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CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Mechanism of Action
Quinapril is deesterified to the principal metabolite,
quinaprilat, which is an inhibitor of ACE activity in
human subjects and animals. ACE is a peptidyl dipeptidase
that catalyzes the conversion of angiotensin I to the
vasoconstrictor, angiotensin II. The effect of quinapril
in hypertension and in congestive heart failure (CHF)
appears to result primarily from the inhibition of circulating
and tissue ACE activity, thereby reducing angiotensin
II formation. Quinapril inhibits the elevation in blood
pressure caused by intravenously administered angiotensin
I, but has no effect on the pressor response to angiotensin
II, norepinephrine or epinephrine. Angiotensin II also
stimulates the secretion of aldosterone from the adrenal
cortex, thereby facilitating renal sodium and fluid reabsorption.
Reduced aldosterone secretion by quinapril may result
in a small increase in serum potassium. In controlled
hypertension trials, treatment with quinapril HCl alone
resulted in mean increases in potassium of 0.07 mmol/L
(see PRECAUTIONS.) Removal of angiotensin II negative
feedback on renin secretion leads to increased plasma
renin activity (PRA).
While the principal mechanism of antihypertensive effect
is thought to be through the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone
system, quinapril exerts antihypertensive actions even
in patients with low renin hypertension. Quinapril HCl
was an effective antihypertensive in all races studied,
although it was somewhat less effective in blacks (usually
a predominantly low renin group) than in nonblacks. ACE
is identical to kininase II, an enzyme that degrades bradykinin,
a potent peptide vasodilator; whether increased levels
of bradykinin play a role in the therapeutic effect of
quinapril remains to be elucidated.
Pharmacokinetics and Metabolism
Following oral administration, peak plasma quinapril
concentrations are observed within one hour. Based on
recovery of quinapril and its metabolites in urine, the
extent of absorption is at least 60%. The rate and extent
of quinapril absorption are diminished moderately (approximately
25-30%) when quinapril HCl tablets are administered during
a high-fat meal. Following absorption, quinapril is deesterified
to its major active metabolite, quinaprilat (about 38%
of oral dose), and to other minor inactive metabolites.
Following multiple oral dosing of quinapril HCl, there
is an effective accumulation half-life of quinaprilat
of approximately 3 hours, and peak plasma quinaprilat
concentrations are observed approximately 2 hours post-dose.
Quinaprilat is eliminated primarily by renal excretion,
up to 96% of an IV dose, and has an elimination half-life
in plasma of approximately 2 hours and a prolonged terminal
phase with a half-life of 25 hours. The pharmacokinetics
of quinapril and quinaprilat are linear over a single-dose
range of 5-80 mg doses and 40-160 mg in multiple daily
doses. Approximately 97% of either quinapril or quinaprilat
circulating in plasma is bound to proteins.
In patients with renal insufficiency, the elimination
half-life of quinaprilat increases as creatinine clearance
decreases. There is a linear correlation between plasma
quinaprilat clearance and creatinine clearance. In patients
with end-stage renal disease, chronic hemodialysis or
continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis has little effect
on the elimination of quinapril and quinaprilat. Elimination
of quinaprilat is reduced in elderly patients (³65
years) and in those with heart failure; this reduction
is attributable to decrease in renal function (see DOSAGE
AND ADMINISTRATION). Quinaprilat concentrations are reduced
in patients with alcoholic cirrhosis due to impaired deesterification
of quinapril. Studies in rats indicate that quinapril
and its metabolites do not cross the blood-brain barrier.
Pharmacodynamics and Clinical Effects
Hypertension: Single doses of 20 mg
of quinapril HCl provide over 80% inhibition of plasma
ACE for 24 hours. Inhibition of the pressor response to
angiotensin I is shorter-lived, with a 20 mg dose giving
75% inhibition for about 4 hours, 50% inhibition for about
8 hours, and 20% inhibition at 24 hours. With chronic
dosing, however, there is substantial inhibition of angiotensin
II levels at 24 hours by doses of 20-80 mg.
Administration of 10 to 80 mg of quinapril HCl to patients
with mild to severe hypertension results in a reduction
of sitting and standing blood pressure to about the same
extent with minimal effect on heart rate. Symptomatic
postural hypotension is infrequent although it can occur
in patients who are salt- and/or volume-depleted (see
WARNINGS.) Antihypertensive activity commences within
1 hour with peak effects usually achieved by 2 to 4 hours
after dosing. During chronic therapy, most of the blood
pressure lowering effect of a given dose is obtained in
1-2 weeks. In multiple-dose studies, 10-80 mg per day
in single or divided doses lowered systolic and diastolic
blood pressure throughout the dosing interval, with a
trough effect of about 5-11/3-7 mm Hg. The trough effect
represents about 50% of the peak effect. While the dose-response
relationship is relatively flat, doses of 40-80 mg were
somewhat more effective at trough than 10-20 mg, and twice
daily dosing tended to give a somewhat lower trough blood
pressure than once daily dosing with the same total dose.
The antihypertensive effect of quinapril HCl continues
during long-term therapy, with no evidence of loss of
effectiveness.
Hemodynamic assessments in patients with hypertension
indicate that blood pressure reduction produced by quinapril
is accompanied by a reduction in total peripheral resistance
and renal vascular resistance with little or no change
in heart rate, cardiac index, renal blood flow, glomerular
filtration rate, or filtration fraction.
Use of quinapril HCl with a thiazide diuretic gives a
blood-pressure lowering effect greater than that seen
with either agent alone.
In patients with hypertension, quinapril HCl 10-40 mg
was similar in effectiveness to captopril, enalapril,
propranolol, and thiazide diuretics.
Therapeutic effects appear to be the same for elderly
(³65 years of age) and younger adult patients given
the same daily dosages, with no increase in adverse events
in elderly patients.
Heart Failure: In a placebo-controlled
trial involving patients with congestive heart failure
treated with digitalis and diuretics, parenteral quinaprilat,
the active metabolite of quinapril, reduced pulmonary
capillary wedge pressure, and systemic vascular resistance
and increased cardiac output/index. Similar favorable
hemodynamic effects were seen with oral quinapril in baseline-controlled
trials, and such effects appeared to be maintained during
chronic oral quinapril therapy. Quinapril reduced renal
hepatic vascular resistance and increased renal and hepatic
blood flow with glomerular filtration rate remaining unchanged.
A significant dose response relationship for improvement
in maximal exercise tolerance has been observed with quinapril
HCl therapy. Beneficial effects on the severity of heart
failure as measured by New York Heart Association (NYHA)
classification and Quality of Life and on symptoms of
dyspnea, fatigue, and edema were evident after 6 months
in a double blind, placebo controlled study. Favorable
effects were maintained for up to two years of open label
therapy. The effects of quinapril on long-term mortality
in heart failure have not been evaluated.
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