Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CADUET versus COVERA HS.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CADUET versus COVERA HS.
CADUET vs COVERA-HS
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.
Verapamil hydrochloride is a phenylalkylamine calcium channel blocker that inhibits calcium ion influx across cardiac and smooth muscle cells, thereby reducing afterload and myocardial contractility. In the heart, it slows atrioventricular conduction and prolongs the effective refractory period; in vascular smooth muscle, it causes vasodilation, reducing peripheral vascular resistance.
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.
180 mg orally once daily at bedtime, extended-release tablet. Maximum dose 540 mg/day.
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 6–17 hours for immediate-release; for Covera-HS (controlled-onset extended-release), the half-life is 10–20 hours, allowing once-daily bedtime dosing to achieve peak effect in the morning.
Amlodipine: 60% renal (metabolites), 20-25% biliary/fecal. Atorvastatin: 1% renal (unchanged), 90% biliary/fecal (≥70% as metabolites).
Primarily hepatic metabolism (oxidation and glucuronidation) with renal excretion of inactive metabolites; approximately 80% of metabolites are excreted renally and 15% fecally.
Category C
Category C
Calcium Channel Blocker + HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitor
Calcium Channel Blocker