Sertindole


Sertindole, sold under the brand name Serdolect among others, is an antipsychotic medication. Sertindole was developed by the Danish pharmaceutical company Lundbeck and marketed under license by Abbott Labs. Like other atypical antipsychotics, it has activity at dopamine and serotonin receptors in the brain. It is used in the treatment of schizophrenia.
Sertindole is not approved for use in the United States and was discontinued in Australia in January 2014.

Medical uses

Sertindole appears effective as an antipsychotic in schizophrenia. In a 2013 study in a comparison of 15 antipsychotic drugs in effectivity in treating schizophrenic symptoms, sertindole was found to be slightly less effective than haloperidol, quetiapine, and aripiprazole, as effective as ziprasidone, approximately as effective as chlorpromazine and asenapine, and slightly more effective than lurasidone and iloperidone.

Adverse effects

Very common adverse effects include:
  • Headache
  • Ejaculation failure
  • Insomnia
  • Dizziness
Common adverse effects include:
Uncommon adverse effects include:
Rare adverse effects include:
Unknown frequency adverse events include:

Pharmacology

Sertindole is metabolized in the body to dehydrosertindole. Sertindole has also been reported to interact with tubulin and inhibit its polymerization.

Chemistry

In terms of chemical structure, sertindole is a piperidinylindole.

Safety and status

United States

Abbott Labs first applied for US Food and Drug Administration approval for sertindole in 1996, but withdrew this application in 1998 following concerns over the increased risk of sudden death from QTc prolongation. In a trial of 2000 patients on taking sertindole, 27 patients died unexpectedly, including 13 sudden deaths. Lundbeck cites the results of the Sertindole Cohort Prospective study of 10,000 patients to support its claim that although sertindole does increase the QTc interval, this is not associated with increased rates of cardiac arrhythmias, and that patients on sertindole had the same overall mortality rate as those on risperidone. Nevertheless, in April 2009, an FDA advisory panel voted 13-0 that sertindole was effective in the treatment of schizophrenia but 12-1 that it had not been shown to be acceptably safe., the drug has not been approved by the FDA.

European Union

In the European Union, sertindole was approved and marketed in 19 member states from 1996, but its marketing authorization was suspended by the European Medicines Agency in 1998 and the drug was withdrawn from the market. In 2002, based on new data, the EMA's Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use suggested that Sertindole could be reintroduced for restricted use in clinical trials, with strong safeguards including extensive contraindications and warnings for patients at risk of cardiac dysrhythmias, a recommended reduction in maximum dose from 24 mg to 20 mg in all but exceptional cases, and extensive ECG monitoring requirement before and during treatment., sertindole is authorized in several member states of the European Union.