Drug Monograph

Desmopressin

DDAVP · Stimate · Nocdurna (desmopressin acetate)

Synthetic Vasopressin Analog (Selective V2 Receptor Agonist) · IV / SC / Intranasal / Oral / Sublingual
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
IV: ~2.8–3 h (normal); up to 8.7 h (severe RI); Oral: 1.5–2.5 h
Metabolism
Minimally metabolized (resistant to enzymatic degradation)
Protein Binding
Not characterized
Bioavailability
Oral: ~0.16% (vs IV); Intranasal: ~3.3–4.1%; SC: ~94–112%
Volume of Distribution
26.5 L (after IV 2 mcg)
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Antidiuretic hormone analog (V2-selective)
Available Formulations
Injection 4 mcg/mL; Nasal spray 10 mcg/spray; Nasal spray 150 mcg/spray (Stimate); Tablets 0.1 & 0.2 mg; Sublingual 27.7 & 55.3 mcg (Nocdurna)
Routes
IV, SC, Intranasal, Oral, Sublingual
Renal Adjustment
Contraindicated: CrCl <50 mL/min (t½ increases from 3 h to 9 h)
Hepatic Adjustment
No specific adjustment
Pregnancy
Category B; extensive clinical use supports safety; minimal placental transfer
Lactation
Minimal transfer to breast milk (<0.005% of dose)
Schedule / Legal Status
Rx only (not a controlled substance)
Generic Available
Yes (injection, nasal spray, tablets)
Rx

Indications for Desmopressin

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Central diabetes insipidusAdults and pediatric patients (tablets ≥4 yr; nasal spray ≥4 yr; injection: all ages with careful monitoring)Antidiuretic replacementFDA Approved
Post-surgical / post-traumatic polyuria and polydipsiaAdults and pediatric patients following head trauma or pituitary surgeryTemporary antidiureticFDA Approved
Hemophilia A (mild-moderate, FVIII >5%)Adults and pediatric patients without FVIII inhibitorsHemostatic (FVIII release)FDA Approved
Von Willebrand disease Type I (FVIII >5%)Adults and pediatric patients with mild-moderate VWDHemostatic (VWF/FVIII release)FDA Approved
Primary nocturnal enuresisPediatric patients ≥6 years (tablets only; nasal spray NOT indicated for PNE)Antidiuretic (reduce nocturnal urine)FDA Approved
Nocturia due to nocturnal polyuriaAdults (Nocdurna sublingual only)Antidiuretic (reduce nocturnal urine)FDA Approved

Desmopressin is a synthetic analog of the natural pituitary hormone arginine vasopressin (ADH), with a structural modification (1-deamination and D-arginine substitution at position 8) that greatly enhances antidiuretic potency while virtually eliminating vasopressor activity. This design makes it safe for clinical use at antidiuretic doses without significant blood pressure effects. Desmopressin is the cornerstone of central diabetes insipidus management and a valuable hemostatic agent for mild bleeding disorders. It is ineffective in nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, where the kidneys cannot respond to ADH.

Off-Label Uses

Uremic bleeding: IV desmopressin (0.3 mcg/kg) transiently improves hemostasis in patients with uremia by releasing VWF and shortening bleeding time. Evidence quality: Moderate (multiple small studies, guideline-supported).

Adjunct to prevent rapid sodium correction: Used with hypertonic saline in severe hyponatremia management to prevent osmotic demyelination syndrome. Evidence quality: Moderate (expert opinion, case series).

Platelet dysfunction (antiplatelet agents): Investigated for reversal of antiplatelet effects in intracranial hemorrhage. Evidence quality: Low (limited, mixed results).

Dose

Dosing

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Central DI — intranasal (adults)10 mcg (1 spray) at bedtime10–40 mcg/day divided BID40 mcg/dayAdjust morning and evening doses separately; titrate to control polyuria and polydipsia
Each spray = 10 mcg; if dose <10 mcg, use rhinal tube
Central DI — oral tablets (adults)0.05 mg BID0.1–0.8 mg/day divided BID–TID1.2 mg/dayOral dose is ~10–40× higher than intranasal due to low oral bioavailability (~0.16% vs IV)
Tablet onset ~1 h; peak antidiuretic effect 4–7 h; duration up to 8–12 h
Central DI — injection (adults)2 mcg IV/SC daily or BID2–4 mcg/day IV/SC divided BID4 mcg/dayIV/SC dose is 1/10th of daily intranasal maintenance dose; do not dilute for DI use
Convert from intranasal: start at 1/10th intranasal dose
Hemophilia A / VWD Type I — IV infusion0.3 mcg/kg IV over 15–30 minRepeat after 8–12 h if needed0.3 mcg/kg (max 20 mcg per dose)Give 30 min before procedure; measure FVIII and VWF before treatment; tachyphylaxis after 2–3 doses in 48 h
Dilute in 50 mL NS for adults, 10 mL for children ≤10 kg
Hemophilia A / VWD Type I — intranasal (Stimate)≥50 kg: 300 mcg (1 spray/nostril); <50 kg: 150 mcg (1 spray in one nostril)May repeat once based on response300 mcg per doseStimate spray = 150 mcg/spray (10× concentrated vs DDAVP spray); not interchangeable with the 10 mcg/spray formulation
FVIII peaks ~60–90 min after intranasal dosing
Primary nocturnal enuresis — oral (children ≥6 yr)0.2 mg at bedtime0.2–0.6 mg at bedtime0.6 mg at bedtimeRestrict fluids from 1 h before to 8 h after dose; nasal spray NOT indicated for PNE (higher hyponatremia risk)
Suspend during illness with fluid/electrolyte imbalance
Nocturia (adults) — sublingual (Nocdurna)Women: 27.7 mcg SL; Men: 55.3 mcg SL at bedtimeSame (single fixed dose)27.7 mcg (women); 55.3 mcg (men)Place under tongue 1 h before bedtime; limit fluids from 1 h before to 8 h after; check Na at baseline, within 7 days, at 1 month, then periodically
Women require lower dose due to higher hyponatremia risk
Critical: Formulations Are NOT Interchangeable

Desmopressin is available in multiple formulations with vastly different bioavailabilities and potencies. The DDAVP nasal spray (10 mcg/spray) is NOT the same as Stimate nasal spray (150 mcg/spray). Oral tablets require 10–40-fold higher doses than intranasal administration, and IV/SC doses are roughly 1/10th of intranasal doses. Switching between routes requires careful dose recalculation to avoid either inadequate antidiuresis or life-threatening hyponatremia.

Clinical Pearl: Tachyphylaxis with Repeated Hemostatic Dosing

When desmopressin is used for hemostasis in hemophilia A or VWD, the release of stored FVIII and VWF from endothelial Weibel-Palade bodies diminishes with repeated doses (tachyphylaxis). After 2–3 doses given within 48 hours, the hemostatic response is typically blunted. For surgeries requiring prolonged hemostatic coverage, factor concentrates should be available as backup. A test dose before elective surgery is recommended to confirm an adequate FVIII/VWF response.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Desmopressin is a selective agonist at the vasopressin V2 receptor, with minimal activity at the V1a receptor (which mediates vasoconstriction). This selectivity distinguishes it from native arginine vasopressin and allows clinical use at antidiuretic doses without significant hemodynamic effects. At the renal collecting duct, V2 receptor activation stimulates cAMP-dependent insertion of aquaporin-2 water channels into the luminal membrane, enabling free water reabsorption and producing concentrated urine. At the vascular endothelium, V2 receptor activation triggers release of von Willebrand factor (VWF) and factor VIII from endothelial Weibel-Palade bodies, providing a transient hemostatic effect that is exploited in the management of mild hemophilia A and Type I VWD. Desmopressin also releases tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) from endothelial cells, though the clinical significance of this effect is modest at therapeutic doses.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionBioavailability varies dramatically by route: IV/SC ~100%; intranasal ~3.3–4.1% (DDAVP spray); oral ~0.16% (vs IV) or ~5% (vs intranasal); SL ~0.25%; Tmax: oral 0.9–1.5 h; intranasal ~1.5 hDose equivalence across routes is NOT 1:1; oral doses are 10–40× higher than intranasal; switching formulations requires careful recalculation
DistributionVd 26.5 L (IV 2 mcg); MW 1183.34 Da; poor placental transfer; minimal breast milk excretion (<0.005% of dose)Relatively large Vd for a peptide; safe in pregnancy (extensive clinical experience) and lactation
MetabolismMinimally metabolized; resistant to enzymatic degradation due to 1-deamination and D-arginine substitution; not a CYP substrateNo significant drug-drug interactions via metabolic pathways; the structural modifications give desmopressin ~12× longer antidiuretic duration than native vasopressin
EliminationBiphasic elimination profile (initial t½ 7.8 min, terminal 75.5 min per 2-compartment model, FDA nasal spray PI); mean terminal t½ ~2.8 h after IV by non-compartmental analysis (FDA tablets PI); t½ increases with renal impairment: 2.8 h (normal) → 4.0 h (mild RI) → 6.6 h (moderate RI) → 8.7 h (severe RI); ~52% excreted unchanged in urine within 24 hContraindicated in CrCl <50 mL/min due to markedly prolonged half-life and increased hyponatremia risk; the prolonged half-life relative to native vasopressin enables practical dosing intervals
SE

Side Effects

Adverse effect profiles differ by formulation and indication. Hyponatremia is the dominant safety concern across all routes and indications. The incidence data below are from the FDA prescribing information for each formulation and from controlled clinical trials.

1–10% Common (Intranasal and Oral, Across Indications)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Headache4% (oral, PNE trials) vs 3% placeboMost common drug-related adverse event in nocturnal enuresis trials; generally mild
Nasal congestion / Rhinitis3–8% (intranasal)Route-specific to nasal formulations; chronic use may alter nasal mucosa
Nausea / Abdominal cramps2–5% (intranasal and injection)More common with higher doses and rapid IV administration
Facial flushingCommon (injection)V2-mediated vasodilation; usually transient; dose-dependent
Epistaxis3% (intranasal)Related to intranasal administration technique; instruct proper use
Injection site reactionsCommon (SC)Burning, pain, erythema at injection site; generally mild
Serious Serious (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Hyponatremia (potentially life-threatening)Uncommon with proper monitoring; higher risk in elderly, children, those with excessive fluid intake, and with nasal spray vs tablets for PNEHours to days; can occur at any time during chronic therapyEnsure serum Na is normal before starting; restrict fluids; check Na within 1 week, at 1 month, then periodically; symptoms: headache, nausea, confusion, seizures, coma; if Na drops, reduce dose, increase fluid restriction, or discontinue; fatal cases reported
Hyponatremic seizuresRare; primarily in children and elderly; higher with intranasal vs oral for PNEHours to days after dose, particularly with excessive fluid intakeEmergency management of seizures; correct hyponatremia carefully (risk of osmotic demyelination if corrected too rapidly); permanent discontinuation if seizures occur
Anaphylaxis / Severe hypersensitivityRare; fatal cases reported with IV administrationDuring or shortly after IV/intranasal administrationMonitor during IV administration; have resuscitation equipment available; permanently discontinue for serious allergic reactions
Thrombotic events (MI, CVA)Rare; postmarketing reports with injectionDuring or shortly after hemostatic useUse with caution in patients predisposed to thrombosis; contraindicated in VWD Type IIB (may cause thrombosis from platelet aggregation)
Severe hypotension / HypertensionRare; transient BP changesDuring rapid IV infusionInfuse IV over 15–30 minutes (not rapid push); monitor BP during administration, especially in patients with coronary artery disease
DC Discontinuation Considerations
Central Diabetes Insipidus
Very low
Long-term use well tolerated; DI patients studied for up to 44 months on oral tablets with no dose-related discontinuations. Transient AST elevations (<1.5× ULN) occasionally observed but resolved during continued use
Primary Nocturnal Enuresis
Low
Well tolerated in pediatric trials; headache was the only treatment-related AE exceeding 3%. High relapse rate upon discontinuation (~75%); long-term use for up to 6 months studied safely
Hyponatremia Risk: The Dominant Safety Concern

Desmopressin-induced water retention combined with continued fluid intake can cause potentially fatal dilutional hyponatremia. The risk is highest in children, the elderly, patients with habitual/psychogenic polydipsia, and those taking concurrent medications that impair free water clearance (NSAIDs, SSRIs, TCAs, carbamazepine, chlorpromazine, opioids, lamotrigine). The nasal spray formulation carries a HIGHER hyponatremia risk than oral tablets for nocturnal enuresis (postmarketing data led to removal of the PNE indication from the nasal spray label). All patients must receive clear instructions on fluid restriction: limit intake from 1 hour before to 8 hours after an antidiuretic dose.

Int

Drug Interactions

Desmopressin is not metabolized by CYP enzymes and has no significant pharmacokinetic interactions. All clinically relevant interactions are pharmacodynamic, primarily involving additive hyponatremia risk.

MajorLoop diuretics (furosemide, bumetanide)
MechanismLoop diuretics impair renal concentrating ability and may cause electrolyte imbalances
EffectIncreased risk of severe hyponatremia
ManagementDesmopressin is contraindicated in patients using loop diuretics per several formulation labels; if unavoidable, monitor Na very closely
FDA PI
MajorSystemic / Inhaled glucocorticoids
MechanismCorticosteroids may enhance the hyponatremic effect of desmopressin
EffectPotentiation of water retention and hyponatremia
ManagementContraindicated for the nasal spray formulation per PI; closely monitor serum Na if co-administration is clinically necessary
FDA PI
ModerateSSRIs, TCAs, NSAIDs, carbamazepine, opioids, lamotrigine, chlorpromazine
MechanismThese agents independently impair free water excretion or stimulate ADH release via SIADH-like effects
EffectAdditive hyponatremia risk when combined with desmopressin
ManagementMonitor serum Na more frequently; consider reducing desmopressin dose; strict fluid restriction
FDA PI
MinorVasopressor agents (epinephrine, phenylephrine)
MechanismTheoretical additive effects on vascular tone; however, desmopressin has minimal V1a activity at therapeutic doses
EffectMinimal clinical significance at antidiuretic doses; intranasal epinephrine may alter nasal mucosa and increase desmopressin absorption
ManagementMonitor if co-administered; consider waiting 2 weeks after intranasal epinephrine before using intranasal desmopressin
Medscape
Mon

Monitoring

  • Serum SodiumBefore initiation; within 7 days; at 1 month; then periodically
    Routine
    The single most important monitoring parameter. Ensure Na is normal before starting or resuming therapy. More frequent monitoring in elderly, children, and those on medications that increase hyponatremia risk. If Na drops, consider dose reduction or discontinuation. Desmopressin is contraindicated in patients with hyponatremia or history of hyponatremia.
  • Fluid Intake & Urine OutputAt each visit; ongoing
    Routine
    Monitor urine volume and osmolality to assess antidiuretic response in DI. Restrict fluid from 1 h before to 8 h after antidiuretic dosing. Patients should be instructed to avoid excessive fluid intake. In DI management, aim for adequate sleep duration with normal water turnover.
  • Factor VIII / VWF LevelsBefore first hemostatic dose; 30–60 min after dose
    Routine
    For hemophilia A/VWD use: confirm FVIII >5% before treatment; measure FVIII and VWF response after first dose (test dose) before elective surgery. Do not use if FVIII <5%. Monitor for tachyphylaxis with repeated doses.
  • Blood PressureDuring IV administration
    Trigger-based
    Desmopressin may cause transient hypotension (with compensatory tachycardia) or hypertension. Monitor BP especially in patients with coronary artery disease or hypertensive cardiovascular disease.
  • Renal FunctionBaseline; periodically (elderly)
    Routine
    Contraindicated if CrCl <50 mL/min. Terminal half-life increases from 2.8 h (normal) to 8.7 h (severe renal impairment), markedly increasing hyponatremia risk. Renal function may decline with age, necessitating periodic monitoring in elderly patients.
  • Nasal MucosaPeriodically during chronic intranasal use
    Trigger-based
    Chronic intranasal administration may cause nasal mucosa changes (edema, scarring, atrophy) leading to erratic absorption. If nasal mucosa abnormalities develop, switch to an alternative formulation (oral or injection).
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Hyponatremia or history of hyponatremia: Desmopressin exacerbates water retention and dilutional hyponatremia.
  • Moderate to severe renal impairment (CrCl <50 mL/min): Markedly prolonged half-life (2.8 h to 8.7 h) increases hyponatremia risk.
  • Known hypersensitivity: To desmopressin acetate or any excipient. Fatal anaphylaxis has been reported with IV administration.
  • Patients at increased risk of severe hyponatremia: Including those with excessive fluid intake, illnesses causing fluid/electrolyte imbalance, or concurrent use of loop diuretics or systemic/inhaled glucocorticoids.
  • Von Willebrand disease Type IIB (for hemostatic use): Desmopressin may cause thrombocytopenia and thrombosis due to platelet aggregation.

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Habitual or psychogenic polydipsia: Patients unable to restrict fluid intake are at very high risk of water intoxication.
  • Heart failure or uncontrolled hypertension: Fluid retention may exacerbate cardiac decompensation.
  • Conditions with increased intracranial pressure: Fluid retention could worsen cerebral edema.
  • Nasal mucosa abnormalities (for intranasal use): Erratic absorption from scarring, edema, atrophy, or recent nasal surgery (e.g., transsphenoidal hypophysectomy).

Use with Caution

  • Elderly patients: Greater risk of hyponatremia due to age-related renal impairment and decreased ability to concentrate urine.
  • Pediatric patients: Require strict fluid restriction supervision; dose adjustments needed to prevent excessive decrease in plasma osmolality.
  • Patients predisposed to thrombosis (for hemostatic use): Rare reports of MI and cerebrovascular thrombosis with injection.
  • Concurrent medications increasing hyponatremia risk: SSRIs, TCAs, NSAIDs, carbamazepine, opioids, lamotrigine, chlorpromazine.
FDA Safety Alert Hyponatremia May Be Fatal

Desmopressin can cause hyponatremia, which may be life-threatening if severe. Ensure serum sodium concentration is normal before starting or resuming therapy. Monitor serum sodium within the first week and at one month after initiating or resuming therapy, then periodically. Patients must be instructed to restrict fluid intake. Signs and symptoms of hyponatremia include headache, nausea, vomiting, weight gain, restlessness, fatigue, lethargy, disorientation, muscle weakness, cramps, and confusion. Severe hyponatremia may cause seizures, coma, and respiratory arrest. The nasal spray formulation is NOT indicated for primary nocturnal enuresis due to a higher risk of hyponatremia and hyponatremic seizures compared with oral tablets in postmarketing reports.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Desmopressin replaces or supplements the effect of the natural antidiuretic hormone that your body may not be producing enough of (in diabetes insipidus), or it temporarily boosts certain blood-clotting factors (in bleeding disorders). The way you take it and your dose depend on the condition being treated. Follow your specific instructions carefully.

How to Take

Desmopressin comes in several forms: tablets, nasal spray, sublingual tablets, and injection. Your healthcare provider will prescribe the correct formulation and dose for your condition. Do not switch between formulations without medical guidance, as the doses are very different between routes.

Low Sodium (Hyponatremia) — Most Important Safety Issue
Tell patientThis medication works by helping your body retain water. Drinking too much fluid while taking desmopressin can dangerously lower your blood sodium levels. Limit fluid intake starting 1 hour before and for 8 hours after taking a dose. You will need blood tests to check your sodium level, especially when starting treatment.
Call prescriberImmediately if you develop headache, nausea, vomiting, unusual tiredness, confusion, muscle cramps, or seizures — these may indicate dangerously low sodium.
Illness & Activity Precautions
Tell patientStop taking desmopressin temporarily during any illness that causes vomiting, diarrhea, or fever, or during extremely hot weather or vigorous exercise (conditions that increase water intake or alter electrolyte balance). Resume only after discussing with your healthcare provider.
Call prescriberBefore resuming treatment after illness; if you are unsure whether it is safe to continue during an illness.
Nasal Spray Technique
Tell patientIf using the nasal spray, prime the pump before first use and if not used for more than 1 week. Each bottle delivers 50 sprays; discard any remaining solution after 50 sprays. Do not transfer solution to another bottle. If you have nasal congestion, recent nasal surgery, or chronic sinus problems, the spray may not work properly — talk to your doctor about switching to tablets or injection.
Call prescriberIf you notice the medication seems less effective over time, or if you develop nasal irritation, bleeding, or congestion.
Bleeding Disorder Use (Hemophilia A / VWD)
Tell patientIf you are using desmopressin for a bleeding disorder, it works by temporarily releasing clotting factors from your blood vessels. The effect diminishes with repeated use over short intervals. Carry medical identification indicating your bleeding disorder. Your doctor may test your response to a trial dose before surgery.
Call prescriberIf you experience unexpected bleeding despite treatment, or signs of a blood clot (leg swelling, chest pain, shortness of breath).
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. DDAVP (desmopressin acetate) injection prescribing information. Ferring Pharmaceuticals. Revised September 2022. FDA LabelPrimary injection PI with dosing for central DI and hemophilia A/VWD, PK data, adverse reactions, and updated hyponatremia warnings.
  2. Desmopressin Acetate Tablets prescribing information. Ferring Pharmaceuticals. Revised 2019. FDA LabelOral tablet PI with PK data (Vd 26.5 L, t½ 2.8 h, bioavailability ~0.16% vs IV, renal impairment half-life data), dosing for DI and PNE, and adverse reactions.
  3. DDAVP Nasal Spray (desmopressin acetate) prescribing information. Ferring Pharmaceuticals. Revised October 2018. FDA LabelIntranasal spray PI for DI; notes that nasal spray is NOT indicated for PNE due to higher hyponatremia risk; includes PK, dosing, and nasal mucosa precautions.
Key Clinical Trials / Reviews
  1. Mannucci PM, Ruggeri ZM, Pareti FI, Capitanio A. 1-Deamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin: a new pharmacological approach to the management of haemophilia and von Willebrand’s diseases. Lancet. 1977;1(8017):869-872. DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(77)91197-7Landmark paper establishing desmopressin as a hemostatic agent by demonstrating its ability to raise factor VIII and VWF levels in hemophilia A and VWD patients.
  2. Sterns RH. Disorders of plasma sodium: causes, consequences, and correction. N Engl J Med. 2015;372(1):55-65. DOI: 10.1056/NEJMra1404489Comprehensive review of hyponatremia pathophysiology and management, including the role of desmopressin in both causing and treating sodium disorders.
  3. Glazener CM, Evans JH. Desmopressin for nocturnal enuresis in children. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2002;(3):CD002112. DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD002112Cochrane systematic review of desmopressin for nocturnal enuresis: reduces wet nights by 1–2 per week compared to placebo; ~25% achieve short-term dryness; high relapse rate upon discontinuation.
Guidelines
  1. Christ-Crain M, Bichet DG, Fenske WK, et al. Diabetes insipidus. Nat Rev Dis Primers. 2019;5(1):54. DOI: 10.1038/s41572-019-0103-2Comprehensive primer on diabetes insipidus pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management with desmopressin as first-line therapy for central DI.
  2. Connell NT, Flood VH, Brber A, et al. ASH ISTH NHF WFH 2021 guidelines on the management of von Willebrand disease. Blood Adv. 2021;5(1):301-325. DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2020003264Joint ASH/ISTH/NHF/WFH guideline recommending desmopressin as first-line therapy for minor bleeding or prophylaxis in responsive VWD Type 1 patients.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Osterberg O, Savic RM, Karlsson MO, et al. Pharmacokinetics of desmopressin administrated as an oral lyophilisate dosage form in children with primary nocturnal enuresis and healthy adults. J Clin Pharmacol. 2006;46(10):1204-1211. DOI: 10.1177/0091270006291838Population PK study establishing oral lyophilisate bioavailability (~0.25%) and supporting the dose relationship between oral and sublingual formulations.
  2. Harris AS, Ohlin M, Lethagen S, Nilsson IM. Effects of concentration and volume on nasal bioavailability and biological response to desmopressin. J Pharm Sci. 1988;77(4):337-339. DOI: 10.1002/jps.2600770412Established that intranasal bioavailability is volume- and concentration-dependent (9–20% depending on delivery technique), informing the design of the Stimate high-concentration spray.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Fjellestad-Paulsen A, Tubiana-Rufi N, Harris A, Czernichow P. Central diabetes insipidus in children: antidiuretic effect and pharmacokinetics of intranasal and peroral DDAVP. Acta Endocrinol (Copenh). 1987;115(3):307-312. DOI: 10.1530/acta.0.1150307Pediatric PK study establishing oral-to-intranasal dose conversion ratios and demonstrating ~10–40-fold dose difference between routes in children with DI.
  2. Kim RJ, Malattia C, Allen M, Moshang T Jr, Maghnie M. Vasopressin and desmopressin in central diabetes insipidus: adverse effects and clinical considerations. Pediatr Endocrinol Rev. 2004;2 Suppl 1:115-123. PMID: 16456490Review of desmopressin adverse effects in central DI, including hyponatremia mechanisms, risk factors, and prevention strategies.