Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CORTONE versus DEXACORT.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CORTONE versus DEXACORT.
CORTONE vs DEXACORT
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Cortisone is a corticosteroid that binds to glucocorticoid receptors, leading to decreased inflammation through inhibition of phospholipase A2, reduced cytokine production, and suppression of immune cell migration.
Dexamethasone is a glucocorticoid receptor agonist that modulates gene expression to produce anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive effects by inhibiting phospholipase A2, reducing prostaglandin and leukotriene synthesis, and suppressing cytokine production.
Oral: 25-300 mg daily in 1-4 divided doses; typical initial dose 150-300 mg daily. IM/IV: 100-500 mg every 6-12 hours.
Oral: 0.75-9 mg/day in divided doses; IV: 0.5-9 mg/day every 6-12 hours; IM: 4-20 mg every 2 weeks.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal half-life: 8-12 hours (cortisone) but cortisone is a prodrug; active metabolite cortisol has half-life 1.5-2 hours. Clinical context: duration of action 8-12 hours due to prolonged receptor occupancy.
Plasma terminal elimination half-life is 2.8-3.5 hours in adults, but the biological half-life (duration of HPA axis suppression) is 24-36 hours due to prolonged receptor occupancy
Renal: ~90% as metabolites (glucuronides and sulfates), ~5% unchanged; biliary/fecal: ~5%.
Renal (approximately 80% as inactive metabolites, <5% unchanged), biliary/fecal (minor, approximately 15-20%)
Category C
Category C
Corticosteroid
Corticosteroid