Spironolactone (like eplerenone) is an orally administrable, synthetic aldosterone analogue (canrenone is the active metabolite of spironolactone), a competitiveantagonist of the aldosterone receptor(aldosterone antagonist). By binding and blocking the receptor, spironolactone prevents aldosterone from interacting with its receptor. This prevents the aldosterone effects, i.e. Na+ reabsorption and K+ and H+ excretion in the collecting tube of the nephron are reduced. Spironolactone thus has a natriuretic (and diuretic) effect with simultaneous K+ retention and thus belongs to the potassium-sparing diuretics. The consequence of the diuretic effect is an antihypertensive effect. Therapeutically, however, the natriuretic effect is in the background, and the cardioprotective effect in heart failure is in the foreground. Spironolactone also has antiarrhythmic effects (K+ currents in cardiomyocytes are blocked) Only at extremely high doses does spironolactone inhibit the biosynthesis of aldosterone. The mean half-life of spironolactone is approximately 1.3h.
Spironolactone undergoes a marked first-pass effect when administered or ally and is metabolized primarily in the liver and kidneys to 7-α-thiospirolactone, canrenone or canrenoate, 7-α-thiomethylspirolactone, and 6-β-hydroxy-7-α-thiomethylspirolactone, respectively.
Maximal plasma concentrations of spironolactone are reached 1-2 hours after oral administration.
Excretion of spironolactone is predominantly renal and to a lesser extent via bile. The amount of unchanged spironolactone is low. Only metabolites are found in the urine, primarily canrenone and its glucoronide ester and 6-β-hydroxysulfoxide.
The elimination half-life for spironolactone after oral administration is 1-2 hours, whereas the metabolites are excreted more slowly. Terminal elimination half-lives are about 20 hours for canrenone, about 3 hours for 7-α-thiomethylspirolactone, and about 10 hours for 6-β-hydroxy7-α-thiomethylspirolactone.