4 and CYP2D6 (IC50 of 2.6 µm and 0.8 µm, respectively). The IC50 concentrations for CYP3A4 and CYP2D6 are 160 and 40 fold higher, respectively, than those reached at peak in the plasma after a 20mg dose.
Beta-blockers

When lercanidipine was administered with metoprolol, a beta-blocker eliminated mainly by the liver, the bioavailability of metoprolol was not changed, while that of lercanidipine was reduced by 50%. Therefore, when co-administered with metoprolol, it may be necessary to increase the dose of lercanidipine. It is anticipated that a similar effect may occur with propranolol.
Cardiac glycosides

Co-administration of lercanidipine in patients chronically treated with beta-methyldigoxin (a pro-drug of digoxin) showed no evidence of a pharmacokinetic interaction. However, patients on concomitant digoxin treatment should be closely monitored.

Concomitant administration of cimetidine 400mg BD does not cause significant changes in the plasma levels of lercanidipine: AUC and Cmax were increased by a mean of 11%. However, at higher doses caution is required since the bioavailability and the hypotensive effect of lercanidipine may be increased.
Simvastatin

Co-administration of a 20 mg dose of lercanidipine with 40 mg simvastatin resulted in no increase in the bioavailability of lercanidipine, however a 56% increase was observed for simvastatin and a 28% increase for its active metabolite ß-hydroxyacid. It is unlikely that these changes are clinically relevant. However, it is recommended that when required lercanidipine be administered in the morning and simvastatin in the evening.
Warfarin

Co-administration of 20 mg lercanidipine with warfarin, in healthy volunteers, did not alter the pharmacokinetics of lercanidipine.

The metabolism of dihydropyridines can be inhibited by grapefruit juice, leading to increased plasma concentration and hypotensive effect.

Alcohol should be avoided while taking lercanidipine since it may potentiate the effect of vasodilating antihypertensive drugs.
Adverse Reactions

Treatment with lercanidipine is generally well tolerated. In nine placebo-controlled clinical trials with a treatment duration lasting at least 4 weeks, 582 patients were initially treated with lercanidipine, and 292 patients received placebo. Most of the events reported in the studies were related to the vasodilatory effects of lercanidipine, and were classified mild-moderate in severity.

Table 1 lists, according to organ system, adverse events that were reported in placebo controlled trials in hypertensive patients with lercanidipine tablets at an incidence greater than or equal to 1% in at least one of the active treatment groups.

2.5 mg QD up to 40 mg QD, and with treatment duration ranging from single dose up to more than 1 year. Adverse experiences which were not clearly drug related and which occurred in <1% but = 0.1% of patients are summarized according to organ system.

Cardiovascular: palpitations/tachycardia.Central and Peripheral nervous system: dizziness, vertigo.

Gastrointestinal: nausea, dyspepsia, abdominal pain, diarrhoea.

Psychiatric: somnolence.

General: flushing, asthenia (including fatigue and muscle weakness).The following events have been rarely reported:

Cardiovascular: hypotension, orthostatic hypotension, periorbital oedema, anginal pain, myocardial infarction, cardiac failure.

Serious adverse events have been reported in clinical trials in less than 0.002% of the patients. The remaining adverse events have been reported as mild to moderate in intensity.

Laboratory tests

There were reports of isolated and reversible increases in serum levels of hepatic transaminases; no other clinically significant pattern of laboratory test abnormalities related to lercanidipine has been observed. Lercanidipine does not effect blood sugar or lipid levels.
Dosage and Administration

The recommended dose is 10mg once daily, at least 15 minutes before a meal. The dose may be increased to 20mg once daily depending on the individual response. Dose titration should be gradual, as it may take about 2 weeks for the maximal hypertensive effect to be apparent. Titration may proceed more rapidly, however, if clinically warranted, provided the patient is assessed frequently. Since it is unlikely that increasing the dose beyond 20mg will further improve the efficacy, and may be associated with side effects, doses above 20 mg are not recommended. Some individuals not adequately controlled on a single antihypertensive agent may benefit from the addition of LERKA (Lercanidipine, Zanidip) at the same doses used in monotherapy to the existing regimen with a beta-blocker, a diuretic or an ACE-inhibitor.

Use in elderly, children, hepatic and renal impairment: see precautions.
Overdosage

There is no experience with lercanidipine overdosage. As with other dihydropyridines, overdosage might be expected to cause excessive peripheral vasodilation with marked hypotension and reflex tachycardia. In case of severe hypotension, bradycardia and unconsciousness, cardiovascular and respiratory monitoring will be required, and supportive treatment may be necessary. Since lercanidipine is highly lipophilic, dialysis is unlikely to be effective.

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