Clozapine, the only approved drug for treatment-resistant schizophrenia, causes serious heart inflammation in some patients through mechanisms that were not fully understood. Using heart cells grown from the patients' own stem cells, this study found that clozapine damages mitochondria, triggers oxidative stress, and activates an inflammatory protein complex called NLRP3 — and these effects were stronger in cells from patients who had previously experienced clozapine-related heart inflammation. Treating the cells with elamipretide reduced all of these harmful effects, suggesting mitochondrial damage is a central mechanism of clozapine cardiotoxicity.
Vaziri, Nazanin; Shutt, Timothy E; Karim, Wasi; Raedler, Thomas J; Pantelis, Christos; Thomas, Naveen; Jayaram, Mahesh; Greenway, Steven C; Bousman, Chad A