Quetiapine is an atypical antipsychotic drug with a similar chemical structure to clozapine and olanzapine. Clozapine was the first atypical antipsychotic drug, but the risk of significant agranulocytosis requires rigorous monitoring.
The risk of neutropenia and agranulocytosis associated with antipsychotics such as clozapine is reported to be between 1% and 10%. With quetiapine, premarketing and smaller postmarketing studies suggest the risk of neutropenia is less than 0.01%. By November 2007 the Australian Adverse Drug Reactions Advisory Committee (ADRAC)1 had received two possible and eight probable case reports of neutropenia associated with quetiapine. Seven of the eight patients were known to have recovered after stopping the drug.
The onset of neutropenia with quetiapine is variable. In the ADRAC series, neutropenia was reported to have occurred from one week to one year after starting therapy. The dose of quetiapine ranged from 50 mg daily to 1000 mg daily. The effect did not appear to be dose dependent. Published case reports include patients who developed neutropenia two days2 and two months3 after starting quetiapine. Other reports of quetiapine-associated neutropenia have been confounded by the simultaneous use of clozapine4 or valproate.5,6
The exact mechanism(s) by which quetiapine causes neutropenia is unknown. From the clozapine literature, proposed mechanisms are direct bone marrow suppression or toxicity from the drug or its metabolites.7 Immmunologically mediated destruction of granulocytes or granulocytic precursors has also been proposed. Given the related chemical structure and pharmacological profile of quetiapine and clozapine, quetiapine-induced neutropenia may have similar mechanisms.3
Our patient was taking multiple medications before admission, but sertraline and omeprazole were the only other drugs suspected to cause neutropenia. However, as she had taken sertraline and omeprazole for more than one year, it was thought that quetiapine was the more likely explanation. In addition, after stopping quetiapine, the neutropenia resolved, despite the continuation of both sertraline and omeprazole.
The World Health Organization definition of 'probable/likely' causality assessment of a suspected adverse reaction is:
a clinical event, including laboratory test abnormality, with a reasonable time sequence to administration of the drug, unlikely to be attributed to concurrent disease or other drugs or chemicals, and which follows a clinically reasonable response on withdrawal (dechallenge). Rechallenge information is not required to fulfil this definition.8
Based on these criteria, it appears our patient had a 'probable' response to the development of neutropenia associated with quetiapine, with a rapid recovery after the drug was stopped and replaced by risperidone.
Although the risk of agranulocytosis is low it needs to be balanced against any benefit of treatment. There is currently no strong evidence to support the use of quetiapine for psychological and behavioural problems in patients with dementia.9