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Principles of drug action

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Title: Principles of drug action


1
Principles of drug action
  • Pharmacokinetics
  • Pharmacodynamics
  • Neuropharmacology
  • Psychopharmacology

2
Pharmacodynamics
  • Drug-receptor interactions
  • Receptor complexes and the action of ligands
  • Transmembrane potential changes via receptor
    complex
  • Change is proportional to receptors occupied or
    by rate of reversible binding (attachment) of
    ligand
  • Effects are agonistic or antagonistic

3
Receptor types
  • These membrane-spanning proteins are coils of 7
    or 12 transmembrane loops, called alpha-helical
    coils. There are four types
  • Ion channel receptor complexes respond to
    neurotransmitters from outside or G proteins from
    inside the cell. Drugs can affect either.
  • Carrier/transporter proteins, especially for
    reuptake
  • G-protein-coupled receptors and enzyme cascades
  • G is for guanine, a cellular nucleotide affected
    by these receptors
  • Enzymes

4
Ways a drug may act on a neuron or synapse
  • Manufacture Increase or block
  • Packaging Make vesicles leaky
  • Transport Block or facilitate vesicle movement
  • In the synapse
  • Mimic
  • Block
  • Post-synaptic receptors and autoreceptors
  • After reversible binding Enzymes or reuptake

5
Pharmacodynamics
  • Drug-receptor affinity
  • Governed by stereochemical fit
  • Effects on brain determined by location of
    receptor types

6
The dose-response relationship
  • Dose
  • Potency
  • Efficacy or maximum effect
  • Slope

7
The dose-response curve
  • The dose-response curve relates the amount
    administered to the response.
  • Response may be measured as responding or as
    intensity of response

8
The dose-response curve Effectiveness and safety
9
Drug variability and toxicity assessment
  • ED50 Effective dose for 50 of subjects
  • TD50 Toxic dose for 50 of subjects
  • Both ED50 and TD50 are different for each effect
  • The therapeutic index
  • TI TD50 / ED50
  • No drug is 100 safe
  • Placebo effects
  • The FDA and drug development

10
FDA rules
  • Pure Food and Drug Act, 1906 Labeling accuracy
    to eliminate adulteration
  • Cuforhedake Brane-Fude, labeled 30 alcohol
  • Sherley Amendment, 1912 No false and
    fraudulent therapeutic claims on the label
  • Harrison Narcotics Act, 1914 Trade controls and
    taxation (Dr. Hamilton Wright)
  • Marijuana Tax Act (1937) Harry Anslinger
  • Agriculture Department vs. Treasury Dept.
  • Enforcement concerns merged under Department of
    Justice, 1968? DEA, 1973

11
Expansion of FDA concerns
  • Purity (1906)
  • Safety (1938) The Food, Drug, and Cosmetics Act
  • Toxicity assessment before marketing
  • Instructions for use on the label
  • Effectiveness (1962) Kefauver-Harris amendments
  • Carters Little Liver Pills

12
The Australian approach
  • The Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)
  • Drug Safety and Evaluation Branch
  • Adverse Drugs Reaction Unit (ADRU)
  • Manufacturers and suppliers (importers) are known
    as sponsors, and are responsible for both entry
    into the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods
    and reporting of postmarketing adverse reactions
    to the ADRU.
  • Only the ADRU reports must be based on Australian
    populations.
  • Uses a partnership approach.

13
The TGA
  • Established by the Therapeutic Goods Act of 1989
  • A unit of the federal department of Health and
    Ageing.
  • Covers assessment and monitoring activities
  • Focuses on Quality, Safety, and Effectiveness
  • Defines therapeutic goods
  • Website www.tga.gov.au/about/about.htm

14
Current FDA Approval Process
  • Safety Pre-clinical testing of several dosages
    over relevant time periods on at least two
    species
  • Carefully planned clinical trials with signed
    informed consent and annual reports
  • Phase 1 clinical trials Small doses on healthy
    volunteers Pharmacokinetics and side effects
  • Phase 2 Small sample of hospital patients
  • Phase 3 Broader clinical trials on patients

15
The Controlled Substances Act, 1970
  • Schedule system Based on abuse potential,
    medical usefulness, and risk of dependence
  • Schedule I Hi-no-hi. Heroin, marijuana, LSD
  • Schedule II Hi-yes-hi. Morphine, Marinol,
    cocaine, methamphetamine
  • Schedule III Moderate-yes-moderate.
    Amphetamine, barbiturates, PCP
  • Schedule IV Low-yes-less than III. Chloral
    hydrate
  • Schedule V Low-yes-less than IV. Cocaine
    mixtures

16
More recent legislation
  • The Orphan Drug Act, 1983
  • Analogue (Designer Drug) Act, 1986
  • Prescription Drug Marketing Act, 1987
  • Anti-Drug Abuse Act, 1988 (established ONDCP)
  • aka Omnibus Drug Act
  • Anabolic Steroids Control Act, 1990
  • http//www.druglibrary.org/schaffer/History/drug_l
    aw_timeline.htm

17
Harry J. Anslinger
Marijuana is smoked by musicians. And Im not
speaking about good musicians, but the
jazz type. -Commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of
Narcotics, 1930-1962
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