Details
Stereochemistry | ACHIRAL |
Molecular Formula | 2C8H15O2.Na.H |
Molecular Weight | 310.4047 |
Optical Activity | NONE |
Defined Stereocenters | 0 / 0 |
E/Z Centers | 0 |
Charge | 0 |
SHOW SMILES / InChI
SMILES
[H+].[Na+].CCCC(CCC)C([O-])=O.CCCC(CCC)C([O-])=O
InChI
InChIKey=MSRILKIQRXUYCT-UHFFFAOYSA-M
InChI=1S/2C8H16O2.Na/c2*1-3-5-7(6-4-2)8(9)10;/h2*7H,3-6H2,1-2H3,(H,9,10);/q;;+1/p-1
Molecular Formula | Na |
Molecular Weight | 22.98976928 |
Charge | 1 |
Count |
|
Stereochemistry | ACHIRAL |
Additional Stereochemistry | |
Defined Stereocenters | 0 / 0 |
E/Z Centers | 0 |
Optical Activity | NONE |
Molecular Formula | C8H16O2 |
Molecular Weight | 144.2114 |
Charge | 0 |
Count |
|
Stereochemistry | ACHIRAL |
Additional Stereochemistry | |
Defined Stereocenters | 0 / 0 |
E/Z Centers | 0 |
Optical Activity | NONE |
DescriptionCurator's Comment: Description was created based on several sources, including
http://psychopharmacologyinstitute.com/mood-stabilizers/valproate-in-psychiatry-approved-indications-and-off-label-uses/ | https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2009/022152s002lbl.pdf | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12847559 | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11742974 | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11473107
Curator's Comment: Description was created based on several sources, including
http://psychopharmacologyinstitute.com/mood-stabilizers/valproate-in-psychiatry-approved-indications-and-off-label-uses/ | https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2009/022152s002lbl.pdf | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12847559 | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11742974 | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11473107
Valproic acid (VPA; valproate; di-n-propylacetic acid, DPA; 2-propylpentanoic acid, or 2-propylvaleric acid) was first synthesized in 1882, by Burton. FDA approved valproic acid for the treatment of manic episodes associated with bipolar disorder, for the monotherapy and adjunctive therapy of complex partial seizures and simple and complex absence seizures and adjunctive therapy in patients with multiple seizure types that include absence seizures and for the prophylaxis of migraine headaches.
The mechanisms of VPA which seem to be of clinical importance in the treatment of epilepsy include increased gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-ergic activity, reduction in excitatory neurotransmission, and modification of monoamines. Recently, it was discovered that the VPA is a class I selective histone deacetylase inhibitor. This activity can be distinguished from its therapeutically exploited antiepileptic activity.
Approval Year
Targets
Primary Target | Pharmacology | Condition | Potency |
---|---|---|---|
Target ID: CHEMBL325 Sources: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11473107 |
0.4 mM [IC50] | ||
Target ID: CHEMBL1937 Sources: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11742974/ |
0.54 mM [IC50] |
Conditions
Condition | Modality | Targets | Highest Phase | Product |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | DEPAKENE Approved UseDepakene (valproic acid) is indicated as monotherapy and adjunctive therapy in the treatment of patients with complex partial seizures that occur either in isolation or in association with other types of seizures. Depakene (valproic acid) is indicated for use as sole and adjunctive therapy in the treatment of simple and complex absence seizures, and adjunctively in patients with multiple seizure types which include absence seizures.
Simple absence is defined as very brief clouding of the sensorium or loss of consciousness accompanied by certain generalized epileptic discharges without other detectable clinical signs. Complex absence is the term used when other signs are also present. |
|||
Preventing | STAVZOR Approved UseStavzor (valproic acid) delayed release capsules is indicated for:
• Acute treatment of manic episodes associated with bipolar disorder
• Monotherapy and adjunctive therapy of complex partial seizures and simple and complex absence seizures; adjunctive therapy in patients with multiple seizure types that include absence seizures
• Prophylaxis of migraine headaches Launch Date2008 |
|||
Primary | STAVZOR Approved UseStavzor (valproic acid) delayed release capsules is indicated for:
• Acute treatment of manic episodes associated with bipolar disorder
• Monotherapy and adjunctive therapy of complex partial seizures and simple and complex absence seizures; adjunctive therapy in patients with multiple seizure types that include absence seizures
• Prophylaxis of migraine headaches Launch Date2008 |
Cmax
Value | Dose | Co-administered | Analyte | Population |
---|---|---|---|---|
107.2 mg/L |
500 mg 2 times / day multiple, oral dose: 500 mg route of administration: Oral experiment type: MULTIPLE co-administered: |
VALPROIC ACID plasma | Homo sapiens population: HEALTHY age: UNKNOWN sex: FEMALE / MALE food status: FED |
AUC
Value | Dose | Co-administered | Analyte | Population |
---|---|---|---|---|
1951 mg × h/L |
500 mg 2 times / day multiple, oral dose: 500 mg route of administration: Oral experiment type: MULTIPLE co-administered: |
VALPROIC ACID plasma | Homo sapiens population: HEALTHY age: UNKNOWN sex: FEMALE / MALE food status: FED |
T1/2
Value | Dose | Co-administered | Analyte | Population |
---|---|---|---|---|
16 h |
1000 mg 1 times / day steady-state, oral dose: 1000 mg route of administration: Oral experiment type: STEADY-STATE co-administered: |
VALPROIC ACID plasma | Homo sapiens population: UNKNOWN age: UNKNOWN sex: UNKNOWN food status: UNKNOWN |
Doses
Dose | Population | Adverse events |
---|---|---|
150 mg/kg single, intravenous Highest studied dose Dose: 150 mg/kg Route: intravenous Route: single Dose: 150 mg/kg Sources: |
healthy, 30.2 ± 11.7 Health Status: healthy Age Group: 30.2 ± 11.7 Sex: M+F Sources: |
DLT: Headache, Nausea... |
140 mg/kg single, intravenous MTD Dose: 140 mg/kg Route: intravenous Route: single Dose: 140 mg/kg Sources: |
healthy, 30.2 ± 11.7 Health Status: healthy Age Group: 30.2 ± 11.7 Sex: M+F Sources: |
|
25 g single, oral Overdose |
unhealthy, 37 |
Disc. AE: Somnolence... AEs leading to discontinuation/dose reduction: Somnolence Sources: |
100 g single, oral Overdose |
unhealthy, 41 |
Disc. AE: Coma... |
120 mg/kg 1 times / day multiple, intravenous Highest studied dose Dose: 120 mg/kg, 1 times / day Route: intravenous Route: multiple Dose: 120 mg/kg, 1 times / day Sources: |
unhealthy, 62.5 |
DLT: Somnolence... |
60 mg/kg 1 times / day multiple, intravenous MTD Dose: 60 mg/kg, 1 times / day Route: intravenous Route: multiple Dose: 60 mg/kg, 1 times / day Sources: |
unhealthy, 62.5 |
|
60 mg/kg 1 times / day multiple, oral Recommended Dose: 60 mg/kg, 1 times / day Route: oral Route: multiple Dose: 60 mg/kg, 1 times / day Sources: |
unhealthy Health Status: unhealthy Sources: |
Disc. AE: Hepatotoxicity, Pancreatitis... AEs leading to discontinuation/dose reduction: Hepatotoxicity Sources: Pancreatitis |
AEs
AE | Significance | Dose | Population |
---|---|---|---|
Headache | DLT | 150 mg/kg single, intravenous Highest studied dose Dose: 150 mg/kg Route: intravenous Route: single Dose: 150 mg/kg Sources: |
healthy, 30.2 ± 11.7 Health Status: healthy Age Group: 30.2 ± 11.7 Sex: M+F Sources: |
Nausea | DLT | 150 mg/kg single, intravenous Highest studied dose Dose: 150 mg/kg Route: intravenous Route: single Dose: 150 mg/kg Sources: |
healthy, 30.2 ± 11.7 Health Status: healthy Age Group: 30.2 ± 11.7 Sex: M+F Sources: |
Somnolence | Disc. AE | 25 g single, oral Overdose |
unhealthy, 37 |
Coma | Disc. AE | 100 g single, oral Overdose |
unhealthy, 41 |
Somnolence | 40% DLT |
120 mg/kg 1 times / day multiple, intravenous Highest studied dose Dose: 120 mg/kg, 1 times / day Route: intravenous Route: multiple Dose: 120 mg/kg, 1 times / day Sources: |
unhealthy, 62.5 |
Hepatotoxicity | Disc. AE | 60 mg/kg 1 times / day multiple, oral Recommended Dose: 60 mg/kg, 1 times / day Route: oral Route: multiple Dose: 60 mg/kg, 1 times / day Sources: |
unhealthy Health Status: unhealthy Sources: |
Pancreatitis | Disc. AE | 60 mg/kg 1 times / day multiple, oral Recommended Dose: 60 mg/kg, 1 times / day Route: oral Route: multiple Dose: 60 mg/kg, 1 times / day Sources: |
unhealthy Health Status: unhealthy Sources: |
Overview
CYP3A4 | CYP2C9 | CYP2D6 | hERG |
---|---|---|---|
OverviewOther
Other Inhibitor | Other Substrate | Other Inducer |
---|---|---|
Drug as perpetrator
Target | Modality | Activity | Metabolite | Clinical evidence |
---|---|---|---|---|
minimal | ||||
minimal | ||||
minimal | ||||
Sources: https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/nda/2008/022152s000_ClinPharmR.pdf#page=17 Page: 17.0 |
no | |||
weak [Ki 7975 uM] | ||||
weak [Ki 8553 uM] | ||||
weak [Ki 9150 uM] | ||||
yes [Ki 600 uM] | likely (co-administration study) Comment: competitive inhibition; risk of pharmacokinetic drug–drug interactions should be taken into account during concomitant use of valproic acid and CYP2C9 substrates |
Drug as victim
Target | Modality | Activity | Metabolite | Clinical evidence |
---|---|---|---|---|
no | ||||
yes | ||||
Sources: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9606477/ Page: 3.0 |
yes | |||
Sources: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9606477/ Page: 3.0 |
yes | |||
yes | ||||
yes | ||||
yes | ||||
yes | ||||
yes | ||||
yes | ||||
yes |
PubMed
Title | Date | PubMed |
---|---|---|
Hepatic encephalopathy associated with combined clozapine and divalproex sodium treatment. | 1997 Apr |
|
Reversible cortical atrophy and cognitive decline induced by valproic acid. | 1998 |
|
Assessment of colour vision in epileptic patients exposed to single-drug therapy. | 1999 |
|
Cognitive dysfunction induced by phenytoin and valproate in rats: effect of nitric oxide. | 1999 Jul |
|
Failure of periconceptual folic acid to prevent a neural tube defect in the offspring of a mother taking sodium valproate. | 1999 Jun |
|
Elimination of oxcarbazepine-induced oculogyric crisis following vagus nerve stimulation. | 1999 Jun 10 |
|
Pathomorphological changes in mouse liver and kidney during prolonged valproate administration. | 2000 |
|
[Lyell syndrome associated with lamotrigine]. | 2000 Dec 16-31 |
|
Orthotopic liver transplantation with poor neurologic outcome in valproate-associated liver failure: a need for critical risk-benefit appraisal in the use of valproate. | 2000 Feb |
|
Valproic acid-induced hyperammonemic encephalopathy with triphasic waves. | 2000 Jul |
|
Visual and auditory hallucinations with the association of bupropion and valproate. | 2000 Mar |
|
Gabapentin prophylaxis of clozapine-induced seizures. | 2000 Mar |
|
[Valproic acid in prophylaxis of bipolar disorder. A case of valproate-induced encephalopathy]. | 2000 May |
|
The safety of rapid valproic acid infusion. | 2000 Oct |
|
Antiepileptic drug withdrawal in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy undergoing presurgical video-EEG monitoring. | 2001 Feb |
|
Divalproex sodium augmentation of haloperidol in hospitalized patients with schizophrenia: clinical and economic implications. | 2001 Feb |
|
[Febrile convulsions, Treatment and prognosis]. | 2001 Feb 19 |
|
Valproic acid has temporal variability in urinary clearance of metabolites. | 2001 Jan |
|
A 25-year-old woman with bipolar disorder. | 2001 Jan 24-31 |
|
Does genomic imprinting contribute to valproic acid teratogenicity? | 2001 Jan-Feb |
Patents
Sample Use Guides
In Vivo Use Guide
Sources: https://www.drugs.com/dosage/valproic-acid.html
Usual Adult Dose for Epilepsy
Complex partial seizures:
Initial dose: 10 to 15 mg/kg orally or intravenously per day as an IV infusion in divided doses, increased by 5 to 10 mg/kg per week if necessary according to clinical response
Maintenance dose: 10 to 60 mg/kg per day in divided doses
Maximum dose: 60 mg/kg per day
Simple and complex absence seizures:
Initial dose: 15 mg/kg orally or intravenously per day as an IV infusion in divided doses, increased at one week intervals by 5 to 10 mg/kg/day according to seizure control and tolerability
Maximum dose: 60 mg/kg per day
Comments:
-If the total daily dose exceeds 250 mg, it should be given in 2 to 3 divided doses.
-Use of IV valproate sodium for periods longer than 14 days has not been studied; patients should be converted to oral valproate as soon as clinically feasible.
-When switching from oral to IV valproate, the total daily dose of IV valproate should be equivalent to the total daily dose of oral valproate, and administered at the same frequency as the oral product.
-Equivalence between IV and oral valproate products at steady state has only been evaluated in a 6-hourly dosing regimen. Trough plasma level monitoring may be required if IV valproate is administered 2 to 3 times a day.
-Complex partial seizures: When converting patients to valproate monotherapy, concomitant antiepileptic drug dosage can generally be reduced by approximately 25% every 2 weeks, commencing either at the start of valproate therapy or delayed by 1 to 2 weeks. Patients should be monitored closely during this period for increased seizure frequency.
Uses: Monotherapy and adjunctive therapy in the treatment of complex partial seizures; sole and adjunctive therapy for simple and complex absence seizures; adjunctive therapy in patients with multiple seizure types that include absence seizures.
Usual Adult Dose for Mania
Delayed-release capsules :
Initial dose: 750 mg orally per day in divided doses
Maximum dose: 60 mg/kg orally per day
Duration: Safety and efficacy beyond 3 weeks has not been established
Comments:
-The dose should be increased as rapidly as possible to achieve the lowest therapeutic dose which produces the desired clinical effect or the desired range of plasma concentrations.
-In placebo-controlled clinical trials of acute mania, patients were dosed to a clinical response with a trough plasma concentration of 50 to 125 mcg/mL.
-Maximum concentrations were generally achieved within 14 days.
-Safety and efficacy for longer term use in the maintenance of the initial response and prevention of new manic episodes has not been systematically evaluated in clinical trials. Use for extended periods should be accompanied by regular review for the long-term usefulness of the drug for the individual patient.
Use: Treatment of manic episodes associated with bipolar disorder.
Usual Adult Dose for Migraine Prophylaxis
Delayed release oral capsules:
Initial dose: 250 mg orally twice a day
Comments:
-Some patients may benefit from doses up to 1000 mg per day.
-In clinical trials, there was no evidence that higher doses led to greater efficacy.
Usual Pediatric Dose for Epilepsy
10 years of age or older:
Complex partial seizures:
Initial dose: 10 to 15 mg/kg orally or intravenously per day as an IV infusion in divided doses, increased by 5 to 10 mg/kg per week if necessary according to clinical response
Maintenance dose: 10 to 60 mg/kg per day in divided doses
Maximum dose: 60 mg/kg per day
Simple and complex absence seizures:
Initial dose: 15 mg/kg orally or intravenously per day as an IV infusion in divided doses, increased at one week intervals by 5 to 10 mg/kg/day according to seizure control and tolerability
Maximum dose: 60 mg/kg per day
Comments:
-If the total daily dose exceeds 250 mg, it should be given in 2 to 3 divided doses.
-Use of IV valproate sodium for periods longer than 14 days has not been studied; patients should be converted to oral valproate as soon as clinically feasible.
-When switching from oral to IV valproate, the total daily dose of IV valproate should be equivalent to the total daily dose of oral valproate, and administered at the same frequency as the oral product.
-Equivalence between IV and oral valproate products at steady state has only been evaluated in a 6-hourly dosing regimen. Trough plasma level monitoring may be required if IV valproate is administered 2 to 3 times a day.
-Complex partial seizures: When converting patients to valproate monotherapy, concomitant antiepileptic drug dosage can generally be reduced by approximately 25% every 2 weeks, commencing either at the start of valproate therapy or delayed by 1 to 2 weeks. Patients should be monitored closely during this period for increased seizure frequency.
Uses: Monotherapy and adjunctive therapy in the treatment of complex partial seizures; sole and adjunctive therapy for simple and complex absence seizures; adjunctive therapy in patients with multiple seizure types that include absence seizures.
Route of Administration:
Other
In Vitro Use Guide
Sources: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28407839
H9C2 cells were cultured and allotted to the blank, vehicle, and valproic acid (VPA)-treated groups: the VPA treated group received VPA exposure at concentrations of 2.0, 4.0 and 8.0 mmol/L. VPA might result in acetylation/deacetylation imbalances by inhibiting HDAC1-3 protein expression and total HDAC activity, leading to the down-regulation of mRNA and protein expression of Vangl2 and Scrib.
Substance Class |
Chemical
Created
by
admin
on
Edited
Wed Apr 02 07:43:29 GMT 2025
by
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Record UNII |
644VL95AO6
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Record Status |
Validated (UNII)
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Record Version |
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NCI_THESAURUS |
C264
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S-80
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CHEMBL109
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4667
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DTXSID70227388
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C28996
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SUB00014MIG
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m11369
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5132
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266856
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76584-70-8
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1224201
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DBSALT000185
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Divalproex
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ACTIVE MOIETY |