1 interaction related to plasma levels
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in tobacco smoke (not nicotine) strongly induce CYP1A2, the liver enzyme that handles most clozapine metabolism, so smokers tend to have lower clozapine levels and need higher doses. The greater danger is stopping smoking: levels can climb sharply over a few days as the enzyme returns to baseline, risking sedation, seizures, and toxicity unless the dose is reviewed.