Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: GANTANOL DS versus ILOSONE SULFA.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: GANTANOL DS versus ILOSONE SULFA.
GANTANOL-DS vs ILOSONE SULFA
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Sulfamethoxazole is a sulfonamide that inhibits bacterial dihydrofolate synthesis by competing with para-aminobenzoic acid, thereby blocking folate synthesis. Trimethoprim inhibits bacterial dihydrofolate reductase, converting dihydrofolate to tetrahydrofolate. This sequential blockade produces bactericidal activity.
Ilosone (erythromycin) is a macrolide antibiotic that inhibits bacterial protein synthesis by binding to the 50S ribosomal subunit. Sulfa (sulfisoxazole) is a sulfonamide that inhibits dihydropteroate synthase, blocking folate synthesis. The combination provides synergistic bacteriostatic activity.
2 g (DS strength: 2 g sulfamethoxazole/400 mg trimethoprim) orally every 12 hours for 14-21 days for Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia.
Each 5 mL suspension contains 250 mg erythromycin base and 600 mg sulfisoxazole; typical adult dose is 10 mL (2 tsp) every 6 hours, not to exceed 40 mL/day.
None Documented
None Documented
10-12 hours (sulfamethoxazole component); prolonged in renal impairment (up to 30 hours with CrCl <15 mL/min).
Erythromycin: 1.5-2 hours; Sulfisoxazole: 4-7 hours; clinical context: dose adjustment in renal impairment (CrCl <50 mL/min) needed for sulfisoxazole
Primarily renal (70-100%) as unchanged drug and inactive metabolites (sulfamethoxazole N4-acetyl and glucuronide conjugates); <5% biliary/fecal.
Renal: 70-80% as unchanged drug and active metabolite (sulfisoxazole); Biliary: 10-15% as metabolites; Fecal: <5%
Category C
Category C
Sulfonamide Antibiotic
Macrolide and Sulfonamide Antibiotic