CGMP Specific PDE Type-5 Inhibitors/Alpha-Blockers
This information is generalized and not intended as specific medical advice. Consult your healthcare professional before taking or discontinuing any drug or commencing any course of treatment.
Medical warning:
Moderate. These medicines may cause some risk when taken together. Contact your healthcare professional (e.g. doctor or pharmacist) for more information.
How the interaction occurs:
Sildenafil, tadalafil, vardenafil, and alpha-blockers can lower your blood pressure.
What might happen:
Taking sildenafil, tadalafil, or vardenafil with an alpha-blocker may result in your blood pressure becoming too low.If your blood pressure is too low, you may feel faint, dizzy, or lose consciousness.
What you should do about this interaction:
Let your healthcare professionals (e.g. doctor or pharmacist) know that you are taking these medicines together.If you have been taking an alpha-blocker, your doctor may want you to wait to start taking sildenafil, tadalafil, or vardenafil until you have adjusted to your alpha-blocker.If you have been taking sildenafil, tadalafil, or vardenafil, your doctor may start you on a lower dose of an alpha-blocker.Your doctor may instruct you to separate the times you take your sildenafil, tadalafil, or vardenafil from the time you take your alpha-blocker.Let your healthcare professionals know if you experience any dizziness or fainting.Your healthcare professionals may already be aware of this interaction and may be monitoring you for it. Do not start, stop, or change the dosage of any medicine before checking with them first.
References:
1.Viagra (sildenafil) US prescribing information. Pfizer Inc. January, 2011.
2.Viagra (sildenafil) Australian prescribing information. Pfizer October 17, 2006.
3.Viagra (sildenafil citrate) Canadian prescribing information. Pfizer March 9, 2006.
4.Viagra (sildenafil citrate) UK summary of product characteristics. Pfizer Limited July 11, 2006.
5.Cialis (tadalafil) US prescribing information. Eli Lilly and Company February, 2010.
6.Cialis (tadalafil) Australian prescribing information. Eli Lilly Pty Ltd July 3, 2006.
7.Cialis (tadalafil) Canadian prescribing information. Lilly August 30, 2005.
8.Cialis (tadalafil) UK summary of product characteristics. Eli Lilly and Company Limited September 16, 2008.
9.Levitra (vardenafil hydrochloride) US prescribing information. Bayer Pharmaceuticals Corporation October, 2007.
10.Levitra (vardenafil hydrochloride) Canadian prescribing information. Bayer, Inc. October 24, 2006.
11.Levitra (vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate) UK summary of product characteristics. Bayer plc December 20, 2006.
12.Levitra (vardenafil hydrochloride trihydrate) Australian prescribing information. Bayer Australia Limited November 2, 2006.
13.Hytrin (terazosin hydrochloride) US prescribing information. Abbott Laboratories July, 2009.
14.Cardura (doxazosin hydrochloride) US prescribing information. Pfizer, Inc. July, 2009.
15.Minipress (prazosin hydrochloride) US prescribing information. Pfizer Inc. July, 2009.
16.Kloner RA, Jackson G, Emmick JT, Mitchell MI, Bedding A, Warner MR, Pereira A. Interaction between the phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitor, tadalafil and 2 alpha-blockers, doxazosin and tamsulosin in healthy normotensive men. J Urol 2004 Nov;172(5 Pt 1):1935-40.
17.Auerbach SM, Gittelman M, Mazzu A, Cihon F, Sundaresan P, White WB. Simultaneous administration of vardenafil and tamsulosin does not induce clinically significant hypotension in patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia. Urology 2004 Nov;64(5):998-1003; discussion 1003-4.
18.Rapaflo (silodosin) US prescribing information. Watson Laboratories, Inc. March, 2010.





