Cilostazol

Cilostazol

Generic Name

Cilostazol

Mechanism

  • Selective inhibition of PDE3 → ↑ intracellular cyclic‑adenosine monophosphate (cAMP).
  • Vasodilation: cAMP relaxes vascular smooth muscle in both arterial and venous beds, improving limb perfusion.
  • Antiplatelet effect: Elevated cAMP inhibits platelet aggregation by reducing thromboxane A₂ production.
  • The dual action decreases skeletal‑muscle ischemia while protecting against thrombotic events.

Pharmacokinetics

ParameterValue & Notes
RouteOral, tablets (3 h p.o.)
Bioavailability~0.35 (intrinsic factor 5‑HT₄ mediated sequestration)
Peak concentration (Tₘₐₓ)1 – 3 h post‑dose
Half‑life5 – 8 h (dose‑dependent; ~8 h in liver impairment)
MetabolismHepatic, via CYP1A1, 1A2, 2C9, 2D6, 3A4 (no clinically active metabolite)
ExcretionRenal (≈35%) and biliary: unchanged drug and metabolites
Protein binding12 % (low, minimal impact on drug interactions)
Special Populations • Mild‑moderate renal impairment: no dose adjustment needed; < 25 % displays longer retention.
• Severe renal impairment (CrCl < 15 mL min⁻¹): use with caution or avoid.
• Hepatic impairment: dose reduction (50 %) should be considered.

Indications

  • Intermittent claudication secondary to PAD after conservative therapy (exercise, revascularization, lifestyle change).
  • Improvement of walking distance and quality of life in symptomatic patients.
  • Additionally used off‑label for vascular angina and to reduce claudication frequency in certain symptomatic PAD trials.

Contraindications

ContraindicationReason
Severe heart failureVasodilatory effect may worsen symptoms.
Active peptic ulcer disease or GI bleedAntiplatelet action increases bleeding risk.
HypersensitivityType I hypersensitivity reactions.
Pregnancy & lactationCategory C; teratogenic in animals; not recommended.
Severe hepatic impairmentMetabolic pathway limited.
Recent thrombotic event (e.g., MI, stroke < 3 months)“Higher bleed toxicity” in early post‑events.

Warnings:
Bleeding: When combined with warfarin or dual antiplatelet therapy (aspirin + clopidogrel), risk increases; monitor INR/bleeding signs.
Renal dysfunction: Accumulation of parent drug may enhance toxicity.
Diabetes: Improved microvascular blood flow may transiently alter glucose reads; monitor blood glucose.
Alcohol use: Concomitant use potentiates CYP450 inhibition—monitor for side effects.

Dosing

  • Starting Dose: 100 mg orally twice daily (BID).
  • Adult Indications: 100 mg × 2 days = 200 mg daily.
  • Renal Impairment (CrCl 30–49 mL min⁻¹): 100 mg once daily (QD); no use if CrCl  2 weeks of therapy without benefit.

Adverse Effects

Common (≥ 5 %):
• Headache, nausea, diarrhea, palpitations, mild tremor, dizziness, flushing, edema (often lower extremities).

Serious (≤ 1 %):
• GI ulceration, intracranial hemorrhage, severe arrhythmias (ventricular fibrillation or torsade de pointes), clinically significant bleeding, sudden vision loss from retinal artery occlusion.

Rare (≤ 0.1 %):
• Acute heart failure exacerbation, hepatic dysfunction, increased lipogenesis, electrolyte imbalance.

Monitoring

ParameterFrequencyPurpose
ECG and heart rateBaseline, then 1–2 weeks, additional if tachycardia developsMonitor arrhythmia risk
Blood pressureBaseline, yearlyDetect hypotension or orthostatic changes
Complete blood countBaseline, 1 month, then quarterlyIdentify anemia from GI bleeding
Liver function testsBaseline, 1 month, then 6‑monthHepatotoxicity surveillance
Renal function (CrCl)Baseline, 1 month, then 6‑monthAdjust dosing for clearance
Bleeding signsContinuousPrompt cessation if overt bleed
Walking distance (Borg scale)1 month, then quarterlyEfficacy assessment

Clinical Pearls

  • Efficacy timing: Initiate cilostazol within 2 weeks of claudication onset to maximize improvement; delaying > 6 weeks reduces benefit.
  • Contraindication nuance: Even mild heart failure (NYHA I–II) should be avoided; alternative agents (e.g., pentoxifylline) may be preferable.
  • Bleeding caution: Use single‑agent cilostazol in patients requiring anticoagulation—adjust timing of INR checks.
  • Cost & accessibility: Generic formulations are widely available, reducing health‑system burden while maintaining efficacy.
  • Drug interactions: Ketoconazole and Cimetidine modestly increase plasma levels; warfarin additive effects may occur.
  • Adjunct therapy: When combined with supervised exercise, cilostazol can lead to additive walking distance improvements—consider a 12‑week “exercise + cilostazol” program.
  • Special population: In patients with Polycythemia Vera, cilostazol’s vasodilatory effect can precipitate hematologic complications; avoid concurrent usage.
  • Monitoring of side‑effect severity: Early mild palpitations should prompt ACE‑inhibitor monitoring; consider cardio‑protective beta‑blockers if arrhythmias arise.

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• *For comprehensive dosing, safety, and regulatory updates, always refer to the most current prescribing information and institutional guidelines.*

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