Carbamazepine CAS 298-46-4
Introduction:Basic information about Carbamazepine CAS 298-46-4, including its chemical name, molecular formula, synonyms, physicochemical properties, and safety information, etc.
Carbamazepine Basic informationOverview Indication Dosage and administration Plasma levels monitoring Cautions Pharmacodynamics Interactions Special populations Mode of action Psychiatric use Adverse reactions and precaution References
| Product Name: | Carbamazepine |
| Synonyms: | Oxcarbazepine IMpurity A;CarbaMazepine (D10, 98%);CarbaMazepine (D10, 98%) 100 ug/Ml In CH3CN-D3;CarbaMazepine (D10, 98%) 100 ug/Ml In MeOH;CarbaMazepine-13C6;Carbamazepine solution;CARBAMAZEPIN;CARBAMAZEPINE |
| CAS: | 298-46-4 |
| MF: | C15H12N2O |
| MW: | 236.27 |
| EINECS: | 206-062-7 |
| Product Categories: | TEGRETOL;Pharmaceutical raw material;Aromatics;Isotope Labelled Compounds;Pharmaceutical Chemicals;Intermediates & Fine Chemicals;Pharmaceuticals;Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients;APIs;Acids and Derivatives;Heterocycles;Pharmaceutical;298-46-4 |
| Mol File: | 298-46-4.mol |
Carbamazepine Chemical Properties
| Melting point | 191-192 °C (lit.) |
| Boiling point | 378.73°C (rough estimate) |
| density | 1.1099 (rough estimate) |
| refractive index | 1.5906 (estimate) |
| Fp | 9℃ |
| storage temp. | 2-8°C |
| solubility | 45% (w/v) aq 2-hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin: soluble29mg/mL |
| form | Crystals |
| pka | 13.94±0.20(Predicted) |
| color | Almost white |
| Water Solubility | pract. insoluble |
| Merck | 14,1781 |
| BCS Class | 2 |
| InChI | 1S/C15H12N2O/c16-15(18)17-13-7-3-1-5-11(13)9-10-12-6-2-4-8-14(12)17/h1-10H,(H2,16,18) |
| InChIKey | FFGPTBGBLSHEPO-UHFFFAOYSA-N |
| SMILES | NC(=O)N1c2ccccc2C=Cc3ccccc13 |
| LogP | 2.450 |
| CAS DataBase Reference | 298-46-4(CAS DataBase Reference) |
| NIST Chemistry Reference | Carbamazepine(298-46-4) |
| EPA Substance Registry System | 5H-Dibenz[b,f]azepine-5-carboxamide (298-46-4) |
Safety Information
| Hazard Codes | Xn,T,F |
| Risk Statements | 42/43-22-20/21/22-39/23/24/25-23/24/25-11 |
| Safety Statements | 37-24-22-36/37/39-36-45-36/37-16 |
| RIDADR | UN1230 - class 3 - PG 2 - Methanol, solution |
| WGK Germany | 2 |
| RTECS | HN8225000 |
| HS Code | 29339900 |
| Storage Class | 6.1C - Combustible acute toxic Cat.3 toxic compounds or compounds which causing chronic effects |
| Hazard Classifications | Acute Tox. 4 Oral Repr. 1A Resp. Sens. 1 Skin Sens. 1A STOT SE 3 |
| Hazardous Substances Data | 298-46-4(Hazardous Substances Data) |
| Toxicity | LD50 orally in mice, rats: 3750, 4025 mg/kg (Stenger, Roulet) |
| Overview | Carbamazepine (CBZ) is an irninostilbene derivative, structurally similar to the tricyclic antidepressants. Chemically. CBZ is a neutral, liposoluble compound that can easily pass the bloodlbrain barrier and other membranes in the body. Developed and marketed for the treatment of epileptic seizures and trigeminal neuralgia, CBZ has been utilized more and more frequently in the last decade to treat psychiatric disorders. Carbamazepine was first evaluated as a potential treatment in manic depressive psychosis by Takezaki and Hanaoka (1971)[1], and Okuma et al. (1973)[2]. In 1979, Okuma et al.[3] performed the first double-blind trial of carbamazepine in comparison with the antipsychotic chlorpromazine in mania and found that 70% and 60% of patients improved respectively. A further placebo-controlled double-blind study replicated the antimanic properties of carbamazepine under controlled circumstances (Ballenger and Post, 1980). There have since been many studies demonstrating the efficacy of carbamazepine in treating the acute manic and depressive symptoms of bipolar disorder, as well as in prophylaxis[4, 5]. Figure 1 the chemical structure of carbamazepine Carbamazepine is a first- generation antiepileptic drug (AED) known with the proprietary brand name of Tegretol® (Novartis, Basel) in the UK and USA (Fig. 3.2). Oxcarbazepine is a second- generation AED supplied under the proprietary brand name of Trileptal® (Novartis, Basel) in the UK and USA (Fig. 3.3). Eslicarbazepine is a third- generation AED sold under the proprietary brand names of Zebinix® (Eisai, Hatfield) in the UK and Aptiom® (Sunovion, Marlborough, MS) in the USA. |
| Indication | Carbamazepine has been used to treat many types of epilepsies since the early sixties[6]. The psychotropic properties of the drug were soon recognized and prompted studies in psychiatric disorders. Today, the main indications for CBZ in psychiatry are the treatment of acute manic states and the prophylaxis of recurrence in bipolar disorders[7]. The clinical studies reviewed consistently reported a CBZ success rate in acute manic states and recurrence prophylaxis in bipolar disorders ranging from 50 to 65%. More recent works confirmed the success rate in acute manic states[8], whereas data for the long-term prophylaxis of recurrence were more variable, and in general less positive[9]. Post et al. (1993) [10] suggested that poor long-term CBZ efficacy might be due to tolerance development and, on the basis of the CBZ action in experimental models. Speculated that periods of drug "holiday" may restore its efficacy. A similar warning has been reported for the long-term prophylactic efficacy of lithium[11]. Evidence of some positive action of CBZ in unipolar depression has also been reported[12]. More recently. Cullen et al. (1991) [13] retrospectively analyzed 16 melancholic patients who received CBZ alone or in combination with other psychotropic drugs. Seven patients had a moderate to marked improvement, but treatment had to be discontinued in five due to side effects. Stuppaeck et al. (1993) [14], in open observations in 15 patients with unipolar depression, concluded that CBZ had a positive effect in 11 patients. Other psychiatric syndromes for which CBZ has been proved or suggested to be useful include aggressive agitation in demented patients[15]. Super-sensitivity psychosis[16], and alcohol[17] and benzodiazepine withdrawal syndromes[18]. In panic disorders, CBZ has been reported to attenuate panic attacks in subjects with underlying EEG abnormalities[19]. However, in the only controlled trial in 14 patients with panic disorders, CBZ was no better than placebo[20].Recommendations
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| Dosage and administration | Carbamazepine dosages employed in the various pathologies are similar: in most cases therapeutic effects are obtained at doses of 10 to 20 mg/kg/day. Age has only a limited effect on CBZ disposition, but children may need a slightly higher dosage (in mg/kg). No dosage adjustments are required in relation to patient's sex or other genetic factors. Treatment should be started at low dosages (3 - 5 mg/kg/day) and increased progressively by a similar amount every 5-7 days, until the desired clinical effect is obtained or persistent side effects appear. This approach will determine the lowest effective (or the maximum tolerated) dose and reduce the incidence of dose-dependent side effects, which are more frequent and more troublesome for the patient at the beginning of therapy[15]. If tolerance is poor but the drug seems to be clinically effective, an even slower titration may prove useful. Treatment of acute manic states, however, may require a faster titration at the cost of an increased frequency of side effects[16]. A daily dose administered in conventional tablets or oral suspension should be divided into 3-4 intakes to avoid excessive fluctuations of plasma concentration; alternatively, slow-release preparations can be used. In some countries a chewable tablet formulation (100 mg) is available, which may be convenient in children[13].
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| Plasma levels monitoring | Correlations between dosages and plasma levels of carbamazepine, as well as between plasma levels, and clinical efficacy or tolerability, are rather tenuous. However, monitoring of the plasma levels (therapeutic range in the treatment of epilepsy 4–12 mg/ L) may be useful in selected conditions, such as a dramatic increase in seizure frequency/ verification of patient compliance, during pregnancy, in suspected absorption disorders, in suspected toxicity due to polymedication. |
| Cautions |
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| Pharmacodynamics | Carbamazepine given in conventional tablets shows a mean peak concentration time during chronic treatment of about 4 hours, with an estimated oral bioavailability of 80-90%[21]. Carbamazepine is readily distributed in the body with an apparent volume of distribution (estimated on the presumption of a 100% oral bioavailability) of 0.8 2.0 /kg. Brain concentrations are about 1.21.4 times those in plasma and the breast milk/ total plasma level ratio is about 0.4 [22]. In plasma, CBZ binds to circulating proteins, mostly albumin and a1-acid glycoprotein. The bound fraction is about 70-80% and is constant in the interval of plasma concentrations normally observed in therapy[23]. Carbamazepine is mainly eliminated through hepatic metabolism by microsomal enzymes of the cytochrome P450 family. The main metabolites are epoxy-CBZ and 10.11-dihydro, 10,lldihydroxy carbarnazepine (CBZ-DIOL). In man, the hydroxylated derivatives are conjugated with glucuronic acid and excreted by the kidneys. Small amounts of unmodified CBZ are found in feces and in urine[24]. Quantitatively, the main urinary metabolite is CBZ-DIOL, which is, however, inactive. Carbamazepine-l0, 11-epoxideh as anticonvulsant potency similar to the parent drug, and has comparable efficacy in trigerninal neuralgia in man. After repeated dose, CBZ induces its own metabolism and its half-life is reduced by about 50%. Changing, for example, from 36 hours at the beginning of therapy to 21 hours after 3 weeks of treatment. Patients treated with other enzyme-inducing drugs may have a CBZ half-life as short as 5 16 hours. Children present a slightly higher CBZ clearance[21]. |
| Interactions | With AEDs
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| Special populations | Hepatic impairment
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| Mode of action | The many effects of CBZ on the central nervous system include: the ability to bind to neuron membrane sodium channels when they are in the inactivated state, slowing the speed of reactivation and thus reducing the neuron's capacity of high frequency firing[25]; selective interaction with adenosine receptors and modification of the activity of second messengers like CAMP and cGMP and modification of various neurotransmitter systems[26]. An interesting aspect of CBZ action on the brain is the apparent selectivity for the limbic system, a feature that may provide an anatomical basis for both the psychotropic action of the drug and its efficacy in psychomotor epilepsies. Carbamazepine is characterized by a good behavioural and cognitive profile in patients with epilepsy. Overall, adverse psychiatric effects (especially irritation, agitation, depression) are rarely reported in this patient population. Moderate cognitive problems affecting attention, memory, and language have occasionally been reported (especially at high doses). |
| Psychiatric use | Carbamazepine was approved as a treatment for acute mania in 2004, decades after it was recognized as an effective alternative to lithium in the management of bipolar illness. Data from open- label trials suggest that carbamazepine is effective in the prophylaxis of bipolar disorder or acute mania, but may be less effective than valproate or lithium. However, carbamazepine has been suggested to be a better alternative for atypical manifestations of bipolar disorder, such as rapid cycling course, mood- incongruent delusions, or in the presence of other co- morbid psychiatric or neurological conditions. Carbamazepine may also be effective in unipolar depression, whereas its utility in schizophrenia is uncertain. In rarer cases, carbamazepine has been used to treat aggressive behaviour and to facilitate sedatives/ alcohol withdrawal, but there is no solid evidence to date to establish its efficacy in this domain. To summarize, evidence is strongest to support the mood stabilizing properties of carbamazepine. |
| Adverse reactions and precaution | The most common manifestations of acute CBZ toxicity at therapeutic dosages involve the central nervous and gastrointestinal systems (sedation. nystagmus, diplopia, ataxia, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, constipation, diarrhea) [27]. Dry mouth may occur as a consequence of some anticholinergic action of the drug. These symptoms respond to a dose reduction and, due to tolerance development, usually abate during treatment. Carbamazepine may induce involuntary movements such as myoclonic and choreoathetoid jerks, dystonia and asterixis[28]. Carbarnazepine has negative chmnotropic and dromotropic effects on cardiac conduction and may induce various types of bradyarrhythmia or even a complete atrioventricular block[28]. These dangerous complications are usually observed in elderly patients or patients with a preexisting impairment of cardiac conduction, are concentration-related, and require dose reduction or drug suspension. During pregnancy, important modifications of CBZ kinetics may occur, requiring plasma concentration monitoring and, possibly, dosage adjustment[22]. CBZ enters breast milk (milk/plasma ratio of about 0.4)and a transfer of 1-4 mg/day of drug from mother to child takes place during nursing[22]. Concentrations in the breast-fed infant should not normally exceed 0.5 1.0 ug/ml, but somewhat higher concentrations, up to 4.7 ~ug /ml one case, have occasionally been reported[22]. These findings suggest that breast-feeding is not to be discouraged and that it should be discontinued only if the newborn shows signs of distress, such as blunted suck reflex. |
| References |
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| Description | Carbamazepine is a synthetic iminostilbene derivative structurallysimilar to imipramine, a tricyclic antidepressant. Whileunrelated structurally, carbamazepine shares a similar therapeuticaction with phenytoin. Carbamazepine was first discoveredin 1953 by Swiss chemist Walter Schindler. Throughout the1960s, antimuscarinic was used and marketed for trigeminalneuralgia and as an anticonvulsant. By the 1970s, it was beingused as a mood stabilizer for patients with bipolar disorder. |
| Chemical Properties | White or off-white crystalline powder. Soluble in ethanol, acetone, propylene glycol, insoluble in water. Odorless and tasteless. |
| Originator | Tegretol,Geigy,W. Germany,1964 |
| History | The development of carbamazepine began in the 1950s, a result of Walter Schindler's exploration of iminostilbene derivatives at J.R. Geigy AG (now Novartis) in Switzerland. Schindler first synthesized the molecule in 1953, initially aiming to find tricyclic compounds with antidepressant activity. However, early pharmacological screening unexpectedly revealed its potent anticonvulsant effect, similar to phenytoin. This discovery revolutionized its development, leading to its successful initial use in treating trigeminal neuralgia in 1962, quickly becoming a standard treatment for the condition. Encouraged by this, clinical research for epilepsy was launched, and it was first approved for marketing in the UK in 1965 under the brand name Tegretol®, followed by FDA approval in the US in 1974. Subsequent studies also discovered its mood-stabilizing effects, making it an important drug for treating bipolar disorder in the late 1970s. |
| Uses | Used in treatment of pain associated with trigeminal neuralgia. Anticonvulsant |
| Uses | Carbamazepine (CBZ) is a first generation anticonvulsant and mood stabilizing compound that has been used as a therapeutic in the context of neuropathic pain, epilepsy, and affective disorders. It exerts its effects by blocking voltage-gated sodium channels (IC50 = 640 μM), making fewer of these channels available to subsequently open, which leads to decreased high-frequency repetitive firing of action potentials. The estimated IC50 values for inhibition of Nav1.7-, Nav1.3-, and Nav1.8-type channels by CBZ following prolonged inactivation have been reported as 406, 900, and 138 μM, respectively. CBZ can also inhibit L-type Ca2+ channels (IC50 = 974 μM) and has been shown to potentiate GABAA receptors (IC50 >3 mM). |
| Definition | ChEBI: Carbamazepine is a dibenzoazepine that is 5H-dibenzo[b,f]azepine carrying a carbamoyl substituent at the azepine nitrogen, used as an anticonvulsant. It has a role as an anticonvulsant, an EC 3.5.1.98 (histone deacetylase) inhibitor, a mitogen, a glutamate transporter activator, an antimanic drug, an analgesic, a non-narcotic analgesic, an environmental contaminant, a xenobiotic, a drug allergen and a sodium channel blocker. It is a dibenzoazepine and a member of ureas. |
| Manufacturing Process | 19.3 parts of iminostilbene are dispersed in 100 parts by volume of toluene.Phosgene is then introduced whereupon the temperature of the reactionmixture rises to 70°C. While boiling under reflux, further phosgene isintroduced until all the iminostilbene has dissolved and the hydrogen chloridedevelopment is complete. The reaction mixture is then cooled and the 5-chlorocarbonyl iminostilbene which has crystallized out is filtered off undersuction. It melts at 168° to 169°C. 12.8 parts of 5-chlorocarbonyl iminostilbene are dispersed in 128 parts byvolume of absolute ethanol and ammonia gas is introduced for three hoursinto this mixture while stirring at boiling temperature. The reaction iscomplete after this time; the reaction mixture is cooled and the crystals whichprecipitate are filtered off under suction. The ammonium chloride is washedfrom the crystals with water and the residue is recrystallized first fromabsolute ethanol and then from benzene. 5-carbamyl iminostilbene is obtainedwhich melts at 204° to 206°C. |
| Brand name | Carbatrol (Shire); Epitol (Teva); Equetro (Shire); Tegretol(Novartis); Teril (Taro). |
| Therapeutic Function | Analgesic, Anticonvulsant |
| Biological Functions | Carbamazepine has become a major drug in the treatmentof seizure disorders. It has high efficacy, is well toleratedby most patients, and exhibits fewer long-termside effects than oth
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