Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ARALEN HYDROCHLORIDE versus HYDROXYCHLOROQUINE.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ARALEN HYDROCHLORIDE versus HYDROXYCHLOROQUINE.
ARALEN HYDROCHLORIDE vs Hydroxychloroquine
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Chloroquine, a 4-aminoquinoline, accumulates in acidic organelles such as lysosomes and food vacuoles of malaria parasites, raising pH and inhibiting hemozoin polymerization, which leads to toxic heme accumulation and parasite death. It also has anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory effects by inhibiting TLR signaling and cytokine production.
Hydroxychloroquine is a 4-aminoquinoline antimalarial agent that accumulates in lysosomes and inhibits Toll-like receptor signaling, reduces cytokine production, and interferes with antigen presentation. It also inhibits heme polymerase in malarial parasites, leading to toxic heme accumulation.
Chloroquine phosphate 500 mg (300 mg base) orally once weekly for prophylaxis; 600 mg base (1 g phosphate) orally initially, followed by 300 mg base (500 mg phosphate) at 6, 24, and 48 hours for treatment of malaria.
400 mg orally once daily or 200 mg orally twice daily, then 200-400 mg orally once daily for maintenance, depending on indication.
None Documented
None Documented
Clinical Note
moderateHydroxychloroquine + Fesoterodine
"The serum concentration of the active metabolites of Fesoterodine can be increased when Fesoterodine is used in combination with Hydroxychloroquine."
Clinical Note
moderateHydroxychloroquine + Artemether
"The risk or severity of QTc prolongation can be increased when Hydroxychloroquine is combined with Artemether."
Clinical Note
moderateHydroxychloroquine + Chloroquine
"The serum concentration of Chloroquine can be decreased when it is combined with Hydroxychloroquine."
Clinical Note
moderate48-72 hours (terminal elimination half-life); prolonged to weeks with chronic dosing due to extensive tissue accumulation, especially in the liver, spleen, and melanin-containing tissues.
Terminal half-life: 30-60 days (prolonged due to extensive tissue binding); clinical context: requires loading dose for rapid effect.
Renal (~70% unchanged), with 10-20% in feces; biliary elimination is minor.
Primarily renal (30-60% unchanged); minor hepatic metabolism; fecal elimination accounts for ~20-30%.
Category C
Category A/B
Antimalarial
Antimalarial / DMARD
Hydroxychloroquine + Lumefantrine
"The risk or severity of QTc prolongation can be increased when Hydroxychloroquine is combined with Lumefantrine."