Glutethimide

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Glutethimide
Glutethimide.svg
Glutethimide ball-and-stick model.png
Systematic (IUPAC) name
3-ethyl-3-phenyl-piperidine-2,6-dione
Clinical data
Pregnancy
category
  • C: (United States)
Legal status
Routes of
administration
oral
Pharmacokinetic data
Bioavailability Variable (Tmax = 1–6 hours)[1]
Protein binding ~50%
Metabolism Extensive hepatic
Biological half-life 8–12 hours
Excretion Renal
Identifiers
CAS Number 77-21-4 YesY
ATC code N05CE01 (WHO)
PubChem CID: 3487
IUPHAR/BPS 7192
DrugBank DB01437 YesY
ChemSpider 3367 YesY
UNII C8I4BVN78E YesY
KEGG D00532 YesY
ChEMBL CHEMBL1102 YesY
Chemical data
Formula C13H15NO2
Molecular mass 217.264 g/mol
  • O=C1NC(CCC1(CC)C2=CC=CC=C2)=O
  • InChI=1S/C13H15NO2/c1-2-13(10-6-4-3-5-7-10)9-8-11(15)14-12(13)16/h3-7H,2,8-9H2,1H3,(H,14,15,16) YesY
  • Key:JMBQKKAJIKAWKF-UHFFFAOYSA-N YesY
Physical data
Melting point 84 °C (183 °F)
Solubility in water 999 mg/L (30 °C/86 °F) mg/mL (20 °C)
  (verify)

Glutethimide is a hypnotic sedative that was introduced by Ciba[2] in 1954 as a safe alternative to barbiturates to treat insomnia. Before long, however, it had become clear that glutethimide was just as likely to cause addiction and caused similarly severe withdrawal symptoms. Doriden was the brand-name version of the drug; it was also available under the brand names Elrodorm, Noxyron, Glimid and others. Both the generic and brand-name forms are very rarely prescribed today. Current production levels in the United States (the annual quota for manufacturing imposed by the DEA has been three grams, enough for six Doriden tablets, for a number of years) point to it only being used in small scale research.

Glutethimide DOJ.jpg

Long term use

Long term use rebound effects, which resembled those seen in withdrawal, have anecdotally been described in patients who were still taking a stable dose of the drug. The symptoms included delirium, hallucinosis, convulsions and fever.[3]

Recreational use

Glutethimide is a CYP2D6 enzyme inducer. When taken with codeine, it enables the body to convert higher amounts of the codeine (higher than the average 5 - 10%) to morphine. The general sedative effect also adds to the effect of the combination. The effect was also used clinically, including some research in the 1970s in various countries of using it under carefully monitored circumstances as a form of oral opioid agonist substitution therapy, e.g. as a Substitutionmittel that may be a useful alternative to methadone[4][5] The combination was known as Dors & Fours, a Six Pack, Loads, etc. as two Doriden tablets and four Tylenol (or Emprin, Emprazil or other drugs) With Codeine No. 4, or plain 60 mg codeine tablets were sold as a set. The demand for this combination, in western Pennsylvania and surrounding areas of other states and perhaps elsewhere, has led to small-scale clandestine synthesis of glutethimide since 1984,[6] a process that is, like methaqualone synthesis, somewhat difficult and fraught with potential bad outcomes when less-than-gifted chemists are doing the deed with industrial-grade precursors without adequate quality control. The fact that the simpler clandestine synthesis of other extinct pharmaceutical depressants like ethchlorvynol, methyprylon, or the oldest barbiturates is not reported would seem to point to a high level of motivation surrounding a unique drug, again much like methaqualone. Analysis of confiscated glutethimide seems to invariably show the drug or the results of attempted synthesis, whereas purported methaqualone is in a significant minority of cases found to be inert, or contain diphenhydramine or benzodiazepines [7]

The enzyme induction is apparently several times stronger than that induced by promethazine (Phenergan, Atosil), a phenothiazine antihistamine used clinically as an opioid potentiator (Phenergan VC With Codeine, Mepergan (pethidine + promethazine), mixing the antihistamine with alphaprodine and other such drugs in an IV)

Legal status

Glutethimide is a Schedule II drug under the Convention on Psychotropic Substances.[8] It was originally a Schedule III drug in the United States under the Controlled Substances Act, but in 1991 it was upgraded to Schedule II,[9] after it was discovered that misuse combined with codeine increased the effect of the codeine and deaths had resulted from the combination.[10][11] It has a DEA ACSCN of 2550 and a 2013 production quota of 3 g.

Chemistry

Glutethimide (2-ethyl-2-phenylgutarimide) is synthesized by addition of 2-phenylbutyronitrile to the methylacrylate (Michael reaction), and the subsequent alkaline hydrolysis of the nitrile group in the obtained compound into an amide group, and the subsequent acidic cyclization of the product into the desired glutethimide.[12] The (R) isomer has a faster onset and more potent anticonvulsant activity in animal models than the (S) isomer.[13]

Glutethimide syn.png

See also

References

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  2. US patent 2673205, Hoffmann, K.; Tagmann, E., "3-Disubstituted Dioxopiperidines and the Manufacture thereof", issued 1954-03-23, assigned to Ciba 
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  6. Gahlinger, 2001, pp 203
  7. Gahlinger, 2001 Ch "Methaqualone & Glutethimide"
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    DE patent 950193, Hoffmann, K. & Tagmann, E., "Verfahren zur Herstellung neuer Dioxopiperidine" 
    US patent 2673205, Hoffmann, K. & Tagmann, E., "3-disubstituted dioxopiperidines and the manufacture thereof" 
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  13. Annual Report in Medicinal Chemistry Volume 12 page 13