Drug Monograph

Ramipril (Altace)

ramipril

Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme (ACE) Inhibitor · Oral
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
13–17 h (effective, ramiprilat)
Metabolism
Hepatic CES1 (prodrug → ramiprilat)
Protein Binding
Ramipril 73%; Ramiprilat 56%
Bioavailability
50–60% (oral)
Tmax
~1 h (ramipril); 1.5–4 h (ramiprilat)
Clinical Information
Drug Class
ACE Inhibitor
Available Doses
1.25, 2.5, 5, 10 mg capsules/tablets; 1 mg/mL oral solution
Route
Oral only
Renal Adjustment
Yes — CrCl <40 mL/min
Hepatic Adjustment
Caution — ramipril levels ↑3-fold
Pregnancy
Contraindicated (Boxed Warning)
Lactation
Not recommended
Schedule
Prescription only (not scheduled)
Generic Available
Yes
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
HypertensionAdultsMonotherapy or combination with thiazidesFDA Approved
Cardiovascular risk reduction (MI, stroke, CV death)Adults ≥55 years at high risk of atherosclerotic eventsAdded to standard careFDA Approved
Heart failure post-MIAdults with clinical signs of HF 2–9 days after acute MIAdjunctive to standard post-MI therapyFDA Approved

Ramipril has one of the broadest evidence bases among ACE inhibitors. The HOPE trial (2000) established its role in cardiovascular protection for high-risk patients irrespective of baseline blood pressure, while the AIRE trial (1993) demonstrated mortality reduction in post-MI heart failure. The AHA/ACC/HFSA 2022 guideline includes ACE inhibitors as guideline-directed therapy for HFrEF.

Off-Label Uses

Heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) — chronic — Recommended in AHA/ACC 2022 guidelines as part of GDMT for LVEF <40%. Evidence: High

Diabetic nephropathy / proteinuric CKD — ACE inhibitors reduce proteinuria and slow CKD progression, especially with albuminuria. Evidence: High

Stable coronary artery disease — Vascular-protective effects independent of blood pressure reduction per HOPE data. Evidence: High

Prevention of new-onset diabetes — HOPE and DREAM data suggest reduced incidence of diabetes with ramipril. Evidence: Moderate

Dose

Dosing

Adult Dosing by Clinical Scenario

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Hypertension — not on a diuretic2.5 mg PO once daily2.5–20 mg/day20 mg/dayGive once daily or divide BID if trough effect wanes
Onset: 1–2 h; peak BP reduction: 3–6 h (FDA PI)
Hypertension — already on a diuretic1.25 mg PO once daily2.5–20 mg/day20 mg/dayDiscontinue diuretic 2–3 days before starting if possible; supervise first dose closely
CV risk reduction (HOPE protocol)2.5 mg PO once daily × 1 week5 mg × 3 weeks → 10 mg once daily10 mg/dayTarget 10 mg/day; achieved in 83% of HOPE patients at 1 year
Benefit extends beyond BP reduction
Heart failure post-MI (AIRE protocol)2.5 mg PO BID5 mg PO BID (target)5 mg BID (10 mg/day)Start 2–9 days post-MI if haemodynamically stable; reduce to 1.25 mg BID if initial dose not tolerated
HFrEF — chronic (GDMT)1.25–2.5 mg PO once dailyTitrate to 10 mg once daily10 mg/dayTitrate over weeks; combine with beta-blocker, MRA, and SGLT2i per 2022 guidelines

Renal Impairment Adjustments

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
CrCl ≥40 mL/minNo adjustmentStandard20 mg/day (HTN)Monitor renal function periodically
CrCl <40 mL/min1.25 mg PO once dailyTitrate to response5 mg/dayRamiprilat AUC 3–4× higher than in normal renal function (FDA PI)
Hepatic impairmentReduced starting doseTitrate cautiouslyPer clinical responseRamipril levels increase ~3-fold; ramiprilat levels unchanged. Use with caution.
Clinical Pearl: Capsule Administration Options

Ramipril capsules can be opened and the contents sprinkled on applesauce (~120 mL) or mixed in water or apple juice for patients who cannot swallow capsules whole. The mixture can be stored for up to 24 hours at room temperature or 48 hours refrigerated. Tablets should be swallowed whole. An oral solution (1 mg/mL) is also available for precise low-dose titration.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Ramipril is an oral prodrug that is rapidly de-esterified in the liver by carboxylesterase 1 (CES1) to form ramiprilat, a potent non-sulfhydryl ACE inhibitor. Ramiprilat competitively inhibits angiotensin-converting enzyme, preventing conversion of angiotensin I to angiotensin II. This reduces systemic vascular resistance, aldosterone secretion, and sodium/water retention while increasing levels of the vasodilator bradykinin. Ramiprilat has high tissue affinity, with preferential distribution to the liver, kidneys, and lungs, which may contribute to its sustained organ-protective effects observed in the HOPE trial. Unlike captopril, ramipril lacks a sulfhydryl group, resulting in a lower incidence of dysgeusia and rash. Multiple doses of 2 mg or more produce over 90% inhibition of plasma ACE activity at 4 hours, with over 80% inhibition persisting at 24 hours.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionBioavailability 50–60%; Tmax ramipril ~1 h, ramiprilat 1.5–4 hFood slows rate but not extent of absorption; can be taken with or without food
DistributionProtein binding: ramipril 73%, ramiprilat 56%; high tissue penetration (liver, kidneys, lungs)High tissue ACE affinity may underlie vascular-protective effects beyond BP reduction
MetabolismHepatic de-esterification (CES1) to ramiprilat (active); further to glucuronide conjugate and diketopiperazine (inactive); no CYP involvementHepatic impairment increases ramipril (not ramiprilat) levels ~3-fold; minimal CYP interaction risk
Elimination60% urine, 40% faeces; <2% unchanged ramipril; triphasic: distribution t½ 2–4 h, apparent elimination t½ 9–18 h, terminal t½ >50 h; effective t½ 13–17 hSteady state by 4th dose; dose reduction when CrCl <40 mL/min (AUC 3–4× higher)
SE

Side Effects

≥10%Very Common
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Cough (long-term use)~12%In a 1-year study, almost 12% developed cough, with ~4% requiring discontinuation (FDA PI). In the AIRE post-MI population, 8% vs 4% placebo. In HOPE, 7.3% discontinued due to cough vs 1.8% placebo. Class effect due to bradykinin accumulation; switch to ARB if intolerable.
1–10%Common
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Headache5.4%Similar to placebo rate in hypertension trials; rarely treatment-limiting
Hypotension (post-MI population)5%From AIRE trial; risk highest during initial treatment; monitor closely for first 2 weeks and after dose increases (FDA PI)
Dizziness2.2–4%2.2% in hypertension trials (FDA PI); 4% in AIRE (vs 3% placebo); usually transient
Fatigue / asthenia2.0%Only adverse effect more frequent than placebo in hypertension trials (FDA PI)
Nausea2% vs 1% placeboFrom AIRE trial; generally mild
Postural hypotension2% vs 1% placeboFrom AIRE trial; risk increased with concurrent diuretics or volume depletion
Syncope2% vs 1% placeboFrom AIRE trial; slow titration and volume repletion reduce risk
Elevated serum creatinine1.2%1.2% alone, 1.5% with diuretic (FDA PI); generally reversible and haemodynamic in nature
Hyperkalemia (K >5.7 mEq/L)~1%In hypertensive patients (FDA PI); risk increases with renal impairment, diabetes, or K-sparing agents
SeriousSerious (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Angioedema0.3% (US trials); 0.4% (HOPE)Any time during therapy; higher rate in Black patientsDiscontinue immediately; secure airway; epinephrine if laryngeal involvement; never rechallenge with any ACE inhibitor
Acute renal failureRareDays to weeks; bilateral renal artery stenosis is highest riskDiscontinue ramipril; IV fluids; evaluate for renovascular disease
Neutropenia / agranulocytosis / pancytopeniaRareWeeks to months; higher risk with collagen vascular disease + renal impairmentMonitor WBC in high-risk patients; discontinue and refer if confirmed
Hepatic failure / cholestatic jaundiceVery rareVariableDiscontinue ACE inhibitor; urgent hepatology referral; can be fatal
Stevens-Johnson syndrome / toxic epidermal necrolysisVery rare (post-marketing)VariableImmediate discontinuation; dermatology/burns referral
Fetal toxicityExpected with 2nd/3rd trimester exposureSecond and third trimestersDiscontinue immediately when pregnancy detected; fetal monitoring
DiscontinuationDiscontinuation Rates
Hypertension Trials (US)
~3% (FDA PI)
Top reasons: Cough (1.0%), dizziness (0.5%), impotence (0.4%)
HOPE Trial (CV Risk Reduction, ~4.5 years)
28.9% vs 27.3% placebo
Key DC reasons (ramipril vs placebo): Cough 7.3% vs 1.8%; hypotension/dizziness 1.9% vs 1.5%
Reason for DiscontinuationRate (Ramipril vs Placebo)Context
Cough7.3% vs 1.8% (HOPE)Most common reason for DC across all trials; resolves within 1–4 weeks of stopping
Hypotension / dizziness1.9% vs 1.5% (HOPE)Higher in first weeks; mitigate with slow titration and volume repletion
Angioedema0.4% vs 0.2% (HOPE)Mandates permanent discontinuation of all ACE inhibitors
Impotence0.4% (HTN trials)Not clearly dose-related; may improve after discontinuation
Managing ACE Inhibitor Cough

Ramipril-associated cough is the leading cause of treatment discontinuation. In a large pharmacoepidemiological study (n = 10,380), ramipril-related cough occurred in 7.1% of patients, with female sex, smoking, COPD, and asthma as independent risk factors. The cough is dry, non-productive, and typically appears within 1–2 weeks of starting therapy. Switching to an ARB is the recommended approach for patients with intolerable cough, as ARBs do not inhibit bradykinin degradation. In ONTARGET, cough was significantly less frequent with telmisartan than with ramipril (1.1% vs 4.2%).

Int

Drug Interactions

Ramipril is a prodrug activated by hepatic carboxylesterase, not CYP enzymes, so cytochrome P450-mediated interactions are not a significant concern. The key interaction risks involve additive effects on the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, potassium homeostasis, and renal haemodynamics.

MajorAliskiren
MechanismDual RAS blockade
EffectIncreased risk of hypotension, hyperkalaemia, and acute renal failure
ManagementContraindicated in patients with diabetes; avoid if GFR <60 mL/min
FDA PI
MajorSacubitril/Valsartan (Entresto)
MechanismDual neprilysin and ACE inhibition increases bradykinin
EffectElevated risk of angioedema
ManagementDo not co-administer; allow at least 36-hour washout when switching
FDA PI
MajorPotassium-Sparing Diuretics / K Supplements
MechanismAdditive potassium retention via reduced aldosterone
EffectPotentially life-threatening hyperkalaemia
ManagementMonitor K⁺ frequently; use with caution, especially in renal impairment
FDA PI
ModerateNSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen, celecoxib)
MechanismReduced prostaglandin-mediated renal vasodilation
EffectBlunted antihypertensive effect; increased risk of renal impairment and hyperkalaemia
ManagementUse lowest effective NSAID dose for shortest duration; monitor renal function and BP
FDA PI
ModerateLithium
MechanismReduced renal lithium clearance
EffectElevated serum lithium with risk of toxicity
ManagementMonitor lithium levels frequently when initiating, adjusting, or stopping ramipril
FDA PI
ModerateInjectable Gold (sodium aurothiomalate)
MechanismUnclear; possibly bradykinin-mediated
EffectNitritoid reactions (flushing, nausea, hypotension)
ManagementUse with caution; monitor after gold injections
FDA PI
ModeratemTOR Inhibitors (sirolimus, everolimus, temsirolimus)
MechanismPossible additive effect on bradykinin levels
EffectIncreased risk of angioedema
ManagementMonitor closely for angioedema, especially during initial co-administration
FDA PI
MinorAntidiabetic Agents (insulin, sulfonylureas)
MechanismACE inhibitors may reduce insulin resistance
EffectPossible enhanced hypoglycaemic effect
ManagementMonitor blood glucose more closely during initiation
FDA PI
Mon

Monitoring

  • Blood PressureEach visit; closely after first dose
    Routine
    Seated and standing BP at initiation and each dose increase. In post-MI or HF patients, monitor for symptomatic hypotension especially in the first 2 weeks.
  • Renal FunctionBaseline, 1–2 weeks, then periodically
    Routine
    Serum creatinine and BUN. A rise up to 30% may be acceptable (haemodynamic); >30% or progressive increase warrants dose reduction. Check more frequently with concurrent NSAIDs or renal impairment.
  • Serum PotassiumBaseline, 1–2 weeks, after dose changes
    Routine
    Target K⁺ <5.5 mEq/L. Risk of hyperkalaemia with renal impairment, diabetes, K-sparing agents, or potassium supplements.
  • WBC / DifferentialBaseline, then periodically if high-risk
    Trigger-based
    Monitor in patients with collagen vascular disease and/or renal impairment who are at elevated risk for neutropenia. Advise patients to report signs of infection (sore throat, fever).
  • Hepatic EnzymesIf symptoms develop
    Trigger-based
    Check ALT, AST, and bilirubin if patient develops jaundice or unexplained hepatic symptoms. ACE inhibitors have rarely been linked to cholestatic hepatitis progressing to hepatic necrosis.
  • Pregnancy StatusBefore starting and ongoing
    Routine
    Confirm negative pregnancy test before initiation in women of childbearing potential. Counsel on reliable contraception and immediate reporting of pregnancy.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • History of angioedema associated with any ACE inhibitor, or hereditary/idiopathic angioedema
  • Hypersensitivity to ramipril or any ACE inhibitor
  • Pregnancy (discontinue immediately when detected)
  • Concurrent aliskiren in patients with diabetes mellitus
  • Concurrent neprilysin inhibitor (e.g., sacubitril/valsartan); must allow 36-hour washout

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Bilateral renal artery stenosis or stenosis of a solitary kidney — high risk of acute renal failure
  • Haemodynamically significant aortic stenosis — afterload reduction may cause critical hypotension
  • Collagen vascular disease with renal impairment — elevated risk of agranulocytosis

Use with Caution

  • Volume depletion or hyponatraemia — correct before starting; consider lower initial dose
  • Elderly patients — higher peak ramiprilat levels and AUC; start low and titrate carefully
  • Pre-existing renal impairment — dose reduction required when CrCl <40 mL/min
  • Hepatic impairment — ramipril levels increase ~3-fold; ramiprilat levels are not significantly affected
  • Desensitisation therapy (e.g., hymenoptera venom) — increased anaphylactoid risk
FDA Boxed Warning Fetal Toxicity

Drugs that act directly on the renin-angiotensin system can cause injury and death to the developing fetus. When pregnancy is detected, ramipril should be discontinued as soon as possible. Second and third trimester exposure has been associated with fetal renal dysfunction, oligohydramnios, skull hypoplasia, limb contractures, lung hypoplasia, and neonatal death.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Ramipril works by blocking a hormone system that raises blood pressure and stresses the heart and blood vessels. Depending on the reason for prescribing, it may lower blood pressure, protect the heart after a heart attack, or reduce the long-term risk of stroke and heart attack. It does not cure these conditions but provides ongoing protection when taken consistently. Patients should not stop taking ramipril without discussing with their prescriber.

How to Take

Take ramipril at the same time each day, with or without food. Capsules can be swallowed whole or opened and mixed with applesauce, water, or apple juice. If a dose is missed, take it as soon as remembered unless the next dose is due soon. Never double up.

Dizziness & Lightheadedness
Tell patientMost likely in the first few days, particularly when standing up. Rise slowly, stay well hydrated, and avoid alcohol. The body usually adjusts within 1–2 weeks.
Call prescriberIf dizziness is severe, persistent beyond the first week, or if fainting occurs.
Persistent Dry Cough
Tell patientA dry, tickly cough is a recognised side effect. It is not dangerous but can be bothersome. It usually resolves within 1–4 weeks of stopping. Do not take cough suppressants without medical advice.
Call prescriberIf the cough is persistent and affecting sleep or daily life; an alternative medication (ARB) may be considered.
Swelling (Angioedema Warning)
Tell patientRarely, ramipril can cause swelling of the face, lips, tongue, or throat. This can happen at any time during treatment.
Call prescriberSeek emergency medical attention immediately if swelling of face, lips, tongue, or throat occurs, or if there is difficulty breathing. Do not take another dose.
Pregnancy Prevention
Tell patientRamipril can cause serious harm to an unborn baby, particularly in the second and third trimesters. Women of childbearing age must use reliable contraception.
Call prescriberReport a positive pregnancy test or planned pregnancy immediately so ramipril can be safely replaced.
Signs of Infection
Tell patientVery rarely, ramipril may affect white blood cell production. Any unexplained sore throat, fever, or mouth sores should be reported.
Call prescriberIf symptoms of infection develop, especially sore throat with fever, for prompt blood count evaluation.
Potassium & Salt Substitutes
Tell patientRamipril can raise potassium levels. Avoid potassium-containing salt substitutes and do not take potassium supplements unless instructed by a clinician.
Call prescriberIf experiencing muscle weakness, irregular heartbeat, or tingling, which may indicate elevated potassium.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. Altace (ramipril) capsules prescribing information. Pfizer. Revised 2013. FDA LabelPrimary regulatory source for approved indications, dosing, adverse reactions, and pharmacokinetics.
  2. Altace (ramipril) tablets prescribing information. Revised 2012. FDA LabelTablet formulation label with detailed PK data including triphasic elimination and renal impairment effects.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Yusuf S, Sleight P, Pogue J, et al. Effects of an angiotensin-converting-enzyme inhibitor, ramipril, on cardiovascular events in high-risk patients (HOPE). N Engl J Med. 2000;342(3):145–153. doi:10.1056/NEJM200001203420301Landmark trial demonstrating 22% relative risk reduction in MI, stroke, and CV death with ramipril 10 mg/day in high-risk patients without HF.
  2. The Acute Infarction Ramipril Efficacy (AIRE) Study Investigators. Effect of ramipril on mortality and morbidity of survivors of acute myocardial infarction with clinical evidence of heart failure. Lancet. 1993;342(8875):821–828. doi:10.1016/0140-6736(93)92693-NEstablished 27% mortality reduction with ramipril in post-MI patients with heart failure; primary source for AIRE-specific adverse event data.
  3. ONTARGET Investigators, Yusuf S, Teo KK, et al. Telmisartan, ramipril, or both in patients at high risk for vascular events. N Engl J Med. 2008;358(15):1547–1559. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa0801317Established telmisartan as noninferior to ramipril; key comparative tolerability data (cough 1.1% vs 4.2%, angioedema 0.1% vs 0.3%).
  4. Arnold JMO, Yusuf S, Young J, et al. Prevention of heart failure in patients in the HOPE study. Circulation. 2003;107(9):1284–1290. doi:10.1161/01.CIR.0000054165.93055.42HOPE substudy confirming ramipril reduces development of new heart failure in high-risk patients; discontinuation data source.
Guidelines
  1. Heidenreich PA, Bozkurt B, Aguilar D, et al. 2022 AHA/ACC/HFSA guideline for the management of heart failure. Circulation. 2022;145(18):e895–e1032. doi:10.1161/CIR.0000000000001063Current guideline positioning ACE inhibitors as GDMT for HFrEF (Stage C, LVEF ≤40%).
  2. Whelton PK, Carey RM, Aronow WS, et al. 2017 ACC/AHA guideline for the prevention, detection, evaluation, and management of high blood pressure in adults. Hypertension. 2018;71(6):e13–e115. doi:10.1161/HYP.0000000000000065Major hypertension guideline supporting ACE inhibitors as first-line for compelling indications.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Chauhan P, Alexander ST, Ganesan N, et al. Ramipril. In: StatPearls. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; updated October 6, 2024. NCBI BookshelfComprehensive review covering ramipril pharmacology, dosing, adverse effects, and monitoring considerations.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Shionoiri H. Clinical pharmacokinetics of ramipril. Clin Pharmacokinet. 1994;26(1):7–15. doi:10.2165/00003088-199426010-00002Definitive PK review: protein binding (ramipril 73%, ramiprilat 56%), metabolism, and renal impairment effects.
  2. Frampton JE, Peters DH. Ramipril: an updated review of its therapeutic use in essential hypertension and heart failure. Drugs. 1995;49(3):440–466. doi:10.2165/00003495-199549030-00008Comprehensive review of ramipril clinical pharmacology and therapeutic use across hypertension and heart failure.
  3. Wyskida K, Jura-Szoltys E, Smertka M, Owczarek A, Chudek J. Factors that favor the occurrence of cough in patients treated with ramipril. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2012;9(10):3579–3594. doi:10.3390/ijerph9103579Pharmacoepidemiological study (n = 10,380) establishing cough incidence of 7.1% and identifying risk factors including female sex, smoking, and COPD.