Drug Monograph

Cialis (Tadalafil)

tadalafil tablets — for erectile dysfunction & benign prostatic hyperplasia

PDE5 Inhibitor·Oral·Erectile Dysfunction & BPH
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
17.5 h (longest among PDE5i)
Metabolism
Hepatic: CYP3A4 (predominant)
Protein Binding
94%
Bioavailability
Not determined (no food effect)
Volume of Distribution
63 L (apparent)
Clinical Information
Drug Class
PDE5 Inhibitor
Available Doses
2.5 mg, 5 mg, 10 mg, 20 mg
Route
Oral (PRN or daily)
Duration of Action
Up to 36 hours (PRN dosing)
Nitrate Interaction
CONTRAINDICATED; wait ≥48 h after last dose
Alpha-Blocker (BPH)
Combination NOT recommended for BPH
Generic Available
Yes
Schedule
Prescription only (not scheduled)
Rx

Indications

IndicationDosing ApproachApproved YearStatus
Erectile dysfunction (ED)PRN (10–20 mg) or daily (2.5–5 mg)2003FDA Approved
Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) — signs and symptomsDaily only (5 mg)2011FDA Approved
ED and BPH — concomitant ED and BPH symptomsDaily only (5 mg)2011FDA Approved

Tadalafil is a PDE5 inhibitor distinguished by its long half-life of 17.5 hours, which provides a duration of action up to 36 hours after a single dose and supports once-daily dosing. It is the only PDE5 inhibitor approved by the FDA for both ED and the signs and symptoms of BPH. Over 9,000 men were treated with tadalafil during clinical trials worldwide. Tadalafil’s absorption is unaffected by food, providing flexible dosing. The drug is also marketed as Adcirca for pulmonary arterial hypertension at a different dose (40 mg daily); this monograph covers the ED and BPH indications only.

Limitation of Use: Combination with Finasteride

If tadalafil is used with finasteride to initiate BPH treatment, such use is recommended for up to 26 weeks only, because the incremental benefit of tadalafil decreases from 4 weeks until 26 weeks, and the incremental benefit beyond 26 weeks is unknown.

Dose

Dosing

Standard Dosing Regimens

Indication / RegimenStarting DoseMaintenanceMaximumNotes
ED — PRN (as needed)10 mg PRN5–20 mg PRN20 mg/dayTake prior to anticipated sexual activity; effective up to 36 h post-dose; max once daily
Do not split tablets; take without regard to food
ED — daily2.5 mg once daily2.5–5 mg once daily5 mg/daySame time every day; no regard to timing of sexual activity
Steady-state reached in ~5 days; 1.6-fold accumulation
BPH — daily5 mg once daily5 mg once daily5 mg/daySame time every day
With finasteride: 5 mg tadalafil + finasteride for ≤26 weeks
ED + BPH — daily5 mg once daily5 mg once daily5 mg/daySame time every day; addresses both conditions with a single regimen
No regard to timing of sexual activity

Renal and Hepatic Dose Adjustments

PopulationPRN (as needed)Daily Use (ED / BPH / ED+BPH)
CrCl 30–50 mL/minStart 5 mg; max 10 mg q48hBPH/ED+BPH: start 2.5 mg, may increase to 5 mg
CrCl <30 or hemodialysisMax 5 mg q72hNot recommended (ED, BPH, or ED+BPH)
Hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh A/B)Max 10 mg; once-daily not extensively evaluatedCaution advised; not extensively evaluated
Hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh C)Not recommendedNot recommended
Potent CYP3A4 inhibitors (ketoconazole, ritonavir)Max 10 mg q72hMax 2.5 mg daily
Alpha-blockers — for EDMust be stable on alpha-blocker first; initiate tadalafil at lowest dose
Alpha-blockers — for BPHCombination NOT recommended; discontinue alpha-blocker ≥1 day before starting tadalafil
Clinical Pearl: PRN vs Daily — Choosing the Right Regimen

The PRN regimen (10–20 mg) suits patients with less frequent sexual activity who prefer spontaneity within a 36-hour window. The daily regimen (2.5–5 mg) is ideal for patients with frequent sexual activity (≥2 times/week), those who prefer to dissociate medication from sexual timing, or those with concurrent BPH symptoms. Only the 5 mg daily dose is approved for BPH. Patients switching from PRN to daily should start at 2.5 mg and titrate. The daily regimen also offers the advantage of a single tablet addressing both ED and BPH.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Tadalafil selectively inhibits PDE5, the enzyme responsible for degradation of cGMP in the corpus cavernosum. By preventing cGMP breakdown during sexual stimulation, tadalafil facilitates smooth muscle relaxation and blood inflow to the penis. In the prostate and bladder, PDE5 inhibition relaxes smooth muscle, reducing BPH-related lower urinary tract symptoms. Tadalafil is more than 10,000-fold selective for PDE5 over PDE1, PDE2, and PDE4, and 700-fold selective over PDE6 (retinal), which explains why colour vision changes are rare (<0.1%) compared with sildenafil. Tadalafil has mild systemic vasodilatory properties; tadalafil 20 mg resulted in a mean maximal supine BP decrease of only 1.6/0.8 mmHg relative to placebo in healthy subjects.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionTmax 30 min to 6 h (median 2 h); no food effect on rate or extent of absorption; dose-proportional exposure from 2.5–20 mg; steady state in ~5 days with daily dosing; 1.6-fold accumulationFlexible dosing with meals; slower onset than sildenafil but much longer duration (up to 36 h); supports both PRN and daily regimens
DistributionApparent Vd ~63 L; 94% protein-bound (albumin, α-1 acid glycoprotein); <0.0005% of dose in semenModerate tissue distribution; high protein binding limits dialysis efficacy in overdose
MetabolismPredominantly CYP3A4; primary metabolite is methylcatechol glucuronide (inactive); does not inhibit or induce CYP1A2, 2C9, 2C19, 2D6, 2E1, or 3A4Susceptible to CYP3A4 inhibitors (ketoconazole +312% AUC) and inducers (rifampin −88% AUC); does not alter PK of co-administered CYP substrates
Eliminationt½ 17.5 h; oral clearance 2.5 L/h; 61% feces, 36% urine (as metabolites); hemodialysis negligibleLongest half-life among PDE5 inhibitors; enables once-daily dosing and up to 36 h PRN window; dose adjustment needed in renal impairment due to metabolite accumulation
SE

Side Effects

≥2%PRN Dosing for ED (Table 1 — 8 Studies, 12 Weeks)
Adverse EffectPlacebo (n=476)5 mg (n=151)10 mg (n=394)20 mg (n=635)
Headache5%11%11%15%
Dyspepsia1%4%8%10%
Back pain3%3%5%6%
Myalgia1%1%4%3%
Nasal congestion1%2%3%3%
Flushing1%2%3%3%
Pain in limb1%1%3%3%
≥1%Daily Dosing for BPH and ED+BPH (Table 4 — 3 Studies, 12 Weeks)
Adverse EffectPlacebo (n=576)5 mg (n=581)Clinical Note
Headache2.3%4.1%Most common; lower rate than PRN dosing at higher doses
Dyspepsia0.2%2.4%GI-related; may be managed with food or antacids
Back pain1.4%2.4%Typically occurs 12–24 h post-dose; resolves within 48 h; diffuse bilateral lower lumbar/gluteal/thigh
Nasopharyngitis1.6%2.1%Not clearly drug-related
Diarrhea1.0%1.4%Mild; more common in patients ≥65
Pain in extremity0.0%1.4%Similar to back pain/myalgia; PDE5 class effect
Myalgia0.3%1.2%Usually mild to moderate; resolves without treatment
Dizziness0.5%1.0%Vasodilation-related
SeriousSerious Adverse Effects
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
PriapismRare (postmarketing)During or after sexual activitySeek emergency care if erection >4 h; irreversible damage if untreated >6 h
NAIONRare (postmarketing); ~2-fold risk with PDE5 classVariableDiscontinue; ophthalmology referral; risk factors include “crowded disc,” age >50, diabetes, HTN
Sudden hearing lossRare (postmarketing)Variable; may include tinnitus/dizzinessDiscontinue; prompt ENT evaluation
Hypersensitivity (Stevens-Johnson syndrome, exfoliative dermatitis)Rare (postmarketing)VariableDiscontinue immediately; contraindicated for re-challenge
CV events (MI, sudden cardiac death, stroke)Rare (postmarketing)During/after sexual activityEmergency care; most patients had pre-existing CV risk; causality uncertain
DiscontinuationDiscontinuation Rates
PRN for ED (12 weeks)
3.1% vs 1.4% placebo
Daily for BPH/ED+BPH (12 weeks)
3.6% vs 1.6% placebo
Back Pain / Myalgia

Back pain and myalgia generally occur 12 to 24 hours after dosing and resolve within 48 hours. The pain is characteristically diffuse, bilateral, involving lower lumbar, gluteal, thigh, or thoracolumbar muscles, and is exacerbated by recumbency. Approximately 0.5% of PRN users discontinued due to back pain/myalgia. When treatment was necessary, paracetamol or NSAIDs were generally effective. Colour vision changes were rare (<0.1% of all patients).

Int

Drug Interactions

Tadalafil is predominantly metabolised by CYP3A4. Unlike sildenafil, it does not inhibit or induce any CYP isoforms at therapeutic concentrations. The critical interaction is with nitrates (contraindicated) and GC stimulators (riociguat — contraindicated). Clinicians prescribing daily tadalafil should be aware that continuous plasma levels increase the window for drug interactions compared with PRN dosing.

MajorOrganic nitrates (nitroglycerin, isosorbide, amyl nitrite)
EffectPotentiates hypotensive effect of nitrates via synergistic NO/cGMP pathway
ManagementABSOLUTELY CONTRAINDICATED; if nitrate needed in a life-threatening situation, at least 48 hours must elapse after last tadalafil dose before nitrate can be considered, under close hemodynamic monitoring
FDA PI
MajorGC stimulators (riociguat)
EffectPDE5 inhibitors may potentiate hypotensive effects of GC stimulators
ManagementCONTRAINDICATED; do not co-administer
FDA PI
MajorKetoconazole (potent CYP3A4 inhibitor)
EffectKetoconazole 400 mg daily: tadalafil AUC +312%, Cmax +22%; ketoconazole 200 mg daily: AUC +107%, Cmax +15%
ManagementPRN: max 10 mg q72h; daily: max 2.5 mg; applies also to itraconazole
FDA PI
MajorRitonavir (HIV protease inhibitor / potent CYP3A4 inhibitor)
EffectRitonavir 200 mg BID: tadalafil AUC +124%, no Cmax change; ritonavir 500–600 mg BID: AUC +32%, Cmax −30%
ManagementPRN: max 10 mg q72h; daily: max 2.5 mg
FDA PI
ModerateRifampin (potent CYP3A4 inducer)
EffectTadalafil AUC −88%, Cmax −46%; expect decreased efficacy
ManagementNo dose adjustment; efficacy of daily dosing may be substantially reduced; also applies to carbamazepine, phenytoin, phenobarbital
FDA PI
ModerateAlpha-blockers (doxazosin, tamsulosin, alfuzosin)
EffectAdditive hypotension risk; clinical studies with doxazosin, tamsulosin, and alfuzosin showed significant blood pressure augmentation
ManagementED: stable on alpha-blocker first, initiate tadalafil at lowest dose; BPH: combination NOT recommended; discontinue alpha-blocker ≥1 day before starting tadalafil for BPH
FDA PI
Mon

Monitoring

  • CV StatusBefore prescribing
    Routine
    Assess fitness for sexual activity; avoid in patients with MI <90 days, stroke <6 months, NYHA Class 2+ HF <6 months, unstable angina, uncontrolled arrhythmias, hypotension (<90/50), or uncontrolled hypertension
  • Nitrate / GC Stimulator ScreenEvery visit
    Routine
    Confirm absence of organic nitrate use (including recreational “poppers”) and GC stimulators (riociguat); both are absolutely contraindicated; at least 48 h must elapse after last tadalafil dose before nitrate use
  • BPH AssessmentBaseline; 4–12 weeks; then periodically
    Routine
    Assess IPSS or AUA-SI score; exclude prostate cancer before attributing symptoms to BPH; re-evaluate at 26 weeks if using with finasteride
  • Renal FunctionBaseline
    Routine
    Check CrCl to guide dosing: CrCl 30–50 requires adjustment; CrCl <30/HD: daily use not recommended; PRN limited to 5 mg q72h
  • Vision / HearingIf symptoms occur
    Trigger-based
    Discontinue and seek immediate evaluation for sudden vision loss (NAION risk) or sudden hearing loss (may include tinnitus/dizziness)
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Concurrent nitrate use: Organic nitrates or nitric oxide donors in any form (regular or intermittent), including recreational amyl nitrite/nitrate
  • Known serious hypersensitivity: To tadalafil (Cialis or Adcirca) or excipients; includes history of Stevens-Johnson syndrome or exfoliative dermatitis
  • GC stimulators: Concurrent use with riociguat or any guanylate cyclase stimulator

Not Recommended

  • MI within last 90 days: Not studied; sexual activity poses cardiovascular risk
  • Unstable angina or angina during intercourse
  • NYHA Class 2+ heart failure in the last 6 months
  • Uncontrolled arrhythmias, hypotension (<90/50), or uncontrolled hypertension
  • Stroke within the last 6 months
  • Severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh C)
  • Alpha-blocker combination for BPH: Efficacy not studied; hypotension risk
Critical: Nitrate Timing 48-Hour Minimum After Tadalafil Before Nitrate Administration

Unlike sildenafil (where the timing is unknown), the Cialis FDA label specifically states that if nitrate administration is deemed medically necessary in a life-threatening situation, at least 48 hours should elapse after the last tadalafil dose. Even then, nitrates should only be given under close medical supervision with hemodynamic monitoring. The 17.5-hour half-life means significant tadalafil levels persist longer than with shorter-acting PDE5 inhibitors.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Critical: Nitrate / “Poppers” Warning
Tell patientNever take tadalafil if you use any form of nitrate medication for chest pain or recreational “poppers.” If you develop chest pain after taking tadalafil, tell the emergency team you have taken a PDE5 inhibitor so they avoid giving nitrates. At least 48 hours must pass since your last tadalafil dose before a nitrate can be considered.
PRN vs Daily Dosing
Tell patientPRN: Take 10–20 mg before anticipated sexual activity. The medication can work for up to 36 hours. Do not take more than one dose per day. Daily: Take 2.5–5 mg at the same time every day regardless of when you plan sexual activity. Full benefit develops over approximately 5 days. Do not split tablets.
Back Pain / Muscle Aches
Tell patientSome patients develop lower back pain or muscle aches 12–24 hours after taking tadalafil. This usually resolves within 48 hours and can be managed with over-the-counter pain relievers such as paracetamol or ibuprofen. Contact your doctor if the pain is severe or persistent.
Vision / Hearing / Erection Emergencies
Tell patientStop tadalafil and seek immediate medical attention if you experience: a sudden loss of vision in one or both eyes; a sudden decrease in hearing (with or without ringing/dizziness); or an erection lasting longer than 4 hours. These are medical emergencies requiring prompt treatment.
Alcohol
Tell patientConsuming large amounts of alcohol (5 or more drinks) with tadalafil can increase the chances of dizziness, headache, and rapid heartbeat due to additive blood pressure lowering. Moderate alcohol consumption is acceptable.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. Cialis (tadalafil) tablets — Full Prescribing Information. Eli Lilly and Company. Revised February 2018. FDA LabelPrimary regulatory source: 3 indications (ED, BPH, ED+BPH), dosing Tables 1–4, renal/hepatic adjustments, CYP3A4 interaction data, alpha-blocker guidance, finasteride limitation.
  2. Cialis (tadalafil) tablets — FDA Label 2011 (BPH approval). FDA Label 2011Label revision adding BPH and ED+BPH indications; source for Table 4 (BPH adverse reactions) and alpha-blocker contraindication in BPH.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Brock GB, McMahon CG, Chen KK, et al. Efficacy and safety of tadalafil for the treatment of erectile dysfunction: results of integrated analyses. J Urol. 2002;168(4 Pt 1):1332–1336. PubMed: 12352386Integrated analysis from 5 pivotal RCTs establishing PRN tadalafil efficacy across ED severities and aetiologies; 36-hour duration of action confirmed.
  2. Porst H, Roehrborn CG, Gratzke C, et al. Effects of tadalafil on lower urinary tract symptoms secondary to benign prostatic hyperplasia and on erectile dysfunction in sexually active men with both conditions: analyses of pooled data from four randomized, placebo-controlled tadalafil clinical studies. J Sex Med. 2013;10(8):2044–2052. PubMed: 23782456Pooled analysis from 4 BPH trials demonstrating tadalafil 5 mg daily improves both LUTS-BPH and ED in men with both conditions.
  3. Oelke M, Giuliano F, Mirone V, et al. Monotherapy with tadalafil or tamsulosin similarly improved lower urinary tract symptoms suggestive of benign prostatic hyperplasia in an international, randomised, parallel, placebo-controlled clinical trial. Eur Urol. 2012;61(5):917–925. PubMed: 22297243Head-to-head trial demonstrating tadalafil 5 mg non-inferior to tamsulosin for LUTS-BPH, supporting the BPH FDA indication.
  4. Glina S, Roehrborn CG, Engelen S, et al. Tadalafil 5 mg plus finasteride 5 mg versus finasteride 5 mg combination therapy for benign prostatic hyperplasia: a 26-week randomized double-blind study. J Urol. 2014;192(3):830–838. PubMed: 24704009The pivotal combination trial of tadalafil + finasteride showing early BPH symptom benefit that diminishes by 26 weeks; basis for the FDA limitation of use.
Guidelines
  1. Burnett AL, Nehra A, Breau RH, et al. Erectile dysfunction: AUA guideline. J Urol. 2018;200(3):633–641. PubMed: 29746858AUA guideline positioning PDE5 inhibitors as first-line for ED; recommends daily tadalafil for concurrent ED+BPH.
  2. Lerner LB, McVary KT, Barry MJ, et al. Management of lower urinary tract symptoms attributed to benign prostatic hyperplasia: AUA guideline part 1 — initial work-up and medical management. J Urol. 2021;206(4):806–817. PubMed: 34384237AUA BPH guideline including tadalafil 5 mg daily as a medical management option for LUTS-BPH.
Pharmacokinetics
  1. Forgue ST, Patterson BE, Bedding AW, et al. Tadalafil pharmacokinetics in healthy subjects. Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2006;61(3):280–288. PubMed: 16487221Definitive PK study: t½ 17.5 h (5th–95th: 11.5–29.6 h), CL/F 2.48 L/h, Vz/F 62.6 L, linear PK, no food effect, steady state by day 5, 1.6-fold accumulation.
  2. Tadalafil — StatPearls. National Center for Biotechnology Information. Updated March 2024. NCBI BookshelfComprehensive clinical review covering mechanism, pharmacokinetics (t½ 17.5 h, 94% protein-bound, 61% fecal/36% renal excretion), dosing, and adverse effects for all tadalafil indications.
Mechanistic / Selectivity
  1. Corbin JD, Francis SH. Pharmacology of phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors. Int J Clin Pract. 2002;56(6):453–459. PubMed: 12166544PDE selectivity profile review: tadalafil >10,000-fold selective for PDE5 vs PDE1–4; 700-fold vs PDE6; explains low rate of visual side effects compared with sildenafil.
  2. Andersson KE, de Groat WC, McVary KT, et al. Tadalafil for the treatment of lower urinary tract symptoms secondary to benign prostatic hyperplasia: pathophysiology and mechanism(s) of action. Neurourol Urodyn. 2011;30(2):292–301. PubMed: 21284020Discusses the pathophysiological rationale for PDE5 inhibition in BPH/LUTS: smooth muscle relaxation in prostate, bladder, and urethra; improved pelvic blood flow.