CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Mechanism of Action: Nimodipine is a calcium channel blocker. The contractile
processes of smooth muscle cells are dependent upon calcium ions, which enter
these cells during depolarization as slow ionic transmembrane currents. Nimodipine
inhibits calcium ion transfer into these cells and thus inhibits contractions
of vascular smooth muscle. In animal experiments, nimodipine had a greater effect
on cerebral arteries than on arteries elsewhere in the body perhaps because
it is highly lipophilic, allowing it to cross the blood-brain barrier; concentrations
of nimodipine as high as 12.5 ng/mL have been detected in the cerebrospinal
fluid of nimodipine-treated subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) patients. The precise
mechanism of action of nimodipine in humans is unknown. Although the clinical
studies described below demonstrate a favorable effect of nimodipine on the
severity of neurological deficits caused by cerebral vasospasm following SAH,
there is no arteriographic evidence that the drug either prevents or relieves
the spasm of these arteries. However, whether or not the arteriographic methodology
utilized was adequate to detect a clinically meaningful effect, if any, on vasospasm
is unknown.
Pharmacokinetics and Metabolism: In man, nimodipine is rapidly absorbed
after oral administration, and peak concentrations are generally attained within
one hour. The terminal elimination half-life is approximately 8 to 9 hours but
earlier elimination rates are much more rapid, equivalent to a half-life of
1-2 hours; a consequence is the need for frequent (every 4 hours) dosing. There
were no signs of accumulation when nimodipine was given three times a day for
seven days. Nimodipine is over 95% bound to plasma proteins. The binding was
concentration independent over the range of 10 ng/mL to 10 µg/mL. Nimodipine
is eliminated almost exclusively in the form of metabolites and less than 1%
is recovered in the urine as unchanged drug. Numerous metabolites, all of which
are either inactive or considerably less active than the parent compound, have
been identified. Because of a high first-pass metabolism, the bioavailability
of nimodipine averages 13% after oral administration. The bioavailability is
significantly increased in patients with hepatic cirrhosis, with Cmax approximately
double that in normals which necessitates lowering the dose in this group of
patients (see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION). In a study of 24 healthy male
volunteers, administration of nimodipine capsules following a standard breakfast
resulted in a 68% lower peak plasma concentration and 38% lower bioavailability
relative to dosing under fasted conditions.
In a single parallel-group study involving 24 elderly subjects (aged 59-79)
and 24 younger subjects (aged 22-40), the observed AUC and Cmax of nimodipine
was approximately 2-fold higher in the elderly population compared to the younger
study subjects following oral administration (given as a single dose of 30 mg
and dosed to steady-state with 30 mg t.i.d. for 6 days). The clinical response
to these age-related pharmacokinetic differences, however, was not considered
significant. (See PRECAUTIONS: Geriatric Use.)
Clinical Trials: Nimodipine has been shown, in 4 randomized, double-blind,
placebo-controlled trials, to reduce the severity of neurological deficits resulting
from vasospasm in patients who have had a recent subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH).
The trials used doses ranging from 20-30 mg to 90 mg every 4 hours, with drug
given for 21 days in 3 studies, and for at least 18 days in the other. Three
of the four trials followed patients for 3-6 months. Three of the trials studied
relatively well patients, with all or most patients in Hunt and Hess Grades
I - III (essentially free of focal deficits after the initial bleed) the fourth
studied much sicker patients, Hunt and Hess Grades III - V. Two studies, one
U.S., one French, were similar in design, with relatively unimpaired SAH patients
randomized to nimodipine or placebo. In each, a judgment was made as to whether
any late-developing deficit was due to spasm or other causes, and the deficits
were graded. Both studies showed significantly fewer severe deficits due to
spasm in the nimodipine group; the second (French) study showed fewer spasm-related
deficits of all severities. No effect was seen on deficits not related to spasm.
Study |
Dose |
Grade* |
|
Patients |
Number
Analyzed |
Any Deficit
Due to Spasm |
Numbers with
Severe Deficit |
U.S. |
20-30 mg |
I-III |
Nimodipine |
56 |
13 |
1 |
Placebo |
60 |
16 |
8** |
French |
60 mg |
I-III |
Nimodipine |
31 |
4 |
2 |
Placebo |
39 |
11 |
10** |
* Hunt and Hess Grade
** p=0.03 |
A third, large, study was performed in the United Kingdom in SAH patients with
all grades of severity (but 89% were in Grades I-III). Nimodipine was dosed
60mg every 4 hours. Outcomes were not defined as spasm related or not but there
was a significant reduction in the overall rate of infarction and severely disabling
neurological outcome at 3 months:
|
Nimodipine |
Placebo |
Total patients |
278 |
276 |
Good recovery |
199* |
169 |
Moderate disability |
24 |
16 |
Severe disability |
12** |
31 |
Death |
43*** |
60 |
* p = 0.0444 - good and moderate vs severe
and dead
** p = 0.001 - severe disability
*** p = 0.056 - death |
A Canadian study entered much sicker patients, (Hunt and Hess Grades III-V),
who had a high rate of death and disability, and used a dose of 90 mg every
4 hours, but was otherwise similar to the first two studies. Analysis of delayed
ischemic deficits, many of which result from spasm, showed a significant reduction
in spasm-related deficits. Among analyzed patients (72 nimodipine, 82 placebo),
there were the following outcomes.
|
Delayed Ischemic
Deficits (DID) |
Permanent Deficits |
Nimodipine
n (%) |
Placebo
n (%) |
Nimodipine
n (%) |
Placebo
n (%) |
DID Spasm Alone |
8 (11)* |
25 (31) |
5(7)* |
22 (27) |
DID Spasm Contributing |
18 (25) |
21 (26) |
16(22) |
17 (21) |
DID Without Spasm |
7 (10) |
8 (10) |
6(8) |
7 (9) |
No DID |
39 (54) |
28 (34) |
45(63) |
36 (44) |
* p = 0.001, nimodipine vs placebo |
When data were combined for the Canadian and the United Kingdom studies, the
treatment difference on success rate (i.e. good recovery) on the Glasgow Outcome
Scale was 25.3% (nimodipine) versus 10.9% (placebo) for Hunt and Hess Grades
IV or V . The table below demonstrates that nimodipine tends to improve good
recovery of SAH patients with poor neurological status post-ictus, while decreasing
the numbers with severe disability and vegetative survival.
Glasgow Outcome* |
Nimodipine
(n=87) |
Placebo
(n=101) |
Good Recovery |
22 (25.3%) |
11 (10.9%) |
Moderate Disability |
8 (9.2%) |
12 (11.9%) |
Severe Disability |
6 (6.9%) |
15 (14.9%) |
Vegetative Survival |
4 (4.6%) |
9 (8.9%) |
Death |
47 (54.0%) |
54 (53.5%) |
* p = 0.045, nimodipine vs placebo |
A dose-ranging study comparing 30, 60 and 90 mg doses found a generally low
rate of spasm-related neurological deficits but no dose response relationship.