Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CADUET versus CARDIZEM.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CADUET versus CARDIZEM.
CADUET vs CARDIZEM
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Amlodipine: Dihydropyridine calcium channel blocker that inhibits calcium ion influx across cardiac and vascular smooth muscle cell membranes, causing vasodilation and reduced peripheral vascular resistance. Atorvastatin: HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor that competitively inhibits the conversion of HMG-CoA to mevalonate, reducing cholesterol synthesis in the liver.
Diltiazem inhibits calcium influx into cardiac and vascular smooth muscle cells during depolarization by binding to L-type calcium channels. This results in coronary vasodilation, decreased myocardial oxygen demand, and negative chronotropic and inotropic effects.
CADUET (amlodipine/atorvastatin) is available as tablets of 2.5/10, 2.5/20, 2.5/40, 5/10, 5/20, 5/40, 5/80, 10/10, 10/20, 10/40, and 10/80 mg amlodipine/atorvastatin. Initial dose depends on current antihypertensive and lipid-lowering therapy. Usual starting dose is 5/10 mg orally once daily; titrate at intervals of 2-4 weeks based on blood pressure and LDL-C goals. Maximum daily dose: amlodipine 10 mg; atorvastatin 80 mg.
Oral: 30-120 mg three to four times daily; extended-release: 120-360 mg once daily. IV: Initial 0.25 mg/kg (max 25 mg) bolus over 2 minutes, may repeat in 15 minutes (0.35 mg/kg); maintenance: 5-15 mg/hour continuous infusion.
None Documented
None Documented
Amlodipine: terminal half-life 30-50 h (enables once-daily dosing). Atorvastatin: terminal half-life ~14 h, but active metabolites (ortho- and para-hydroxy atorvastatin) have half-life 20-30 h; clinically, pharmacodynamic half-life (HMG-CoA reductase inhibition) is ~20-30 h.
Terminal elimination half-life is 3.0-4.5 hours in healthy adults; may be prolonged to 7-9 hours in elderly, hepatic impairment, or renal impairment; clinically relevant for dosing frequency.
Amlodipine: 60% renal (metabolites), 20-25% biliary/fecal. Atorvastatin: 1% renal (unchanged), 90% biliary/fecal (≥70% as metabolites).
Primarily hepatic metabolism with extensive first-pass effect; approximately 2-4% excreted unchanged in urine; fecal excretion accounts for about 65% of dose as metabolites; renal excretion accounts for about 35% of dose as metabolites.
Category C
Category C
Calcium Channel Blocker + HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitor
Calcium Channel Blocker