Acute Porphyria Drug Database

C02DB02 - Hydralazine
Porphyrinogenic
P

Rationale
Structurally very similar to dihydralazine which is a mechanism based CYP-1A2 and 3A4 inhibitor. CYP 1A2- inducer. Several references warn against its use.
Chemical description
Therapeutic characteristics
Antihypertensive, peripheral vasodilator.
Metabolism and pharmakokinetics
Structurally very similiar to dihydralazine which is metabolized in the liver by non-CYP dependent N-acetylation and by CYP-dependent N-oxidation.
Preclinical data
Dihydralazine appears to induce CYP1A2. The N-oxidation may theoretically give rise to reactive hydroxylamine and that way to inactivation of hepatic CYPs. In vitro studies with both rat- and human liver microsomes demonstrate that dihydralazine is a mechanism based inhibitor of CYPs 1A2 and 3A4. Effects of hydralazine on the activity of delta-aminolevulinate synthase and on the formation of porphyrins and cytochrome P-450 were examined in the 18-day-old chick embryo liver in ovo. Hydralazine was found to induce delta-aminolevulinate synthase in this system. Hydralazine therefore have the potential to precipitate clinical expression in human hereditary hepatic porphyrias and should be avoided or used with caution in patients with these disorders (Anderson KE. Biochim Biophys Acta 1978).
Personal communication
None
Published experience
A male hypertensive patient (age 28) is treated with clonidine (Bhadoria). After withdrawal because of non-compliance the patient is treated acutely for severe hypertension with methyldopa and hydralazine. Blood pressure gets normal, but continuous upper abdominal pain, constipation, red urine, and a strongly positive PBG (Walter-Schwartz test) arise upon this treatment. The patient improves on withdrawal of methyldopa and hydralazine, and administration of glucose. In this case two drugs are implicated, but methyldopa is less likely to have contributed (see methyldopa monograph).

References

  1. Scientific articles
  2. Anderson KE: Effects of antihypertensive drugs on hepatic heme synthesis? Biochem. Biophys. Acta 543:313, 1978. Potentially unsafe. #4795
  3. Masubuchi and Horie. Mechanism-based inactivation of cytochrome P450s 1A2 and3A4 by dihydralazine in human liver microsomes. PMID 10525281. PMID 10525281. #4794
  4. Moore MR, Hift RJ: Drugs in the acute porphyrias. Cell Mol Biol. 43:89, 1997: unsafe. #1241
  5. Bhadoria et al. Safe use of clonidine, nifedipine and vitamin K. J Assoc Physicians India. 1988 Nov;36(11):675-6. PMID: 3248999. May have precipitated an attack. PMID 3248999. #4796

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