Drug Monograph

Vonoprazan

Voquezna; also co-packaged as Voquezna Triple Pak and Voquezna Dual Pak
Potassium-Competitive Acid Blocker (P-CAB)·Oral
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
~7–8 h
Metabolism
CYP3A4 (major); CYP2B6, CYP2C19, CYP2D6, SULT2A1
Protein Binding
~80%
Tmax
1.5–2 h
Vd (apparent)
~1,050 L
Clinical Information
Drug Class
P-CAB (first-in-class in US)
Available Doses
10 mg, 20 mg tablets
Route
Oral
Renal Adjustment
Yes — EE healing and H. pylori (see dosing)
Hepatic Adjustment
Yes — EE healing and H. pylori (see dosing)
Pregnancy
Insufficient human data; animal data show fetal bone and liver effects at high doses
Lactation
Breastfeeding NOT recommended (liver injury in nursing rat pups)
Schedule
Rx only
Generic Available
No (as of 2024)
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Healing of all grades of EE and relief of associated heartburnAdultsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Maintenance of healed EE and relief of associated heartburnAdultsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Relief of heartburn associated with non-erosive GERDAdultsMonotherapyFDA Approved
H. pylori infection — triple therapyAdultsWith amoxicillin + clarithromycinFDA Approved
H. pylori infection — dual therapyAdultsWith amoxicillinFDA Approved

Vonoprazan is the first potassium-competitive acid blocker (P-CAB) approved in the United States, representing a new mechanistic class distinct from proton pump inhibitors. Unlike PPIs, vonoprazan does not require acid-mediated activation, binds to both active and resting proton pumps in a reversible and potassium-competitive manner, is acid-stable, and achieves meaningful acid suppression from the first dose. Its longer half-life (~7–8 hours vs ~1–2 hours for PPIs) and food-independent dosing are additional differentiators. For H. pylori eradication, vonoprazan-based triple and dual therapy demonstrated superiority over lansoprazole-based triple therapy, particularly in patients with clarithromycin-resistant strains.

Off-Label Uses

PPI-refractory erosive esophagitis — Evidence quality: Moderate. Small studies suggest that switching from a PPI to vonoprazan may improve acid control and mucosal healing in patients who have failed standard PPI therapy.

NSAID-associated gastroprotection — Evidence quality: Moderate (Japan data). Vonoprazan is approved in Japan for prevention of low-dose aspirin and NSAID-induced ulcers at 10 mg daily, but this indication is not FDA-approved in the US.

Dose

Dosing

Adult Dosing by Clinical Scenario

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Erosive esophagitis — healing20 mg once daily20 mg once daily20 mg/day8 weeks
Take with or without food; swallow whole
Healed EE — maintenance and heartburn relief10 mg once daily10 mg once daily10 mg/dayUp to 6 months
Non-erosive GERD — heartburn relief10 mg once daily10 mg once daily10 mg/day4 weeks
H. pylori — triple therapy20 mg twice daily20 mg twice daily40 mg/dayWith amoxicillin 1 g BID + clarithromycin 500 mg BID, morning and evening (12 h apart), for 14 days
H. pylori — dual therapy20 mg twice daily20 mg twice daily40 mg/dayWith amoxicillin 1 g three times daily (morning, midday, evening), for 14 days
Dual therapy avoids clarithromycin; amoxicillin TID distinguishes this from triple therapy

Renal Impairment Dosing

Clinical ScenarioeGFR ≥30 mL/mineGFR <30 mL/minNotes
EE healing20 mg QD10 mg QDDose reduced in severe renal impairment
EE maintenance / Non-erosive GERD10 mg QD10 mg QDNo adjustment
H. pylori (triple or dual)20 mg BIDNot recommendedAlso refer to amoxicillin/clarithromycin renal dosing

Hepatic Impairment Dosing

Clinical ScenarioChild-Pugh AChild-Pugh BChild-Pugh C
EE healing20 mg QD10 mg QD10 mg QD
EE maintenance / Non-erosive GERD10 mg QD10 mg QD10 mg QD
H. pylori (triple or dual)20 mg BIDNot recommendedNot recommended
Clinical Pearl: Key Differences from PPIs

Vonoprazan can be taken with or without food and does not require pre-meal timing. Unlike PPIs, its acid-suppressive effect is clinically meaningful from the first dose — reaching approximately 63% pH >4 time on day 1, increasing to ~85% by day 7 at 20 mg. Tablets must be swallowed whole (no crushing or chewing). For H. pylori missed doses, take within 4 hours; for EE/GERD, take within 12 hours. Clarithromycin co-administration increases vonoprazan AUC by approximately 58% via CYP3A4 inhibition, but no dose adjustment is needed.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Vonoprazan is a potassium-competitive acid blocker (P-CAB) that suppresses gastric acid secretion by inhibiting the H+/K+-ATPase in a potassium-competitive manner at the secretory surface of parietal cells. This mechanism differs fundamentally from PPIs in several clinically important ways. First, vonoprazan does not require acid-catalysed activation — it directly inhibits the proton pump as the parent compound, whereas PPIs must be converted to a reactive sulfenamide in an acidic environment. Second, vonoprazan binds the proton pump reversibly and noncovalently, in contrast to the irreversible covalent binding of PPIs. Third, vonoprazan inhibits both active (acid-secreting) and resting proton pumps, while PPIs can only bind pumps in the active conformation. Its high pKa of 9.6 promotes selective accumulation in the acidic canalicular space of parietal cells, and its acid stability means it does not degrade in the stomach. These properties result in faster onset of acid suppression (within 2–3 hours of a single dose), more complete and sustained pH control, and less dependence on meal timing or CYP2C19 genotype.

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionRapid; Tmax 1.5–2 h; food has minimal effect on exposure; acid-stable (no enteric coating needed); linear PK 10–40 mgCan be dosed without regard to meals; provides rapid onset of acid suppression from first dose
Distribution~80% plasma protein bound; Vd ~1,050 L (apparent); high pKa (9.6) concentrates drug in acidic parietal cell canaliculi; binds active and resting pumpsExtensive tissue distribution; selective accumulation at site of action explains prolonged pharmacological effect despite moderate plasma half-life
MetabolismExtensive hepatic: mainly CYP3A4; also CYP2B6, CYP2C19, CYP2D6, and SULT2A1; all metabolites pharmacologically inactiveCYP2C19 genotype has minimal impact on exposure (~15–29%); vonoprazan is a CYP2C19 inhibitor and weak CYP3A inhibitor; clarithromycin co-administration increases vonoprazan AUC ~58%
Eliminationt½ ~7–8 h; ~59% urinary excretion as metabolites, ~8% unchanged in urine; steady state by day 3–4; minimal accumulation (accumulation index <1.2)Substantially longer half-life than PPIs (~1–2 h); allows once- or twice-daily dosing; dose adjustment for severe renal (eGFR <30) and moderate-severe hepatic impairment
SE

Side Effects

≥10%Very Common

No individual adverse reaction exceeded 10% in vonoprazan-treated patients across any indication. In the H. pylori lansoprazole comparator arm, diarrhoea reached 10%.

2–10%Common — by Indication

EE Healing (N=514 vonoprazan 20 mg vs N=510 lansoprazole 30 mg; ≥2%)

Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Gastritis3% (vs 2% lansoprazole)Grouped term; slightly above comparator
Diarrhoea2% (vs 3% lansoprazole)Actually lower than comparator in this trial
Abdominal distension2% (vs 1%)Twice the comparator rate
Abdominal pain2% (vs 1%)Grouped term
Nausea2% (vs 1%)Mild in most cases

EE Maintenance (N=296 vonoprazan 10 mg vs N=297 lansoprazole 15 mg; ≥3%)

Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Gastritis6% (vs 3% lansoprazole)Double the comparator rate; most common adverse reaction in maintenance phase
Abdominal pain4% (vs 2%)Grouped term
Dyspepsia4% (vs 3%)Marginally above comparator
Hypertension3% (vs 2%)Grouped term; monitor blood pressure in long-term use
Urinary tract infection3% (vs 2%)Slightly above comparator

Non-Erosive GERD (N=259 vonoprazan 10 mg vs N=256 placebo; ≥2%)

Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Abdominal pain2% (vs 2% placebo)No difference from placebo
Constipation2% (vs 1%)Modest increase over placebo
Diarrhoea2% (vs 1%)Modest increase over placebo
Nausea2% (vs <1%)Higher than placebo
Urinary tract infection2% (vs 1%)Modest increase over placebo

H. pylori Triple Therapy (N=346; ≥2%) and Dual Therapy (N=348; ≥2%)

Adverse EffectTripleDualClinical Note
Diarrhoea4%5%Notably lower than LAC comparator (10%)
Dysgeusia5%1%Driven by clarithromycin; nearly absent in dual therapy
Vulvovaginal candidiasis3%2%Antibiotic-related; higher than LAC (1%)
Abdominal pain2%3%Similar to LAC (3%)
Headache3%1%Higher in triple than dual or LAC
Hypertension2%1%Grouped term
Nasopharyngitis<1%2%More common in dual therapy
SeriousSerious (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Acute tubulointerstitial nephritisRare (reported in trials)Any pointDiscontinue vonoprazan; evaluate renal function
Clostridioides difficile-associated diarrhoeaRare (post-marketing, with antibacterials)Days to monthsStool testing; discontinue; targeted antibiotic therapy
Bone fracture (including osteoporosis-related)Reported in trials (≤1%)With long-term useUse shortest duration; manage per guidelines
Severe cutaneous reactions (SJS, TEN)Very rare (post-marketing)Days to weeksImmediate discontinuation; emergency care
Hepatic injury / hepatic failure / jaundiceVery rare (post-marketing)VariableMonitor liver function; discontinue if suspected
Hypomagnesaemia / hypocalcaemia / hypokalaemiaRare (post-marketing)With prolonged useCheck electrolytes; supplement; consider discontinuation
Vitamin B12 deficiencyRare (post-marketing)With long-term useMonitor B12; supplement if deficient
Anaphylactic shockVery rare (post-marketing)Any timeEmergency care; permanent discontinuation
Fundic gland polypsReported in trials and post-marketingWith long-term use >1 yearUsually asymptomatic; use shortest treatment duration
DiscontinuationDiscontinuation Rates
H. pylori Triple Therapy
2.3% (8/346 patients)
Top reasons: Diarrhoea (0.6%), hypertension (0.6%). Comparator LAC: 1.2% (4/345).
H. pylori Dual Therapy
0.9% (3/348 patients)
Top reason: Rash (0.6%). Lower discontinuation than triple therapy.
Gastritis — Notable Adverse Effect in Maintenance Studies

Gastritis was the most common adverse reaction in the EE maintenance phase (6% vs 3% lansoprazole). This finding is consistent with the pharmacological effect of profound acid suppression, which can lead to reactive changes in gastric mucosa including hypergastrinaemia-induced ECL cell hyperplasia. The clinical significance in the context of up to 6 months of therapy requires ongoing assessment.

Int

Drug Interactions

Vonoprazan is a CYP3A substrate, a CYP2C19 inhibitor, and a weak CYP3A inhibitor. These properties create clinically important interactions distinct from PPIs. Strong or moderate CYP3A4 inducers should be avoided as they may reduce vonoprazan efficacy. The CYP2C19 inhibitory effect is relevant for clopidogrel (may reduce its active metabolite) and CYP2C19 substrates like citalopram and cilostazol (may increase their exposure).

MajorRilpivirine
MechanismReduced intragastric acidity decreases rilpivirine absorption
EffectSubstantially decreased rilpivirine concentrations; risk of HIV treatment failure
ManagementContraindicated — do not co-administer
FDA PI
MajorStrong/Moderate CYP3A4 inducers (e.g., rifampin, phenytoin, carbamazepine)
MechanismVonoprazan is a CYP3A substrate; inducers decrease its exposure
EffectReduced vonoprazan efficacy
ManagementAvoid concomitant use
FDA PI
ModerateClopidogrel
MechanismVonoprazan is a CYP2C19 inhibitor; clopidogrel requires CYP2C19 for bioactivation
EffectMay reduce plasma concentrations of clopidogrel active metabolite and reduce platelet inhibition
ManagementCarefully monitor clopidogrel efficacy; consider alternative antiplatelet therapy
FDA PI
ModerateCYP2C19 substrates (citalopram, cilostazol)
MechanismVonoprazan inhibits CYP2C19
EffectIncreased exposure of CYP2C19 substrate drugs
ManagementMonitor for adverse reactions; see substrate prescribing information for dose adjustments
FDA PI
ModerateCYP3A substrates with narrow therapeutic index
MechanismVonoprazan is a weak CYP3A inhibitor
EffectMay increase exposure of sensitive CYP3A substrates
ManagementFrequently monitor concentrations and/or adverse reactions; dosage reduction of substrate may be needed
FDA PI
ModerateAtazanavir / Nelfinavir and other pH-dependent drugs
MechanismReduced intragastric acidity decreases absorption
EffectReduced efficacy of pH-dependent drugs including iron, ketoconazole, erlotinib, mycophenolate mofetil
ManagementAvoid concomitant use with atazanavir and nelfinavir. See PI for other drugs
FDA PI
ModerateClarithromycin (when co-administered in triple therapy)
MechanismMutual metabolic inhibition: clarithromycin inhibits CYP3A4 (increasing vonoprazan AUC ~58%); vonoprazan weakly inhibits CYP3A (increasing clarithromycin AUC ~50%)
EffectIncreased exposure of both drugs; may contribute to greater adverse events in triple therapy
ManagementNo dose adjustment required per PI; this interaction is inherent to the approved triple therapy regimen
FDA PI
Mon

Monitoring

  • Magnesium / CalciumBaseline and periodically
    Routine
    Monitor in patients on prolonged treatment, those taking digoxin, or those on drugs causing hypomagnesaemia (diuretics). Supplement as needed; consider discontinuation if hypocalcaemia is refractory.
  • Chromogranin AHold vonoprazan ≥4 weeks before testing
    Trigger-based
    Vonoprazan requires a 4-week washout before CgA testing — longer than the 14-day PPI hold. Also hold ≥4 weeks before secretin stimulation testing. This reflects more potent and sustained acid suppression.
  • Vitamin B12If symptoms develop
    Trigger-based
    Consider workup if clinical symptoms of B12 deficiency appear during long-term therapy.
  • Renal FunctionBaseline; if symptoms develop
    Trigger-based
    Acute TIN has been reported in clinical trials. Assess baseline eGFR for dosing purposes (EE healing and H. pylori adjustments required for eGFR <30).
  • Liver FunctionBaseline; if symptoms develop
    Trigger-based
    Hepatic injury and failure reported post-marketing. Assess baseline hepatic function for dosing purposes. Monitor for signs of hepatotoxicity.
  • Symptom Response4–8 weeks
    Routine
    Assess symptom resolution at end of treatment. Suboptimal response does not exclude gastric malignancy — consider endoscopy, especially in older adults.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Known hypersensitivity to vonoprazan or any component (reactions include anaphylactic shock)
  • Concomitant use with rilpivirine-containing products

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • H. pylori treatment in moderate-severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh B/C) — vonoprazan not recommended for this indication
  • H. pylori treatment in severe renal impairment (eGFR <30) — vonoprazan not recommended
  • Concomitant strong/moderate CYP3A4 inducers — may reduce vonoprazan efficacy; avoid

Use with Caution

  • Moderate-severe hepatic impairment (EE healing) — reduce dose to 10 mg daily
  • Severe renal impairment (EE healing) — reduce dose to 10 mg daily
  • Pregnancy — insufficient human data; animal studies showed fetal effects at supratherapeutic doses
  • Lactation — breastfeeding not recommended; liver injury observed in nursing rat pups at clinically relevant exposures
  • Paediatric patients — safety and effectiveness not established
  • Patients on clopidogrel — vonoprazan is a CYP2C19 inhibitor and may reduce clopidogrel activation
  • Long-term use — risks of bone fracture, fundic gland polyps, B12 deficiency, hypomagnesaemia
FDA Safety Advisory Lactation: Breastfeeding Not Recommended

In a pre- and postnatal development study, liver discoloration associated with necrosis, fibrosis, and haemorrhage occurred in offspring of rats administered vonoprazan during gestation and lactation. Mechanistic studies demonstrated the effect was attributable to exposure during lactation. Patients should not breastfeed during treatment with vonoprazan.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Vonoprazan is a new type of acid-reducing medication that works differently from older medications like omeprazole. It is used to heal damage caused by stomach acid in the oesophagus, to relieve heartburn, and to treat H. pylori stomach infections.

How to Take

Take vonoprazan with or without food — meal timing does not matter. Swallow the tablet whole; do not crush or chew. For H. pylori treatment, take the full 14-day course exactly as directed with the prescribed antibiotics, even if you feel better.

Gastrointestinal Effects
Tell patientStomach discomfort, nausea, and diarrhoea are the most commonly reported effects. During H. pylori treatment, altered taste is common and is caused by clarithromycin.
Call prescriberIf diarrhoea is severe, watery, bloody, or does not improve — this may indicate a C. difficile infection.
Breastfeeding
Tell patientBreastfeeding is not recommended during vonoprazan treatment. Animal studies showed potential for liver effects in nursing offspring.
Call prescriberDiscuss alternative feeding options before starting treatment if breastfeeding.
Missed Doses
Tell patientFor heartburn or EE: if missed, take within 12 hours; otherwise skip and resume normal schedule. For H. pylori: if missed, take within 4 hours; otherwise skip. Never double up on doses.
Call prescriberContact if multiple doses are missed during the H. pylori treatment course.
Skin Reactions
Tell patientSevere skin reactions are rare but can be serious.
Call prescriberSeek immediate attention for any rash, blistering, peeling skin, mouth sores, or facial swelling.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. VOQUEZNA (vonoprazan) tablets prescribing information. Phathom Pharmaceuticals, Inc. NDA 218710. Revised 7/2024. accessdata.fda.govCurrent FDA-approved PI for single-agent vonoprazan — primary source for all GERD/EE indications, dosing (including renal/hepatic adjustments), adverse reactions Tables 5–8, drug interactions, and PK data.
  2. VOQUEZNA TRIPLE PAK / DUAL PAK prescribing information. Phathom Pharmaceuticals, Inc. NDA 215152/215153. Revised 2025. accessdata.fda.govCo-packaged product PI for H. pylori indications; source for eradication-specific adverse reactions, 14-day regimen dosing, and clarithromycin interaction data.
  3. FDA approval letter for VOQUEZNA (vonoprazan) NDA 218710, July 17, 2024. accessdata.fda.govApproval letter confirming single-agent vonoprazan approval for EE, EE maintenance, non-erosive GERD, and expanded H. pylori indications.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Laine L, Lu Y, Engstrom A, et al. Vonoprazan versus lansoprazole for healing and maintenance of healing of erosive esophagitis: a randomized trial. Gastroenterology. 2023;164(1):61-71. doi:10.1053/j.gastro.2022.09.041PHALCON-EE: pivotal Phase 3 trial demonstrating non-inferiority of vonoprazan to lansoprazole for EE healing and superiority for LA grade C/D healing.
  2. Chey WD, Mégraud F, Laine L, et al. Vonoprazan triple and dual therapy for Helicobacter pylori infection in the United States and Europe: randomized clinical trial. Gastroenterology. 2022;163(4):1012-1022. doi:10.1053/j.gastro.2022.06.055PHALCON-HP: Phase 3 trial showing vonoprazan triple and dual therapy superiority over LAC for H. pylori eradication, especially in clarithromycin-resistant strains.
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; published before vonoprazan US approval but provides the therapeutic framework for EE management.
  2. Chey WD, Leontiadis GI, Howden CW, Moss SF. ACG Clinical Guideline: Treatment of Helicobacter pylori Infection. Am J Gastroenterol. 2017;112(2):212-239. doi:10.1038/ajg.2016.563ACG H. pylori guideline; vonoprazan-based regimens are expected to be incorporated into future guideline updates.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Oshima T, Miwa H. Potent potassium-competitive acid blockers: a new era for the treatment of acid-related diseases. J Neurogastroenterol Motil. 2018;24(3):334-344. doi:10.5056/jnm18029Comprehensive review of P-CAB pharmacology, contrasting reversible K+-competitive inhibition with irreversible PPI binding.
  2. Graham DY, Dore MP. Update on the use of vonoprazan: a competitive acid blocker. Gastroenterology. 2018;154(3):462-466. doi:10.1053/j.gastro.2018.01.018Expert perspective positioning vonoprazan relative to PPIs, including relative acid-suppressive potency comparisons.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Echizen H. The first-in-class potassium-competitive acid blocker, vonoprazan fumarate: pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic considerations. Clin Pharmacokinet. 2016;55(4):409-418. doi:10.1007/s40262-015-0326-7Key PK review: t½ ~7.7 h, Tmax 1.5–2 h, protein binding 80%, Vd 1050 L, CYP3A4 as primary metabolic pathway, and minimal CYP2C19 genotype effect.
  2. Frelinger AL 3rd, Lee RD, Engstrom A, et al. The effect of food on the pharmacokinetics of vonoprazan. Clin Pharmacol Drug Dev. 2022;11(8):915-924. doi:10.1002/cpdd.1090Food-effect study confirming minimal impact on vonoprazan bioavailability, supporting food-independent dosing.
  3. VA Pharmacy Benefits Management. Vonoprazan (VOQUEZNA) in Erosive Esophagitis — National Drug Monograph, May 2024. va.govVA comprehensive monograph providing independent clinical appraisal including GRADE evidence ratings for EE healing and maintenance.