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Pregabalin

Lyrica

Gabapentinoid (Calcium Channel Alpha-2-Delta Ligand)Schedule VGeneric availableTDM data

Pregabalin binds with high affinity to the alpha 2 -delta site (an auxiliary subunit of voltage-gated calcium channels) in central nervous system tissues. Although the mechanism of action of pregabalin has not been fully elucidated, results with genetically modified mice and with compounds structurally related to pregabalin (such as gabapentin) suggest that binding to the alpha 2 -delta subunit may be involved in pregabalin's anti-nociceptive and antiseizure effects in animals. In animal models of nerve damage, pregabalin has been shown to reduce calcium-dependent release of pro-nociceptive neurotransmitters in the spinal cord, possibly by disrupting alpha 2 -delta containing-calcium channel trafficking and/or reducing calcium currents. Evidence from other animal models of nerve damage and persistent pain suggest the anti-nociceptive activities of pregabalin may also be mediated through interactions with descending noradrenergic and serotonergic pathways originating from the brainstem that modulate pain transmission in the spinal cord. While pregabalin is a structural derivative of the inhibitory neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), it does not bind directly to GABA A , GABA B , or benzodiazepine receptors, does not augment GABA A responses in cultured neurons, does not alter rat brain GABA concentration or have acute effects on GABA uptake or degradation. However, in cultured neurons prolonged application of pregabalin increases the density of GABA transporter protein and increases the rate of functional GABA transport. Pregabalin does not block sodium channels, is not active at opiate receptors, and does not alter cyclooxygenase enzyme activity. It is inactive at serotonin and dopamine receptors and does not inhibit dopamine, serotonin, or noradrenaline reuptake.

Compare Pregabalin

FDA-Approved Indications

  • Diabetic peripheral neuropathic pain (adults)
  • Postherpetic neuralgia (adults)
  • Partial-onset seizures — adjunct (adults; pediatric 1 month+)
  • Fibromyalgia (adults)
  • Neuropathic pain — spinal cord injury (adults)

Common Off-Label Uses

  • Generalized anxiety disorder
  • Social anxiety disorder
  • Alcohol withdrawal
  • Insomnia

What Sets This Drug Apart

  • FDA-approved for generalized anxiety disorder (EU only, not US), fibromyalgia, neuropathic pain (diabetic, post-herpetic), and epilepsy adjunct
  • Linear pharmacokinetics (unlike gabapentin) — predictable dose-response relationship; faster onset of effect
  • Schedule V controlled substance — first gabapentinoid to be federally scheduled; labeled euphoria 2% signals mild abuse potential
  • Zero CYP metabolism, entirely renally excreted — same clean interaction profile as gabapentin
  • Dose reduction required in renal impairment (CrCl <60 mL/min); PR interval prolongation reported (distinctive vs gabapentin)