(Bold for FDA approved)
How Antadict works• Irreversibly inhibits aldehyde dehydrogenase, the enzyme involved in second-stage metabolism of alcohol</br>
• Alcohol is metabolized to acetaldehyde, which in turn is metabolized by aldehyde dehydrogenase; thus, disulfiram blocks this second-stage metabolism</br>
• If alcohol is consumed by a patient taking disulfiram, toxic levels of acetaldehyde build up, causing unpleasant side effects</br>
• This aversive experience ideally leads to negative conditioning, in which patients abstain from alcohol in order to avoid the unpleasant effects
• Disulfiram’s effects are immediate; patients should not take disulfiram until at least 12 hours after drinking
Notable Side Effects• Metallic taste, dermatitis, sedation
• Flushing, headache, tachycardia, nausea, vomiting (if alcohol is consumed)
Life Threatening Side Effects• Hepatotoxicity
• Myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, respiratory depression, other signs of alcohol toxicity (if alcohol is consumed)

unusual

not usual
• Wait
• Reduce dose
• Take at night to reduce sedation
• 250–500 mg/day; 1-year duration
Dosage Forms• Tablet 250 mg, 500 mg scored
• Maintenance treatment should be continued until the patient is recovered
• No
Renal Impairment• Not recommended for patients with chronic renal failure
Hepatic Impairment• Not recommended
Cardiac Impairment• Contraindicated
Elderly• Not generally recommended for patients older than age 60
• Some patients may tolerate lower doses better
Children and Adolescents• Safety and efficacy have not been established
Pregnancy• Effective June 30, 2015, the FDA requires changes to the content and format of pregnancy and lactation information in prescription drug labels, including the elimination of the pregnancy letter categories; the Pregnancy and Lactation Labeling Rule (PLLR or final rule) applies only to prescription drugs and will be phased in gradually for drugs approved on or after June 30, 2001
• Controlled studies have not been conducted in pregnant women
• Some animal studies have shown adverse effects
• Pregnant women needing to stop drinking may consider behavioral therapy before pharmacotherapy
• Not generally recommended for use during pregnancy, especially during first trimester
Breast Feeding• Unknown if disulfiram is secreted in human breast milk, but all psychotropics are assumed to be secreted in breast milk
• Recommended either to discontinue drug or bottle feed
Based on data Published online by Cambridge University Press
Compiled by Dr. Jash Ajmera