Drug Monograph

Dexlansoprazole

Dexilant (formerly Kapidex)
Proton Pump Inhibitor (PPI)·Oral — Dual Delayed-Release
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
~1–2 h
Metabolism
Hepatic (CYP2C19, CYP3A4)
Protein Binding
96–99%
Peak Plasma
Dual peaks: 1–2 h and 4–5 h
Formulation
Dual delayed-release (DDR) capsule
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Proton Pump Inhibitor (R-enantiomer of lansoprazole)
Available Doses
30 mg, 60 mg capsules
Route
Oral
Renal Adjustment
Not required
Hepatic Adjustment
Moderate (Child-Pugh B): 30 mg for EE; Severe (Child-Pugh C): Not recommended
Pregnancy
Animal data: possible fetal bone effects; no adequate human data
Lactation
Lansoprazole/metabolites in rat milk; unknown in humans
Schedule
Rx only
Generic Available
Yes
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Healing of all grades of erosive esophagitis (EE)≥12 yearsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Maintenance of healed EE and relief of heartburn≥12 yearsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Symptomatic non-erosive GERD≥12 yearsMonotherapyFDA Approved

Dexlansoprazole is the R-enantiomer of lansoprazole, formulated in a unique dual delayed-release technology that produces two distinct plasma peaks. Its FDA-approved indications are focused exclusively on GERD-spectrum conditions — erosive esophagitis healing and maintenance, and symptomatic non-erosive GERD. Unlike its racemic parent lansoprazole, dexlansoprazole does not carry indications for peptic ulcer disease, H. pylori eradication, NSAID-associated ulcers, or Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Its key clinical advantage is the ability to be taken without regard to meal timing, a flexibility enabled by the dual-release pharmacokinetic profile.

Off-Label Uses

Eosinophilic oesophagitis (EoE) — Evidence quality: Moderate. PPI-responsive EoE is a recognised entity, and PPIs including dexlansoprazole are used as initial therapy per gastroenterology guidelines, though the specific evidence base is predominantly with omeprazole and esomeprazole.

Non-variceal upper GI bleeding prophylaxis — Evidence quality: Low. Used empirically in some settings though data specific to dexlansoprazole is lacking; no IV formulation available.

Dose

Dosing

Dosing by Clinical Scenario (Patients ≥12 Years)

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Erosive esophagitis — healing (all grades)60 mg once daily60 mg once daily60 mg/dayUp to 8 weeks
Can be taken with or without food; swallow whole or sprinkle on applesauce
Healed EE — maintenance and heartburn relief30 mg once daily30 mg once daily30 mg/dayControlled studies: up to 6 months in adults, up to 16 weeks in patients 12–17 years
Symptomatic non-erosive GERD — heartburn30 mg once daily30 mg once daily30 mg/day4 weeks

Hepatic Impairment

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
EE healing — moderate hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh B)30 mg once daily30 mg once daily30 mg/dayUp to 8 weeks; dose reduced from 60 mg due to increased exposure
Severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh C)Not recommended
Clinical Pearl: Food-Independent Dosing

Dexlansoprazole’s dual delayed-release formulation allows dosing without regard to meal timing — a meaningful practical advantage over lansoprazole, omeprazole, and esomeprazole, which must be taken before meals for optimal absorption. In food-effect studies, Cmax increased 12–55% and AUC increased 9–37% with food, but these changes did not affect clinical efficacy, supporting the flexible dosing instruction. Capsules can be opened and sprinkled on applesauce, or given via oral syringe or nasogastric tube (≥16 French) with water.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Dexlansoprazole is the R-enantiomer of lansoprazole, a substituted benzimidazole that suppresses gastric acid secretion by irreversibly inhibiting the H+/K+-ATPase proton pump at the secretory surface of gastric parietal cells. Like its racemic parent, dexlansoprazole is a prodrug that accumulates in the acidic canalicular compartment of active parietal cells, where it undergoes acid-catalysed conversion to a reactive sulfenamide that covalently binds cysteine residues on the proton pump. The unique pharmacological feature of dexlansoprazole is its dual delayed-release formulation, which contains two types of enteric-coated granules with different pH-dependent dissolution profiles. This produces two distinct plasma peaks — the first at approximately 1–2 hours and the second at 4–5 hours post-dose — resulting in a prolonged plasma concentration profile and extended duration of acid suppression compared to conventional single-release PPIs.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionDual delayed-release: two plasma peaks at 1–2 h and 4–5 h; food increases Cmax by 12–55% and AUC by 9–37% but does not affect efficacy; highly variable PK (CV% >25%)Can be taken with or without food; dual peaks extend the period of effective plasma concentration
Distribution96–99% plasma protein bound (concentration-independent over 0.01–20 mcg/mL); concentrates in parietal cell canaliculiExtensively protein bound; not expected to be removed by haemodialysis
MetabolismExtensive hepatic metabolism by oxidation, reduction, and conjugation (sulfate, glucuronide, glutathione); CYP2C19 (hydroxylation, major) and CYP3A4 (sulfone) are the primary enzymatic pathways; metabolites inactiveCYP2C19 poor metabolisers have higher exposure; dose reduction for moderate hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh B); not recommended in severe impairment (Child-Pugh C)
Eliminationt½ ~1–2 h; no clinically meaningful accumulation with daily dosing (AUC <10% higher on day 5 vs day 1)Despite short half-life, dual-release design extends acid suppression; no renal dose adjustment needed
SE

Side Effects

≥10%Very Common

No individual adverse reaction exceeded 10% incidence in controlled adult trials. Safety was evaluated in 4,548 adults across controlled and single-arm studies, with 863 treated for ≥6 months and 203 for ≥1 year.

2–10%Common (Adults)
Adverse EffectIncidence (Total)Clinical Note
Diarrhoea4.8% (vs 2.9% placebo; 30 mg: 5.1%, 60 mg: 4.7%)Most common adverse reaction overall; led to discontinuation in 0.7% of patients
Abdominal pain4.0% (vs 3.5% placebo)Similar to placebo at the 30 mg dose (3.5%); slightly higher at 60 mg (4.0%)
Nausea2.9% (vs 2.6% placebo)Marginally above placebo; 30 mg: 3.3%, 60 mg: 2.8%
Upper respiratory tract infection1.9% (vs 0.8% placebo; 30 mg: 2.9%)Higher at the 30 mg dose (2.9%) than the 60 mg dose (1.7%)
Vomiting1.6% (vs 0.8% placebo; 30 mg: 2.2%)More common at 30 mg than 60 mg
Flatulence1.6% (vs 0.6% placebo; 30 mg: 2.6%)More common at 30 mg than 60 mg

In adolescents (12–17 years, N=166), the most common adverse reactions (≥5%) were headache, abdominal pain, diarrhoea, nasopharyngitis, and oropharyngeal pain. The profile was consistent with that observed in adults.

SeriousSerious (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Clostridioides difficile-associated diarrhoeaRareDays to monthsStool testing; discontinue PPI; targeted antibiotic therapy
Acute tubulointerstitial nephritisRareAny point during therapyDiscontinue dexlansoprazole; evaluate renal function
Severe cutaneous reactions (SJS, TEN, DRESS, AGEP)Very rare; some fatalDays to weeksImmediate discontinuation; emergency dermatological care
HypomagnesaemiaRareUsually after ≥3 months; most after ≥1 yearCheck magnesium; supplement; consider PPI discontinuation
Osteoporosis-related fracturesRare; increased with long-term useAfter ≥1 yearUse lowest dose/shortest duration; manage per guidelines
Cutaneous and systemic lupus erythematosusVery rareWeeks to yearsDiscontinue PPI; refer to specialist; most resolve in 4–12 weeks
Vitamin B12 deficiencyRare; with use >3 yearsAfter years of continuous useMonitor B12; supplement if deficient
Fundic gland polypsUncommon; risk increases >1 yearMonths to yearsUsually asymptomatic; use shortest PPI duration
Anaphylactic shockVery rare (post-marketing)Any timeEmergency care; permanent discontinuation
Drug-induced hepatitisVery rare (post-marketing)VariableMonitor liver function; discontinue if suspected
DiscontinuationDiscontinuation Rates
Adults — Controlled Trials
0.7% for diarrhoea (most common cause)
Context: Overall discontinuation due to adverse reactions was low. Dexlansoprazole was well tolerated across 4,548 adults including 863 treated for ≥6 months. The safety profile in long-term studies was consistent with short-term trials.
Adolescents (12–17 Years)
Low — consistent with adult profile
Context: Adverse reaction profile similar to adults in 166 adolescents studied. No new safety signals identified.
Managing Diarrhoea — The Most Common Adverse Effect

Diarrhoea occurred in 4.8% of dexlansoprazole-treated adults (vs 2.9% placebo) and was the most common cause of treatment discontinuation (0.7%). Rates were similar between the 30 mg and 60 mg doses. In most cases, diarrhoea was mild and self-limiting. Persistent or severe diarrhoea warrants evaluation for C. difficile, especially in hospitalised patients or those concurrently receiving antibiotics.

Int

Drug Interactions

Dexlansoprazole is metabolised primarily by CYP2C19 and CYP3A4. In vitro studies show it is unlikely to inhibit CYP1A1, 1A2, 2A6, 2B6, 2C8, 2C9, 2D6, 2E1, or 3A4. In vivo studies confirmed no impact on the pharmacokinetics of phenytoin (CYP2C9 substrate) or theophylline (CYP1A2 substrate). Although dexlansoprazole has the potential to inhibit CYP2C19 in vitro, an in vivo study in CYP2C19 extensive and intermediate metabolisers showed no clinically relevant effect on diazepam pharmacokinetics.

MajorRilpivirine
MechanismElevated gastric pH reduces rilpivirine absorption
EffectSubstantially decreased rilpivirine concentrations; risk of HIV treatment failure and resistance
ManagementContraindicated — do not co-administer
FDA PI
MajorAtazanavir / Nelfinavir
MechanismElevated gastric pH substantially reduces absorption of these protease inhibitors
EffectReduced antiviral plasma concentrations; risk of virological failure
ManagementAvoid concomitant use with nelfinavir. For atazanavir, see atazanavir PI for dosing guidance. For saquinavir, monitor for potential toxicity
FDA PI
MajorMethotrexate (high-dose)
MechanismPPIs may inhibit renal clearance of methotrexate
EffectElevated and prolonged serum methotrexate levels; risk of toxicity
ManagementConsider temporary withdrawal of dexlansoprazole during high-dose methotrexate cycles
FDA PI
ModerateWarfarin
MechanismIn vivo study showed no clinically significant effect on warfarin PK; however, PPI class reports exist
EffectPost-marketing PPI class reports of increased INR and bleeding risk
ManagementMonitor INR when starting, adjusting, or stopping dexlansoprazole
FDA PI
ModerateTacrolimus
MechanismPPIs may increase tacrolimus levels, particularly in CYP2C19 intermediate or poor metabolisers
EffectPotential for tacrolimus toxicity
ManagementMonitor tacrolimus whole blood trough concentrations
FDA PI
ModerateDigoxin
MechanismElevated gastric pH may increase digoxin oral bioavailability
EffectPotential for increased digoxin exposure (class-level concern)
ManagementMonitor digoxin concentrations; adjust dose as needed to maintain therapeutic levels
FDA PI
ModeratepH-dependent drugs (ketoconazole, iron, erlotinib, mycophenolate mofetil)
MechanismReduced gastric acidity decreases dissolution and absorption
EffectReduced plasma concentrations of the affected drug
ManagementUse alternatives not requiring acidic pH; monitor clinical efficacy; use caution with MMF in transplant patients
FDA PI
MinorClopidogrel
MechanismDexlansoprazole has potential CYP2C19 inhibitory activity
EffectIn a study of CYP2C19 extensive metabolisers (N=40), active metabolite AUC of clopidogrel was reduced by ~9% (90% CI: 86–97%); clinical significance unclear
ManagementNo dose adjustment of clopidogrel needed per FDA PI. The ~9% reduction was considered not clinically important
FDA PI
Mon

Monitoring

  • MagnesiumBaseline and periodically if use >3 months
    Routine
    Serum magnesium prior to initiation and periodically during prolonged use. Also monitor calcium in patients with pre-existing hypocalcaemia risk. Supplement as needed; consider PPI discontinuation if hypocalcaemia is refractory.
  • Vitamin B12Consider after ≥3 years
    Trigger-based
    Monitor if symptoms of B12 deficiency develop. Long-term acid suppression impairs B12 absorption.
  • Renal FunctionIf signs of nephritis
    Trigger-based
    Monitor creatinine if unexplained renal decline. Acute TIN can occur at any point during therapy.
  • Bone DensityPer guidelines
    Trigger-based
    Consider DXA for patients on long-term high-dose PPI therapy with fracture risk factors.
  • Chromogranin AHold PPI ≥14 days before testing
    Trigger-based
    PPI-induced hypergastrinaemia elevates CgA and ECL cell hyperplasia; causes false positives in neuroendocrine tumour workups.
  • Symptom Response4–8 weeks
    Routine
    Assess symptom resolution at end of treatment course. Suboptimal response does not exclude gastric malignancy — consider endoscopy in older adults.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Known hypersensitivity to any component of the formulation (reactions include anaphylaxis, anaphylactic shock, angioedema, bronchospasm, acute TIN, urticaria)
  • Concomitant use with rilpivirine-containing products

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh C) — dexlansoprazole is not recommended; no clinical data in this population
  • Concurrent high-dose methotrexate — consider temporary PPI withdrawal

Use with Caution

  • Moderate hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh B) — reduce EE healing dose to 30 mg once daily
  • Long-term use (>1 year) — increased risks of hypomagnesaemia, B12 deficiency, bone fractures, fundic gland polyps
  • Paediatric patients <2 years — not recommended due to risk of heart valve thickening demonstrated in juvenile rat studies with lansoprazole
  • Pregnancy — animal data suggest possible adverse effects on fetal bone growth; use only if clearly needed
  • Hospitalised patients or those on antibiotics — increased C. difficile risk
FDA Class-Wide Regulatory Warning PPI Class: Long-Term Risk Advisory

The FDA has issued safety communications regarding class-wide PPI risks, including C. difficile-associated diarrhoea, bone fractures, hypomagnesaemia, vitamin B12 deficiency, cutaneous and systemic lupus erythematosus, fundic gland polyps, and severe cutaneous adverse reactions (SJS, TEN, DRESS, AGEP). Use the lowest effective dose for the shortest clinically appropriate duration.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Dexlansoprazole reduces stomach acid to heal damage caused by acid reflux and to relieve heartburn. It may be prescribed for a short course (4–8 weeks) or for ongoing maintenance to prevent reflux damage from returning.

How to Take

Dexlansoprazole can be taken at any time of day, with or without food. Swallow the capsule whole. If unable to swallow capsules, open the capsule and sprinkle the granules on one tablespoon of applesauce — swallow immediately without chewing. The granules can also be given through an oral syringe with water or via a nasogastric tube.

Diarrhoea
Tell patientLoose stools are the most common side effect (about 1 in 20 patients). This is usually mild and self-limiting.
Call prescriberIf diarrhoea is severe, persistent, watery or bloody, or accompanied by fever — these may indicate C. difficile infection.
Long-Term Use
Tell patientExtended use may slightly increase risks of low magnesium, low vitamin B12, and weakened bones. Periodic blood tests may be needed.
Call prescriberReport muscle cramps, palpitations, tingling, or unusual tiredness.
Skin Reactions
Tell patientSevere skin reactions are extremely rare but can be serious.
Call prescriberSeek immediate medical attention for any widespread rash, blistering, peeling skin, mouth sores, or facial swelling.
Missed Doses & Stopping
Tell patientIf a dose is missed, take it as soon as remembered unless the next dose is nearly due. Do not double up. Do not stop the medication early without discussing with the prescriber.
Call prescriberContact if symptoms return after completing the course or fail to improve within the expected timeframe.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. DEXILANT (dexlansoprazole) delayed-release capsules prescribing information. Takeda Pharmaceuticals America, Inc. Revised 2/2025. DailyMed. dailymed.nlm.nih.govCurrent FDA-approved prescribing information — primary source for all indications, dosing, adverse reactions, drug interactions, and PK data including the dual-peak profile.
  2. DEXILANT (dexlansoprazole) prescribing information. FDA label 2020. accessdata.fda.govFDA label confirming clopidogrel interaction data (~9% reduction in active metabolite AUC), food-effect data, and paediatric dosing.
  3. FDA approval letter for DEXILANT (dexlansoprazole) supplemental NDA, July 2023. accessdata.fda.govMost recent supplemental approval incorporating updated safety labelling for severe cutaneous adverse reactions.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Sharma P, Shaheen NJ, Perez MC, et al. Clinical trials: healing of erosive oesophagitis with dexlansoprazole MR, a proton pump inhibitor with a novel dual delayed-release formulation — results from two randomized controlled studies. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2009;29(7):731-741. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2036.2009.03933.xPivotal Phase 3 trials establishing dexlansoprazole 60 mg non-inferiority to lansoprazole 30 mg for EE healing.
  2. Metz DC, Howden CW, Perez MC, et al. Clinical trial: dexlansoprazole MR, a proton pump inhibitor with dual delayed-release technology, effectively controls symptoms and prevents relapse in patients with healed erosive oesophagitis. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2009;29(7):742-754. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2036.2009.03954.xMaintenance study demonstrating dexlansoprazole 30 mg superiority over placebo for maintaining EE healing over 6 months.
Guidelines
  1. Katz PO, Dunbar KB, Schnoll-Sussman FH, et al. ACG Clinical Guideline for the Diagnosis and Management of Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease. Am J Gastroenterol. 2022;117(1):27-56. doi:10.14309/ajg.0000000000001538Current GERD guideline supporting PPI use for EE healing and maintenance; addresses PPI step-down and long-term use considerations.
  2. Dellon ES, Liacouras CA, Molina-Infante J, et al. Updated International Consensus Diagnostic Criteria for Eosinophilic Esophagitis. Gastroenterology. 2018;155(4):1022-1033.e10. doi:10.1053/j.gastro.2018.07.009Consensus criteria removing the requirement for PPI non-response in EoE diagnosis; supports PPI trial as initial therapy.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Shin JM, Sachs G. Pharmacology of proton pump inhibitors. Curr Gastroenterol Rep. 2008;10(6):528-534. doi:10.1007/s11894-008-0098-4Comprehensive PPI pharmacology review covering activation chemistry and irreversible pump binding relevant to all PPIs including dexlansoprazole.
  2. Vakily M, Zhang W, Wu J, et al. Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of a known active PPI with a novel dual delayed release technology, dexlansoprazole MR: a combined analysis of randomized controlled clinical trials. Curr Med Res Opin. 2009;25(3):627-638. doi:10.1185/03007990802693696Key PK/PD analysis establishing the dual-peak plasma profile and demonstrating extended acid suppression compared to lansoprazole.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Lee RD, Vakily M, Mulford D, et al. Clinical trial: the effect and timing of food on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of dexlansoprazole MR, a novel dual delayed release formulation of a proton pump inhibitor — evidence for dosing flexibility. Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2009;29(8):824-833. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2036.2009.03898.xFood-effect study establishing that dexlansoprazole can be taken without regard to meal timing despite modest PK increases with food.
  2. Zhang W, Wu J, Atkinson S. Effects of dexlansoprazole MR, a novel dual delayed-release formulation of a proton pump inhibitor, on plasma gastrin levels in healthy subjects. J Clin Pharmacol. 2009;49(4):444-454. doi:10.1177/0091270008329547Characterises the gastrin response to dexlansoprazole; relevant to monitoring guidance and CgA interference.
  3. Wu J, Vakily M, Gipson A, et al. Effect of hepatic impairment on dexlansoprazole pharmacokinetics. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2008;83(Suppl 1):S58. doi:10.1038/sj.clpt.6100434Data supporting dose reduction in moderate hepatic impairment and contraindicating use in severe hepatic impairment.