Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: DORZOLAMIDE HYDROCHLORIDE AND TIMOLOL MALEATE versus HEMANGEOL.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: DORZOLAMIDE HYDROCHLORIDE AND TIMOLOL MALEATE versus HEMANGEOL.
DORZOLAMIDE HYDROCHLORIDE AND TIMOLOL MALEATE vs HEMANGEOL
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Dorzolamide is a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor that reduces aqueous humor secretion by inhibiting carbonic anhydrase in the ciliary processes. Timolol is a non-selective beta-adrenergic receptor antagonist that reduces aqueous humor production by blocking beta-2 adrenergic receptors in the ciliary epithelium.
Hemangeol (propranolol hydrochloride) is a non-selective beta-adrenergic receptor antagonist that competitively blocks beta-1 and beta-2 receptors. In infantile hemangioma, the exact mechanism is not fully understood, but proposed actions include vasoconstriction, inhibition of angiogenesis by downregulating VEGF and bFGF, and induction of apoptosis in endothelial cells.
One drop of the fixed combination (dorzolamide 22.26 mg/mL, timolol 6.83 mg/mL) in the affected eye(s) every 12 hours.
3 mg/kg/day orally divided into 2 doses for pediatric patients; adult use not indicated
None Documented
None Documented
Dorzolamide: ~4 months but accumulates in RBCs; terminal half-life ~4-5 months due to binding to carbonic anhydrase. Timolol: ~4-6 hours.
3-4 hours in infants (0-1 year) and 3.5-4.5 hours in children (1-6 years); clinical context: requires TID dosing to maintain therapeutic effect.
Dorzolamide: primarily renal (approx. 80% unchanged), with minor biliary/fecal elimination. Timolol: renal (15-20% unchanged) and extensive hepatic metabolism with fecal excretion.
Primarily hepatic metabolism via UGT1A9 and CYP2C9; <5% excreted unchanged in urine. Biliary/fecal elimination of metabolites; exact % not defined.
Category A/B
Category C
Beta-Blocker
Beta-Blocker