Drug Monograph

Ranolazine

Brand names: Ranexa; Aspruzyo Sprinkle (oral granules); generic ranolazine ER widely available
Selective inhibitor of late sodium current (late INa) · Oral extended-release
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
True t½ 1.4–1.9 h; apparent ~7 h with ER (flip-flop kinetics)
Metabolism
CYP3A4 (major), CYP2D6 (minor)
Protein Binding
~62% (mainly α₁-acid glycoprotein)
Bioavailability
35–50% (IR); 76% relative (ER vs solution)
Volume of Distribution
85–180 L (steady state)
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Antianginal — late INa blocker
Available Doses
Tablets ER: 500 mg, 1000 mg
Sprinkle granules: 500 mg, 1000 mg
Route
Oral, twice daily
Renal Adjustment
Caution; monitor; discontinue if AKI
Hepatic Adjustment
Contraindicated in cirrhosis (any Child-Pugh)
Pregnancy
Use only if benefit outweighs risk; limited human data
Lactation
No human data; present in rat milk
Schedule / Legal Status
Rx only; not a controlled substance
Generic Available
Yes (multiple manufacturers since 2019)
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Treatment of chronic anginaAdults; may be used with beta-blockers, nitrates, CCBs, antiplatelets, lipid-lowering agents, ACEi or ARBsMonotherapy or adjunctiveFDA Approved

Ranolazine carries a single FDA-approved indication: the treatment of chronic angina. Originally approved in 2006 as second-line therapy after other antianginals, the labelling was updated in 2012 to remove the second-line restriction, making ranolazine a first-line antianginal option per the FDA label. Current 2023 AHA/ACC chronic coronary disease guidelines, however, still position ranolazine as an add-on agent when symptoms persist on beta-blocker, calcium channel blocker, or long-acting nitrate therapy. Its differentiating feature is anti-ischemic activity that does not depend on changes in heart rate or blood pressure — a useful property in normotensive or bradycardic patients in whom further haemodynamic suppression is undesirable.

Common Off-Label Uses

Microvascular angina (INOCA / coronary microvascular dysfunction) — small randomised trials and observational data suggest ranolazine improves anginal frequency in patients with non-obstructive coronary artery disease. (Evidence quality: low–moderate)

Atrial fibrillation — adjunctive rhythm or rate control — late INa blockade reduces atrial triggered activity. Combination with low-dose dronedarone (HARMONY) and amiodarone-augmenting protocols have shown signal of benefit in paroxysmal AF, but ranolazine is not FDA-approved for this indication. (Evidence quality: low–moderate)

Diabetic glycemic control — modest reductions in HbA1c were observed in CARISA and TERISA, attributed to inhibition of glucagon secretion. Ranolazine should NOT be used as a glucose-lowering agent. (Evidence quality: moderate; not a treatment indication)

Long QT syndrome type 3 (SCN5A gain-of-function) — late INa blockade is mechanistically rational and has been used in selected paediatric and adult cases. (Evidence quality: very low — case series)

Stable ventricular arrhythmias — adjunctive use in select refractory ventricular tachycardia, particularly in ischaemic substrates. (Evidence quality: very low)

Dose

Dosing

Ranolazine is dosed twice daily, initially 500 mg PO BID, with up-titration to the maximum recommended 1000 mg PO BID guided by symptom response. Doses above 1000 mg BID are poorly tolerated and not approved. Tablets must be swallowed whole — they cannot be crushed, broken, or chewed; the Aspruzyo Sprinkle granule formulation is available for patients with swallowing difficulty.

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Chronic angina — standard initiation, no relevant interactions500 mg BID1000 mg BID1000 mg BIDUp-titrate after several days based on symptom response
Steady state reached within 3 days; allow ≥1 week before judging efficacy of a dose
On concomitant moderate CYP3A inhibitor (diltiazem, verapamil, erythromycin, fluconazole)500 mg BID500 mg BID500 mg BID (capped)Do not exceed 500 mg BID per FDA label
Diltiazem 180 mg/day raises ranolazine AUC ~1.5-fold
On concomitant P-gp inhibitor (e.g., cyclosporine)500 mg BIDDown-titrate by clinical responsePer responseIncreased absorption via P-gp inhibition
Monitor closely for adverse effects, ECG QTc
Aspruzyo Sprinkle (granules) — alternative formulation500 mg BID1000 mg BID1000 mg BIDSprinkle on tablespoonful of soft food (applesauce, yoghurt) and consume immediately; do not chew
May be administered via NG/G-tube per product label

Population-Specific Considerations

PopulationRecommendationRationale
Pediatric (<18 y)Not recommended — safety and efficacy not establishedNo supporting trial data; angina extremely rare in this group
Elderly ≥65 yStandard dosing; clinical caution at the low end of dose rangePharmacokinetics not significantly altered by age
Elderly ≥75 yHigher rates of adverse events, serious adverse events, and discontinuations per FDA label; cautious titration advisedGreater susceptibility to dizziness, neurologic effects, and acute kidney injury
Mild renal impairment (CrCl 60–89 mL/min)No dose adjustmentModest exposure increase without clinical sequelae
Moderate renal impairment (CrCl 30–59 mL/min)Initiate at lower end of range; monitor renal function periodicallyCmax up to 50% higher; increased risk of acute renal failure
Severe renal impairment (CrCl <30 mL/min)Use with extreme caution; some sources avoidAcute renal failure reported in PK study at 1000 mg BID; PK study halted prematurely
Mild hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh A)Contraindicated per FDA label (cirrhotic patients)Cmax increased ~30%; 3-fold greater QT prolongation than in non-cirrhotic patients
Moderate–severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh B/C)ContraindicatedCmax increased ~80% in Child-Pugh B
Heart failure (NYHA I–IV)No dose adjustmentPharmacokinetics unaffected; minimal effect on heart rate and blood pressure
Clinical Pearl — A Haemodynamically Neutral Antianginal

Ranolazine is unique among antianginals in that it does not lower heart rate or blood pressure to any clinically meaningful degree. This makes it especially useful in patients with chronic angina whose symptom control is incomplete despite first-line beta-blocker or calcium channel blocker therapy at maximum tolerated doses, in patients already at the haemodynamic floor (e.g., resting bradycardia or borderline hypotension), and in those whose comorbidities (heart failure, COPD) preclude further beta-blockade.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Ranolazine selectively inhibits the late inward sodium current (late INa) in cardiac myocytes. Under ischaemic conditions, late INa is pathologically enhanced, allowing excessive sodium entry that drives reverse-mode Na⁺/Ca²⁺ exchanger activity and cytosolic calcium overload. Calcium overload increases left ventricular diastolic wall tension, raises myocardial oxygen demand, and impairs coronary perfusion of the subendocardium. By blunting late INa, ranolazine lowers diastolic tension, restores diastolic perfusion, and reduces ischaemia-driven anginal symptoms — without affecting heart rate or systemic blood pressure to any clinically meaningful degree. A secondary, dose-related effect on the rapid delayed-rectifier potassium current (IKr) explains the modest QT-interval prolongation observed at therapeutic doses.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionOral bioavailability 35–50% (IR); ER tablets 76% relative to solution; Tmax 2–5 h; food has no significant effect on Cmax/AUCTake without regard to meals; high inter-individual variability in exposure
DistributionVd at steady state 85–180 L; ~62% protein-bound (mainly to α₁-acid glycoprotein, weakly to albumin)Lipophilic with extensive tissue distribution; not removed by haemodialysis
MetabolismHepatic — predominantly CYP3A4, with minor CYP2D6 contribution; ranolazine is also a P-glycoprotein substrate. Weak CYP3A inhibitor; partial CYP2D6 inhibitor; P-gp inhibitorThe locus of nearly every clinically important interaction; strong CYP3A inhibitors and inducers are contraindicated
Elimination~73% urinary excretion (predominantly metabolites); <5% unchanged drug; true elimination t½ 1.4–1.9 h, but apparent t½ ~7 h with ER formulation due to flip-flop kinetics; steady state in 3 daysTwice-daily dosing produces a trough:peak ratio of 0.3–0.6; renal failure increases AUC up to two-fold
SE

Side Effects

The adverse-effect profile is dominated by mild central nervous system and gastrointestinal symptoms, all of which are dose-related and most common during titration to 1000 mg BID. Incidences below are taken from the integrated FDA Ranexa pivotal-trial dataset (2,018 patients across CARISA, MARISA, ERICA, and the long-term open-label extensions).

≥4% Most Common (the FDA label’s >4% threshold)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Dizziness6.2%Dose-related; most prominent during titration. Counsel against driving until response is known.
Headache5.5%Generally mild and self-limited; rarely a reason for discontinuation.
Constipation4.5%Anticipate at initiation, particularly in elderly and bedbound patients; recommend hydration and a stimulant or osmotic laxative as needed.
Nausea4.4%Usually mild; food may improve tolerance but is not required for absorption.
0.5–4% Common (more frequent on ranolazine than placebo per FDA label)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Asthenia, peripheral edema0.5–4%Asthenia is a recognised reason for discontinuation; peripheral edema is generally mild.
Bradycardia, palpitations0.5–4%Despite minimal heart-rate effect on average, individual cases occur — especially with concomitant beta-blockade or QT-prolonging drugs.
Hypotension, orthostatic hypotension0.5–4%Less frequent than with traditional antianginals; usually mild.
Vomiting, abdominal pain, dry mouth, dyspepsia0.5–4%GI effects often improve over weeks of therapy.
Anorexia0.5–4%Monitor weight, particularly in elderly patients.
Tinnitus, vertigo0.5–4%Class as ear/labyrinth disorder; usually self-resolving.
Blurred vision0.5–4%Counsel against driving until visual response is known.
Dyspnea0.5–4%Generally mild; differentiate from anginal-equivalent symptoms.
Confusional state, vasovagal syncope0.5–4%More common in elderly; consider dose reduction.
Hyperhidrosis, hematuria0.5–4%Hematuria warrants urinalysis to exclude alternative causes.
Serum creatinine elevation (~0.1 mg/dL)Class effect
Per FDA label
Per FDA label, an artefactual rise from inhibition of tubular creatinine secretion — true GFR is unchanged in healthy volunteers. Distinguish from genuine acute kidney injury (which is also reported and requires discontinuation).
Serious Serious Adverse Reactions (regardless of frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
QT interval prolongationDose-related; mean +6 ms at 1000 mg BIDWithin days of initiation or dose increaseBaseline ECG; reassess after dose escalation; avoid in known/family long-QT syndrome and concurrent QT-prolonging drugs. Torsades not observed at therapeutic doses in the 6,560-patient MERLIN-TIMI 36 trial.
Acute renal failure<0.5%
Higher in CrCl <30 mL/min
Days to weeks after initiationCheck renal function at baseline and periodically in CrCl <60 mL/min. Differentiate from artefactual creatinine rise (no BUN change). Discontinue immediately if AKI develops.
Severe neurologic syndrome (myoclonus, abnormal coordination, tremor, paresthesia, hallucinations)Rare (post-marketing)Often after dose increase or with renal/hepatic impairmentReduce dose or discontinue; symptoms typically resolve. Particular vigilance in CrCl <30 mL/min and the very elderly.
Angioedema<0.5%VariableDiscontinue immediately and treat per standard angioedema protocols; do not rechallenge.
Hypoglycaemia in diabetics on antidiabetic therapyPost-marketing reportsVariableReinforce home glucose monitoring; consider down-titration of insulin or sulfonylurea if hypoglycaemia emerges.
Pulmonary fibrosis, hematologic cytopenias (thrombocytopenia, leukopenia, pancytopenia), eosinophilia<0.5%Variable; often after prolonged exposureInvestigate persistent dyspnea, unexplained cytopenia, or new infiltrates; discontinue if confirmed.
Discontinuation Discontinuation Rates (FDA label, controlled studies)
Adults (controlled chronic angina trials)
~6% vs ~3% placebo
Top reasons: dizziness, nausea, asthenia, constipation, headache.
Pediatric
N/A not approved
Safety and efficacy not established; no paediatric data available.
Reason for DiscontinuationIncidenceContext
Dizziness1.3%
vs 0.1% placebo
Single most common cause of withdrawal; correlates with peak ranolazine plasma levels and the 1000 mg BID dose.
Nausea1.0%
vs 0% placebo
Often improves with continued therapy; consider 500 mg BID for ≥1 week before escalation.
Asthenia, constipation, headache~0.5% each
vs 0% placebo
Each accounts for a small but distinct withdrawal cohort.
Management Priority — Recognising Drug Toxicity in Renal Impairment

Patients with CrCl <30 mL/min are at highest risk for the two distinctive ranolazine toxicities — acute renal failure and the dose-dependent neurologic syndrome (myoclonus, ataxia, hallucinations). Both are typically reversible on discontinuation but can be misattributed to other causes in elderly patients on polypharmacy. Any new-onset neurologic symptoms, particularly involuntary movements or coordination disturbance, in a patient on ranolazine should prompt immediate dose reduction or withdrawal pending evaluation.

Int

Drug Interactions

Ranolazine has a complex interaction profile because it is both a substrate and an inhibitor of multiple pathways: extensively metabolised by CYP3A4 (with a smaller CYP2D6 contribution) and a substrate of P-glycoprotein, while itself acting as a partial CYP2D6 inhibitor and a P-gp inhibitor. Strong CYP3A inhibitors and strong CYP3A inducers are absolute contraindications. Moderate CYP3A inhibitors mandate a 500 mg BID dose cap. QT-prolonging drugs require additive caution.

Major Strong CYP3A inhibitors
ExamplesKetoconazole, itraconazole, voriconazole, posaconazole, clarithromycin, telithromycin, nefazodone, ritonavir-boosted regimens, cobicistat
MechanismCYP3A inhibition; ketoconazole 200 mg BID raises ranolazine levels ~3.2-fold
EffectMarked increase in ranolazine exposure with dose-dependent QT prolongation and neurotoxicity risk
ManagementCONTRAINDICATED per FDA label
FDA PI
Major Strong CYP3A inducers
ExamplesRifampin, rifabutin, rifapentine, phenobarbital, phenytoin, carbamazepine, St John’s wort
MechanismCYP3A induction substantially reduces ranolazine plasma exposure
EffectLoss of antianginal efficacy
ManagementCONTRAINDICATED per FDA label; choose alternative inducer-free therapy
FDA PI
Major Moderate CYP3A inhibitors
ExamplesDiltiazem, verapamil, erythromycin, fluconazole, grapefruit juice/products
MechanismModerate CYP3A inhibition; diltiazem 180 mg/day raises AUC ~1.5-fold
EffectIncreased ranolazine exposure with QT prolongation and adverse-event burden
ManagementCap ranolazine at 500 mg BID; avoid grapefruit; counsel patients on this.
FDA PI
Major Class IA & III antiarrhythmics
ExamplesQuinidine, procainamide, disopyramide, sotalol, dofetilide, ibutilide; caution with amiodarone
MechanismAdditive IKr blockade and QT prolongation
EffectIncreased risk of torsades de pointes
ManagementAvoid combination if possible; if unavoidable, ECG monitoring at baseline and after dose changes; correct K⁺ and Mg²⁺.
Lexicomp / Class effect
Moderate P-gp inhibitors (cyclosporine)
MechanismP-glycoprotein inhibition increases intestinal absorption of ranolazine
EffectHigher ranolazine exposure
ManagementInitiate at 500 mg BID and down-titrate further based on clinical response and ECG.
FDA PI
Moderate Digoxin
MechanismRanolazine inhibits intestinal P-gp; FDA label cites a 1.5-fold rise in digoxin plasma concentration with ranolazine 1000 mg BID
EffectIncreased risk of digoxin toxicity
ManagementReduce digoxin dose at ranolazine initiation and monitor digoxin level after 7 days.
FDA PI
Moderate CYP3A statins (simvastatin, lovastatin)
MechanismRanolazine is a weak CYP3A inhibitor; per the Ranexa label, simvastatin and its metabolites approximately double in exposure at ranolazine 1000 mg BID
EffectIncreased risk of statin-induced myopathy and rhabdomyolysis
ManagementCap simvastatin at 20 mg/day; consider switching to atorvastatin, rosuvastatin, or pravastatin.
FDA PI
Moderate CYP2D6 substrates
ExamplesTricyclic antidepressants, antipsychotics, metoprolol, propafenone, codeine, dextromethorphan
MechanismPartial CYP2D6 inhibition by ranolazine raises substrate plasma concentrations
EffectMagnified pharmacologic and adverse effects of the substrate
ManagementUse lower doses of the CYP2D6 substrate than typically prescribed; monitor clinical response.
FDA PI
Mon

Monitoring

Monitoring is a balance of routine baseline assessments before initiation and trigger-based laboratory work directed at the two distinctive ranolazine toxicities — QT prolongation and acute kidney injury.

  • 12-lead ECG (QTc) Baseline; after each dose escalation; with new QT-prolonging co-medication
    Routine
    Mean QTc increase is approximately 6 ms at 1000 mg BID. Avoid ranolazine if baseline QTc >500 ms; reassess if QTc rises >60 ms above baseline or exceeds 500 ms on therapy.
  • Serum creatinine, BUN, electrolytes Baseline; periodically in CrCl <60 mL/min
    Routine
    An artefactual ~0.1 mg/dL creatinine rise occurs from inhibition of tubular secretion (no BUN change). Progressive creatinine rise with concurrent BUN/potassium increase indicates true AKI — discontinue.
  • Blood pressure & heart rate Baseline and at each visit
    Routine
    Ranolazine has minimal haemodynamic effect on average; new tachycardia or hypotension should prompt reassessment of contributors.
  • Anginal frequency & severity Baseline and at follow-up; patient diary helpful
    Routine
    Allow at least 1–2 weeks at 1000 mg BID before judging full response. Tolerance does not develop over 12 weeks.
  • Drug interaction reconciliation At every encounter
    Routine
    Ask explicitly about new prescriptions of azole antifungals, macrolides, anticonvulsants, antiretrovirals, herbal St John’s wort, and grapefruit ingestion at every visit.
  • Glucose / HbA1c in diabetics If hypoglycaemia symptoms
    Trigger-based
    Modest HbA1c reductions are well-described; rare hypoglycaemia reported with concomitant insulin or sulfonylurea. Reinforce home glucose monitoring at initiation.
  • Neurologic examination If new tremor, ataxia, myoclonus, or confusion
    Trigger-based
    Neurologic syndromes are dose- and exposure-related; consider dose reduction or discontinuation. Particular vigilance in renal impairment and the very elderly.
  • Digoxin level 7–10 days after ranolazine initiation/dose change in patients on digoxin
    Trigger-based
    Anticipate ~1.5-fold rise; consider empirical 50% digoxin dose reduction at ranolazine initiation.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Liver cirrhosis of any Child-Pugh class — 3-fold greater QT prolongation reported in cirrhotic patients.
  • Concurrent strong CYP3A inhibitors — ketoconazole, itraconazole, voriconazole, posaconazole, clarithromycin, telithromycin, nefazodone, ritonavir-boosted antiretrovirals, cobicistat.
  • Concurrent strong CYP3A inducers — rifampin, rifabutin, rifapentine, phenobarbital, phenytoin, carbamazepine, St John’s wort.
  • Hypersensitivity to ranolazine or any tablet excipient.

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Pre-existing QT prolongation — congenital long QT syndrome, family history of LQTS, baseline QTc >500 ms, or potassium-channel variants associated with QT prolongation.
  • Severe renal impairment (CrCl <30 mL/min) — high risk of acute renal failure and neurotoxicity in pharmacokinetic study at 1000 mg BID; some clinicians avoid altogether.
  • Concomitant Class IA or Class III antiarrhythmic therapy — additive QT prolongation; cardiology co-management essential.
  • Acute coronary syndromes / acute MI — MERLIN-TIMI 36 did not demonstrate reduction in major cardiovascular events when ranolazine was added to standard ACS care; benefit limited to recurrent ischaemia and angina-related endpoints.

Use with Caution

  • Patients ≥75 years — higher rates of adverse events, serious adverse events, and discontinuation per FDA label.
  • Moderate renal impairment (CrCl 30–59 mL/min) — initiate at 500 mg BID and monitor renal function periodically.
  • Diabetics on insulin or sulfonylurea — risk of hypoglycaemia.
  • Concomitant digoxin or simvastatin — anticipate dose adjustment of the partner drug.
  • Pregnancy — limited human data; animal toxicity at supratherapeutic exposures only. Use only if clearly needed.
FDA Regulatory Warning QT Interval Prolongation

The FDA Ranexa label highlights dose-related QTc prolongation as a class warning. Mean QTc increase at therapeutic doses is on the order of a few milliseconds (approximately 6 ms at 1000 mg BID in steady-state plasma exposure analyses) but can be markedly larger in patients with hepatic impairment (where the labelled contraindication applies) or with concomitant QT-prolonging drugs. Although torsades de pointes was not observed in MERLIN-TIMI 36 (n = 6,560 NSTE-ACS patients), the FDA warns that there is little experience with high doses, prolonged exposure, or co-administration with other QT-prolonging drugs in patients with congenital or acquired long QT syndromes.

Clinicians should obtain a baseline ECG, reassess after dose escalation to 1000 mg BID, correct potassium and magnesium before initiation, and avoid ranolazine in patients with baseline QTc >500 ms or known long QT syndrome.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Explain that ranolazine is a daily preventive medicine for chronic chest pain (angina). It works through a different mechanism than other heart medications and does not lower blood pressure or heart rate to any meaningful degree, which is why it is often added to existing treatment rather than replacing it. It is not a rescue medication — patients should continue to carry sublingual nitroglycerin for breakthrough chest pain.

How to Take

Take one tablet by mouth twice daily, approximately 12 hours apart, with or without food. Tablets must be swallowed whole — do not crush, break, or chew them, as this destroys the extended-release coating and changes how the medicine is absorbed. The Aspruzyo Sprinkle granule formulation is available for patients with swallowing difficulty: empty one packet onto a tablespoon of soft food (applesauce or yoghurt) and consume immediately. If a dose is missed, skip it and take the next dose at the regular time — never double up.

Constipation
Tell patient Constipation is common, particularly in the first weeks. Increase dietary fibre and water intake, stay active, and ask the pharmacist about a stool softener or stimulant laxative if needed. Symptoms usually settle with continued therapy.
Call prescriber If you have not had a bowel movement for several days, develop severe abdominal pain, or notice blood in the stool — call the same day.
Dizziness, Drowsiness, or Blurred Vision
Tell patient Dizziness can occur, especially in the first days. Do not drive, operate machinery, or perform tasks requiring full alertness until you know how the medication affects you. Stand up slowly and stay hydrated.
Call prescriber Fainting, falls, persistent dizziness, vision problems that do not resolve, or palpitations that do not settle — seek medical advice promptly.
Drugs & Foods to Avoid
Tell patient Avoid grapefruit and grapefruit juice entirely — they raise drug levels. Always tell every doctor, dentist, and pharmacist that you take ranolazine. Many common medicines must be avoided or have their dose adjusted (some antifungals, some antibiotics like clarithromycin, certain HIV medications, anti-seizure medicines, and the herbal supplement St John’s wort).
Call prescriber Before starting any new prescription medication, over-the-counter drug, or herbal supplement — confirm it is safe with ranolazine.
Chest Pain or Heart-Rhythm Symptoms
Tell patient Continue your daily ranolazine. For an acute episode of chest pain, sit down, place a sublingual nitroglycerin tablet or spray under the tongue, and wait five minutes. If the pain persists after a second dose, call emergency services. Ranolazine itself does not work fast enough to relieve a chest-pain attack.
Call prescriber Fast or pounding heartbeats, fluttering in the chest, fainting spells, or sudden severe chest pain that lasts more than a few minutes — call emergency services or your prescriber urgently.
Diabetes & Low Blood Sugar
Tell patient If you have diabetes and use insulin or a sulfonylurea (such as glipizide or glimepiride), ranolazine can lower your blood sugar slightly. Check your blood sugar more often during the first weeks of treatment and learn to recognise low-sugar symptoms (sweating, tremor, hunger, confusion).
Call prescriber Repeated low blood sugar readings, sudden tremor, slurred speech, or confusion warrant immediate dose review.
New Neurologic Symptoms
Tell patient Rarely, ranolazine can cause unusual symptoms such as sudden muscle jerks, tremor, unsteadiness, tingling, or hallucinations. These are reversible if recognised early and the medication is reduced or stopped.
Call prescriber Any new tremor, involuntary movements, difficulty walking, or seeing or hearing things that are not there — contact your prescriber the same day.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Ranexa® (ranolazine) extended-release tablets — full prescribing information. Gilead Sciences. DailyMed — Ranexa label Definitive U.S. label and source for adverse-event incidence rates (dizziness 6.2%, headache 5.5%, constipation 4.5%, nausea 4.4%; 6% overall discontinuation) and dosing rules used in this monograph.
  2. U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Ranexa NDA 21-526 approval and supplements — historical labelling and pharmacokinetic data. accessdata.fda.gov Source for the 3.2-fold ranolazine AUC increase with ketoconazole, the 1.5-fold AUC rise with diltiazem 180 mg/day, and other labelled drug-interaction quantification.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Chaitman BR, Skettino SL, Parker JO, et al; MARISA Investigators. Anti-ischemic effects and long-term survival during ranolazine monotherapy in patients with chronic severe angina. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2004;43(8):1375–1382. doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2003.11.045 Dose-response monotherapy trial (n = 191) establishing antianginal efficacy across 500–1500 mg BID without clinically meaningful haemodynamic change.
  2. Chaitman BR, Pepine CJ, Parker JO, et al; CARISA Investigators. Effects of ranolazine with atenolol, amlodipine, or diltiazem on exercise tolerance and angina frequency in patients with severe chronic angina: a randomized controlled trial. JAMA. 2004;291(3):309–316. doi.org/10.1001/jama.291.3.309 Pivotal combination trial (n = 823) demonstrating reduced angina frequency and increased exercise duration when ranolazine was added to standard antianginal therapy.
  3. Stone PH, Gratsiansky NA, Blokhin A, Huang IZ, Meng L; ERICA Investigators. Antianginal efficacy of ranolazine when added to treatment with amlodipine: the ERICA (Efficacy of Ranolazine in Chronic Angina) trial. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2006;48(3):566–575. doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2006.05.044 Combination trial (n = 565) showing reduced anginal frequency and nitroglycerin consumption when ranolazine 1000 mg BID was added to amlodipine 10 mg/day.
  4. Morrow DA, Scirica BM, Karwatowska-Prokopczuk E, et al. Effects of ranolazine on recurrent cardiovascular events in patients with non–ST-elevation acute coronary syndromes: the MERLIN-TIMI 36 randomized trial. JAMA. 2007;297(16):1775–1783. doi.org/10.1001/jama.297.16.1775 Largest ranolazine trial (n = 6,560) — neutral on the composite primary endpoint in NSTE-ACS but reassured on safety and showed reduced recurrent ischaemia, with no excess of arrhythmia or sudden death.
  5. Kosiborod M, Arnold SV, Spertus JA, et al; TERISA Investigators. Evaluation of ranolazine in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and chronic stable angina: results from the TERISA randomized clinical trial. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2013;61(20):2038–2045. doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2013.02.011 Randomised trial in chronic angina with diabetes; ranolazine reduced angina frequency and sublingual nitroglycerin use compared with placebo.
Guidelines
  1. Virani SS, Newby LK, Arnold SV, et al. 2023 AHA/ACC/ACCP/ASPC/NLA/PCNA guideline for the management of patients with chronic coronary disease. Circulation. 2023;148(9):e9–e119. doi.org/10.1161/CIR.0000000000001168 Current U.S. guideline positioning ranolazine as an add-on antianginal agent in chronic coronary disease, particularly for patients on maximum tolerated first-line therapy.
  2. Knuuti J, Wijns W, Saraste A, et al. 2019 ESC guidelines for the diagnosis and management of chronic coronary syndromes. Eur Heart J. 2020;41(3):407–477. doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehz425 European framework supporting ranolazine as a second-line antianginal agent and recognising its specific value in patients with low heart rate or low blood pressure.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Chaitman BR. Ranolazine for the treatment of chronic angina and potential use in other cardiovascular conditions. Circulation. 2006;113(20):2462–2472. doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.597500 Authoritative mechanistic and clinical review of ranolazine’s late INa blockade, antianginal effects, and electrophysiological profile.
  2. Antzelevitch C, Belardinelli L, Zygmunt AC, et al. Electrophysiological effects of ranolazine, a novel antianginal agent with antiarrhythmic properties. Circulation. 2004;110(8):904–910. doi.org/10.1161/01.CIR.0000139333.83620.5D Foundational electrophysiology paper characterising ranolazine’s selective late INa blockade and its modest IKr effect.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Jerling M. Clinical pharmacokinetics of ranolazine. Clin Pharmacokinet. 2006;45(5):469–491. doi.org/10.2165/00003088-200645050-00003 Definitive pharmacokinetic review establishing the bioavailability range, ~62% protein binding, 85–180 L volume of distribution, and the flip-flop kinetics that account for the apparent 7-hour half-life with the ER formulation.
  2. Wilson SR, Scirica BM, Braunwald E, et al. Efficacy of ranolazine in patients with chronic angina: observations from the MERLIN-TIMI 36 trial. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2009;53(17):1510–1516. doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2009.01.037 Largest analysis of ranolazine in patients with established coronary artery disease (n = 3,565); confirmed antianginal efficacy with reassuring safety in a broader population than the original phase III trials.
  3. Scirica BM, Morrow DA, Hod H, et al. Effect of ranolazine, an antianginal agent with novel electrophysiological properties, on the incidence of arrhythmias in patients with non–ST-segment elevation acute coronary syndrome: results from MERLIN-TIMI 36. Circulation. 2007;116(15):1647–1652. doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.724880 Pre-specified arrhythmia analysis from MERLIN-TIMI 36 showing reduced ventricular and supraventricular arrhythmia on continuous Holter — the foundation for ongoing off-label investigation in atrial fibrillation.