Chlorthalidone (chlorthalidone) - Dosing, PA Forms & Info (2026)
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    1. Home
    2. Chlorthalidone - Chlorthalidone  tablet

    Get your patient on Chlorthalidone - Chlorthalidone  tablet (Chlorthalidone)

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    Prescribing informationPubMed™ news

    Chlorthalidone - Chlorthalidone  tablet prescribing information

    • Indications & usage
    • Dosage & administration
    • Contraindications
    • Adverse reactions
    • Description
    • Pharmacology
    • How supplied/storage & handling
    • Data source
    • Indications & usage
    • Dosage & administration
    • Contraindications
    • Adverse reactions
    • Description
    • Pharmacology
    • How supplied/storage & handling
    • Data source
    Prescribing Information
    Indications & Usage

    INDICATIONS AND USAGE

    Diuretics such as chlorthalidone are indicated in the management of hypertension either as the sole therapeutic agent or to enhance the effect of other antihypertensive drugs in the more severe forms of hypertension.

    Chlorthalidone is indicated as adjunctive therapy in edema associated with congestive heart failure, hepatic cirrhosis, and corticosteroid and estrogen therapy.

    Chlorthalidone has also been found useful in edema due to various forms of renal dysfunction, such as nephrotic syndrome, acute glomerulonephritis, and chronic renal failure.

    Usage in Pregnancy: The routine use of diuretics in an otherwise healthy woman is inappropriate and exposes mother and fetus to unnecessary hazard. Diuretics do not prevent development of toxemia of pregnancy, and there is no satisfactory evidence that they are useful in the treatment of developed toxemia.

    Edema during pregnancy may arise from pathological causes or from the physiologic and mechanical consequences of pregnancy. Chlorthalidone is indicated in pregnancy when edema is due to pathologic causes, just as it is in the absence of pregnancy (however, see PRECAUTIONS , below). Dependent edema in pregnancy, resulting from restriction of venous return by the expanded uterus, is properly treated through elevation of the lower extremities and use of support hose; use of diuretics to lower intravascular volume in this case is illogical and unnecessary. There is hypervolemia during normal pregnancy that is harmful to neither the fetus nor the mother (in the absence of cardiovascular disease), but that is associated with edema, including generalized edema, in the majority of pregnant women. If this edema produces discomfort, increased recumbency will often provide relief. In rare instances, this edema may cause extreme discomfort that is not relieved by rest. In these cases, a short course of diuretics may provide relief and be appropriate.

    Dosage & Administration

    DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION

    Therapy should be initiated with the lowest possible dose. This dose should be titrated according to individual patient response to gain maximal therapeutic benefit while maintaining lowest dosage possible. A single dose given in the morning with food is recommended; divided daily doses are unnecessary.

    Hypertension: Initiation : Therapy, in most patients, should be initiated with a single daily dose of 25 mg. If the response is insufficient after a suitable trial, the dosage may be increased to a single daily dose of 50 mg. If additional control is required, the dosage of chlorthalidone may be increased to 100 mg once daily or a second antihypertensive drug (step 2 therapy) may be added. Dosage above 100 mg daily usually does not increase effectiveness. Increases in serum uric acid and decreases in serum potassium are dose-related over the 25 to 100 mg/day range.

    Maintenance : Maintenance doses may be lower than initial doses and should be adjusted according to individual patient response. Effectiveness is well sustained during continued use.

    Edema: Initiation : Adults, initially 50 to 100 mg daily, or 100 mg on alternate days. Some patients may require 150 to 200 mg at these intervals or up to 200 mg daily. Dosages above this level, however, do not usually produce a greater response.

    Maintenance : Maintenance doses may often be lower than initial doses and should be adjusted according to individual patient response. Effectiveness is well sustained during continued use.

    Contraindications

    CONTRAINDICATIONS

    Anuria.

    Known hypersensitivity to chlorthalidone or other sulfonamide-derived drugs.

    Adverse Reactions

    ADVERSE REACTIONS

    The following adverse reactions have been observed, but there is not enough systematic collection of data to support an estimate of their frequency.

    Gastrointestinal System Reactions :

    anorexia,
    gastric irritation
    nausea,
    vomiting
    cramping
    diarrhea
    constipation
    jaundice (intrahepatic cholestatic jaundice)
    pancreatitis

    Central Nervous System Reactions :

    dizziness
    vertigo
    paresthesias
    headache
    xanthopsia

    Hematologic Reactions :

    leukopenia
    agranulocytosis
    thrombocytopenia
    aplastic anemia

    Dermatologic-Hypersensitivity Reactions :

    purpura
    photosensitivity
    rash
    urticaria
    necrotizing angiitis
    (vasculitis)
    (cutaneous vasculitis)
    Lyell's syndrome (toxic epidermal necrolysis)

    Cardiovascular Reactions : orthostatic hypotension may occur and may be aggravated by alcohol, barbiturates, or narcotics.

    Other Adverse Reactions :

    hyperglycemia
    glycosuria
    hyperuricemia
    muscle spasm
    weakness
    restlessness
    impotence

    Whenever adverse reactions are moderate or severe, chlorthalidone dosage should be reduced or therapy withdrawn.

    Description

    DESCRIPTION

    Chlorthalidone USP is an oral antihypertensive/diuretic. It is a monosulfamyl diuretic that differs chemically from thiazide diuretics in that a double-ring system is incorporated in its structure. It is 2-chloro-5(1-hydroxy-3-oxo-1-isoindolinyl) benzenesulfonamide, with the following structural formula:

    Referenced Image

    Chlorthalidone, USP is practically insoluble in water, in ether, and in chloroform; soluble in methanol; slightly soluble in alcohol.

    Chlorthalidone tablets are available containing either 25 mg or 50 mg of chlorthalidone USP and the following inactive ingredients: colloidal silicon dioxide, corn starch, crospovidone, ferric oxide yellow, magnesium stearate, microcrystalline cellulose. The 50 mg tablet also contains FD&C Blue #1.

    Pharmacology

    CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY

    Chlorthalidone is an oral diuretic with prolonged action (48–72 hours) and low toxicity. The major portion of the drug is excreted unchanged by the kidneys. The diuretic effect of the drug occurs in approximately 2.6 hours and continues for up to 72 hours. The mean half-life following a 50 to 200 mg dose is 40 hours. In the first order of absorption, the elimination half-life is 53 hours following a 50 mg dose, and 60 hours following a 100 mg dose. Approximately 75 percent of the drug is bound to plasma proteins, 58 percent of the drug being bound to albumin. This is caused by an increased affinity of the drug to erythrocyte carbonic anhydrase. Nonrenal routes of elimination have yet to be clarified. Data are not available regarding percentage of dose as unchanged drug and metabolites, concentration of the drug in body fluids, degree of uptake by a particular organ or in the fetus, or passage across the blood-brain barrier.

    The drug produces copious diuresis with greatly increased excretion of sodium and chloride. At maximal therapeutic dosage, chlorthalidone is approximately equal in its diuretic effect to comparable maximal therapeutic doses of benzothiadiazine diuretics. The site of action appears to be the cortical diluting segment of the ascending limb of Henle's loop of the nephron.

    How Supplied/Storage & Handling

    HOW SUPPLIED

    Chlorthalidone Tablets, USP are available containing 25 mg or 50 mg of Chlorthalidone, USP.

    The 25 mg tablets are light-yellow colored, round shaped, uncoated, flat, bevelled edge tablets, debossed with '103'on one side of the tablet and blank on the other side. They are available as follows:

    NDC 59746-760-01
    Bottles of 100 with child-resistant closure

    NDC 59746-760-36
    Bottles of 1000 with child-resistant closure

    The 50 mg tablets are light-green colored, round shaped, uncoated, flat, bevelled edge scored tablets, debossed with 'I' to the left and '3'to the right of the score on one side of the tablet and blank on the other side. They are available as follows:

    NDC 59746-761-01
    Bottles of 100 with child-resistant closure

    Store at 20 to 25° C (68 to 77° F). [See USP Controlled Room Temperature]. Protect from light. Keep container tightly closed. Avoid excessive heat. Dispense in a tight container as defined in the USP.

    Keep out of the reach of children.
    This product should be dispensed in a container with a child-resistant cap.

    Manufactured by:

    Inventia Healthcare Limited,
    F1-F1/1-F75/1, Additional Ambernath M.I.D.C.,
    Ambernath (East)-421506,
    Dist. Thane, Maharashtra, India

    Distributed by:

    Jubilant Cadista Pharmaceuticals Inc.
    Salisbury, MD 21801, USA.

    ATE0614L/02

    REVISED: February 2022

    Data SourceWe receive information directly from the FDA and PrescriberPoint is updated as frequently as changes are made available
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