Drug Monograph

Rizatriptan

rizatriptan benzoate · Brand: Maxalt, Maxalt-MLT

Selective 5-HT1B/1D Receptor Agonist (Triptan) · Oral Tablet · Orally Disintegrating Tablet
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
2–3 hours
Metabolism
MAO-A (primary)
Protein Binding
14%
Bioavailability
~45% (oral)
Volume of Distribution
~140 L (males); ~110 L (females)
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Triptan (5-HT1B/1D agonist)
Available Doses
5 mg, 10 mg (tablet & ODT)
Route
Oral
Renal Adjustment
Not required
Hepatic Adjustment
No formal recommendation; use caution
Pregnancy
Caution — animal data suggest fetal harm
Lactation
No human data available; caution advised
Schedule
Prescription only (not controlled)
Generic Available
Yes (tablet & ODT)
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Acute migraine with or without auraAdults (≥18 years)Acute abortiveFDA Approved
Acute migraine with or without auraPediatric (6–17 years)Acute abortive (weight-based dosing)FDA Approved

Rizatriptan was among the earliest second-generation triptans approved by the FDA (1998) and is distinguished by its rapid onset of action, with peak plasma concentrations reached approximately 1 hour after oral dosing. It is available as both a conventional tablet and an orally disintegrating tablet (Maxalt-MLT), offering convenience for patients with nausea-associated migraine. Rizatriptan is not indicated for migraine prophylaxis or for the treatment of cluster headache, and should not be used in hemiplegic or basilar migraine.

Off-Label Uses

Menstrual migraine (short-term prophylaxis): Small trials suggest rizatriptan 10 mg taken at migraine onset during the perimenstrual window is effective; evidence quality is moderate.

Migraine in children <6 years: Not FDA-approved for this age group; limited data from open-label studies; evidence quality is low.

Dose

Dosing

Adult Dosing by Clinical Scenario

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Migraine — first-line oral treatment10 mg PO10 mg PO30 mg/24 hMay repeat ≥2 h after first dose if headache returns
10 mg more effective than 5 mg but more side effects
Migraine — dose-sensitive or triptan-naive patients5 mg PO5–10 mg PO30 mg/24 hConsider starting at 5 mg if prior triptan side effects
Step up to 10 mg if 5 mg insufficient
Migraine — nausea prominent (ODT preferred)10 mg ODT10 mg ODT30 mg/24 hPlace on tongue, dissolves in saliva; no water needed
Similar bioavailability to tablet; Tmax slightly delayed
Migraine — co-prescribed with propranolol5 mg PO5 mg PO15 mg/24 hPropranolol increases rizatriptan AUC by 70%
Do NOT use 10 mg dose with propranolol

Pediatric and Special Population Adjustments

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Pediatric 6–17 years, <40 kg5 mg PO5 mg PO5 mg/24 hSingle dose only; safety of multiple doses not established
Do NOT use if also taking propranolol
Pediatric 6–17 years, ≥40 kg10 mg PO10 mg PO10 mg/24 hSingle dose only
If on propranolol: 5 mg single dose only
Elderly patients5 mg PO5–10 mg PO30 mg/24 hPK similar to younger adults; start low due to CV risk
Cardiovascular evaluation before first dose recommended
Clinical Pearl: Rizatriptan vs Other Oral Triptans

Rizatriptan 10 mg achieves peak plasma concentration in approximately 1 hour — the fastest Tmax among oral triptans. In the Ferrari meta-analysis of 53 triptan trials, rizatriptan 10 mg had the lowest NNT for 2-hour pain-free response among oral formulations. Unlike sumatriptan, rizatriptan absorption is not affected by migraine-associated gastric stasis, making it a particularly reliable choice for patients who report delayed or inconsistent response to other oral triptans.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Rizatriptan is a potent and selective agonist at serotonin 5-HT1B and 5-HT1D receptors. Its anti-migraine action involves two complementary pathways. Stimulation of 5-HT1B receptors on meningeal blood vessels produces selective cranial vasoconstriction, reversing the vasodilation that contributes to migraine pain. Simultaneously, activation of 5-HT1D receptors on trigeminal nerve terminals inhibits the release of pro-inflammatory neuropeptides such as CGRP and substance P, dampening neurogenic inflammation and pain transmission through the trigeminovascular system. These dual actions interrupt the migraine cascade and provide rapid relief of headache, photophobia, phonophobia, and nausea.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
Absorption~90% absorbed; oral bioavailability ~45% (first-pass effect); Tmax ~1–1.5 h (tablet), ~1.6–2.5 h (ODT)Fastest Tmax among oral triptans; absorption not impaired by migraine-associated gastric stasis; food delays but does not reduce absorption
DistributionVd ~140 L (males), ~110 L (females); protein binding 14%Wide distribution; low protein binding makes displacement interactions unlikely; AUC ~30% higher in females
MetabolismPrimarily MAO-A to inactive indole acetic acid; minor active metabolite (N-monodesmethyl-rizatriptan, <1% in urine); not a significant CYP substrateMAO-A inhibitors contraindicated (moclobemide increased AUC by 119%); propranolol increases AUC by 70% via MAO-A pathway; CYP inhibitors do not affect levels
Eliminationt½ 2–3 h; 82% urinary (14% unchanged, 51% as IAA metabolite); plasma clearance ~1000–1500 mL/min (males)Short half-life means headache recurrence is possible; no dose adjustment needed in renal impairment; renal clearance involves active tubular secretion
SE

Side Effects

Adverse reaction data reflect controlled clinical trials in over 3,700 adult patients who received single or multiple doses of rizatriptan. Incidence rates are from the FDA prescribing information. The most common adverse reactions (≥5% and greater than placebo) are asthenia/fatigue, somnolence, pain/pressure sensation, and dizziness, and appear to be dose-related.

≥10%Very Common (10 mg dose)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Neurological events (composite)20% (vs 11% placebo)Includes dizziness, somnolence, headache; dose-related
Digestive events (composite)13% (vs 8% placebo)Includes nausea and dry mouth; may overlap with migraine symptoms
1–10%Common (Individual Adverse Reactions)
Adverse Effect5 mg / 10 mg / PlaceboClinical Note
Dizziness4% / 9% / 5%Marked dose-response; advise against driving after dosing
Somnolence4% / 8% / 4%Dose-related; usually transient
Asthenia / fatigue4% / 7% / 2%Most common reason patients report feeling unwell after dosing
Pain and pressure sensations (all sites)6% / 9% / 3%Includes chest, neck, throat, jaw; usually non-cardiac
Nausea4% / 6% / 4%Difficult to distinguish from migraine-associated nausea
Atypical sensations / paresthesia3–4% / 4–5% / <2–4%Tingling, warm/cold sensations; brief and self-limiting
Chest pain / tightness / pressure<2% / 3% / 1%Non-ischemic in most patients; evaluate if CV risk factors present
Dry mouth3% / 3% / 1%Mild; resolves spontaneously
Neck/throat/jaw tightness<2% / 2% / 1%Pressure sensation; typically non-cardiac
SeriousSerious (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Myocardial ischemia / infarctionVery rareWithin hours of doseDiscontinue permanently; emergency cardiac care
Coronary vasospasm (Prinzmetal-type)Very rareMinutes to hoursDiscontinue permanently; cardiac monitoring
Cardiac arrhythmias (VT/VF)Very rareWithin hoursEmergency resuscitation; permanent discontinuation
Cerebrovascular events (stroke, hemorrhage)Very rareVariableDiscontinue immediately; neurological assessment
Serotonin syndromeRareMinutes to hours (with serotonergic co-administration)Discontinue all serotonergic agents; supportive care
Anaphylaxis / angioedema / toxic epidermal necrolysisVery rareAny timeEmergency treatment; permanent contraindication
Peripheral vasospasm (GI ischemia, Raynaud syndrome)Very rareHours post-doseDiscontinue; rule out vasospasm before retreatment
SeizuresVery rare (postmarketing)VariableDiscontinue; evaluate seizure threshold
Medication overuse headacheIncreases with ≥10 days/month useWeeks to monthsWithdrawal and preventive therapy transition
DiscontinuationDiscontinuation Rates
Controlled Trials
Low overall
Top reasons: Adverse events did not increase with up to 3 doses in 24 h; discontinuation rates low in trials
Clinical Practice
Variable over long-term use
Top reasons: Headache recurrence, somnolence, insufficient relief, chest symptoms
Reason for DiscontinuationIncidenceContext
Headache recurrence~30–40% of attacksDue to short half-life (2–3 h); second dose usually effective
Somnolence / fatigueDose-relatedMore pronounced with 10 mg; consider 5 mg if problematic
Chest/pressure symptomsLow (<3% at 10 mg)Usually non-cardiac; proactive counselling reduces discontinuation
Managing Somnolence

Somnolence is the most clinically impactful side effect of rizatriptan, affecting 8% of patients at the 10 mg dose (vs 4% placebo). It is dose-related and typically peaks within 1–2 hours of dosing. Patients should be advised to avoid driving or operating heavy machinery until they understand their response. For patients who find 10 mg sedating, the 5 mg dose offers a meaningful reduction in somnolence (4%) with some trade-off in efficacy.

Int

Drug Interactions

Rizatriptan is metabolized primarily by MAO-A and is not a significant substrate for cytochrome P450 enzymes. It is a weak competitive inhibitor of CYP2D6 only at concentrations far above therapeutic levels. The clinically important interactions center on MAO-A-mediated metabolism and serotonergic pharmacology.

MajorMAO-A Inhibitors (e.g., moclobemide, phenelzine)
MechanismInhibition of MAO-A reduces rizatriptan metabolism
EffectMoclobemide increased rizatriptan AUC by 119% and Cmax by 41%; N-monodesmethyl metabolite AUC increased >400%
ManagementContraindicated during or within 2 weeks of MAO-A inhibitor use
FDA PI
MajorPropranolol
MechanismA propranolol metabolite inhibits MAO-A, reducing rizatriptan clearance
EffectRizatriptan AUC increased by 70% (mean); a 4-fold AUC increase observed in one individual
ManagementReduce rizatriptan dose to 5 mg; max 15 mg/24 h in adults; see pediatric dosing restrictions
FDA PI
MajorErgotamine / Dihydroergotamine
MechanismAdditive vasospastic effects
EffectProlonged vasospasm and potential ischemia
ManagementContraindicated within 24 hours of each other
FDA PI
MajorOther Triptans (e.g., sumatriptan, zolmitriptan)
MechanismAdditive 5-HT1B/1D agonism
EffectCumulative vasospasm risk
ManagementDo not use different triptans within 24 hours
FDA PI
ModerateSSRIs / SNRIs (e.g., sertraline, venlafaxine)
MechanismCombined serotonergic activity
EffectPotential serotonin syndrome
ManagementMonitor for serotonin syndrome symptoms; combination commonly used in practice with appropriate vigilance
FDA PI / AHS
MinorOther beta-blockers (nadolol, metoprolol, atenolol)
MechanismNo significant PK interaction identified (specific to propranolol metabolite)
EffectNo change in rizatriptan levels
ManagementNo dose adjustment required; interaction is unique to propranolol
FDA PI
MinorCYP450 Inhibitors
MechanismRizatriptan is not a significant CYP substrate
EffectNo meaningful change in rizatriptan levels expected
ManagementNo dose adjustment needed with CYP inhibitors
FDA PI
MinorMAO-B Inhibitors (selegiline, rasagiline)
MechanismRizatriptan metabolized by MAO-A, not MAO-B
EffectNo pharmacokinetic interaction anticipated
ManagementNo dose adjustment needed
FDA PI
Mon

Monitoring

  • Cardiovascular AssessmentBefore first dose
    Routine
    Perform CV evaluation in triptan-naive patients with multiple risk factors. Consider first dose in medically supervised setting with ECG if high-risk.
  • Blood PressureEach clinical visit
    Routine
    Monitor for hypertension. Slight increases (~2–3 mmHg) observed at maximal doses. Contraindicated in uncontrolled hypertension.
  • Headache FrequencyMonthly diary
    Routine
    Track acute medication use days. Using triptans ≥10 days/month risks medication overuse headache. Safety of treating >4 headaches/month not established.
  • Serotonin SyndromeEach use with serotonergic drugs
    Trigger-based
    Watch for agitation, hyperthermia, hyperreflexia, clonus, tremor when co-administered with SSRIs, SNRIs, TCAs, or MAO inhibitors.
  • Cardiac SymptomsAny new symptom
    Trigger-based
    Evaluate chest pain, palpitations, or dyspnea for cardiac ischemia before continued use. Most symptoms are non-cardiac.
  • Periodic CV EvaluationPeriodically
    Routine
    For intermittent long-term users with cardiovascular risk factors, periodic cardiovascular re-evaluation is recommended.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Ischemic coronary artery disease or coronary artery vasospasm (including Prinzmetal angina)
  • History of stroke or TIA
  • Peripheral vascular disease
  • Ischemic bowel disease
  • Uncontrolled hypertension
  • Hemiplegic or basilar migraine
  • Use of another triptan or ergotamine within 24 hours
  • Concurrent or recent MAO-A inhibitor use (within 2 weeks)
  • Known hypersensitivity to rizatriptan (anaphylaxis, angioedema, toxic epidermal necrolysis reported)

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Multiple cardiovascular risk factors (diabetes, smoking, obesity, strong family CAD history) — requires CV evaluation before first dose
  • Controlled hypertension — transient BP elevations may occur

Use with Caution

  • Concurrent SSRI/SNRI/TCA therapy — serotonin syndrome risk
  • Concurrent propranolol — must reduce rizatriptan dose to 5 mg
  • Pregnancy — animal data suggest fetal harm; no clear teratogenic signal in human registry, but data limited
  • Phenylketonuria — ODT formulation contains phenylalanine
  • High-frequency use (≥10 days/month) — medication overuse headache risk
FDA Class-Wide Regulatory Warning Cardiovascular Risk with Triptans

Serious cardiac events, including myocardial infarction, have occurred following 5-HT1 agonist use. Some events have occurred in patients without known cardiovascular disease. Perform cardiovascular evaluation in patients with multiple risk factors before administering rizatriptan. Consider first dose in a medically supervised setting with post-dose ECG in higher-risk patients.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Rizatriptan is a rescue medication designed to stop a migraine attack once it has started. It works best when taken as early as possible after headache onset. It does not prevent future migraines and should not be taken daily.

How to Take

Swallow the standard tablet whole with water. For the orally disintegrating tablet (ODT), peel open the blister pack with dry hands, place the tablet on the tongue and let it dissolve — it will be swallowed with saliva without water. The medication can be taken with or without food. If the headache returns after initial relief, a second dose can be taken at least 2 hours later. Do not take more than 30 mg in 24 hours. If you take propranolol, use only 5 mg per dose.

Drowsiness and Fatigue
Tell patientRizatriptan commonly causes drowsiness and fatigue, especially at the 10 mg dose. These effects usually last 1–2 hours. Plan to rest if possible after taking the medication.
Call prescriberIf drowsiness is severe, persistent, or accompanied by confusion or difficulty speaking, seek immediate medical attention.
Chest, Throat, or Jaw Tightness
Tell patientSensations of pressure or tightness in the chest, throat, or jaw occur in a small percentage of patients and are usually not related to the heart. Knowing to expect this may reduce unnecessary alarm.
Call prescriberIf chest tightness is severe, persistent, or accompanied by shortness of breath, left arm pain, or irregular heartbeat, seek emergency care immediately.
Headache Recurrence
Tell patientBecause rizatriptan is cleared quickly (half-life 2–3 hours), the headache may return in 30–40% of treated attacks. A second dose can be taken at least 2 hours after the first if the initial dose provided some relief.
Call prescriberIf headaches consistently recur or you use rizatriptan more than 9 days per month, discuss preventive therapy with your prescriber.
Propranolol Interaction
Tell patientIf you take propranolol for migraine prevention or any other reason, your rizatriptan dose must be limited to 5 mg. Taking the full 10 mg dose with propranolol significantly increases rizatriptan blood levels and side effects.
Call prescriberAlways inform any new prescriber that you take both medications so the dose can be adjusted appropriately.
Medication Overuse Headache
Tell patientUsing any acute migraine treatment too frequently (≥10 days per month) can paradoxically worsen headaches. Keep a headache diary to track usage days.
Call prescriberIf headaches are becoming more frequent or you rely on rizatriptan multiple times per week, contact your prescriber to discuss preventive options.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. Rizatriptan Benzoate Tablets — Full Prescribing Information. Revised October 2025. drugs.com/pro/rizatriptan-tabletsCurrent FDA-approved PI for rizatriptan tablets; primary source for dosing, adverse reactions, contraindications, and propranolol interaction data.
  2. MAXALT / MAXALT-MLT (rizatriptan benzoate) — Full Prescribing Information. Merck & Co. FDA Label (PDF)Brand-name PI with detailed PK parameters, clinical trial efficacy data, and pediatric dosing information.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Visser WH, Terwindt GM, Reines SA, et al. Rizatriptan vs sumatriptan in the acute treatment of migraine: a placebo-controlled dose-ranging study. Arch Neurol. 1996;53(11):1132-1137. doi:10.1001/archneur.1996.00550110082014Early head-to-head trial establishing rizatriptan’s dose-response relationship and comparative efficacy versus sumatriptan.
  2. Goldstein J, Ryan R, Jiang K, et al. Crossover comparison of rizatriptan 5 mg and 10 mg versus sumatriptan 25 mg and 50 mg in migraine. Headache. 1998;38(10):737-747. doi:10.1046/j.1526-4610.1998.3810737.xCrossover RCT demonstrating rizatriptan 10 mg superiority over sumatriptan 25 mg and 50 mg for 2-hour pain-free response.
  3. Ho TW, Pearlman E, Lewis D, et al. Efficacy and tolerability of rizatriptan in pediatric migraineurs: results from a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial using a novel adaptive enrichment design. Cephalalgia. 2012;32(10):750-765. doi:10.1177/0333102412451358Pivotal trial supporting FDA approval of rizatriptan in pediatric patients aged 6–17 years using weight-based dosing.
Guidelines
  1. Marmura MJ, Silberstein SD, Schwedt TJ. The acute treatment of migraine in adults: the American Headache Society evidence assessment of migraine pharmacotherapies. Headache. 2015;55(1):3-20. doi:10.1111/head.12499AHS evidence assessment establishing Level A evidence for rizatriptan in acute migraine treatment.
  2. Ferrari MD, Goadsby PJ, Roon KI, Lipton RB. Triptans (serotonin, 5-HT1B/1D agonists) in migraine: detailed results and methods of a meta-analysis of 53 trials. Cephalalgia. 2002;22(8):633-658. doi:10.1046/j.1468-2982.2002.00404.xDefinitive meta-analysis of all triptans showing rizatriptan 10 mg with the lowest NNT for 2-hour pain-free response among oral formulations.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Hargreaves RJ. Pharmacology and potential mechanisms of action of rizatriptan. Cephalalgia. 2000;20(Suppl 1):2-9. doi:10.1046/j.1468-2982.2000.020s1002.xComprehensive review of rizatriptan’s pharmacology, comparing absorption kinetics and CNS penetration across triptans.
  2. Goadsby PJ, Lipton RB, Ferrari MD. Migraine — current understanding and treatment. N Engl J Med. 2002;346(4):257-270. doi:10.1056/NEJMra010917Landmark review of migraine pathophysiology and the mechanism by which triptans inhibit CGRP release from trigeminal nerves.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Vyas KP, Halpin RA, Geer LA, et al. Disposition and pharmacokinetics of the antimigraine drug rizatriptan in humans. Drug Metab Dispos. 2000;28(1):89-95. PubMed: 10611145Definitive human PK study establishing rizatriptan’s bioavailability (47%), MAO-A metabolism, renal clearance, and metabolite profiles.
  2. Goldberg MR, Sciberras D, De Smet M, et al. Influence of beta-adrenoceptor antagonists on the pharmacokinetics of rizatriptan in healthy subjects: a randomized, crossover study. Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2001;52(1):69-76. doi:10.1046/j.0306-5251.2001.01420.xKey study quantifying the 70% AUC increase with propranolol co-administration and confirming no interaction with nadolol.
  3. Wellington K, Plosker GL. Rizatriptan: an update of its use in the management of migraine. Drugs. 2002;62(10):1539-1574. doi:10.2165/00003495-200262100-00007Comprehensive drug review covering clinical pharmacology, efficacy across multiple trials, and tolerability profile of rizatriptan.
  4. Mannix LK, Savani N, Engbring M, et al. Efficacy and tolerability of rizatriptan for the treatment of migraine in pediatric and adolescent patients. Curr Med Res Opin. 2006;22(10):1947-1955. doi:10.1185/030079906X132497Early pediatric efficacy and safety data supporting weight-based dosing in younger migraine patients.