Indapamide (indapamide) - Dosing, PA Forms & Info (2026)
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    1. Home
    2. Indapamide - Indapamide tablet, Film Coated

    Get your patient on Indapamide - Indapamide tablet, Film Coated (Indapamide)

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    Prescribing informationPubMed™ news

    Indapamide - Indapamide tablet, Film Coated prescribing information

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

    INDICATIONS AND USAGE

    Indapamide tablets are indicated for the treatment of hypertension, alone or in combination with other antihypertensive drugs.

    Indapamide tablets are also indicated for the treatment of salt and fluid retention associated with congestive heart failure.

    Usage in Pregnancy: The routine use of diuretics in an otherwise healthy woman is inappropriate and exposes mother and fetus to unnecessary hazard (see PRECAUTIONS ). 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. Indapamide is indicated in pregnancy when edema is due to pathologic causes, just as it is in the absence of pregnancy (however, see PRECAUTIONS ). 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 which is not harmful to either the fetus or the mother (in the absence of cardiovascular disease), but which 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 which is not relieved by rest. In these cases, a short course of diuretics may provide relief and may be appropriate.

    Dosage & Administration

    DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION

    Hypertension: The adult starting indapamide dose for hypertension is 1.25 mg as a single daily dose taken in the morning. If the response to 1.25 mg is not satisfactory after four weeks, the daily dose may be increased to 2.5 mg taken once daily. If the response to 2.5 mg is not satisfactory after four weeks, the daily dose may be increased to 5 mg taken once daily, but adding another antihypertensive should be considered.

    Edema of Congestive Heart Failure: The adult starting indapamide dose for edema of congestive heart failure is 2.5 mg as a single daily dose taken in the morning. If the response to 2.5 mg is not satisfactory after one week, the daily dose may be increased to 5 mg taken once daily.

    If the antihypertensive response to indapamide is insufficient, indapamide may be combined with other antihypertensive drugs, with careful monitoring of blood pressure. It is recommended that the usual dose of other agents be reduced by 50% during initial combination therapy. As the blood pressure response becomes evident, further dosage adjustments may be necessary.

    In general, doses of 5 mg and larger have not appeared to provide additional effects on blood pressure or heart failure, but are associated with a greater degree of hypokalemia. There is minimal clinical trial experience in patients with doses greater than 5 mg once a day.

    Contraindications

    CONTRAINDICATIONS

    Anuria. Known hypersensitivity to indapamide or to other sulfonamide-derived drugs.

    Adverse Reactions

    ADVERSE REACTIONS

    Most adverse effects have been mild and transient.

    The Clinical Adverse Reactions listed in Table 1 represent data from Phase II/III placebo-controlled studies (306 patients given indapamide 1.25 mg). The Clinical Adverse Reactions listed in Table 2 represent data from Phase II placebo-controlled studies and long-term controlled clinical trials (426 patients given indapamide 2.5 mg or 5 mg). The reactions are arranged into two groups: 1) a cumulative incidence equal to or greater than 5%; 2) a cumulative incidence less than 5%. Reactions are counted regardless of relation to drug.

    TABLE 1: Adverse Reactions from Studies of 1.25 mg
    Incidence ≥ 5% Incidence < 5%•
    BODY AS A WHOLE
    Headache Asthenia
    Infection Flu Syndrome
    Pain Abdominal Pain
    Back Pain Chest Pain
    GASTROINTESTINAL SYSTEM Constipation
    Diarrhea
    Dyspepsia
    Nausea
    METABOLIC SYSTEM Peripheral Edema
    CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM Nervousness
    Dizziness Hypertonia
    RESPIRATORY SYSTEM Cough
    Rhinitis Pharyngitis
    Sinusitis
    SPECIAL SENSES Conjunctivitis
    •OTHER

    All other clinical adverse reactions occurred at an incidence of < 1%.

    Approximately 4% of patients given indapamide 1.25 mg compared to 5% of the patients given placebo discontinued treatment in the trials of up to eight weeks because of adverse reactions.

    In controlled clinical trials of six to eight weeks in duration, 20% of patients receiving indapamide 1.25 mg, 61% of patients receiving indapamide 5 mg, and 80% of patients receiving indapamide 10 mg had at least one potassium value below 3.4 mEq/L. In the indapamide 1.25 mg group, about 40% of those patients who reported hypokalemia as a laboratory adverse event returned to normal serum potassium values without intervention. Hypokalemia with concomitant clinical signs or symptoms occurred in 2% of patients receiving indapamide 1.25 mg.

    TABLE 2: Adverse Reactions from Studies of 2.5 mg and 5 mg
    Incidence ≥ 5% Incidence < 5%
    CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM / NEUROMUSCULAR
    Headache Lightheadedness
    Dizziness Drowsiness
    Fatigue, weakness, loss of energy, lethargy,
    tiredness, or malaise

    Vertigo
    Insomnia

    Muscle cramps or spasm, or numbness
    of the extremities

    Depression
    Blurred Vision

    Nervousness, tension, anxiety, irritability, or
    agitation
    GASTROINTESTINAL SYSTEM Constipation
    Nausea
    Vomiting
    Diarrhea
    Gastric irritation
    Abdominal pain or cramps
    Anorexia
    CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM Orthostatic hypotension
    Premature ventricular contractions
    Irregular heart beat
    Palpitations
    GENITOURINARY SYSTEM Frequency of urination
    Nocturia
    Polyuria
    DERMATOLOGIC/HYPERSENSITIVITY Rash
    Hives
    Pruritus
    Vasculitis
    OTHER Impotence or reduced libido
    Rhinorrhea
    Flushing
    Hyperuricemia
    Hyperglycemia
    Hyponatremia
    Hypochloremia
    Increase in serum urea nitrogen (BUN) or creatinine
    Glycosuria
    Weight loss
    Dry mouth
    Tingling of extremities

    Because most of these data are from long-term studies (up to 40 weeks of treatment), it is probable that many of the adverse experiences reported are due to causes other than the drug. Approximately 10% of patients given indapamide discontinued treatment in long-term trials because of reactions either related or unrelated to the drug.

    Hypokalemia with concomitant clinical signs or symptoms occurred in 3% of patients receiving indapamide 2.5 mg q.d. and 7% of patients receiving indapamide 5 mg q.d. In long-term controlled clinical trials comparing the hypokalemic effects of daily doses of indapamide and hydrochlorothiazide, however, 47% of patients receiving indapamide 2.5 mg, 72% of patients receiving indapamide 5 mg, and 44% of patients receiving hydrochlorothiazide 50 mg had at least one potassium value (out of a total of 11 taken during the study) below 3.5 mEq/L. In the indapamide 2.5 mg group, over 50% of those patients returned to normal serum potassium values without intervention.

    In clinical trials of six to eight weeks, the mean changes in selected values were as shown in the tables below.

    Mean Changes from Baseline after 8 Weeks of Treatment – 1.25 mg
    Serum Electrolytes (mEq/L) Serum Uric Acid BUN
    Potassium Sodium Chloride (mg/dL) (mg/dL)
    Indapamide – 0.28 – 0.63 – 2.60 0.69 1.46
    1.25 mg
    (n=255 to 257)
    Placebo 0.00 – 0.11 – 0.21 0.06 0.06
    (n=263 to 266)

    No patients receiving indapamide 1.25 mg experienced hyponatremia considered possibly clinically significant (<125 mEq/L).

    Indapamide had no adverse effects on lipids.

    Mean Changes from Baseline after 40 Weeks of Treatment – 2.5 mg and 5 mg
    Serum Electrolytes (mEq/L) Serum Uric Acid BUN
    Potassium Sodium Chloride (mg/dL) (mg/dL)
    Indapamide – 0.4 – 0.6 – 3.6 0.7 – 0.1
    2.5 mg (n=76)
    Indapamide – 0.6 – 0.7 – 5.1 1.1 1.4
    5 mg (n=81)

    The following reactions have been reported with clinical usage of indapamide: jaundice (intrahepatic cholestatic jaundice), hepatitis, pancreatitis and abnormal liver function tests. These reactions were reversible with discontinuance of the drug.

    Also reported are erythema multiforme, Stevens-Johnson Syndrome, bullous eruptions, purpura, photosensitivity, fever, pneumonitis, anaphylactic reactions, agranulocytosis, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia and aplastic anemia. Other adverse reactions reported with antihypertensive/diuretics are necrotizing angiitis, respiratory distress, sialadenitis, xanthopsia.

    Postmarketing Experience
    Eye Disorders: Choroidal effusion, acute myopia, and angle-closure glaucoma (frequency not known). 1

    1 Module 2.5 SER-indapamide-choroidal effusion-acute myopia and angle-closure glaucoma-Jul2020

    To report SUSPECTED ADVERSE EVENTS, contact Teva at 1-888-838-2872 or FDA at 1-800-FDA-1088 or http://www.fda.gov/ for voluntary reporting of adverse reactions.

    Drug Interactions

    Drug Interactions

    Other Antihypertensives: Indapamide may add to or potentiate the action of other antihypertensive drugs. In limited controlled trials that compared the effect of indapamide combined with other antihypertensive drugs with the effect of the other drugs administered alone, there was no notable change in the nature or frequency of adverse reactions associated with the combined therapy.

    Lithium: See WARNINGS .

    Post-Sympathectomy Patient: The antihypertensive effect of the drug may be enhanced in the post-sympathectomized patient.

    Norepinephrine: Indapamide, like the thiazides, may decrease arterial responsiveness to norepinephrine, but this diminution is not sufficient to preclude effectiveness of the pressor agent for therapeutic use.

    Description

    DESCRIPTION

    Indapamide is an oral antihypertensive/diuretic. Its molecule contains both a polar sulfamoyl chlorobenzamide moiety and a lipid-soluble methylindoline moiety. It differs chemically from the thiazides in that it does not possess the thiazide ring system and contains only one sulfonamide group. The chemical name of indapamide is 4-Chloro- N -(2-methyl-1-indolinyl)-3-Sulfamoylbenzamide, and its molecular weight is 365.84. The compound is a weak acid, pK a =8.8, and is soluble in aqueous solutions of strong bases. It is a white to yellow-white crystalline (tetragonal) powder, and has the following structural formula:

    Referenced Image

    Each tablet, for oral administration, contains 1.25 mg or 2.5 mg of indapamide, USP. In addition, each tablet contains the following inactive ingredients: corn starch, hypromellose, lactose monohydrate, magnesium stearate, maltodextrin, microcrystalline cellulose, polydextrose, polyethylene glycol, talc, titanium dioxide, triacetin. The 1.25 mg tablet also contains FD&C yellow #6 aluminum lake (sunset yellow lake).

    Pharmacology

    CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY

    Indapamide is the first of a new class of antihypertensive/diuretics, the indolines. The oral administration of 2.5 mg (two 1.25 mg tablets) of indapamide to male subjects produced peak concentrations of approximately 115 ng/mL of the drug in blood within two hours. The oral administration of 5 mg (two 2.5 mg tablets) of indapamide to healthy male subjects produced peak concentrations of approximately 260 ng/mL of the drug in the blood within two hours. A minimum of 70% of a single oral dose is eliminated by the kidneys and an additional 23% by the gastrointestinal tract, probably including the biliary route. The half-life of indapamide in whole blood is approximately 14 hours.

    Indapamide is preferentially and reversibly taken up by the erythrocytes in the peripheral blood. The whole blood/plasma ratio is approximately 6:1 at the time of peak concentration and decreases to 3.5:1 at eight hours. From 71% to 79% of the indapamide in plasma is reversibly bound to plasma proteins.

    Indapamide is an extensively metabolized drug, with only about 7% of the total dose administered, recovered in the urine as unchanged drug during the first 48 hours after administration. The urinary elimination of 14 C-labeled indapamide and metabolites is biphasic with a terminal half-life of excretion of total radioactivity of 26 hours.

    In a parallel design double-blind, placebo controlled trial in hypertension, daily doses of indapamide between 1.25 mg and 10 mg produced dose-related antihypertensive effects. Doses of 5 mg and 10 mg were not distinguishable from each other although each was differentiated from placebo and 1.25 mg indapamide. At daily doses of 1.25 mg, 5 mg and 10 mg, a mean decrease of serum potassium of 0.28, 0.61 and 0.76 mEq/L, respectively, was observed and uric acid increased by about 0.69 mg/100 mL.

    In other parallel design, dose-ranging clinical trials in hypertension and edema, daily doses of indapamide between 0.5 mg and 5 mg produced dose-related effects. Generally, doses of 2.5 mg and 5 mg were not distinguishable from each other although each was differentiated from placebo and from 0.5 mg or 1 mg indapamide. At daily doses of 2.5 mg and 5 mg a mean decrease of serum potassium of 0.5 and 0.6 mEq/Liter, respectively, was observed and uric acid increased by about 1 mg/100 mL.

    At these doses, the effects of indapamide on blood pressure and edema are approximately equal to those obtained with conventional doses of other antihypertensive/diuretics.

    In hypertensive patients, daily doses of 1.25 mg, 2.5 mg and 5 mg of indapamide have no appreciable cardiac inotropic or chronotropic effect. The drug decreases peripheral resistance with little or no effect on cardiac output, rate or rhythm. Chronic administration of indapamide to hypertensive patients has little or no effect on glomerular filtration rate or renal plasma flow.

    Indapamide had an antihypertensive effect in patients with varying degrees of renal impairment, although in general, diuretic effects declined as renal function decreased.

    In a small number of controlled studies, indapamide taken with other antihypertensive drugs such as hydralazine, propranolol, guanethidine and methyldopa, appeared to have the additive effect typical of thiazide-type diuretics.

    How Supplied/Storage & Handling

    HOW SUPPLIED

    Indapamide Tablets, USP are available as follows:

    1.25 mg — Each orange, round, film-coated tablet imprinted with Referenced Imageon one side and 597 on the other side contains 1.25 mg of indapamide, USP. Tablets are supplied in bottles of 100 (NDC 0228-2597-11) and 1000 (NDC 0228-2597-96).

    2.5 mg — Each white, round, film-coated tablet imprinted with Referenced Imageon one side and 571 on the other side contains 2.5 mg of indapamide, USP. Tablets are supplied in bottles of 100 (NDC 0228-2571-11) and 1000 (NDC 0228-2571-96).

    Keep tightly closed.

    Store at controlled room temperature 20° to 25°C (68° to 77°F) [see USP]. Avoid excessive heat.

    Dispense in a tight, light-resistant container as defined in the USP.

    Manufactured In India By:
    Watson Pharma Private Ltd.
    Verna, Salcette, Goa 403722, INDIA

    Manufactured For:
    Teva Pharmaceuticals
    Parsippany, NJ 07054

    Rev. A 10/2022

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