Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CAPOZIDE 50 15 versus ENALAPRIL MALEATE.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CAPOZIDE 50 15 versus ENALAPRIL MALEATE.
CAPOZIDE 50/15 vs ENALAPRIL MALEATE
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
CAPOZIDE 50/15 combines captopril (angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor) and hydrochlorothiazide (thiazide diuretic). Captopril inhibits ACE, reducing angiotensin II formation, decreasing aldosterone secretion, and lowering blood pressure. Hydrochlorothiazide increases sodium and water excretion by inhibiting the Na+/Cl- cotransporter in distal convoluted tubules.
Enalapril is a prodrug that is hydrolyzed to enalaprilat, a potent competitive inhibitor of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE), blocking the conversion of angiotensin I to angiotensin II, reducing vasoconstriction, aldosterone secretion, and sodium/water retention.
Oral, 1 tablet (captopril 50 mg / hydrochlorothiazide 15 mg) once daily. May increase to 2 tablets daily in divided doses if needed.
Initial: 5 mg orally once daily; titrate to 10-40 mg/day in 1-2 divided doses. Target: 10-40 mg/day. Maximum: 40 mg/day. Route: Oral. Frequency: Once or twice daily.
None Documented
None Documented
Captopril: terminal half-life ~2 hours (in patients with normal renal function; prolonged in renal impairment to 21-36 hours). Hydrochlorothiazide: half-life 6-15 hours (mean ~9 hours; prolonged in renal impairment). Clinical context: dosing interval affected by renal function.
Terminal elimination half-life of enalaprilat (active metabolite) is approximately 35-38 hours. This prolonged half-life supports once-daily dosing in most patients, but may require dosage adjustment in renal impairment.
Captopril: renal excretion of unchanged drug and metabolites, primarily in urine (60-75%), with ~20% as unchanged captopril; small amount in feces (5-10%). Hydrochlorothiazide: renal excretion (95% unchanged), <5% via biliary/fecal.
Primarily renal (60-80% as unchanged drug and metabolites, mainly enalaprilat); biliary/fecal excretion accounts for the remainder (approximately 20-30%).
Category C
Category D/X
ACE Inhibitor and Diuretic Combination
ACE Inhibitor