Article March 1, 2004

The Development of Clonazepam as a Psychotropic: The Massachusetts General Hospital Experience

Jerrold F. Rosenbaum, MD

J Clin Psychiatry 2004;65(suppl 5):3-6

Article Abstract

The pathophysiology of anxiety disorders is not clearly understood; therefore, clinical observation,case reports, and case reviews continue to enhance physicians’ understanding of disease and treatmentmechanisms. At Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), physicians and researchers are guided bythe recognition that available approved treatments are a small subset of what is sensible to try in anxietydisorders and have thus chosen to remain open minded and prepared to challenge assumptionsabout therapeutic agents and to explore new uses, including early work with high-potency benzodiazepines.Clinical trials established alprazolam as efficacious for panic disorder, and the agent was widelyprescribed for patients at MGH after its approval. Soon, however, clinical observation suggested a shortduration of benefit for a given dose in some patients. In some cases, patients who missed a dose reportedrebound worsening. In response to the apparent problematic pharmacokinetics of alprazolam,members of the MGH psychiatry department pursued investigation that ultimately established the antipanicefficacy of clonazepam as well as examined its effectiveness in the treatment of other disorders,such as bipolar disorder and social phobia. The process of exploring new uses of older agents remainsa worthy effort while we await newer agents with innovative mechanisms of action.