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Pharmacokinetics -- part 1 --

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Title: Pharmacokinetics -- part 1 --


1
Pharmacokinetics-- part 1 --
  • W.M. Tom
  • Department of Pharmacology
  • University of Hong Kong

2
Pharmacokinetics
  • -- refers to the action of the body on the drug,
    including
  • absorption
  • distribution
  • elimination -- metabolism excretion

3
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4
Drug Disposition
5
Drug Absorption
  • Peroral administration (P.O. route)
  • swallowing
  • commonly known as oral administration
  • most convenient and economic method of systemic
    drug delivery
  • dosage forms, e.g. tablets, capsules,
    syrups, etc.

6
Drug absorption
Solids are not absorbed!
Dissolution is usually the rate limiting step!
7
Drug Absorption
  • Peroral administration (P.O. route)
  • drug release ? formulation (e.g.
    tablets) e.g. particle size, surface area,
    excipients (inert substances)
  • DISINTEGRATION (solid )
  • ?
  • DISSOLUTION (solution)
  • ?
  • ABSORPTION
  • ?
  • SYSTEMIC CIRCULATION ( bioavailability)

8
Drug absorptionstomach (pH 13)in favour of
weak acid absorptionduodenum (pH 57)in
favour of weak base absorptionileum (pH
78)in favour of weak base absorption
9
Diffusion Across Membrane
(pH lt pKa )
HA
Weak Acid
(pH gt pKa )
A-
(pH gt pKa )
B
Weak Base
(pH lt pKa )
BH
10
Drug Absorption
  • Factors affecting drug absorption by enteral
    routes
  • 1. Drug dissolution
  • -- depends on drug formulation of oral
    preparations
  • 2. pH environment in GI tract
  • -- unionized form efficiently absorbed
  • 3. Lipid solubility of the drug
  • -- nonpolar form easily absorbed

11
Drug Absorption
  • Factors affecting drug absorption by enteral
    routes
  • 4. Effects of food
  • -- in general delays drug absorption
  • 5. First pass effect
  • -- absorption of a drug into the portal
    circulation
  • -- drug metabolized by liver before it reaches
    the systemic circulation

12
First-pass effectmouthesophagusstomachsmal
l intestinecolonrectum
13
First - Pass Effect
14
Drug Absorption
  • Parenteral routes
  • 1. intravenous injection (IV)
  • -- directly into a vein
  • -- 100 bioavailability
  • 2. intramuscular injection (IM) -- into a
    muscle
  • -- depends on blood supply

15
Drug Absorption
  • Parenteral routes
  • 3. subcutaneous injection (SC)
  • -- under the skin
  • -- intended for slow absorption
  • 4. others -- inhalation
  • -- sublingual
  • -- topical
  • -- transdermal, etc.

16
Absorption, distribution, metabolism and
excretion
17
Drug Distribution
  • Drug transfer to various tissues
  • -- depends on drug lipophilicity and blood flow
  • Drug barriers
  • -- e.g. blood-brain barrier, placenta
  • Drug binding to plasma proteins
  • -- bound drugs are pharmacologically inactive
  • -- unbound drugs are free to distribute to
    target tissues
  • -- different drugs may compete for binding to
    plasma proteins and displace each other from
    binding sites

18
LOCUS OF ACTION RECEPTORS
TISSUE RESERVOIRS
Bound
Free
Free
Bound
ABSORPTION
Free Drug
EXCRETION
SYSTEMIC CIRCULATION
Bound Drug
BIOTRANSFORMATION
19
Saturation of Protein Binding Sites

20
Drug displacement from protein binding sites
21
Plasma Protein Binding
consequence of drug displacement
  • an increase in free drug concentration of the
    displaced drug ?? an increase in drug
    effect
  • (be cautious when using a drug of low T.I.)
  • a decrease in the duration of action of the
    displaced drug because more free drugs are
    available for elimination

22
Drug Metabolism
  • modification of the chemical structure by enzyme
    systems in the body
  • -- e.g. cytochrome P450 in liver
  • these chemical reactions produce water-soluble
    metabolites which are more readily excreted by
    the kidneys
  • -- phase I reaction, e.g. oxidation
  • -- phase II (conjugation) reaction, e.g.
    glucuronidation
  • drug metabolism activity can be influenced by a
    variety of drugs

23
The two phases of drug metabolism
24
The two phases of drug metabolism
25
Proportion of drugs metabolized by the major
phase I and phase II enzymes
26
Drug Metabolism
  • enzyme induction
  • -- results in faster rate of metabolism
  • -- e.g. in heavy cigarette smokers, alcoholics
  • enzyme inhibition
  • -- results in slower rate of metabolism
  • -- e.g. taking another drug which uses the same
    enzyme for metabolism
  • biological variations in drug metabolism
  • -- e.g. genetics, disease states, age, etc.

27
Drug Excretion
  • in urine
  • -- by glomerular filtration and renal tubular
    secretion -- polar water-soluble metabolites
    readily excreted while nonpolar forms
    reabsorbed back to circulation
  • in bile and feces
  • other routes
  • -- e.g. in sweat, milk and other body fluids
  • -- volatile gases by exhalation

28
Renal excretion of drugs-- lipid-soluble
and un-ionized drugs are passively reabsorbed
through the nephron-- active secretion of
organic acids and bases occurs only in the
proximal tubular segment-- in distal tubular
segments, the secretion of H favours
reabsorption of weak acids (less ionized) and
excretion of weak bases (more ionized)
29
Part 1 ended
30
Pharmacokinetics-- part 2 --
  • W.M. Tom
  • Department of Pharmacology
  • University of Hong Kong

31
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32
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33
Time course of action of a single oral dose
Time of onset T1 - T0Time to peak
effect T2 - T0Duration of action T3 -
T1MEC minimum effective
concentration
34
Time course of drug action
  • time of onset
  • -- the time taken for the drug to produce a
    response
  • time to peak effect
  • -- the time taken for the drug to reach its
    highest blood concentration
  • duration of action
  • -- the time during which the drug produces a
    response
  • elimination half-life ( t 1/2 )
  • -- the time taken to reduce the drug
    concentration in the blood by 50

35
One Compartment IV Bolus Pharmacokinetic Model
  • Assumptions
  • drug is mixed instantaneously in blood
  • drug in the blood is in rapid equilibrium with
    drug in the extravascular tissues
  • drug elimination follows first order kinetics

36
One Compartment IV Bolus Pharmacokinetic Model
  • rate of concentration change at each time point
  • dCp
  • k Cp
  • dt
  • . (1)
  • Cp plasma drug concnetration
  • k elimination rate constant

37
One Compartment IV Bolus Pharmacokinetic Model
  • Ct C0 e k t .
    (2)
  • Ct plasma concentration at time t
  • C0 plasma concentration at time 0

38
One Compartment IV Bolus Pharmacokinetic Model
  • k t
  • log Ct log C0 . (3)
  • 2.303
  • Ct plasma concentration at time t
  • C0 plasma concentration at time 0

39
One Compartment IV Bolus Pharmacokinetic Model
  • Apparent volume of distribution (Vd )
  • apparent volume that the drug is distributed into
  • not a physiological volume
  • amount of drug in the body X
  • Vd
  • drug conc. In plasma Cp
  • DOSE
  • or Vd . (4)
  • C0

40
One Compartment IV Bolus Pharmacokinetic Model
  • DOSE
  • Vd . (4)
  • C0
  • substitute (4) to (3), I.e. Ct C0 e k
    t
  • DOSE
  • Ct e k t . (5)
  • Vd

41
One Compartment IV Bolus Pharmacokinetic Model
  • Half-Life of Elimination ( t 1/2 )
  • time taken for the plasma concentration to fall
    to half its original value
  • 0.693
  • t 1/2 . (6)
  • k

42
One-compartment pharmacokinetics (single dose,
IV)Cp plasma drug concentration C0
plasma concentration at time zerok el
elimination constant elimination half-life
t 1/2 t 2 - t 1
43
One Compartment IV Bolus Pharmacokinetic Model
  • Drug clearance ( CL )
  • a measure of he efficiency with which a drug is
    removed from the body
  • rate of elimination amount of drug
    k
  • CL
  • Cp Cp
  • Vd k . (7)
  • CL total CL kidney CL liver CL others

44
One Compartment IV Bolus Pharmacokinetic Model
  • Bioavailability ( F )
  • measures the extent of absorption of a given
    drug, usually expressed as fraction of the
    administered dose
  • intravenous injection, by definition, has a
    bioavailability of 100
  • AUC CL
  • F .. (8)
  • DOSE
  • AUC area under the conc.-time curve

45
Bioavailability
Plasma concentration
(AUC)o (AUC)iv
i.v. route
oral route
Time (hours)
46
Multiple IV Bolus Dose Administration
  • drug accumulation occurs when repeated doses are
    given before the drug is completely eliminated
  • repeated drug administration at dose intervals (t
    ) will give a steady state with the plasma
    concentration fluctuating between a maximum
    (Cmax) and a minimum (Cmin ) value

47
Plateau principle Css steady state
concentrationCmax maximum CssCmin
minimum CssMEC minimum effective
concentrationMTC minimum toxic
concentrationtherapeutic range MTC - MEC
48
Time course of drug action
  • plateau principle
  • -- repeated drug administration at fixed dosage
    intervals will produce a plateau
    concentration of drug in the blood (I.e.
    steady state)
  • steady state
  • -- a state at which the rate of drug
    administration is equal to the rate of
    elimination
  • therapeutic range
  • -- the range between the minimum effective
    concentration (MEC) and the minimum toxic
    concentration (MTC) of a drug

49
Effect of dosage intervals on drug concentration
curve 1 -- dosage interval too short
curve 2 -- too long curve 3 -- ideal
50
Blood levels of drugs with intermittent dosage
a typical oral dosage four times a
day on a schedule of 10-2-6-10 or 9-1-5-9
51
Time course of drug action
  • loading dose
  • -- a large dose given to achieve therapeutic
    concentration rapidly
  • maintenance dose
  • -- a dose given to maintain the drug
    concentration at steady state

52
Combined Infusion and Bolus Administration
  • to achieve a therapeutic concentration more
    quickly is to give a loading dose by rapid IV
    injection and then start the slower maintenance
    infusion
  • Loading dose Css ? Vd
    ........... (9)
  • Maintenance dose CL ? Cp ? ? . (10)

53
Multi-compartment Pharmacokinetic Model
  • the drug appears to distribute between 2 or more
    compartments
  • the drug is not instantaneously equilibrated in
    various tissues
  • rapidly perfused tissues often belong to the
    central compartment
  • slowly perfused tissues belong to the peripheral
    compartment

54
Two-compartment pharmacokinetics (single dose,
IV) central compartment (rapid)
t 1/2 ? peripheral compartment (slow)
t 1/2 ?
55
Part 2 ended
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