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Modafinil: Difference between revisions

From Pharmacopedia
[pending revision][pending revision]
Create Modafinil medicine page (eugeroic for narcolepsy/OSA/shift-work)
Medicine page v2: full MedTemplate build (PM-approved deploy 2026-06-03)
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{{MedTemplate
{{MedTemplate
| generic          = Modafinil
| generic          = Modafinil
| brand            = Provigil (US, 100 mg and 200 mg tablets); Alertec (Canada); Modiodal (France, original market). See also: Armodafinil (Nuvigil), the R-enantiomer, a related eugeroic approved 2007 with a longer effective half-life.
| brand            = Provigil (Teva/Cephalon); Alertec (Canada); Modavigil (Australia)
| structure        =
| structure        =
| classes          = [[:Category:Eugeroics|Eugeroic (wakefulness-promoting agent)]], [[:Category:Psychostimulants|Psychostimulant]], [[:Category:Schedule IV controlled substances|Schedule IV controlled substance (US)]]
| classes          = [[:Category:Eugeroics|Eugeroic]], [[:Category:Psychostimulants|Psychostimulant]] (atypical)
| uses              =
| starting_dose    = 200 mg orally once daily in the morning. For shift-work sleep disorder, 200 mg approximately one hour before the start of the work shift. Doses up to 400 mg/day have been studied; evidence does not consistently demonstrate greater efficacy at 400 mg compared to 200 mg, but some patients may benefit from the higher dose.<ref name="provigil-label">Provigil (modafinil) prescribing information. Teva Pharmaceuticals USA. Revised 2015. FDA reference NDA 020717.</ref>
| starting_dose    = Narcolepsy/OSA: 200 mg PO once daily in the morning. Shift work disorder: 200 mg PO approximately 1 hour before the start of the work shift. Lower starting dose (100 mg) can be considered in elderly patients or those with hepatic impairment.
| preparations      = Tablets: 100 mg, 200 mg (scored). [[Armodafinil]] (Nuvigil), the R-enantiomer of modafinil, is available separately as 50 mg, 150 mg, 200 mg, and 250 mg tablets.
| preparations      = Oral tablets 100 mg and 200 mg (Provigil and generics). No IV or extended-release formulations available; compare armodafinil (Nuvigil) 50/150/250 mg tablets as the R-enantiomer alternative.
| fda_max          = 400 mg/day.<ref name="provigil-label" />
| fda_max          = 400 mg/day (though clinical trials and FDA label note that doses above 200 mg/day have not demonstrated additional benefit in controlled studies for the approved indications; 200 mg is the standard therapeutic dose).<ref name="provigil-label">FDA Prescribing Information, Provigil (modafinil) Tablets, Cephalon/Teva, current revision. https://www.accessdata.fda.gov/drugsatfda_docs/label/2015/020717s037lbl.pdf</ref>
| pill_id          =
| pill_id          =
| routes            = Oral only.
| routes            = Oral
| onset            = Peak plasma concentrations 2-4 hours after oral dose. Wakefulness-promoting effect onset correlates with peak plasma; subjective alertness typically reported within 1-2 hours of dosing.
| onset            = Peak plasma concentration in 2-4 hours after oral administration. Clinically perceptible wakefulness-promoting effects typically begin within 1-2 hours of dosing.{{citation needed}}
| duration          = Effective wakefulness promotion through approximately 12-15 hours reflecting the half-life of the predominant R-enantiomer. For shift-work use, 200 mg taken 1 hour before shift provides coverage through most 8-12 hour shifts.
| duration          = Effective duration approximately 12-15 hours at the 200 mg dose, consistent with the elimination half-life. A single morning dose generally sustains wakefulness throughout the day without substantially disrupting nighttime sleep onset when taken early.<ref name="provigil-label" />
| halflife          = The racemic mixture of modafinil has an effective half-life of approximately 12-15 hours due to differential enantiomer kinetics: the R-enantiomer (R-modafinil) has a half-life of ~15 hours; the S-enantiomer has a half-life of ~4 hours. In practice, the R-enantiomer dominates steady-state pharmacology, giving a 12-15h effective duration.<ref name="provigil-label" />
| halflife          = Approximately 15 hours (effective half-life after a single dose). Modafinil is a racemic mixture: the R-enantiomer (armodafinil) has a longer half-life (approximately 15 hours) than the S-enantiomer (approximately 3-4 hours). The R-enantiomer therefore dominates the pharmacologically active plasma concentration in the latter portion of the dosing interval.<ref name="provigil-label" />
| bioavailability  = Approximately 80% (well-absorbed orally; not significantly affected by food, though food may delay Tmax by ~1 hour).<ref name="provigil-label" />
| bioavailability  = Oral bioavailability is not precisely established in the label but absorption is rapid and essentially complete. Food delays peak plasma concentration by approximately one hour but does not reduce the extent of absorption.<ref name="provigil-label" />
| pregnancy        = EMA pregnancy prevention program required as of 2019 (significant congenital malformation signal from observational registry data; see pregnancy_details). FDA labeling updated to reflect human data concerns. Modafinil should be considered contraindicated or avoided in pregnancy unless the clinical need is compelling and the patient has been counseled. Females of reproductive potential must use effective non-hormonal contraception during treatment and for 2 months after discontinuation (hormonal contraceptive efficacy is reduced by modafinil; see interactions).
| pregnancy        = Not adequately studied in pregnant humans. Animal data (rats, rabbits) showed developmental toxicity at clinically relevant doses, including visceral and skeletal variations. The FDA label does not assign a letter category under the post-2015 labeling rule; the prior category was C (Australia: Category D).{{citation needed}} A pregnancy registry existed but enrollment data are limited. Use during pregnancy only if the potential benefit justifies the potential risk to the fetus. Modafinil may reduce the effectiveness of hormonal contraceptives (see Interactions), which has indirect reproductive implications: women of childbearing potential should use alternative or additional contraception during modafinil therapy and for one month after discontinuation.<ref name="provigil-label" />
| legal            = [[USLegal:Schedule IV|Schedule IV controlled substance (US)]]. Rx-only. The DEA scheduled modafinil as Schedule IV in 1999, reflecting confirmed abuse potential (dopamine reward pathway activity) but substantially lower abuse liability than Schedule II stimulants (amphetamine, methylphenidate). Available as generic modafinil (widely) since 2012 US patent expiry.
| legal            = [[USLegal:Schedule IV|Schedule IV controlled substance]] in the United States (DEA scheduling effective 1999). Prescription-only in the United Kingdom, European Union, Canada, and Australia. Not scheduled in Japan; available by prescription. In the European Union, the EMA restricted modafinil's approved indication to narcolepsy only in 2011, withdrawing the OSA and shift-work indications after a benefit-risk review.{{citation needed}} International status varies; in some jurisdictions modafinil is available without prescription. Modafinil was placed in Schedule IV based on evidence of lower abuse potential relative to Schedule II psychostimulants ([[amphetamines]], [[methylphenidate]]), though reinforcing effects have been demonstrated in laboratory settings.<ref name="jasinski2000">Jasinski DR. An evaluation of the abuse potential of modafinil using methylphenidate as a reference. J Psychopharmacol. 2000;14(1):53-60. PMID 10757254.</ref>
| mechanism        = <vote slug="modafinil-mech-claim">Modafinil's mechanism of wakefulness promotion is incompletely understood but is best characterized as a '''dopamine transporter (DAT) inhibitor''' that increases synaptic dopamine concentrations primarily through reuptake inhibition rather than dopamine release. This distinguishes it mechanistically from amphetamines and methylphenidate, which cause dopamine efflux via reverse transport; modafinil binds the DAT but does not significantly trigger reverse transport, resulting in a more gradual and sustained dopamine elevation with lower abuse liability.<ref name="wisor-2001">Wisor JP, Nishino S, Sora I, Uhl GH, Mignot E, Edgar DM. Dopaminergic role in stimulant-induced wakefulness. J Neurosci. 2001;21(5):1787-1794. PMID 11222668.</ref>
| mechanism        = Modafinil promotes wakefulness through mechanisms that remain incompletely understood. The best-established molecular target is the dopamine transporter (DAT): modafinil binds DAT and inhibits dopamine reuptake, increasing extracellular dopamine concentrations in wakefulness-relevant brain regions including the nucleus accumbens and prefrontal cortex.<ref name="volkow2009">Volkow ND, Fowler JS, Logan J, et al. Effects of modafinil on dopamine and dopamine transporters in the male human brain: clinical implications. JAMA. 2009;301(11):1148-1154. PMID 19293415.</ref> PET imaging in humans demonstrated that therapeutic doses (200-400 mg) occupy DAT and increase dopamine in the nucleus accumbens, establishing that modafinil is, at the molecular level, a dopamine reuptake inhibitor.


Secondary mechanisms contributing to wakefulness include norepinephrine transporter (NET) inhibition (elevating noradrenergic tone), activation of orexin/hypocretin-containing neurons in the lateral hypothalamus (the same neurons lost in narcolepsy type 1), and increased histaminergic signaling (H1 activation, consistent with wakefulness -- the inverse of H1-blocking antihistamines that cause drowsiness). Serotonin and GABA effects have been described but are considered secondary to the dopamine/norepinephrine and histamine effects.</vote>
Despite sharing a DAT mechanism with [[amphetamines]] and [[methylphenidate]], modafinil's clinical and behavioral profile differs substantially. It produces wakefulness without the pronounced euphoria, sympathomimetic cardiovascular activation, or rebound hypersomnia characteristic of classical psychostimulants at therapeutic doses.<ref name="ballon2006">Ballon JS, Feifel D. A systematic review of modafinil: potential clinical uses and mechanisms of action. J Clin Psychiatry. 2006;67(4):554-566. PMID 16669720.</ref> The reasons for this divergence are not fully resolved. Proposed contributors include:
| intro            = Modafinil is a wakefulness-promoting agent (eugeroic) used primarily for narcolepsy, obstructive sleep apnea residual sleepiness, and shift work sleep disorder. It is chemically unrelated to amphetamines and is mechanistically distinct from classical psychostimulants, acting primarily as a dopamine reuptake inhibitor without significant dopamine release, which accounts for its Schedule IV (rather than Schedule II) classification and its comparatively modest abuse liability. It is nonetheless a controlled substance with demonstrated dopamine reward-pathway activity.


Modafinil was developed at Laboratoire Lafon in France by researcher Michel Jouvet's group in the 1970s-1980s as a refinement of adrafinil, a prodrug in the same benzhydryl sulfinyl compound series that Lafon had developed for sleepiness in elderly patients. Modafinil is the active sulfoxide metabolite of adrafinil and was found to have superior potency and reduced peripheral side effects. It was approved in France in 1994 under the trade name Modiodal and received FDA approval in the US in 1998 (Provigil) for narcolepsy, with label expansions to obstructive sleep apnea residual sleepiness and shift work sleep disorder in 2003. Cephalon (later acquired by Teva Pharmaceuticals) marketed Provigil in the US until generic entry in 2012.
'''Histaminergic activation.''' Modafinil increases histamine release in the tuberomammillary nucleus, a key node of the ascending arousal system. This effect is not shared by amphetamines and may account for modafinil's selective wakefulness promotion without generalized CNS stimulation. Histamine H1 and H3 receptor pathways appear to be involved, though whether this is a direct or indirect effect remains debated.{{citation needed}}


The R-enantiomer of modafinil, armodafinil (Nuvigil, approved by FDA in 2007), has a longer effective half-life (~15 hours) than racemic modafinil (~12-15 hours overall) and was developed as an improved once-daily formulation. Racemic modafinil and armodafinil are considered therapeutically interchangeable for the approved indications at equivalent doses (150 mg armodafinil is approximately bioequivalent to 200 mg modafinil).
'''Orexin (hypocretin) system engagement.''' Modafinil activates orexin-producing neurons in the lateral hypothalamus, the same neurons whose loss causes narcolepsy. This activation may be indirect (mediated via reduced GABAergic inhibition of orexin neurons rather than direct receptor binding). Modafinil's efficacy in narcolepsy, a disease defined by orexin deficiency, makes this pathway clinically plausible, though modafinil remains effective in animal models with ablated orexin neurons, indicating that orexin is not its sole mechanism.{{citation needed}}


Off-label use of modafinil for cognitive enhancement in healthy individuals became prominent in the 2000s through patient-advocacy networks and media attention, contributing to supply pressures and diversion concerns. The emergence of modafinil as a "smart drug" was not supported by robust trials showing benefit in non-sleep-deprived healthy subjects, though sleep-deprivation-reversal effects are well-established.
'''Noradrenergic and glutamatergic effects.''' Modafinil increases norepinephrine release in the cortex and hypothalamus and enhances glutamatergic transmission, while reducing GABA release in several brain regions. These effects collectively shift the excitatory/inhibitory balance toward arousal. Whether they are primary actions or downstream consequences of dopaminergic activation is not established.<ref name="ballon2006" />


A significant pregnancy safety signal was identified in European registry data (congenital malformations), leading the EMA to impose a mandatory pregnancy prevention program in 2019, substantially restricting modafinil prescribing in Europe for women of childbearing potential.
The net picture: modafinil acts at least partly as a DAT inhibitor, but its wake-promoting profile likely reflects simultaneous engagement of multiple arousal circuits (dopaminergic, histaminergic, orexinergic, noradrenergic) rather than pure monoamine reuptake inhibition. This multi-circuit engagement may explain both its clinical distinctness from amphetamines and the difficulty in pinning down a single mechanism.


| history          = Modafinil's history begins with adrafinil, a benzhydryl sulfinyl compound synthesized at Laboratoire Lafon in France in the late 1970s as part of a research program into vigilance-promoting compounds led by the neurobiologist Michel Jouvet. Adrafinil was found to promote wakefulness in animals and humans and was approved in France in 1986 (Olmifon) for treatment of sleepiness and hypersomnia in elderly patients.{{citation needed}}<!-- Candidate: Jouvet M historical sources; Lafon pharmaceutical records. The Jouvet attribution is well-established in secondary sources but primary-source year and institutional credit need verification. -->
| intro            = Modafinil is a wakefulness-promoting medicine approved for the treatment of excessive sleepiness associated with narcolepsy, obstructive sleep apnea (as an adjunct to primary treatment), and shift-work sleep disorder. Classified as a eugeroic (from the Greek for "good arousal"), it sits in or adjacent to the psychostimulant class but differs from [[amphetamines]] and [[methylphenidate]] in both mechanism and clinical profile: it promotes sustained alertness with lower sympathomimetic activation, less euphoria, and substantially lower abuse potential.<ref name="provigil-label" /> Modafinil is widely used off-label for cognitive enhancement and fatigue management, generating a large and contentious literature on its effects in non-sleep-deprived healthy individuals.<ref name="battleday2015">Battleday RM, Brem AK. Modafinil for cognitive neuroenhancement in healthy non-sleep-deprived subjects: a systematic review. Eur Neuropsychopharmacol. 2015;25(11):1865-1881. PMID 26381811.</ref>


Modafinil, the active sulfoxide metabolite of adrafinil, was identified and developed as a standalone compound in the 1980s, offering the advantage of direct activity without requiring hepatic conversion and with a cleaner side-effect profile. Modafinil was approved in France in 1994 under the trade name Modiodal for narcolepsy. The FDA approved modafinil (Provigil) in the United States in December 1998 for narcolepsy. In 2003, FDA expanded the label to include obstructive sleep apnea residual sleepiness (as an adjunct to CPAP) and shift work sleep disorder.
| history          = Modafinil was developed in France in the late 1970s by Michel Jouvet and Lafon Laboratories. Jouvet, a neurophysiologist at the University of Lyon whose work on sleep neuroanatomy had identified the pontine structures governing REM sleep, was investigating a series of benzhydryl sulfinyl compounds for wakefulness-promoting activity. [[Adrafinil]], the prodrug of modafinil, was identified first; modafinil (the primary active metabolite) was subsequently isolated and found to be more potent with a cleaner pharmacokinetic profile.{{citation needed}}


The DEA placed modafinil in Schedule IV in 1999 following confirmation of dopamine reward-pathway activity and evidence of human abuse and diversion, though the relative abuse potential is substantially lower than Schedule II agents. Studies using PET imaging confirmed modafinil's dopamine transporter occupancy at therapeutic doses and its ability to elevate dopamine in the nucleus accumbens, establishing the mechanism basis for scheduling.<ref name="volkow-2009">Volkow ND, Fowler JS, Logan J, et al. Effects of modafinil on dopamine and dopamine transporters in the male human brain: clinical implications. JAMA. 2009;301(11):1148-1154. PMID 19293415.</ref>
Adrafinil was marketed in France in 1986 under the brand name Olmifon for narcolepsy and age-related hypersomnia. Modafinil itself received French marketing authorization in 1994. Cephalon, Inc. (later acquired by Teva Pharmaceutical Industries in 2011) licensed modafinil for the US market. The FDA approved modafinil (as Provigil) in December 1998 for narcolepsy; subsequent approvals added obstructive sleep apnea (adjunct) and shift-work sleep disorder in 2004.<ref name="provigil-label" />


In 2006, FDA declined to approve modafinil for pediatric ADHD, citing serious skin reaction (SJS/TEN and DRESS) risk in children. This decision, despite positive efficacy data, significantly limited modafinil's pediatric market and reinforced amphetamine-class agents as the standard of care for ADHD.
In 2004, Cephalon submitted a supplemental new drug application for modafinil in pediatric ADHD. The FDA's Dermatologic and Ophthalmic Drugs Advisory Committee recommended against approval in 2006, citing one case of Stevens-Johnson syndrome and several cases of serious rash in the pediatric clinical trials. This safety signal, in a population without a life-threatening indication, led the FDA to reject the application and to add a boxed-level warning about serious dermatologic reactions to the adult label.{{citation needed}}


Cephalon obtained a US patent for modafinil and aggressively extended patent protection through formulation changes, leading to FTC scrutiny and ultimately generic entry beginning in 2012 after patent litigation settlements. Armodafinil (Nuvigil), the R-enantiomer, was approved by FDA in June 2007 as an improved formulation with longer duration of action, extending Cephalon's market position.
[[Armodafinil]] (Nuvigil), the isolated R-enantiomer, was approved by the FDA in 2007. Its longer half-life relative to racemic modafinil was the basis for marketing differentiation. Generic modafinil became available in the United States in 2012 following patent expiration, substantially reducing cost and increasing accessibility.{{citation needed}}


A 2019 assessment by the EMA (European Medicines Agency) identified a risk of congenital malformations in pregnancies exposed to modafinil, based on observational registry data showing higher rates of congenital cardiac malformations and other structural anomalies in exposed pregnancies compared to unexposed controls.{{citation needed}}<!-- Candidate: EMA assessment report on modafinil, 2019; EMA/CHMP/688655/2019 or equivalent reference number. The EMA action in 2019 restricting modafinil in women of childbearing potential is well-documented in the medical literature and EMA public communications; specific registry PMID for underlying data needs verification. --> The EMA required a pregnancy prevention program (similar in structure to the valproate pregnancy prevention program) and restricted modafinil prescribing in women of childbearing potential to those who meet contraception requirements. The FDA updated US labeling to reflect the human data signal.
| indications      = <!-- <problem ref/> tags to be inserted after Mark slug approval per rule 2026-05-28. Proposed indications:
  - narcolepsy (EXISTING slug?)
  - excessive-daytime-sleepiness (NEW?)
  - shift-work-sleep-disorder (NEW?)
  INTERFACE: please confirm which pcp_problem slugs exist or are planned for sleep disorders before I add problem refs -->


| indications      = <problem ref="narcolepsy" author="parser-claude">Narcolepsy (type 1 and type 2); reduces excessive daytime sleepiness. FDA-approved first-line pharmacotherapy. Does not address cataplexy (the hallmark of type 1 narcolepsy); sodium oxybate, pitolisant, or tricyclic antidepressants are used for cataplexy management.</problem>
'''FDA-approved indications:'''
<problem ref="obstructive-sleep-apnea" author="parser-claude">Obstructive sleep apnea residual sleepiness; adjunct to CPAP in patients with objective adherence who still report excessive daytime sleepiness despite adequate CPAP therapy. Does not treat the underlying obstructive apnea and should not replace CPAP.</problem>
<problem ref="shift-work" author="parser-claude">Shift work sleep disorder; improves wakefulness during scheduled work hours and reduces sleepiness in patients who work nontraditional hours (night shifts, rotating shifts, early-morning shifts).</problem>
<problem ref="adhd" author="parser-claude">ADHD (off-label); evidence from RCTs showing benefit in adults and children, but FDA declined to add ADHD to the label in 2006 due to serious skin reaction risk in the pediatric population. Not a standard first-line option given available Schedule II agents with stronger evidence bases and established pediatric safety profiles.</problem>
<problem ref="fatigue" author="parser-claude">Fatigue (off-label); used for multiple sclerosis-related fatigue and cancer-related fatigue in patients with significant burden; evidence is inconsistent across trials but endorsed by some oncology and neurology guidelines for refractory cases.</problem>
<problem ref="trd-augment" author="parser-claude">Treatment-resistant depression augmentation (off-label); adjunct to SSRIs/SNRIs for residual fatigue and cognitive symptoms in partially-responsive depression.</problem>
| dosing            = <titration slug="narcolepsy-osa" author="parser-claude" title="Narcolepsy / OSA residual sleepiness">
200 mg PO once daily in the morning. Most patients respond to 200 mg. Doses above 200 mg have not shown consistent additional benefit in controlled trials for the approved indications and increase adverse effect burden.


Elderly patients and those with severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh C): consider 100 mg/day starting dose.
* '''Narcolepsy:''' Improvement of wakefulness in adults with excessive sleepiness associated with narcolepsy.<ref name="provigil-label" />
* '''Obstructive sleep apnea (adjunct):''' Improvement of wakefulness in adults with excessive sleepiness associated with OSA. Modafinil does not treat the underlying airway obstruction; it is an adjunct to CPAP or other primary therapies. The FDA label specifies that it should be used only when CPAP has been tried and is providing adequate ventilation but the patient has residual excessive sleepiness.<ref name="provigil-label" />
* '''Shift-work sleep disorder:''' Improvement of wakefulness in adults with excessive sleepiness associated with shift-work disorder (working during the normal sleep period).<ref name="provigil-label" />


For patients with OSA: confirm CPAP use and adherence before prescribing; modafinil does not substitute for CPAP and does not reduce the cardiovascular or respiratory consequences of untreated OSA.
'''Off-label uses (not FDA-approved):'''
</titration>


<titration slug="shift-work" author="parser-claude" title="Shift work sleep disorder">
* Fatigue associated with multiple sclerosis, cancer-related fatigue, and HIV/AIDS-related fatigue. Evidence is mixed; some controlled trials show benefit, others do not.{{citation needed}}
200 mg PO approximately 1 hour before the start of the work shift. Timing is important; taking modafinil too late in the shift may cause difficulty sleeping after work. Not recommended for episodic shift changes; most appropriate for regular shift schedules.
* ADHD in adults (FDA pediatric application rejected due to SJS risk; some evidence of benefit in adults, but this indication is not well-established).{{citation needed}}
</titration>
* Cognitive enhancement in healthy non-sleep-deprived individuals (see Experiential perspective below).
* Adjunctive treatment in depression with residual fatigue or sleepiness.{{citation needed}}
* Fatigue and sleepiness associated with traumatic brain injury.{{citation needed}}


<titration slug="off-label-fatigue" author="parser-claude" title="Off-label: MS/cancer-related fatigue">
| dosing            = '''Narcolepsy and obstructive sleep apnea:''' 200 mg orally once daily in the morning. Some patients may benefit from 400 mg/day, though evidence for superior efficacy at the higher dose is limited.<ref name="provigil-label" />
100-200 mg PO once daily in the morning, titrated to effect. Evidence base for MS-related fatigue is inconsistent; some trials positive, some null. Cancer-related fatigue evidence is mixed; most benefit suggested in patients with significant fatigue burden (FACIT-Fatigue scales). Use as trial therapy with explicit assessment endpoints; discontinue if no clear benefit at 4-6 weeks.
</titration>


| effects          =
'''Shift-work sleep disorder:''' 200 mg orally approximately one hour before the start of the work shift.<ref name="provigil-label" />
* <effect ref="wakefulness" author="parser-claude">The therapeutic effect; promotes and sustains wakefulness during the dosing window without significant rebound hypersomnia on discontinuation.</effect>
* <effect ref="headache" author="parser-claude">The most common adverse effect; reported in approximately 34% of patients in clinical trials, dose-dependent. Often improves over the first 1-2 weeks; adequate hydration may help.</effect>
* <effect ref="nausea" author="parser-claude">Common (~11%); often mild and self-limited. Taking with food does not significantly affect overall bioavailability but may reduce nausea at initiation.</effect>
* <effect ref="nervousness-anxiety" author="parser-claude">Common (~7%); may be dose-dependent; generally mild. Patients with pre-existing anxiety disorders may be more susceptible.</effect>
* <effect ref="insomnia" author="parser-claude">Particularly if taken too late in the day; the 12-15h half-life means afternoon dosing can interfere with nighttime sleep. Counsel on timing (morning dose for narcolepsy/OSA).</effect>
* <effect ref="hypertension-palpitations" author="parser-claude">Modest cardiovascular stimulant effects; blood pressure and heart rate elevations are milder than amphetamine-class agents. Monitor in patients with pre-existing hypertension or cardiovascular disease.</effect>
* <effect ref="sjs-dress" author="parser-claude">Rare but serious: Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS), toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN), and Drug Reaction with Eosinophilia and Systemic Symptoms (DRESS). The most serious safety concern; the basis for FDA's 2006 rejection of pediatric ADHD indication. Any rash, especially with mucosal involvement or systemic features, requires immediate discontinuation and evaluation. Risk appears higher in children than adults.</effect>
* <effect ref="psychiatric-symptoms" author="parser-claude">Rare: anxiety, agitation, psychosis, mania/hypomania. Modafinil should be used with caution (or avoided) in patients with schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, or bipolar I disorder with a history of mania.</effect>
* <effect ref="reduced-contraceptive-efficacy" author="parser-claude">CYP3A4 induction reduces the systemic exposure of hormonal contraceptives (ethinyl estradiol, progestins). See Interactions. Clinically important for reproductive counseling.</effect>
* <effect ref="appetite-suppression-weight-loss" author="parser-claude">Mild appetite suppression; less prominent than amphetamine-class agents. Generally not clinically meaningful but can be useful in some patients and concerning in those with low body weight or eating disorder history.</effect>
* <effect ref="abuse-dependence" author="parser-claude">Schedule IV; confirmed dopamine reward-pathway activity. Abuse and psychological dependence have been reported, particularly in individuals with stimulant use disorder histories. However, abuse potential is substantially lower than Schedule II stimulants.</effect>


| pk_absorption    = Oral bioavailability approximately 80%; well-absorbed from the GI tract. Peak plasma concentrations (Tmax) at 2-4 hours after dosing. Food does not significantly alter overall bioavailability but may delay Tmax by approximately 1 hour and reduce peak concentration modestly; clinically not significant for most patients.<ref name="provigil-label" />
'''Hepatic impairment:''' Reduce dose by 50% (to 100 mg/day) in patients with severe hepatic impairment. Modafinil is extensively hepatically metabolized; clearance is reduced and half-life prolonged in liver disease.<ref name="provigil-label" />


| pk_distribution  = Volume of distribution approximately 0.9 L/kg. Plasma protein binding approximately 60% (primarily albumin). Distributes widely into brain tissue; CNS penetration is required for therapeutic effect and is confirmed by PET studies showing DAT occupancy at therapeutic doses.<ref name="provigil-label" />
'''Renal impairment:''' No dose adjustment needed for mild-to-moderate renal impairment. Severe renal impairment has not been adequately studied; use with caution.{{citation needed}}


| pk_metabolism    = Modafinil undergoes primarily hepatic metabolism. The major pathway is amide hydrolysis to modafinil acid (major inactive metabolite, renally excreted) and to a lesser extent modafinil sulfone (minor inactive metabolite via CYP3A4/3A5). Approximately 90% of the dose is recovered as metabolites; less than 10% is excreted as unchanged parent compound.
'''Elderly:''' Consider lower doses. Clearance may be reduced; the label recommends consideration of 100 mg/day in elderly patients, though this is not a strict requirement.<ref name="provigil-label" />


Critically for drug interactions: modafinil is a moderate inducer of CYP3A4 and CYP2C9 (relevant for contraceptives, cyclosporine, and statin interactions) and an inhibitor of CYP2C19 (relevant for warfarin, phenytoin, diazepam, and some TCAs). CYP1A2 is also moderately induced.
'''Pediatric:''' Not FDA-approved in children. The pediatric ADHD application was rejected due to SJS risk (see History).


Modafinil exhibits non-linear PK with repeated dosing due to autoinduction of CYP-mediated elimination pathways; steady-state plasma concentrations are lower than predicted from single-dose data, and steady state is typically reached within 2-4 days.<ref name="provigil-label" />
| effects          = '''Wakefulness promotion.''' The primary effect is sustained wakefulness and alertness without the subjective "wired" or jittery quality that characterizes higher-dose amphetamine use in many patients. Sleep latency is increased; the Multiple Sleep Latency Test (MSLT) is the standard objective measure in clinical trials.{{citation needed}}


| pk_elimination    = Primarily renal elimination of metabolites (~80%); fecal route accounts for the remainder. Half-life of the racemic mixture approximately 12-15 hours at steady state (R-enantiomer ~15h, S-enantiomer ~4h). Hepatic impairment (severe) reduces clearance significantly; dose reduction required. Renal impairment does not significantly affect parent drug clearance but metabolites accumulate; caution in severe renal impairment. Not significantly dialyzed.<ref name="provigil-label" />
'''Cognitive effects.''' In patients with sleep disorders, modafinil improves attention, executive function, and working memory, consistent with normalizing the cognitive deficits that excessive sleepiness causes. The more contested question is whether modafinil enhances cognition beyond baseline in well-rested healthy individuals. A 2015 systematic review by Battleday and Brem examined 24 studies of modafinil in non-sleep-deprived subjects and concluded that modafinil improved performance on longer, more complex cognitive tasks (particularly executive function, attention, and learning), while effects on simpler tasks were less consistent. The authors noted that methodological heterogeneity limited firm conclusions.<ref name="battleday2015" />


| pharmacodynamics  = Modafinil's primary pharmacodynamic effect is promotion of wakefulness via dopamine transporter inhibition with consequent increase in synaptic dopamine. PET imaging studies at therapeutic doses have demonstrated significant DAT occupancy (approximately 50-70% occupancy at 200 mg) in the human caudate and putamen, with corresponding elevations in synaptic dopamine in the nucleus accumbens and striatum, confirming that the dopamine pathway is engaged at clinical doses.
<!-- INTERFACE: the cognitive enhancement section below is framed as experiential perspective. Please confirm this framing is appropriate for a primarily pharma medicine, or whether you'd prefer a different structural approach. -->


The key distinction from amphetamines is the absence of significant dopamine efflux: modafinil inhibits reuptake but does not cause the vesicular dopamine release or reverse transport that characterizes amphetamine action. This difference in mechanism produces a more gradual, sustained dopamine increase rather than the sharp spike-and-crash profile of amphetamines and is the pharmacodynamic basis for modafinil's lower abuse liability and Schedule IV rather than Schedule II classification.
'''Experiential perspective.''' Modafinil is widely used off-label as a cognitive enhancer among students, professionals, and shift workers. User reports consistently describe a state of increased focus and reduced fatigue without the physical activation (elevated heart rate, jaw tension, mood elevation) associated with [[amphetamines|amphetamine-class]] psychostimulants. The subjective experience is frequently characterized as "quiet alertness" rather than stimulation. This experiential profile contributes to modafinil's reputation as a "cleaner" alternative to traditional psychostimulants for productivity enhancement.


Norepinephrine reuptake inhibition (via NET) contributes to wakefulness and alertness and may account for some of the sympathomimetic cardiovascular effects (modest BP and HR increases).
The evidence base for cognitive enhancement in healthy individuals is real but modest. The Battleday and Brem systematic review found benefits in complex cognitive domains, but most studies used single-dose designs in laboratory settings; real-world efficacy for sustained academic or professional performance is not well-characterized in controlled trials.<ref name="battleday2015" /> Additionally, there is publication bias: positive results are more likely to be published than null findings, and the magnitude of any cognitive benefit is likely smaller than the most optimistic user reports suggest. Modafinil should not be understood as a reliable cognitive enhancer for all users in all contexts; it is a wakefulness-promoting medicine that may incidentally improve performance in the sleep-deprived and that shows modest, task-dependent benefits in well-rested individuals.


Orexin/hypocretin neuron activation is relevant to the narcolepsy indication: type 1 narcolepsy involves loss of orexin-producing neurons in the lateral hypothalamus. While modafinil cannot replace lost orexin neurons, dopaminergic activation may engage downstream arousal circuitry and partially compensate for orexin deficiency. Whether modafinil acts directly on orexin receptors or indirectly via dopamine is debated.
'''Mood effects.''' At therapeutic doses, modafinil does not produce the pronounced euphoria associated with amphetamines in most individuals. Some users report improved mood, reduced anxiety, and greater emotional equanimity; others report no subjective mood change. At supratherapeutic doses (600-800 mg), reinforcing effects and subjective "high" have been demonstrated in controlled laboratory settings, establishing that modafinil does carry some abuse potential, though less than Schedule II psychostimulants.<ref name="jasinski2000" />


Histamine H1 pathway activation (elevated histaminergic tone) contributes to wakefulness; this mechanism is consistent with the inverse effect of H1 antihistamines.
| adverse          = Adverse effect incidence from controlled clinical trials (modafinil vs placebo):<ref name="provigil-label" />


| interactions      = <pharmaInteractions/>
'''Common (>=5% and at least twice placebo rate):'''
* Headache (34% vs 23%)
* Nausea (11% vs 3%)
* Nervousness (7% vs 3%)
* Rhinitis (7% vs 6%)
* Diarrhea (6% vs 5%)
* Back pain (6% vs 5%)
* Insomnia (5% vs 1%)
* Dizziness (5% vs 4%)
* Dyspepsia (5% vs 4%)


Clinically important interactions for prescribers:
'''Serious adverse effects:'''


* '''Hormonal contraceptives (oral and implantable).''' Modafinil is a CYP3A4 inducer and substantially reduces systemic exposure of ethinyl estradiol and progestin components of combined hormonal contraceptives. This is a MANDATORY counseling point: patients using hormonal contraceptives (pill, patch, ring, implant) should be counseled to use a non-hormonal barrier method during modafinil treatment and for 2 months after stopping. This applies to combined hormonal contraceptives; hormonal IUDs (which act locally in the uterus) are less affected, but the package insert recommends consultation regardless.<ref name="provigil-label" />
'''Dermatologic.''' Stevens-Johnson syndrome (SJS), toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN), and drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS) have been reported. The incidence is rare but the consequences are potentially fatal. In pediatric clinical trials, the rash rate was 0.8% (13 of 1,585 children), including one case of possible SJS and one multi-organ hypersensitivity reaction; nearly all cases occurred within the first five weeks of treatment. This dermatologic signal was the primary basis for the FDA's rejection of the pediatric ADHD indication in 2006.<ref name="provigil-label" /><ref name="prince2018">Prince V, Philippidou M, Walsh S, Creamer D. Stevens-Johnson syndrome induced by modafinil. Clin Exp Dermatol. 2018;43(2):191-192. PMID 29028129.</ref> In adults, post-marketing reports of SJS/TEN exist but incidence is very low and not precisely quantified.{{citation needed}} The label recommends discontinuation at the first sign of rash unless the rash is clearly not medicine-related.


* '''CYP2C19 substrates.''' Modafinil inhibits CYP2C19 and increases exposure of:
'''Angioedema and anaphylactoid reactions.''' Rare post-marketing reports of angioedema (face, larynx, tongue), urticaria, and multi-organ hypersensitivity reactions. Discontinue if angioedema occurs.<ref name="provigil-label" />
  - Warfarin: INR should be monitored more frequently at initiation and with dose changes
  - Phenytoin: phenytoin levels may increase; monitor and consider level check
  - Diazepam: increased diazepam exposure; reduce diazepam dose if co-prescribed
  - Omeprazole and other PPIs metabolized by CYP2C19: increased exposure, typically not clinically significant
  - Clomipramine and other CYP2C19-metabolized TCAs: increased TCA levels


* '''CYP3A4 substrates (induction risk).''' Modafinil modestly induces CYP3A4 and may reduce efficacy of:
'''Psychiatric.''' Depression, anxiety, mania, hallucinations, suicidal ideation, and psychosis have been reported in post-marketing surveillance. These events occurred primarily in patients with pre-existing psychiatric histories, but the label does not restrict use to patients without psychiatric comorbidity. Use with caution in patients with a history of psychosis, mania, or depression.<ref name="provigil-label" />
  - Cyclosporine: significant interaction; cyclosporine levels should be monitored in transplant patients
  - Some HIV antiretrovirals (PIs and NNRTIs metabolized by CYP3A4)
  - Statin interactions are generally modest but theoretically possible


* '''Methylphenidate and amphetamines.''' Co-prescribed for ADHD or treatment-resistant sleepiness: additive wakefulness effects. Additive cardiovascular stimulant effects. Not a strict contraindication but caution warranted.
'''Cardiovascular.''' Not recommended in patients with left ventricular hypertrophy or mitral valve prolapse (the "mitral valve prolapse syndrome" associated with CNS psychostimulants). Modafinil has been associated with palpitations, chest pain, and modest elevations in heart rate and blood pressure. Avoid in patients with recent myocardial infarction or unstable angina.<ref name="provigil-label" />


* '''MAOIs.''' Theoretical concern from combined dopaminergic/adrenergic activity. Avoid combination or observe carefully with appropriate washout between agents.
| pharmacodynamics  = Modafinil's pharmacodynamic profile is defined by wakefulness promotion with minimal peripheral sympathomimetic activation at therapeutic doses, distinguishing it from amphetamines.


* '''Clozapine.''' Modafinil is a CYP1A2 inducer and clozapine is primarily a CYP1A2 substrate; the expected pharmacokinetic direction is reduced clozapine exposure, with risk of breakthrough psychosis or loss of clozapine efficacy (not clozapine toxicity). Case reports of clinically significant clozapine level changes with modafinil co-administration have been reported; monitor clozapine levels and clinical status if modafinil is added or discontinued in a patient on clozapine.{{citation needed}}<!-- Candidate: modafinil-clozapine interaction case reports in the literature; direction of effect via CYP1A2 induction predicts clozapine REDUCTION. Specific PMIDs not confirmed; flag for verification. -->
'''Dopaminergic.''' DAT inhibition is the best-established primary mechanism. Volkow et al. (2009) demonstrated using [11C]cocaine and [11C]raclopride PET that modafinil at 200 mg and 400 mg blocked DAT and increased extracellular dopamine in the human nucleus accumbens. The dopamine increase is modest relative to amphetamines, which promote dopamine release in addition to blocking reuptake.<ref name="volkow2009" />


| pregnancy_details = A 2019 EMA pharmacovigilance review of registry and observational data identified a statistically significant increase in congenital malformations (particularly congenital cardiac malformations and oro-facial malformations) in pregnancies exposed to modafinil compared to unexposed controls. The absolute risk increase was modest but the signal was sufficient for the EMA to require a mandatory pregnancy prevention program, restricting modafinil to females of reproductive potential who fulfill contraception requirements and undergo regular pregnancy testing.{{citation needed}}<!-- Candidate: EMA product-information update document; PMID for the underlying registry study (likely European EURAP or similar dataset); specific PMID not confirmed. EMA action in 2019 is well-documented in public-domain EMA communications. -->
'''Histaminergic.''' Modafinil increases histamine release from the tuberomammillary nucleus. Histamine is a key mediator of the ascending arousal system; [[antihistamines]] (H1 blockers) produce sedation precisely because they oppose this pathway. Whether modafinil's histamine effect is a direct action or downstream of dopaminergic and GABAergic changes is unresolved.<ref name="ballon2006" />


The FDA updated US prescribing information to include the human pregnancy signal and requires counseling about the risk. The FDA has not required a formal pregnancy prevention program comparable to the EMA's, but the updated labeling recommends that females of reproductive potential use effective contraception.
'''GABAergic.''' Modafinil reduces GABA release in multiple brain regions (cortex, hypothalamus, basal ganglia). Reduced GABAergic inhibition of arousal nuclei may contribute to wakefulness promotion and may also explain the anxiogenic effects some patients report.{{citation needed}}


Animal studies at high doses identified skeletal malformations and intrauterine growth restriction in rats and rabbits; developmental effects were seen at doses producing maternal toxicity.
'''Glutamatergic.''' Increased glutamate release has been demonstrated in several brain regions. Enhanced glutamatergic transmission may contribute to the cognitive effects observed in clinical studies.{{citation needed}}


Clinical guidance:
'''Noradrenergic.''' Increased norepinephrine levels in the cortex and hypothalamus have been demonstrated in animal models. The contribution of noradrenergic activation to modafinil's clinical profile is uncertain but likely relevant to attention and arousal.{{citation needed}}
- Modafinil should generally be avoided in pregnancy unless the clinical need (e.g., uncontrolled narcolepsy with significant safety implications) outweighs the documented congenital malformation risk
- If continuing in pregnancy, specialist consultation and close fetal monitoring are appropriate
- Abrupt discontinuation in narcoleptic patients may pose safety risks (e.g., sudden sleep onset while driving); a managed transition plan is needed


Breastfeeding: Limited human data on transfer into breast milk. Animal studies suggest some transfer. Given the lack of safety data and the availability of non-pharmacologic strategies for maternal sleepiness management (where feasible), avoidance during breastfeeding is generally recommended.{{citation needed}}<!-- Candidate: LactMed NCBI entry for modafinil; specific milk-transfer data limited. -->
'''Absence of significant serotonergic effects.''' Unlike [[fenfluramine]] and other anorectic agents, modafinil does not substantially alter serotonin levels. This may explain the absence of the appetite suppression, mood elevation, and serotonin syndrome risk associated with serotonergic psychostimulants.{{citation needed}}


| monitoring        = Baseline before initiation:
| pk_absorption    = Rapidly absorbed after oral administration. Peak plasma concentration (T_max) occurs at 2-4 hours. Food delays T_max by approximately one hour but does not affect total absorption (AUC). The clinical recommendation to take modafinil in the morning is driven by its long duration of action, not by food-dependent absorption concerns.<ref name="provigil-label" />
* Blood pressure and heart rate (modest cardiovascular stimulant; baseline needed for comparison)
* Pregnancy status in females of reproductive potential (mandatory given congenital malformation signal); contraception plan required
* Psychiatric history (psychosis, mania, bipolar disorder: higher risk of psychiatric adverse effects)
* Skin: no routine testing, but counsel about SJS/DRESS at initiation -- any rash requires prompt evaluation
* Cardiac history: structural heart disease or arrhythmia warrants risk-benefit discussion
* Drug interactions review: warfarin (INR), phenytoin (levels), cyclosporine (levels), hormonal contraceptives (switch to non-hormonal)
* Hepatic function: modafinil is primarily hepatically metabolized; severe hepatic impairment requires dose reduction and closer monitoring


Ongoing:
| pk_distribution  = Modafinil is approximately 60% bound to plasma proteins, primarily albumin. The apparent volume of distribution is approximately 0.9 L/kg, suggesting distribution beyond plasma water into tissues. It crosses the blood-brain barrier; brain concentrations are sufficient for DAT occupancy at therapeutic doses, as demonstrated by PET imaging.<ref name="volkow2009" />
* Blood pressure at follow-up visits, especially in hypertensive patients
* Efficacy assessment: daytime sleepiness scales (Epworth Sleepiness Scale, Maintenance of Wakefulness Test in some settings); response should be documented
* Pregnancy testing in females of reproductive potential per contraception plan
* Monitor for psychiatric symptoms (agitation, psychosis, mania) especially in first weeks of treatment
* INR monitoring in patients on warfarin
* No routine CBC, metabolic, or LFT monitoring required in uncomplicated patients


| counseling        = '''Take in the morning (narcolepsy/OSA).''' Modafinil lasts 12-15 hours; taking it in the afternoon can prevent you from sleeping at night. For narcolepsy and OSA, morning dosing gives you daytime coverage without disrupting nighttime sleep.
| pk_metabolism    = Modafinil is extensively metabolized in the liver. The primary route is amide hydrolysis to modafinil acid (an inactive metabolite), which accounts for approximately 40% of urinary metabolites. CYP3A4 contributes to a secondary oxidative pathway. Notably, modafinil is a moderate inducer of CYP3A4, CYP2B6, and potentially CYP1A2, and a reversible inhibitor of CYP2C19.<ref name="provigil-label" />


'''Contraception is required.''' Modafinil reduces the effectiveness of hormonal birth control pills, patches, rings, and implants. Use a condom or non-hormonal method during treatment and for 2 months after stopping. If you think you might be pregnant or become pregnant while taking modafinil, tell your prescriber immediately.
The CYP enzyme interactions are clinically important:


'''Rash: stop and call us.''' Modafinil can rarely cause a severe skin reaction (Stevens-Johnson syndrome or DRESS). If you develop any rash, especially one involving your mouth, eyes, or genitals, or accompanied by fever or swollen lymph nodes, stop the medicine and contact us the same day.
'''CYP3A4 induction.''' Modafinil induces CYP3A4 at steady state. This reduces plasma levels of CYP3A4 substrates. The most clinically significant consequence is reduced efficacy of hormonal contraceptives (ethinyl estradiol and other estrogen/progestin compounds are CYP3A4 substrates). The FDA label recommends alternative or additional contraception during modafinil therapy and for one month after discontinuation.<ref name="provigil-label" />


'''Driving.''' Modafinil is used to treat sleepiness, but it does not completely eliminate the risk of sudden sleep onset, especially if narcolepsy is not fully controlled. Discuss driving safety with your prescriber.
'''CYP2C19 inhibition.''' Modafinil reversibly inhibits CYP2C19, potentially increasing plasma levels of CYP2C19 substrates (diazepam, phenytoin, omeprazole, propranolol). In CYP2C19 poor metabolizers (2-5% of Caucasian populations, 15-20% of East Asian populations), concurrent modafinil could produce supratherapeutic levels of these substrates.{{citation needed}}


'''Not a substitute for sleep.''' Modafinil helps you stay awake but does not replace restorative sleep. Chronic sleep deprivation carries independent health risks regardless of wakefulness promotion.
'''CYP2C9 inhibition.''' In vivo cocktail studies found no clinically significant CYP2C9 effect at steady state (AUC ratio 0.97), though the FDA label recommends warfarin monitoring as a precaution.<ref name="rowland2018">Rowland A, van Dyk M, Warncken D, et al. Evaluation of modafinil as a perpetrator of metabolic drug-drug interactions using a model informed cocktail reaction phenotyping trial protocol. Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2018;84(3):501-509. PMID 29178272.</ref>


'''Schedule IV.''' Modafinil is a controlled substance. Keep it secure, do not share it, and do not take more than prescribed. Psychological dependence can develop with misuse.
'''CYP2D6 relevance.''' Modafinil does not significantly affect CYP2D6 directly. However, in CYP2D6 poor metabolizers (7-10% of Caucasian populations), metabolism of tricyclic antidepressants becomes heavily dependent on CYP2C19. Modafinil's CYP2C19 inhibition is therefore more clinically significant in these patients: co-prescribed tricyclics may accumulate to supratherapeutic levels.<ref name="provigil-label" />


'''Warfarin / phenytoin users.''' If you take warfarin (Coumadin) or phenytoin (Dilantin), modafinil affects how those medicines work. Your prescriber may need to check levels or adjust doses.
| pk_elimination    = Approximately 80% of the dose is recovered in urine, predominantly as metabolites (modafinil acid and modafinil sulfone). Less than 10% is excreted as unchanged modafinil. The effective elimination half-life is approximately 15 hours. Steady state is reached in 2-4 days of daily dosing. Renal clearance is not a significant elimination pathway for the parent compound.<ref name="provigil-label" />


'''OSA: keep using CPAP.''' Modafinil helps with residual daytime sleepiness but does not treat the breathing obstruction. CPAP is still essential for cardiovascular and cognitive protection.
| interactions      = '''Hormonal contraceptives (oral contraceptives, patch, ring):''' Modafinil induces CYP3A4, reducing ethinyl estradiol exposure by approximately 18% at steady state. This is sufficient to reduce contraceptive reliability. Use alternative or additional contraception during modafinil therapy and for one month after discontinuation. This interaction has direct reproductive consequences and should be discussed explicitly with all patients of childbearing potential.<ref name="provigil-label" />
 
'''[[Cyclosporine]]:''' CYP3A4 induction by modafinil may reduce cyclosporine blood levels by 50%. One case report documented clinically significant reduction in cyclosporine trough levels after modafinil initiation in a transplant patient. Monitor cyclosporine levels closely if modafinil is started or stopped.{{citation needed}}
 
'''CYP2C19 substrates ([[diazepam]], [[phenytoin]], [[omeprazole]], [[propranolol]]):''' Modafinil inhibits CYP2C19. Co-administration may increase exposure to these substrates. Phenytoin in particular has a narrow therapeutic index; monitor levels if modafinil is added.<ref name="provigil-label" />
 
'''[[Warfarin]]:''' Modafinil may inhibit CYP2C9 (minor). Monitor PT/INR more closely when initiating or discontinuing modafinil in patients on stable warfarin therapy.<ref name="provigil-label" />
 
'''MAOIs:''' Use with caution. Modafinil increases catecholamine availability; the combination with MAOIs could theoretically potentiate catecholaminergic effects, though serious interactions are not well-documented.{{citation needed}}
 
'''Other CNS-active medicines:''' Modafinil is not a strong psychostimulant in the classical sense, but additive wakefulness-promoting effects may mask fatigue signals that serve a physiological protective function. Combining modafinil with other wakefulness-promoting agents or high-dose [[caffeine]] is not well-studied.{{citation needed}}
 
'''[[Triazolam]] and other CYP3A4-metabolized [[benzodiazepines]]:''' CYP3A4 induction may reduce triazolam exposure by approximately 18%. Consider dose adjustment if concurrent use is necessary.<ref name="provigil-label" />
 
| monitoring        = * '''Baseline and periodic:''' blood pressure and heart rate (modest elevations can occur). No routine laboratory monitoring is mandated by the label for patients without comorbidities.
* '''Rash:''' counsel patients to report any new rash immediately. The SJS risk, while very low, warrants early recognition and prompt discontinuation.
* '''Psychiatric symptoms:''' monitor for new or worsening anxiety, agitation, mania, or psychotic symptoms, particularly in the first weeks of therapy and in patients with psychiatric comorbidity.
* '''Contraceptive counseling:''' confirm at each visit that patients of childbearing potential are using reliable non-hormonal or alternative contraception.
* '''Phenytoin, warfarin, and cyclosporine levels:''' monitor in patients co-prescribed these medicines when modafinil is initiated, dose-adjusted, or discontinued.
 
| counseling        = '''Contraception.''' Modafinil reduces the effectiveness of hormonal contraceptives (birth control pills, patch, ring). Use a non-hormonal method (e.g. IUD, condom) or add a barrier method during modafinil therapy and for one month after stopping. This is among the most clinically consequential interactions and warrants explicit discussion.<ref name="provigil-label" />
 
'''Rash.''' Stop modafinil and contact your clinician immediately if you develop any skin rash. While most rashes during modafinil therapy are benign, Stevens-Johnson syndrome (a rare but serious skin reaction) has been reported. Early discontinuation reduces the risk of progression to a severe reaction.
 
'''Driving and operating machinery.''' Modafinil improves wakefulness but does not eliminate the need for adequate sleep. Do not assume that taking modafinil makes it safe to drive or perform safety-sensitive work during what would otherwise be your sleep period. Judgment about sleepiness is itself impaired by sleep deprivation.
 
'''Abuse potential.''' Modafinil is a Schedule IV controlled substance. While its abuse potential is lower than amphetamines, reinforcing effects have been demonstrated at supratherapeutic doses. Take only as prescribed; do not increase the dose without medical guidance.
 
'''Psychiatric history.''' If you have a history of mania, psychosis, or depression, tell your prescriber before starting modafinil. Report any new mood changes, unusual thoughts, or increased anxiety promptly.
 
| anecdotes        = The question of whether modafinil "works" as a cognitive enhancer is, in an instructive way, the wrong question. The 2015 Battleday and Brem systematic review found that modafinil improved performance on complex cognitive tasks in non-sleep-deprived healthy subjects, but the benefits were task-dependent, dose-dependent, and modest in magnitude. Simple tasks (digit span, basic attention) showed inconsistent or no improvement. Complex tasks (Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, sustained attention paradigms, planning tasks) showed more reliable gains.<ref name="battleday2015" />
 
A subsequent meta-analysis by Roberts et al. (2020) quantified the effect: across 14 studies and 64 effect sizes, modafinil produced a small overall cognitive benefit (standardized mean difference 0.12, p=0.01), with the strongest signal in memory updating (SMD 0.28). For context, methylphenidate showed a somewhat larger pooled effect (SMD 0.21) across more studies, while [[dextroamphetamine]] showed no significant overall effect. The authors noted that laboratory paradigms "do not accurately reflect their actual use."<ref name="roberts2020">Roberts CA, Jones A, Sumnall H, Gage SH, Montgomery C. How effective are pharmaceuticals for cognitive enhancement in healthy adults? A series of meta-analyses of cognitive performance during acute administration of modafinil, methylphenidate and D-amphetamine. Eur Neuropsychopharmacol. 2020;38:40-62. PMID 32709551.</ref>
 
What this suggests is not that modafinil is or isn't a "smart pill," but that the cognitive enhancement question is poorly specified. Modafinil reliably sustains wakefulness and reduces the cognitive costs of fatigue. Whether that constitutes enhancement depends entirely on whether the person taking it was fatigued. For someone who has slept eight hours and is performing a task they find engaging, the evidence for meaningful benefit is thin. For someone running on four hours of sleep performing a cognitively demanding task, the evidence is robust, and the mechanism is obvious: modafinil is doing what it was designed to do.
 
The cultural framing of modafinil as a "nootropic" sometimes obscures this distinction. It is a medicine for sleepiness that incidentally helps when people are sleepy, which, given the prevalence of insufficient sleep, describes a large share of the population. Whether that incidental benefit constitutes cognitive enhancement or compensatory medicine for a chronically sleep-deprived population is a question about framing, not pharmacology.
 
| overdose          = <!-- Placeholder for parser-claude's | overdose = field when it ships. For now, inline toxicity passage. -->
 
'''Toxicity.''' Modafinil has a relatively wide therapeutic index. The oral LD50 in rats is approximately 3,400 mg/kg.{{citation needed}} In clinical trials, 32 subjects received 1,000-1,600 mg/day for 7-21 days without life-threatening effects. Adverse effects at supratherapeutic doses included excitation, agitation, insomnia, tachycardia, and moderate increases in blood pressure and heart rate.<ref name="provigil-label" />
 
Post-marketing overdose reports (including intentional overdoses up to 4,500 mg) have generally described non-lethal outcomes with symptoms including insomnia, agitation, disorientation, tachycardia, nausea, and diarrhea. A poison-center review of 137 cases found that most were mild; approximately 20% required medical treatment. A pediatric accidental ingestion (800-1,000 mg in a three-year-old, approximately 50-63 mg/kg) was managed without sequelae.<ref name="provigil-label" /> Fatalities from modafinil alone are exceptionally rare; the FDA label notes post-marketing fatal overdoses "involving modafinil alone or in combination," but details are limited and most reported deaths involved polypharmacy.
 
There is no specific antidote. Management is supportive: activated charcoal if ingestion is recent, cardiac monitoring, symptomatic treatment of agitation. The long half-life means symptoms may persist for 12-24 hours or longer.
 
'''Dependence potential.''' Modafinil produces reinforcing effects in some laboratory paradigms (self-administration, subjective "high" at supratherapeutic doses), but the clinical dependence profile is much more benign than classical psychostimulants. Physical withdrawal symptoms are generally absent or mild (fatigue, increased sleepiness) upon discontinuation. Tolerance to the wakefulness-promoting effect does not appear to develop substantially at therapeutic doses over months of use, though controlled long-term data are limited.<ref name="sousa2020">Sousa A, Dinis-Oliveira RJ. Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic of the cognitive enhancer modafinil: Relevant clinical and forensic aspects. Subst Abuse. 2020;41(2):155-173. PMID 31951804.</ref>


| anecdotes        =
| seealso          = [[Armodafinil]], [[Methylphenidate]], [[Amphetamine salts]], [[Solriamfetol]], [[Pitolisant]]
| references        = <references/>
}}
}}


== References ==
<references />
[[Category:Eugeroics]]
[[Category:Psychostimulants]]
[[Category:Psychostimulants]]
[[Category:Eugeroics]]
[[Category:Schedule IV controlled substances]]
[[Category:Medicines]]
[[Category:Medicines]]