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Vol. 291, Issue 3, 1150-1155, December 1999
Departments of Medicine (R.W.L., O.S.G., J.A.P., K.D.T., H.L.B.)
and Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (H.L.B.) of the University of
Massachusetts Medical School; and The Center for Study of Disorders of
Iron and Porphyrin Metabolism of UMass Memorial Health Care (R.W.L.,
O.S.G., J.A.P., K.D.T., A.W., H.L.B), Worcester, Massachusetts
Patients with any of the acute porphyrias may suffer from acute
attacks. If these patients are treated with certain drugs, such as
barbiturates, the likelihood of developing an attack is increased.
Patients treated with antidepressants or benzodiazepine-type anxiolytics also could be placed at increased risk of developing porphyric attacks because little is known about the potential for some
of these drugs to induce attacks. Primary cultures of chick embryo
liver cells were used to study the effects of selected antidepressants
and anxiolytics on porphyrin accumulation. Cells were treated with
desferrioxamine (to partially block heme synthesis, simulating
conditions encountered in porphyric patients) and increasing concentrations (3.16-1000 µM) of the evaluated drugs. Twenty hours later, porphyrin accumulation was measured. The drugs included four
antidepressants and five benzodiazepine-type anxiolytics. The
antidepressants bupropion and nefazodone significantly increased porphyrin accumulation when given with desferrioxamine, whereas neither
fluoxetine nor paroxetine increased porphyrin accumulation. The
benzodiazepine-type anxiolytic agents oxazepam, lorazepam, diazepam,
triazolam, and midazolam all significantly increased porphyrin
accumulation when given with desferrioxamine. Dose-response studies
showed that diazepam, midazolam, and triazolam produced significant
increases even at the lowest concentration tested (3.16 µM), whereas
lorazepam and oxazepam required higher concentrations (
10 µM).
These studies suggest that patients with acute porphyrias may be at
greater risk for developing porphyric attacks when treated with
bupropion or nefazodone compared with fluoxetine or paroxetine, and
that the evaluated benzodiazepine derivatives should be administered with caution. Among the latter, low doses of lorazepam and oxazepam may
be safer than those of diazepam, midazolam, and triazolam.