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Registry Hub
Peer-Reviewed Evidence
HomeDrug RegistryCompareINJECTAPAP vs VARENICLINE TARTRATE
Comparative Pharmacology

INJECTAPAP vs VARENICLINE TARTRATE Comparison

Head-to-head clinical analysis & difference comparison: details on mechanism of action, dosing, half-life, interactions, and maternal-fetal safety.

Clinical EssentialsPharmacokineticsSpecial PopulationsSafety & MonitoringPregnancy & LactationClinical Insights
Differential Analysis

INJECTAPAP vs VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Clinician-reviewed, head-to-head comparison of mechanism, dosing, pharmacokinetics, and safety profiles.

View INJECTAPAP Monograph View VARENICLINE TARTRATE Monograph
INJECTAPAP
Non-Opioid Analgesic
Category C
VARENICLINE TARTRATE
Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Partial Agonist
Category A/B
TL;DR — Key Differences
  • Drug class: INJECTAPAP is a Non-Opioid Analgesic; VARENICLINE TARTRATE is a Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Partial Agonist.
  • Half-life: INJECTAPAP has a half-life of 2-3 hours in adults; prolonged to 4-6 hours in neonates and patients with hepatic impairment.; VARENICLINE TARTRATE has Terminal elimination half-life is approximately 24 hours (range 20–29 hours) in healthy adults; steady-state is reached within 4 days; half-life is prolonged in severe renal impairment (Cr Cl <30 m L/min) to ~40 hours..
  • No direct drug-drug interaction has been documented between INJECTAPAP and VARENICLINE TARTRATE.
  • Pregnancy: INJECTAPAP is rated Category C; VARENICLINE TARTRATE is rated Category A/B.

Last clinically reviewed: July 2026 · OpiCalc Medical Review Team

Clinical Essentials

INJECTAPAP
VARENICLINE TARTRATE
Mechanism of Action
INJECTAPAP

Acetaminophen is a centrally acting analgesic and antipyretic; its exact mechanism is not fully understood but involves inhibition of cyclooxygenase (COX) enzymes in the central nervous system and modulation of descending serotonergic pathways. It does not have significant anti-inflammatory activity.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Partial agonist at α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, reducing nicotine craving and withdrawal symptoms by stimulating moderate dopamine release and blocking nicotine binding.

Indications
INJECTAPAP

Management of mild to moderate pain,Reduction of fever

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Smoking cessation treatment (FDA-approved),Off-label: treatment of alcohol use disorder, electronic cigarette cessation

Standard Dosing
INJECTAPAP

1 g intravenous every 6 hours or 650 mg intravenous every 4 hours; maximum 4 g per day.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Initial: 0.5 mg orally once daily on days 1-3, then 0.5 mg twice daily on days 4-7, then 1 mg twice daily starting day 8; target dose: 1 mg twice daily; route: oral; frequency: twice daily after initial titration.

Direct Interaction
INJECTAPAP
No Direct Interaction
VARENICLINE TARTRATE
No Direct Interaction

Pharmacokinetics

INJECTAPAP
VARENICLINE TARTRATE
Half-Life
INJECTAPAP

2-3 hours in adults; prolonged to 4-6 hours in neonates and patients with hepatic impairment.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Terminal elimination half-life is approximately 24 hours (range 20–29 hours) in healthy adults; steady-state is reached within 4 days; half-life is prolonged in severe renal impairment (Cr Cl <30 m L/min) to ~40 hours.

Metabolism
INJECTAPAP

Primarily metabolized in the liver via conjugation (glucuronidation and sulfation) at therapeutic doses; a minor pathway via cytochrome P450 (CYP2E1, CYP1A2, and CYP3A4) produces a toxic metabolite (NAPQI) which is normally detoxified by glutathione.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Minimal metabolism (<10%): primarily excreted unchanged in urine with minor contributions from CYP2A6, glucuronidation, and N-formylation.

Excretion
INJECTAPAP

Renal: 2-5% unchanged; hepatic metabolism to glucuronide and sulfate conjugates, then renal excretion of metabolites. Biliary/fecal: minimal (<5%).

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Renal excretion of unchanged drug accounts for approximately 92% of elimination, with renal clearance exceeding glomerular filtration rate, indicating active tubular secretion; fecal excretion accounts for ~7% (1% as unchanged drug, rest as metabolites), and biliary excretion is negligible.

Protein Binding
INJECTAPAP

10-25% bound to albumin at therapeutic concentrations.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Approximately 20% bound to plasma proteins (primarily albumin); binding is concentration-independent.

VD (L/kg)
INJECTAPAP

0.8-1.0 L/kg; suggests distribution into total body water.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Volume of distribution (Vd) is approximately 3–4 L/kg, suggesting extensive extravascular distribution and tissue binding; clinical meaning: drug distributes widely into tissues, consistent with its CNS activity.

Bioavailability
INJECTAPAP

IV: 100%; oral: 60-90% (first-pass metabolism); rectal: 30-50%.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Oral bioavailability is approximately 100% (nearly complete absorption) with no significant first-pass metabolism; food does not affect absorption.

Special Populations

INJECTAPAP
VARENICLINE TARTRATE
Renal Adjustments
INJECTAPAP

For GFR 30-60 m L/min: no adjustment; for GFR <30 m L/min: extend interval to every 8 hours; maximum 3 g per day.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Cr Cl 30-50 m L/min: No dosage adjustment required. Cr Cl <30 m L/min (or on hemodialysis): Initial dose 0.5 mg once daily; may increase to 0.5 mg twice daily if tolerated and needed; maximum 0.5 mg twice daily.

Hepatic Adjustments
INJECTAPAP

Child-Pugh A: no adjustment; Child-Pugh B: reduce dose by 50%, maximum 2 g per day; Child-Pugh C: contraindicated.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Child-Pugh Class A or B: No dose adjustment necessary. Child-Pugh Class C: Use with caution; no specific dose adjustment recommended, but exposure may be increased.

Pediatric Dosing
INJECTAPAP

For weight ≥50 kg: 1 g every 6 hours; for weight 10-50 kg: 15 mg/kg every 6 hours; for weight <10 kg: 7.5 mg/kg every 6 hours; all intravenous.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Not approved for use in pediatric patients; safety and efficacy not established. No weight-based dosing guidelines available.

Geriatric Dosing
INJECTAPAP

No specific dose adjustment required; consider decreased hepatic function and concomitant medications; maximum 3 g per day for patients with risk factors for hepatotoxicity.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

No specific dose adjustment required solely for age; consider renal function in dose selection as elderly patients may have reduced creatinine clearance; follow renal adjustment guidelines.

Safety & Monitoring

INJECTAPAP
VARENICLINE TARTRATE
Black Box Warnings
INJECTAPAP
FDA Black Box Warning

Acetaminophen has been associated with cases of acute liver failure, hepatotoxicity is primarily due to overdose. Risk is increased in patients with underlying liver disease, chronic alcohol use, and those taking multiple acetaminophen-containing products.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE
FDA Black Box Warning

Serious neuropsychiatric events including suicidality, depression, and hostility have been reported, particularly in patients with pre-existing psychiatric disorders.

Warnings/Precautions
INJECTAPAP

Risk of hepatotoxicity, especially with doses exceeding 4 g/day or in patients with liver impairment,Severe skin reactions including Stevens-Johnson syndrome, toxic epidermal necrolysis, and acute generalized exanthematous pustulosis,Hypersensitivity reactions,Use caution in patients with G6PD deficiency,Avoid use with other acetaminophen-containing products

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Neuropsychiatric symptoms requiring monitoring,Cardiovascular events in patients with cardiovascular disease,Seizures in those with seizure history,Angioedema and hypersensitivity reactions,Accidental injury potential due to dizziness/somnolence,Concomitant alcohol use may increase intoxication effects

Contraindications
INJECTAPAP

Hypersensitivity to acetaminophen or any component of the formulation

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

History of hypersensitivity to varenicline,Use in patients with end-stage renal disease not on dialysis (severe impairment)

Adverse Reactions
INJECTAPAP
Data Pending
VARENICLINE TARTRATE
Data Pending
Food Interactions
INJECTAPAP

No significant food interactions. However, concurrent ingestion of alcohol may increase risk of hepatotoxicity; avoid alcohol while on therapy.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

No significant food interactions. Taking with food may reduce nausea. Avoid excessive alcohol consumption as it may increase the risk of neuropsychiatric events.

Pregnancy & Lactation

INJECTAPAP
VARENICLINE TARTRATE
Teratogenic Risk
INJECTAPAP

FDA Category C. Acetaminophen crosses the placenta. No evidence of teratogenicity in humans with standard doses. First trimester: limited data suggest no increased risk of major malformations. Second and third trimesters: chronic high-dose use may be associated with increased risk of childhood asthma and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Overdose poses risk of maternal and fetal hepatotoxicity.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Pregnancy Category C. Animal studies (rats, rabbits) at exposures up to 0.5 and 23 times the MRHD showed decreased fetal weight, increased incidence of external and visceral malformations (e.g., umbilical hernia, undescended testis) and skeletal variations (e.g., incomplete ossification, wavy ribs) at doses causing maternal toxicity. First trimester: unknown risk, insufficient human data. Second/third trimester: limited human data; theoretical risk of reduced fetal nicotinic receptor development. Avoid unless benefit outweighs risk.

Lactation Summary
INJECTAPAP

Acetaminophen is excreted into breast milk in low concentrations (M/P ratio approximately 0.91-1.42). Reported infant dose is less than 2% of maternal weight-adjusted dose. Considered compatible with breastfeeding. Use lowest effective dose for shortest duration.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Excreted into animal milk (rat studies: 0.3-fold maternal plasma concentrations). No human M/P ratio available. Limited human data; potential for adverse effects on infant neurodevelopment due to nicotinic receptor modulation. Consider alternative therapy; if used, monitor infant for irritability, feeding difficulties.

Pregnancy Dosing
INJECTAPAP

No dose adjustment required for standard therapeutic use. Increased clearance in pregnancy may require shorter dosing intervals for pain control; consider maximum daily dose of 3 g/day instead of 4 g/day. Avoid prolonged use >48 hours without medical supervision.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

No pharmacokinetic studies in pregnancy to guide dose adjustments. Standard dosing (1 mg twice daily) may be used if indicated, but due to altered renal clearance (increased GFR in pregnancy) and unknown impact on metabolism, monitor clinical response and tolerability. No formal dose adjustment recommended; consider discontinuation if intolerable side effects.

Maternal Safety Status
INJECTAPAP
Category C
VARENICLINE TARTRATE
Category A/B

Clinical Insights

INJECTAPAP
VARENICLINE TARTRATE
Clinical Pearls
INJECTAPAP

Acetaminophen injection is indicated for treatment of acute pain and fever. Use with caution in hepatic impairment. Avoid in patients with severe active liver disease. Monitor liver function tests with prolonged use. Do not exceed maximum daily dose (4 g/day in adults). Use the smallest effective dose for the shortest duration.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Start varenicline 1 week before target quit date; titrate dose over first week to reduce nausea. Dose adjustment required in severe renal impairment (Cr Cl <30 m L/min). Avoid use in patients with history of suicidality or severe psychiatric instability. Monitor for neuropsychiatric symptoms. Contraindicated with bupropion due to increased seizure risk.

Patient Counseling
INJECTAPAP

Do not take more than the recommended dose. Overdose can cause severe liver damage.,Inform your healthcare provider if you have liver disease or drink alcohol regularly.,Check other medications for acetaminophen to avoid double dosing.,Seek immediate medical attention if you experience signs of liver injury (e.g., yellowing skin/eyes, dark urine, upper stomach pain).,This medication is administered by intravenous infusion; do not attempt self-administration.

VARENICLINE TARTRATE

Take varenicline after eating with a full glass of water to reduce nausea.,Choose a quit date about 1 week after starting the medication.,Do not skip doses; if you smoke after the quit date, continue taking varenicline.,Report any mood changes, agitation, or suicidal thoughts to your doctor immediately.,Varenicline may cause drowsiness; avoid driving until you know how it affects you.,Do not use this medication if you are pregnant or breastfeeding.,Store at room temperature away from moisture and heat.

Safety Verification

Known Interactions

INJECTAPAP Risks

No interactions on record

VARENICLINE TARTRATE Risks3
Carteolol + Varenicline
moderate

"Concurrent use of carteolol, a nonselective beta-blocker, and varenicline, a partial agonist at nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, may result in additive cardiovascular effects. Varenicline can elevate blood pressure and heart rate, while carteolol may blunt compensatory sympathetic responses, leading to potential hypertensive crises or bradyarrhythmias. Additionally, varenicline may exacerbate bronchospasm in patients with reactive airway disease, which could be potentiated by carteolol's beta-2 blockade."

Malathion + Varenicline
moderate

"Concomitant use of Malathion, an organophosphate acetylcholinesterase inhibitor, with Varenicline, a partial agonist at nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, may result in additive or synergistic cholinergic toxicity. Malathion increases acetylcholine levels at synapses, while Varenicline directly stimulates nicotinic receptors; combined, they can cause excessive nicotinic stimulation, leading to neuromuscular paralysis, bradycardia, hypersalivation, and seizures. Clinical outcomes range from mild muscarinic symptoms to life-threatening cholinergic crisis, particularly in patients with genetic deficiencies in paraoxonase or butyrylcholinesterase."

Penbutolol + Varenicline
moderate

"Concomitant use of Penbutolol, a non-selective beta-blocker, and Varenicline, a partial agonist at nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, may result in additive cardiovascular effects. Penbutolol can attenuate the heart rate and blood pressure responses to Varenicline-induced sympathetic activation, potentially leading to paradoxical hypertension or bradycardia. Additionally, Varenicline may exacerbate bronchospasm in patients with asthma or COPD due to its partial agonist activity, which can be blunted but not eliminated by Penbutolol."

Compare Alternatives

Related Drug Comparisons

Explore head-to-head clinical comparisons of other medications in the same therapeutic classes.

INJECTAPAP vs ACEPHENNon-Opioid Analgesic
VARENICLINE TARTRATE vs ACEPHENNon-Opioid Analgesic
INJECTAPAP vs OFIRMEVNon-opioid Analgesic
VARENICLINE TARTRATE vs OFIRMEVNon-opioid Analgesic
INJECTAPAP vs VARENICLINENicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Partial Agonist
VARENICLINE TARTRATE vs VARENICLINENicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Partial Agonist
Clinical Q&A

Frequently Asked Questions

Common clinical questions about INJECTAPAP vs VARENICLINE TARTRATE, answered by our medical review team.

1. What is the main difference between INJECTAPAP and VARENICLINE TARTRATE?

INJECTAPAP is a Non-Opioid Analgesic that works by Acetaminophen is a centrally acting analgesic and antipyretic; its exact mechanism is not fully understood but involves inhibition of cyclooxygenase (COX) enzymes in the central nervous system and modulation of descending serotonergic pathways. It does not have significant anti-inflammatory activity.. VARENICLINE TARTRATE is a Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Partial Agonist that works by Partial agonist at α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, reducing nicotine craving and withdrawal symptoms by stimulating moderate dopamine release and blocking nicotine binding.. They differ in pharmacokinetic profiles, FDA-approved indications, and side effect profiles.

2. Which is stronger: INJECTAPAP or VARENICLINE TARTRATE?

Potency comparisons between INJECTAPAP and VARENICLINE TARTRATE depend on the specific clinical indication. These are agents from distinct pharmacological classes and are not directly interchangeable by dose. A physician or clinical pharmacist should guide any therapeutic switching decisions.

3. What is the standard dosing for INJECTAPAP vs VARENICLINE TARTRATE?

The standard adult dose of INJECTAPAP is: 1 g intravenous every 6 hours or 650 mg intravenous every 4 hours; maximum 4 g per day.. The standard adult dose of VARENICLINE TARTRATE is: Initial: 0.5 mg orally once daily on days 1-3, then 0.5 mg twice daily on days 4-7, then 1 mg twice daily starting day 8; target dose: 1 mg twice daily; route: oral; frequency: twice daily after initial titration.. Dosing should always be individualized based on indication, renal and hepatic function, age, and other patient factors.

4. Can you take INJECTAPAP and VARENICLINE TARTRATE together?

No direct drug-drug interaction has been formally documented between INJECTAPAP and VARENICLINE TARTRATE in current clinical databases. However, individual patient risk factors including other medications, organ function, and comorbidities should always be evaluated by a qualified healthcare provider.

5. Are INJECTAPAP and VARENICLINE TARTRATE safe during pregnancy?

The maternal-fetal safety profiles differ. INJECTAPAP is classified as Category C. FDA Category C. Acetaminophen crosses the placenta. No evidence of teratogenicity in humans with standard doses. First trimester: limited data suggest no increased risk of major ma. VARENICLINE TARTRATE is classified as Category A/B. Pregnancy Category C. Animal studies (rats, rabbits) at exposures up to 0.5 and 23 times the MRHD showed decreased fetal weight, increased incidence of external and visceral malfor. Always consult a maternal-fetal medicine specialist before taking either drug during pregnancy or lactation.