Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ARALEN PHOSPHATE W PRIMAQUINE PHOSPHATE versus PYRIMETHAMINE.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ARALEN PHOSPHATE W PRIMAQUINE PHOSPHATE versus PYRIMETHAMINE.
ARALEN PHOSPHATE W/ PRIMAQUINE PHOSPHATE vs PYRIMETHAMINE
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Chloroquine and primaquine: Chloroquine inhibits heme polymerase in malaria parasites, preventing conversion of toxic heme to hemozoin; primaquine disrupts mitochondrial function and generates reactive oxygen species, targeting hypnozoites and gametocytes.
Pyrimethamine inhibits dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) in the parasite, blocking the conversion of dihydrofolate to tetrahydrofolate, thereby inhibiting nucleic acid synthesis.
Chloroquine phosphate 600 mg base (1 g salt) orally once daily for 2 days, then 300 mg base (500 mg salt) once daily for at least 2 weeks; plus primaquine phosphate 30 mg base orally once daily for 14 days.
For toxoplasmosis: 200 mg orally once, then 50-75 mg orally once daily for 4-6 weeks, plus sulfadiazine and folinic acid. For malaria prophylaxis: 25 mg orally once weekly.
None Documented
None Documented
Clinical Note
moderatePyrimethamine + Fesoterodine
"The serum concentration of the active metabolites of Fesoterodine can be increased when Fesoterodine is used in combination with Pyrimethamine."
Clinical Note
moderatePyrimethamine + Artemether
"The risk or severity of QTc prolongation can be increased when Pyrimethamine is combined with Artemether."
Clinical Note
moderatePyrimethamine + Lumefantrine
"The risk or severity of QTc prolongation can be increased when Pyrimethamine is combined with Lumefantrine."
Clinical Note
moderateChloroquine: 40-60 days (terminal); Primaquine: 6-8 hours (terminal). Clinical context: chloroquine accumulates extensively, requiring prolonged monitoring for toxicity; primaquine, shorter half-life, once-daily dosing.
Terminal elimination half-life is approximately 96 hours (range 80-123 hours) in adults with normal renal function; prolonged in renal impairment (up to 200 hours). This long half-life supports weekly dosing regimens.
Renal: 70% (chloroquine as unchanged drug and metabolites), 20% (primaquine as metabolites); Fecal: ~10% (chloroquine); Biliary: minor for both.
Primarily renal (approximately 30% unchanged and 20-30% as metabolites); additional biliary/fecal elimination (20-30% as metabolites). Total urinary excretion of parent drug and metabolites accounts for 60-80% of dose.
Category D/X
Category D/X
Antimalarial
Antimalarial / Antiprotozoal
Cyclophosphamide + Pyrimethamine
"The metabolism of Pyrimethamine can be decreased when combined with Cyclophosphamide."