Anticonvulsant / GabapentinoidNot Controlled (federally); Schedule V in KY, MI, TN, VA, WV; Class C in UK

Neurontin®

Gabapentin

Pfizer (originally Parke-Davis) / Generic·FDA December 1993 (epilepsy); July 2002 (postherpetic neuralgia)·
100mg300mg400mg600mg800mg

Version 2025-04 · Last reviewed April 1, 2025 · Methodology

List Price

$600+ (brand Neurontin)

With Insurance

$5–20

How It Works

Despite its name, gabapentin does not directly activate GABA receptors. Instead, it attaches to a subunit of voltage-gated calcium channels in neurons, reducing calcium entry and therefore reducing the release of excitatory neurotransmitters — dampening overactive pain signaling.

BindsAlpha-2-delta (α2δ) subunit of voltage-gated calcium channels
Reduces calcium channel activity → less calcium enters neurons → less neurotransmitter release
Reduces via calcium channel inhibitionGlutamate release
Less excitatory signaling → seizure threshold raised and pain signals dampened
ReducesSubstance P and CGRP release
These pain-signaling peptides are released less → neuropathic pain signaling reduced

Why the side effects happen

Calcium channel inhibition throughout the brain (not just pain pathways) explains the widespread sedation, dizziness, and cognitive impairment. The dose-response curve for side effects is linear while the pain-relief curve plateaus — meaning higher doses produce proportionally more side effects without proportionally more benefit. Gabapentin's unpredictable gut absorption (non-linear pharmacokinetics) means doubling the dose does not double the blood level.

When Will I Feel It?

Pain relief typically begins within 1 week. Full effect takes 4–8 weeks at therapeutic dose. If no improvement by 8 weeks, gabapentin is unlikely to be effective for that specific condition.

1
Day 3–7First week

Initial reduction in nerve pain or seizure frequency. Sedation and dizziness are typically most intense in this phase.

2
Week 1–4Weeks 1–4

Dose titration phase — dose is gradually increased to minimize side effects. Pain relief building.

3
Week 4–84–8 weeks at target dose

Maximum therapeutic effect at target dose. The NNT (number needed to treat) for postherpetic neuralgia is approximately 4–5 — meaning 4–5 patients need to take it for 1 to experience meaningful relief.

4
Month 3+Ongoing

Reassess whether benefit still outweighs side effects. Tolerance to pain relief can develop; if dose is repeatedly being escalated, reassess diagnosis and alternatives.

Adherence Note

Only 30–40% of patients taking gabapentin for neuropathic pain achieve meaningful (≥50%) pain reduction. If you're at 8 weeks at therapeutic dose with no meaningful improvement, gabapentin is unlikely to be the right drug for your condition.

Medical Disclaimer

The information on this page is compiled from publicly available clinical trial data, FDA prescribing information, and peer-reviewed literature. It is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Individual responses to medications vary. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any medication.

Common Side Effects

While taking this medication, you may experience the following common side effects. We've included tips on how to manage them.

Dizziness / vertigo

28%

Most common reason for stopping. Rise slowly; avoid ladders or heights. Usually improves after 1–2 weeks.

Somnolence / excessive sedation

21%

Do not drive or operate machinery until you know your response. May not improve with time at higher doses.

Ataxia (loss of coordination)

13%

Fall hazard, especially in elderly. Consider dose reduction if persistent.

Fatigue

11%

Often improves; take larger portion of dose at night.

Weight gain

3–10%

Average 2–5 lbs in first year. Mechanism: increased appetite, decreased activity due to sedation.

Peripheral edema (ankle swelling)

8%

Common at higher doses. Elevate legs; reduce dose if significant. May indicate need to reassess.

Cognitive impairment / "brain fog"

2–3%

Memory and processing speed affected. At higher doses, can be significant. Report to doctor.

Serious Adverse Effects

  • Respiratory depression — especially when combined with opioids, benzodiazepines, or alcohol; increasingly implicated in overdose deaths
  • Physical dependence — gabapentin withdrawal syndrome includes anxiety, insomnia, nausea, sweating, and seizures; risk highest with abrupt cessation after high-dose chronic use
  • Suicidality — FDA black box warning for all anticonvulsants; increased risk of suicidal thoughts and behavior
  • Mood changes / paradoxical agitation — especially in children and adolescents
  • Drug abuse potential — significant street value; used recreationally for euphoria especially in combination with opioids

Drug Interactions

Major Interactions (Avoid)

Opioids (oxycodone, hydrocodone, tramadol)Synergistic respiratory depression. Gabapentin + opioid combinations are now among the leading drivers of overdose deaths. FDA has issued multiple warnings. Thousands of deaths involve this combination.
CNS depressants (benzodiazepines, alcohol, zolpidem)Additive sedation and respiratory depression. Avoid alcohol entirely; use benzodiazepines with extreme caution and only with medical supervision.

Moderate Interactions (Caution)

Antacids (aluminum/magnesium-containing)Reduce gabapentin absorption by up to 20%. Take gabapentin at least 2 hours after antacid.
MorphineMorphine increases gabapentin bioavailability by ~44%. Combined sedation risk is significant.
HydrocodoneGabapentin increases peak hydrocodone concentration; significant respiratory depression risk in combination.

Food Interactions

AlcoholNever combine. Additive CNS and respiratory depression. Substantially increases overdose risk.
High-fat mealsIncreases gabapentin absorption — can increase both efficacy and side effects. Consistent dosing with meals is recommended.

When to Contact Your Doctor

This medication requires ongoing medical supervision. The following situations warrant a prompt conversation with your prescribing physician — do not wait for your next scheduled appointment.

Contact soon if you notice

  • Respiratory depression — especially when combined with opioids, benzodiazepines, or alcohol; increasingly implicated in overdose deaths
  • Physical dependence — gabapentin withdrawal syndrome includes anxiety, insomnia, nausea, sweating, and seizures; risk highest with abrupt cessation after high-dose chronic use
  • Suicidality — FDA black box warning for all anticonvulsants; increased risk of suicidal thoughts and behavior
  • Mood changes / paradoxical agitation — especially in children and adolescents
  • Seizures — emergency; call 911

Also discuss if you want to

  • Review whether this medication is still appropriate for you
  • Consider dosage adjustments based on response
  • Explore lifestyle or non-drug alternatives
  • Understand stopping or tapering options
  • Plan monitoring labs and follow-up

In the US, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency room for severe symptoms. Poison Control: 1-800-222-1222.

Special Populations

Safety classifications for specific groups — discuss with your provider before use.

Use Caution — Category CPregnancy

Animal studies show developmental toxicity. Human data limited; associated with small-for-gestational-age infants. Use only if clearly indicated and benefit outweighs risk.

Use CautionBreastfeeding

Excreted in breast milk. Monitor infant for sedation and feeding difficulties. Lower-dose exposure is generally considered acceptable for seizure management.

Prescribed for Hot Flashes — Off-LabelMenopause / Hormonal

Gabapentin is frequently used off-label for menopausal hot flashes, particularly for women who cannot or choose not to use hormone therapy. It reduces hot flash frequency and severity. However, it doesn't address other menopause symptoms and carries dependence, cognitive fog, and sedation risks. Discuss the full range of menopause management options — including hormone therapy — with your doctor.

Restricted UseChildren & Teens

FDA approved for partial seizures in children 3+. Off-label use for behavior, ADHD, anxiety, and pain in children is not supported by adequate evidence. Black box warning for suicidality applies.

High RiskOlder Adults

Dizziness, ataxia, and sedation cause significant fall risk. Start at lowest dose (100mg) and titrate slowly. Renal function declines with age — dose must be adjusted for creatinine clearance.

Dose Adjustment RequiredKidney Disease

Gabapentin is renally cleared. Dose must be substantially reduced based on creatinine clearance (eGFR). Accumulation in renal impairment can cause severe toxicity.

FDA Adverse Event Reports

Patient-filed reports from the FDA FAERS database · refreshed daily

Anecdotal data. Reports are not confirmed causation. Always consult your provider.

Community Reports

User-reported experiences — anonymous & anecdotal

Medical Disclaimer

The information on this page is compiled from publicly available clinical trial data, FDA prescribing information, and peer-reviewed literature. It is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Individual responses to medications vary. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any medication.

Metabolic & Lifestyle Alternatives

Neuropathic & Chronic Pain Without Gabapentinoids

The evidence for gabapentin in many chronic pain conditions is weak — lifestyle and targeted interventions often provide comparable relief without dependency or sedation

Important context: Evidence quality varies across these approaches. Some are well-studied with randomized controlled trial data; others are based on observational or smaller studies. These interventions are not guaranteed to replace medication for all patients. Discuss with your doctor whether any of these are appropriate for your clinical situation.

How It Compares

Within Gabapentinoids

Gabapentin and pregabalin (Lyrica) have the same mechanism. Pregabalin has more predictable absorption (linear pharmacokinetics), is FDA-approved for more pain conditions, and is Schedule V. For diabetic neuropathy, duloxetine (SNRI) is guideline-preferred over gabapentinoids.

Strengths

  • Cheap ($20–60/month generic)
  • Not federally scheduled (in most states)
  • Multiple evidence-based indications (epilepsy, PHN)
  • Can be used in opioid-sparing protocols

Weaknesses

  • Non-linear absorption (dose escalation unpredictable)
  • 83% of use is off-label
  • Opioid overdose risk (respiratory depression potentiation)
  • State-level scheduling due to abuse epidemic
  • Criminal off-label marketing history

Clinically Preferred Alternatives

Duloxetine (Cymbalta)FDA-approved for diabetic neuropathy and fibromyalgia — guideline-preferred over gabapentinoids for these indications. Also treats comorbid depression.
Pregabalin (Lyrica)Same mechanism but more predictable dose-response. Appropriate when gabapentin efficacy is inconsistent due to absorption issues. More expensive.
Alpha lipoic acid (600mg/day)For diabetic neuropathy: multiple RCTs show comparable efficacy to gabapentin with no sedation, dependency, or overdose risk.

Global Prescribing & Pricing

🇺🇸

United States

$20–60/mo

Rate

83% of prescriptions are off-label; massive prescribing for pain conditions with limited evidence

Policy

No federal scheduling despite abuse potential. Several states (KY, TN, MI, WV, VA) independently added gabapentin to Schedule V due to epidemic abuse rates.

Cover

Usually covered

🇬🇧

United Kingdom

~$5–15/mo

Rate

Became Class C controlled substance in 2019 due to abuse epidemic

Policy

NHS England and the MHRA added gabapentin (and pregabalin) to Schedule 3 Class C controlled substances in April 2019, following a marked increase in abuse-related deaths — particularly in combination with opioids.

Cover

NHS covered — controlled prescription required

🇩🇪

Germany

~$10–20/mo

Rate

More conservative prescribing for non-epilepsy indications

Policy

German guidelines restrict gabapentinoids to well-documented indications; off-label use requires documented justification and specialist involvement.

Cover

GKV covered for approved indications

🇦🇺

Australia

~$10–25/mo

Rate

PBS restricts to approved indications; limited off-label subsidization

Policy

TGA has issued warnings about gabapentin abuse; PBS coverage is restricted to approved indications with documented diagnosis.

Cover

PBS — restricted to approved indications

The UK's 2019 decision to schedule gabapentin as a controlled substance was driven by data showing it was a major contributor to opioid-related deaths. The US, where abuse rates are similarly high, has not made this change at the federal level — leaving states to act independently.

Clinical Trials & Funding

Understanding who funds research helps contextualize results. Industry-funded trials are not automatically invalid — they undergo the same FDA review — but declared conflicts and sponsor effects are worth knowing. All linked trials can be verified on ClinicalTrials.gov.

Funding Sources

Parke-Davis (now part of Pfizer) was the first pharmaceutical company ever convicted of criminal off-label drug marketing in the US. In 2004, Pfizer paid $430 million in criminal fines and civil penalties for promoting Neurontin for pain, bipolar disorder, ADHD, migraines, and drug withdrawal — none of which were FDA approved. Internal documents from the case revealed deliberate "publication planning" to manufacture scientific evidence through paid ghost-writing, suppression of negative studies, and scripting of "independent" talks by paid physicians. By 2004, 83% of Neurontin prescriptions were off-label.

Declared Conflicts of Interest

The DOJ case revealed that Parke-Davis paid physicians up to $3,000/day to give promotional talks disguised as education. Internal emails showed explicit instructions to suppress negative study results and only publish positive outcomes. The Cochrane reviews on gabapentin for pain show industry-funded trials consistently report more positive results than independent studies — by a substantial margin.

Key Efficacy Results

FDA approved for epilepsy and postherpetic neuralgia only. Evidence for other pain uses (back pain, fibromyalgia, general neuropathy) is weak to moderate. The 2019 Cochrane review on gabapentin for chronic neuropathic pain found it helps only 30–40% of patients, with many experiencing significant side effects.

Referenced Studies

Each study carries a Cochrane RoB-2 risk-of-bias badge — tap the badge for details.

Evidence & Transparency

Cochrane RoB-2 (Risk of Bias)

Badges reflect an editorial assessment using Cochrane's RoB-2 tool domains: randomization, intervention deviation, missing data, outcome measurement, and selective reporting. These are not certified Cochrane reviews. Learn more ↗

CMS Open Payments

Manufacturer payment disclosures are reported via the CMS Sunshine Act. Disclosure is legally required and does not imply bias or misconduct. Language uses "may," "suggests," or "appears" — never definitive clinical claims. CMS Open Payments ↗

Live Clinical Trials

Live from ClinicalTrials.gov · refreshed every 4 hours

Currently enrolling, active, and recently completed studies involving Gabapentin. Data is pulled directly from the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Recent Research

Live from PubMed · peer-reviewed literature · refreshed every 4 hours

Most recently indexed clinical trials and systematic reviews mentioning Gabapentin in PubMed.

Source Documentation

Structured citations for referenced clinical trials

Each referenced trial is listed with its registry ID, funding source, and bias assessment. Use the copy button to generate a formatted citation.

TrialRegistry IDCite
Parke-Davis/Pfizer $430M Criminal ConvictionDOJ-2004
Gabapentin Off-Label Prescribing AnalysisPMID:25879938

Bias ratings use Cochrane RoB-2 methodology. Editorial assessment — not a certified Cochrane review.

Our Methodology

Medical Disclaimer

The information on this page is compiled from publicly available clinical trial data, FDA prescribing information, and peer-reviewed literature. It is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Individual responses to medications vary. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any medication.

Stopping This Medication Safely

Taper Required — Withdrawal Can Be SevereDocumented timeframe: 4–24 weeks depending on dose and duration

Gabapentin acts on GABA and calcium channels; abrupt discontinuation after chronic use causes a withdrawal syndrome that includes severe anxiety, insomnia, nausea, sweating, and — in high-dose users — seizures. Many patients and prescribers are unaware of gabapentin dependence because it is "not a controlled substance" federally. This does not mean it is free of dependence risk.

What Published Research Shows About Stopping This Medication

This summarizes what published research documents — it is not personal medical advice. Any changes to your medication require discussion with your prescribing physician.

  • ·Published protocols describe reducing by no more than 10% of the dose every 1–2 weeks
  • ·Research supports tapering over 3–6 months for high-dose users (>2400mg/day)
  • ·Research documents that abrupt discontinuation in patients using gabapentin for seizure control carries risk of breakthrough seizures
  • ·Research recommends monitoring for anxiety and insomnia — these are documented early signs of withdrawal
  • ·Research supports having an alternative pain management plan in place for the underlying condition during the stopping process

Warning Symptoms — Contact Your Doctor If You Experience:

  • Seizures — emergency; call 911
  • Extreme agitation or confusion
  • Severe sweating and tremors
  • Uncontrollable anxiety or panic
  • Any symptoms resembling alcohol or benzodiazepine withdrawal

Never change or stop a medication without consulting your prescribing physician.

Questions for Your Doctor

Questions to Ask

  • 1.Is my use of gabapentin for an FDA-approved indication, or is this off-label? What is the evidence strength for my specific condition?
  • 2.Given gabapentin is implicated in overdose deaths with opioids, can we review all my medications for this combination?
  • 3.I live in a state where gabapentin is a controlled substance — does this change how you monitor my use?
  • 4.What is the plan if this medication stops working or I want to stop — what does the taper look like?
  • 5.Have non-drug alternatives (physical therapy, alpha lipoic acid, TENS) been considered for my condition?

Lab Tests to Request

  • Renal function (eGFR) — dose must match kidney function
  • PHQ-9 (depression screen — suicidality black box)
  • Abuse/misuse screen if any risk factors
  • Annual review of whether off-label use still has ongoing benefit

Medical Disclaimer

The information on this page is compiled from publicly available clinical trial data, FDA prescribing information, and peer-reviewed literature. It is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Individual responses to medications vary. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any medication.

Frequently Asked Questions About Neurontin®

What is Neurontin® used for?
Neurontin® (Gabapentin) is a Anticonvulsant / Gabapentinoid manufactured by Pfizer (originally Parke-Davis) / Generic. FDA-approved indications include: Partial seizures (with and without secondary generalization); Postherpetic neuralgia (shingles pain); Off-label (unproven): fibromyalgia, general neuropathic pain, back pain, restless legs, alcohol withdrawal, anxiety, bipolar disorder.
What are the common side effects of Neurontin®?
Common side effects of Neurontin® include: Dizziness / vertigo (28%); Somnolence / excessive sedation (21%); Ataxia (loss of coordination) (13%); Fatigue (11%); Weight gain (3–10%).
How much does Neurontin® cost?
Neurontin® list price is approximately $600+ (brand Neurontin). With insurance it typically costs $5–20; without insurance approximately $20–60.
Who funded the clinical trials for Neurontin®?
Parke-Davis (now part of Pfizer) was the first pharmaceutical company ever convicted of criminal off-label drug marketing in the US. In 2004, Pfizer paid $430 million in criminal fines and civil penalties for promoting Neurontin for pain, bipolar disorder, ADHD, migraines, and drug withdrawal — none of which were FDA approved. Internal documents from the case revealed deliberate "publication planning" to manufacture scientific evidence through paid ghost-writing, suppression of negative studies, and scripting of "independent" talks by paid physicians. By 2004, 83% of Neurontin prescriptions were off-label.
How strong is the clinical evidence for Neurontin®?
Key studies: Parke-Davis off-label marketing case (Franklin v. Parke-Davis), multiple industry-funded pain trials, 2004 DOJ settlement. FDA approved for epilepsy and postherpetic neuralgia only. Evidence for other pain uses (back pain, fibromyalgia, general neuropathy) is weak to moderate. The 2019 Cochrane review on gabapentin for chronic neuropathic pain found it helps only 30–40% of patients, with many experiencing significant side effects. Potential conflicts of interest: The DOJ case revealed that Parke-Davis paid physicians up to $3,000/day to give promotional talks disguised as education. Internal emails showed explicit instructions to suppress negative study result.
Are there non-drug alternatives to Neurontin®?
The evidence for gabapentin in many chronic pain conditions is weak — lifestyle and targeted interventions often provide comparable relief without dependency or sedation See the Alternatives tab for full details.

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