Antipsychotic Equivalent Doses Calculator
Clinically-oriented dose conversion tool for Chlorpromazine (CPZ), Olanzapine, Risperidone, and more.
Visual Dose Comparison
Equivalent doses of other common agents based on your input.
Conversion Factors Reference
| Antipsychotic Agent | Reference Dose (mg) | CPZ Equivalent (mg) | Relative Potency |
|---|
What is the Antipsychotic Equivalent Doses Calculator?
The Antipsychotic Equivalent Doses Calculator is a specialized clinical tool designed to assist psychiatrists, pharmacists, and healthcare providers in converting dosages between different antipsychotic medications. In psychopharmacology, switching medications (switching strategies) is common due to side effects, lack of efficacy, or formulary changes. However, simply guessing the dose of a new agent can lead to therapeutic failure or toxicity.
This calculator relies on the concept of Chlorpromazine Equivalents (CPZeq), a standard unit of measure that normalizes the potency of various antipsychotics relative to Chlorpromazine, the first typical antipsychotic. By converting the source dose to a standard CPZ equivalent, clinicians can estimate a mathematically comparable dose for a target drug, such as switching from Risperidone to Olanzapine.
It is meant for professionals managing schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and other psychiatric conditions requiring neuroleptic therapy. However, strictly mathematical conversions must always be tempered with clinical judgment regarding patient history and receptor binding profiles.
Antipsychotic Equivalent Doses Calculator Formula
The mathematical foundation of this tool is the “Ratio to Reference” method. We use a standardized reference table where a specific amount of each drug is deemed equivalent to 100mg of Chlorpromazine.
The core formula is:
Where “Reference” is the milligram amount of the drug equivalent to 100mg CPZ.
Variable Definitions
| Variable | Meaning | Unit | Typical Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Source Dose | Current daily dosage of the patient | mg/day | 0.5 – 1200+ |
| Source Reference | Amount of Source Drug = 100mg CPZ | mg | Fixed Constant |
| CPZ Equivalent | Standardized potency unit | mg CPZ | 50 – 1000+ |
Practical Examples
Example 1: Switching from Haloperidol to Olanzapine
A patient is taking 5 mg of Haloperidol (a high-potency first-generation antipsychotic) and needs to switch to Olanzapine (a second-generation atypical) due to extrapyramidal symptoms.
- Source: Haloperidol 5 mg
- Reference Factor (Haloperidol): 2 mg (= 100mg CPZ)
- Reference Factor (Olanzapine): 5 mg (= 100mg CPZ)
Step 1: Convert to CPZ Equivalent
(5 mg Haloperidol / 2 mg) × 100 = 250 mg CPZ Equivalent.
Step 2: Convert to Olanzapine
(250 mg CPZ / 100) × 5 mg = 12.5 mg Olanzapine.
Example 2: Switching from Quetiapine to Risperidone
A patient on 600 mg of Quetiapine is being switched to Risperidone for better cost management.
- Source: Quetiapine 600 mg
- Reference Factor (Quetiapine): 75 mg (= 100mg CPZ)
- Reference Factor (Risperidone): 2 mg (= 100mg CPZ)
Calculation:
(600 / 75) × 2 = 8 × 2 = 16 mg Risperidone.
Note: 16 mg is a high dose for Risperidone; clinical judgment might cap the starting dose lower and titrate up, highlighting why calculators are starting points, not prescriptions.
How to Use This Antipsychotic Equivalent Doses Calculator
- Select the Source Drug: Choose the medication the patient is currently taking from the first dropdown menu.
- Enter Current Dose: Input the total daily dose in milligrams (mg). Ensure the number is positive.
- Select the Target Drug: Choose the medication you intend to switch the patient to.
- Review the Result: The large blue number indicates the estimated equivalent dose.
- Check Visuals: Look at the “Visual Dose Comparison” chart to see how this dose compares to standard equivalents of other common agents like Aripiprazole or Clozapine.
- Copy Results: Use the green button to copy the calculation breakdown for medical notes.
Key Factors That Affect Antipsychotic Dosing
While the Antipsychotic Equivalent Doses Calculator provides a mathematical baseline, real-world dosing is influenced by several pharmacological and physiological factors:
- Receptor Binding Profiles: Drugs like Aripiprazole (partial dopamine agonist) behave differently than full antagonists like Haloperidol. Mathematical equivalence does not guarantee clinical equivalence in efficacy.
- Sedation vs. Activation: A dose of Quetiapine might be mathematically equivalent to a dose of Risperidone, but Quetiapine is significantly more sedating. A direct swap might leave a patient over-sedated or under-sedated.
- Metabolic Issues: Drugs like Olanzapine and Clozapine carry high metabolic risks. Even if the dose is equivalent, the metabolic burden is not.
- Smoker Status: Smoking induces CYP1A2 enzymes, which metabolize Olanzapine and Clozapine. A smoker may need higher doses than a non-smoker for the same effect.
- Age and Renal Function: Elderly patients often require lower doses (“start low, go slow”) regardless of the calculated equivalent, due to reduced clearance and higher sensitivity to anticholinergic effects.
- Half-Life and Cross-Tapering: This calculator gives the final target dose. It does not calculate the cross-taper schedule. Switching from a drug with a long half-life to one with a short half-life requires careful overlap to prevent withdrawal or rebound psychosis.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
There is no single gold standard, but the Chlorpromazine (CPZ) equivalent method is the most widely used historical standard. Modern comparisons often use “Olanzapine equivalents” or “Risperidone equivalents” derived from meta-analyses like those by Leucht et al.
No. This Antipsychotic Equivalent Doses Calculator is designed for oral formulations. Long-acting injectables (LAIs) have different pharmacokinetics and require specific loading dose strategies found in their package inserts.
Quetiapine has a wide dosing range (50mg to 800mg+). Low doses act primarily as antihistamines (sedatives), while higher doses are required for antipsychotic dopamine blockade. Linear conversion formulas sometimes underestimate the dose needed for antipsychotic effect.
The conversion factors generally account for the total clinical effect of the parent drug and its active metabolites (e.g., Risperidone and its metabolite Paliperidone are clinically linked), but the calculation is based on the parent drug’s administered dose.
100mg CPZ is considered a low-to-moderate “reference unit.” Therapeutic doses for schizophrenia often range from 300mg to 1000mg CPZ equivalents per day.
The typical FDA maximum is 20mg/day, though higher doses are used off-label in treatment-resistant cases. Always verify maximums against local guidelines.
Switching between “pines” (Olanzapine, Quetiapine, Clozapine – highly sedating) and “dones” (Risperidone, Ziprasidone – less sedating) often requires careful monitoring for insomnia or agitation. The calculator gives the dose, but not the side-effect management plan.
Aripiprazole is unique as a partial agonist. Conversions are notoriously difficult because high doses of Aripiprazole don’t block dopamine as fully as high doses of Haloperidol. Treat Aripiprazole equivalents as rough estimates.
Related Tools and Internal Resources
Enhance your clinical toolkit with these related resources:
- Benzodiazepine Equivalence Calculator – Calculate equivalent doses for anxiety medications like Xanax and Valium.
- Creatinine Clearance Calculator – Essential for adjusting renal doses in elderly psychiatric patients.
- QTc Interval Calculator – Assess cardiac risk when prescribing Ziprasidone or Citalopram.
- Opioid MME Calculator – Morphine Milligram Equivalents for pain management safety.
- BMI Calculator for Metabolic Monitoring – Track metabolic syndrome risks associated with antipsychotic use.
- Depression Scale Scorer (PHQ-9) – Digital scoring tool for depression screening.