CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
The therapeutic effects of diltiazem hydrochloride are
believed to be related to its ability to inhibit the cellular influx of calcium
ions during membrane depolarization of cardiac and vascular smooth muscle.
Mechanisms Of Action
Hypertension
Diltiazem produces its antihypertensive effect primarily by
relaxation of vascular smooth muscle and the resultant decrease in peripheral
vascular resistance. The magnitude of blood pressure reduction is related to
the degree of hypertension: thus hypertensive individuals experience an
antihypertensive effect, whereas there is only a modest fall in blood pressure
in normotensives.
Angina
Diltiazem HCl has been shown to produce increases in
exercise tolerance, probably due to its ability to reduce myocardial oxygen
demand. This is accomplished via reductions in heart rate and systemic blood
pressure at submaximal and maximal work loads.
Diltiazem has been shown to be a potent dilator of coronary
arteries, both epicardial and subendocardial. Spontaneous and
ergonovine-induced coronary artery spasms are inhibited by diltiazem.
In animal models, diltiazem interferes with the slow inward
(depolarizing) current in excitable tissue. It causes excitation-contraction
uncoupling in various myocardial tissues without changes in the configuration
of the action potential. Diltiazem produces relaxation of the coronary vascular
smooth muscle and dilation of both large and small coronary vascular smooth
muscle and dilation of both large and small coronary arteries at drug levels
which cause little or no negative inotropic effect. The resultant increases in
coronary blood flow (epicardial and subendocardial) occur in ischemic and
nonischemic models and are accompanied by dose-dependent decreases in systemic
blood pressure and decreases in peripheral resistance.
Hemodynamic And Electrophysiologic Effects
Like other calcium channel antagonists, diltiazem decreases
sinoatrial and atrioventricular conduction in isolated tissues and has a
negative inotropic effect in isolated preparations. In the intact animal,
prolongation of the AH interval can be seen at higher doses.
In man, diltiazem prevents spontaneous and
ergonovine-provoked coronary artery spasm. It causes a decrease in peripheral
vascular resistance and a modest fall in blood pressure in normotensive
individuals and, in exercise tolerance studies in patients with ischemic heart
disease, reduces the heart rate-blood pressure product for any given work load.
Studies to date, primarily in patients with good ventricular function, have not
revealed evidence of a negative inotropic effect; cardiac output, ejection
fraction, and left ventricular end-diastolic pressure have not been affected.
Such data have no predictive value with respect to effects in patients with
poor ventricular function, and increased heart failure has been reported in
patients with preexisting impairment of ventricular function. There are as yet
few data on the interaction of diltiazem and beta-blockers in patients with
poor ventricular function. Resting heart rate is usually slightly reduced by
diltiazem.
Tiazac produces antihypertensive effects both in the supine
and standing positions. Postural hypotension is infrequently noted upon
suddenly assuming an upright position. No reflex tachycardia is associated with
the chronic antihypertensive effects.
Diltiazem hydrochloride decreases vascular resistance,
increases cardiac output (by increasing stroke volume), and produces a slight
decrease or no change in heart rate. During dynamic exercise, increases in
diastolic pressure are inhibited while maximum achievable systolic pressure is
usually reduced. Chronic therapy with diltiazem hydrochloride produces no
change or an increase in plasma catecholamines. No increased activity of the
renin-angiotensin-aldosterone axis has been observed. Diltiazem hydrochloride
reduces the renal and peripheral effects of angiotensin II. Hypertensive animal
models respond to diltiazem with reductions in blood pressure and increased
urinary output and natriuresis without a change in urinary sodium/potassium
ratio. In man, transient natriuresis and kaliuresis have been reported, but
only in high intravenous doses of 0.5 mg/kg of body weight.
Diltiazem-associated prolongation of the AH interval is not
more pronounced in patients with first degree heart block. In patients with
sick sinus syndrome, diltiazem significantly prolongs sinus cycle length (up to
50% in some cases). Intravenous diltiazem in doses of 20 mg prolongs AH
conduction time and AV node functional and effective refractory periods by
approximately 20%.
In two short term, double-blind, placebo-controlled studies
in 256 hypertensive patients with doses up to 540 mg/day, Tiazac showed a
clinically unimportant but statistically significant, dose-related increase in
PR interval (0.008 seconds). There were no instances of greater than
first-degree AV block in any of the clinical trials (see WARNINGS).
Pharmacodynamics
Hypertension
In short term, double blind, placebo-controlled clinical
trials, Tiazac demonstrated a dose-related antihypertensive response among
patients with mild to moderate hypertension. In one parallel-group study of 198
patients Tiazac was given for four weeks. The changes in diastolic blood
pressure measured at trough (24 hours after the dose) for placebo, 90 mg, 180
mg, 360 mg and 540 mg were -5.4, -6.3, -6.2, -8.2, and -11.8 mm Hg,
respectively. Supine diastolic blood pressure as well as standing diastolic and
systolic blood pressures also showed statistically significant linear dose response
effects.
In another clinical trial that followed a dose-escalation
design, Tiazac also reduced blood pressure in a linear dose-related manner.
Supine diastolic blood pressure measured following two-week intervals of
treatment was reduced by -3.7 mm Hg with 120 mg/day versus -2.0 mm Hg with
placebo, by -7.6 mm Hg after escalation to 240 mg/day versus -2.3 mm Hg with
placebo, by -8.1 mm Hg after escalation to 360 mg/day versus -0.9 mm Hg with
placebo, and by -10.8 mm Hg after escalation to 480/540 mg/day versus -2.2 mm
Hg with placebo.
Angina
In a double-blind parallel group placebo-controlled trial
(approximately 50 patients/group, in patients with chronic stable angina),
Tiazac at doses of 120 to 540 mg/day increased exercise tolerance time. At
trough, 24 hours after dosing, exercise tolerance times using a Bruce exercise
protocol, increased by 14, 26, 41, 33 and 32 seconds over baseline for placebo
and the 120 mg, 240 mg, 360 mg, and 540 mg treated patient groups,
respectively. At peak, 8 hours after dosing, exercise tolerance times relative
to baseline were statistically significantly increased by 13, 38, 64, 55 and 42
seconds for placebo and 120 mg, 240 mg, 360 mg, and 540 mg Tiazac treated
patients, respectively. Compared to baseline, Tiazac treated patients
experienced statistically significant reductions in anginal attacks and
decreased nitroglycerin requirements when compared to placebo treated patients.
Pharmacokinetics And Metabolism
Diltiazem is well absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract
but undergoes substantial hepatic first-pass effect. The absolute
bioavailability of an oral dose of an immediate- release formulation (compared
to intravenous administration) is approximately 40%. Only 2% to 4% of unchanged
diltiazem appears in the urine. The plasma elimination half-life of diltiazem
is approximately 3.0 to 4.5 h. Drugs which induce or inhibit hepatic microsomal
enzymes may alter diltiazem disposition. Therapeutic blood levels of diltiazem
appear to be in the range of 40 to 200 ng/mL. There is a departure from
linearity when dose strengths are increased; the half-life is slightly
increased with dose.
The two primary metabolites of diltiazem are
desacetyldiltiazem and desmethyldiltiazem. The desacetyl metabolite is
approximately 25% to 50% as potent a coronary vasodilator as diltiazem and is
present in plasma at concentrations of 10% to 20% of parent diltiazem. However,
recent studies employing sensitive and specific analytical methods have
confirmed the existence of several sequential metabolic pathways of diltiazem.
As many as nine diltiazem metabolites have been identified in the urine of
humans. Total radioactivity measurements following single intravenous dose
administration in healthy volunteers suggest the presence of other unidentified
metabolites. These metabolites are more slowly excreted (with a half-life of
total radioactivity of approximately 20 hours), and attain concentrations in
excess of diltiazem.
In vitro binding studies show diltiazem HCl is 70% to 80%
bound to plasma proteins. Competitive in vitro ligand binding studies have also
shown diltiazem HCl binding is not altered by therapeutic concentrations of
digoxin, hydrochlorothiazide, phenylbutazone, propranolol, salicylic acid, or
warfarin. A study that compared patients with normal hepatic function to
patients with cirrhosis who received immediate-release diltiazem found an
increase in diltiazem elimination half-life and a 69% increase in
bioavailability in the hepatically impaired patients. Patients with severely
impaired renal function (creatinine clearance < 50 mL/min) who received
immediate-release diltiazem had modestly increased diltiazem concentrations
compared to patients with normal renal function.
Tiazac Capsules
When compared to a regimen of immediate-release tablets at
steady-state, approximately 93% of drug is absorbed from the Tiazac
formulation. When Tiazac was coadministered with a high fat content breakfast,
the extent of diltiazem absorption was not affected; Tmax, however, occurred
slightly earlier. The apparent elimination half-life after single or multiple
dosing is 4 to 9.5 hours (mean 6.5 hours).
Tiazac demonstrates non-linear pharmacokinetics. As the
daily dose of Tiazac capsules is increased from 120 to 540 mg, there was a more
than proportional increase in diltiazem plasma concentrations as evidenced by
an increase of AUC, Cmax and Cmin of 6.8, 6 and 8.6 times, respectively, for a
4.5 times increase in dose.