Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: OXAYDO versus OXYCONTIN.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: OXAYDO versus OXYCONTIN.
OXAYDO vs OXYCONTIN
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Oxycodone is a full opioid agonist with relative selectivity for mu-opioid receptors, although it can bind to kappa-opioid receptors at higher doses. The principal therapeutic action of oxycodone is analgesia. Like all full opioid agonists, there is no ceiling effect to analgesia for oxycodone.
Oxycodone is a full opioid agonist with relative selectivity for the mu-opioid receptor, although it can bind to other opioid receptors at higher doses. The principal therapeutic action of oxycodone is analgesia. Like all full opioid agonists, there is no ceiling effect for analgesia with oxycodone. Clinically, dosage is titrated to provide adequate analgesia and may be limited by adverse reactions, including respiratory and CNS depression.
Oral, 5-10 mg every 4-6 hours as needed for pain; maximum 60 mg per day.
10 mg orally every 12 hours; titrate based on pain severity and prior opioid exposure.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life is 3.5-5.5 hours for immediate-release oxycodone; clinically dose every 4-6 hours for sustained analgesia.
4.5-5.0 hours (immediate-release); controlled-release OXYCONTIN has an apparent half-life of 4.5-8.7 hours. Terminal half-life is ~3.5-4 hours for immediate-release, reflecting context-sensitive elimination.
Primarily renal as unchanged drug and metabolites; ~90% excreted in urine (approx 10% unchanged oxycodone, rest as noroxycodone and oxymorphone conjugates) and <10% in feces via biliary elimination.
Primarily renal (90% as metabolites, 10% unchanged). Also biliary/fecal (10%).
Category C
Category C
Opioid Analgesic
Opioid Analgesic