Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ABREVA versus HARVONI.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ABREVA versus HARVONI.
ABREVA vs HARVONI
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Inhibits viral DNA polymerase and DNA synthesis of herpes simplex virus (HSV-1 and HSV-2).
Fixed-dose combination of ledipasvir, an HCV NS5A inhibitor, and sofosbuvir, an HCV NS5B nucleotide polymerase inhibitor. Ledipasvir inhibits HCV NS5A protein essential for viral replication and assembly; sofosbuvir is a prodrug that after intracellular metabolism acts as a chain terminator by inhibiting NS5B RNA-dependent RNA polymerase.
Apply a thin layer to the affected area 5 times daily for 4 days.
One tablet (90 mg ledipasvir/400 mg sofosbuvir) orally once daily with or without food for 12 weeks. For treatment-naïve patients with genotype 1 and cirrhosis, 24 weeks may be considered. For genotype 4, 12 weeks recommended.
None Documented
None Documented
Due to minimal systemic absorption, an elimination half-life cannot be accurately determined in humans. Following intravenous administration in animals, the terminal half-life is approximately 10 hours, but this is not clinically relevant for topical use.
Ledipasvir: 47 hours; Sofosbuvir: 0.5 hours; GS-331007 (predominant circulating metabolite): 27 hours; clinical context: supports once-daily dosing with no accumulation beyond steady state by day 7
Docosanol is minimally absorbed after topical application; systemic absorption is negligible. Any absorbed drug is primarily metabolized and excreted via bile and feces. Renal excretion is insignificant. Less than 1% of the applied dose enters systemic circulation, and nearly all elimination occurs via biliary/fecal routes.
Ledipasvir: 86% fecal, 1% renal; Sofosbuvir: 80% renal (as inactive metabolite GS-331007), 14% fecal; GS-331007: 78% renal
Category C
Category C
Antiviral
Antiviral