Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: AMANTADINE HYDROCHLORIDE versus GANCICLOVIR.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: AMANTADINE HYDROCHLORIDE versus GANCICLOVIR.
AMANTADINE HYDROCHLORIDE vs GANCICLOVIR
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Amantadine hydrochloride is an antiviral and antiparkinsonian agent. Its antiviral mechanism involves inhibition of the M2 ion channel of influenza A virus, preventing viral uncoating and replication. In Parkinson's disease, it increases dopamine release and inhibits dopamine reuptake, and also acts as an NMDA glutamate receptor antagonist, reducing excitotoxicity.
Ganciclovir is a synthetic guanine nucleoside analog that inhibits viral DNA synthesis by competitively inhibiting viral DNA polymerase and by incorporating into viral DNA, causing chain termination. It requires initial phosphorylation by viral thymidine kinase (CMV) or protein kinase (HSV).
For parkinsonism/drug-induced extrapyramidal symptoms: initial 100 mg twice daily; may increase to 300-400 mg/day in divided doses if needed. For influenza A treatment/prophylaxis in adults: 200 mg once daily or 100 mg twice daily; initiate prophylaxis as early as possible and continue for at least 10 days post-exposure.
Induction: 5 mg/kg IV every 12 hours for 14-21 days. Maintenance: 5 mg/kg IV every 24 hours. Oral: 1000 mg three times daily with food.
None Documented
Clinical Note
moderateGanciclovir + Probenecid
"The serum concentration of Probenecid can be increased when it is combined with Ganciclovir."
Clinical Note
moderateValganciclovir + Probenecid
"The serum concentration of Probenecid can be increased when it is combined with Valganciclovir."
Clinical Note
moderateGanciclovir + Mycophenolic acid
"The serum concentration of Mycophenolic acid can be increased when it is combined with Ganciclovir."
Clinical Note
moderateValganciclovir + Mycophenolic acid
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life: 10-14 hours in young adults; up to 34 hours in elderly (due to age-related decline in renal function); prolonged in renal impairment (up to 7 days in anuria).
Terminal half-life: 2.5-5.0 hours in normal renal function; prolonged to 10-30 hours in renal impairment; requires dose adjustment for CrCl <70 mL/min
Renal: 90% unchanged drug via glomerular filtration and tubular secretion; minor fecal (<5%) and biliary elimination.
Renal excretion: >90% unchanged; biliary/fecal: minimal (<5%)
Category C
Category D/X
Antiviral / Antiparkinsonian
Antiviral
"The serum concentration of Mycophenolic acid can be increased when it is combined with Valganciclovir."