Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: AZO GANTANOL versus SULFATRIM.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: AZO GANTANOL versus SULFATRIM.
AZO GANTANOL vs SULFATRIM
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Phenazopyridine is an azo dye with local analgesic effect on urinary tract mucosa via unknown mechanism; sulfamethoxazole is a sulfonamide antibiotic that inhibits bacterial dihydropteroate synthase, blocking folate synthesis.
Sulfatrim is a combination of sulfamethoxazole, a dihydropteroate synthase inhibitor that blocks folate synthesis, and trimethoprim, a dihydrofolate reductase inhibitor that blocks reduction of dihydrofolate to tetrahydrofolate, resulting in sequential inhibition of bacterial folate metabolism.
AZO GANTANOL (phenazopyridine + sulfamethoxazole) is not a standard combination product. Assuming separate components: Sulfamethoxazole 800 mg and Trimethoprim 160 mg (as Bactrim DS) orally every 12 hours. For phenazopyridine: 200 mg orally three times daily after meals.
160 mg trimethoprim / 800 mg sulfamethoxazole (1 DS tablet) orally every 12 hours for 10-14 days.
None Documented
None Documented
Sulfamethoxazole terminal half-life: 9-12 hours in adults with normal renal function (CrCl >80 mL/min); prolonged to 20-50 hours in CKD (CrCl <30 mL/min); phenazopyridine half-life: 9-11 hours
Sulfamethoxazole: 9-11 hours (prolonged in renal impairment, e.g., up to 30 hours in severe renal failure). Trimethoprim: 8-10 hours (prolonged in hepatic impairment).
Renal: 70% as sulfamethoxazole (30% acetylated), N5-acetylated metabolite accounts for 15%; fecal: 20% of dose excreted unchanged in bile; biliary: minor contribution (<5%)
Renal (70-80% as unchanged sulfamethoxazole and N4-acetylated metabolite; 30-40% as unchanged trimethoprim), biliary/fecal (20-30% sulfamethoxazole; 10-20% trimethoprim)
Category C
Category C
Sulfonamide Antibiotic
Sulfonamide Antibiotic