Duration of benzodiazepine clinical activity: Lack of direct relationship with plasma half-life

1984 
The anxiolytic activity and tolerance of two dosage schedules of prazepam, a long plasma half-life benzodiazepine, were compared under double-blind conditions in two groups of 10 inpatients each who met Research Diagnostic Criteria for Generalized Anxiety Disorder and presented chronic and severe symptomatology. Patients received prazepam 40 mg per day on one of two dosage schedules: 1) divided dosage (DD) - 10 mg in the morning and at noon and 20 mg in the evening; or 2) single dosage (SD) - 40 mg in the evening. The 3 weeks of therapy were preceded and followed by 1 week of wash-out for baseline and follow-up assessments, which were performed weekly with the Hamilton Anxiety Scale, Clinical Global Impression, rating of morning drowsiness and evening worsening of symptoms, and patient self-rating of anxiety by means of a visual analogue scale performed both in the morning and in the afternoon. The results showed a clear superiority of the DD over the SD schedule: better anxiolytic efficacy on the Hamilton Anxiety Scale (P<0.0005) and on both morning and afternoon visual analogue scales (P<0.01 andP<0.0002); less morning drowsiness (P<0.0001); and steadier anxiolytic effect during the daytime, as globally rated by the investigator (P<0.0001) or measured by morning-afternoon differences on the visual analogue scale (P<0.005). These results suggest that plasma pharmacokinetics alone may not be sufficient to predict the duration of benzodiazepine anxiolytic activity.
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