Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ESOMEPRAZOLE MAGNESIUM versus YOSPRALA.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: ESOMEPRAZOLE MAGNESIUM versus YOSPRALA.
ESOMEPRAZOLE MAGNESIUM vs YOSPRALA
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Esomeprazole is a proton pump inhibitor that suppresses gastric acid secretion by specific inhibition of the H+/K+ ATPase at the secretory surface of gastric parietal cells.
Yosprala is a combination of aspirin (a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug that inhibits cyclooxygenase-1 and cyclooxygenase-2, thereby reducing thromboxane A2 synthesis and platelet aggregation) and omeprazole (a proton pump inhibitor that inhibits gastric acid secretion by binding to the H+/K+ ATPase enzyme in gastric parietal cells).
20-40 mg orally once daily; for erosive esophagitis, 40 mg once daily for 4-8 weeks. IV: 20-40 mg once daily over 10-30 minutes.
YOSPRALA (esomeprazole magnesium and naproxen) is available as delayed-release tablets containing 375 mg naproxen/20 mg esomeprazole or 500 mg naproxen/20 mg esomeprazole. The typical adult dose is one tablet twice daily, swallowed whole with liquid, at least 30 minutes before meals.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life is approximately 1–1.5 hours in healthy individuals, but may be prolonged to 2–3 hours in poor metabolizers (CYP2C19) or patients with hepatic impairment. The effect on gastric acid secretion persists for 24 hours due to irreversible binding to proton pumps.
Naproxen: terminal elimination half-life is approximately 14 hours (range 12–17 hours), allowing twice-daily dosing. Esomeprazole: terminal half-life is approximately 1.2–1.5 hours after single dose, increasing to ~1.5–2.5 hours with repeated dosing due to saturation of CYP2C19. Clinical context: naproxen's half-life supports sustained analgesic/anti-inflammatory effect; esomeprazole's shorter half-life requires daily dosing for acid suppression.
Approximately 80% of a dose is excreted as metabolites in urine, with the remainder (about 20%) eliminated in feces via biliary excretion. Less than 1% is excreted unchanged in urine.
YOSPRALA (esomeprazole and naproxen) is a fixed-dose combination. Naproxen is primarily excreted in urine as unchanged drug (approximately 60%) and as glucuronide conjugates (approximately 30%). Esomeprazole is extensively metabolized; less than 1% of the dose is excreted unchanged in urine. Biliary/fecal elimination accounts for the remainder via metabolites.
Category A/B
Category C
Proton Pump Inhibitor
Proton Pump Inhibitor