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Dennis S. Flores, MD

REVIEW OF BASIC PHARMACOLOGY. Dennis S. Flores, MD. OBJECTIVES. Describe the different branches of pharmacology Discuss the important concepts and mechanisms of Pharmacodynamics Pharmacokinetics Exercise on pediatric drug dosing. PHARMACOLOGY.

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Dennis S. Flores, MD

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  1. REVIEW OF BASIC PHARMACOLOGY Dennis S. Flores, MD

  2. OBJECTIVES • Describe the different branches of pharmacology • Discuss the important concepts and mechanisms of • Pharmacodynamics • Pharmacokinetics • Exercise on pediatric drug dosing

  3. PHARMACOLOGY • Is the science that deals with the mechanism of action, uses, adverse effects, and fate of drugs in animals and humans • It provides the basis for the understanding of body function and the subsequent treatment of disease

  4. BRANCHES OF PHARMACOLOGY • PHARMACODYNAMICS • The study of what the drug does to the body • PHARMACOKINETICS • The study of what the body does to the drug • Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, Excretion • PHARMACOTHERAPEUTICS • The study of drugs in the treatment and prevention of disease • Pharmacodynamics + Pharmacokinetics

  5. BRANCHES OF PHARMACOLOGY • CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY • The study of the clinical pharmacological evaluation of drugs in human use • Concepts and principles underlying approach to rational therapeutics • PHARMACOGENETICS • The study of genetic variation in response to drug efffects

  6. BRANCHES OF PHARMACOLOGY • PHARMACOVIGILANCE • All scientific and data gathering activities that relate to detection, assessment, understanding, and prevention of adverse events • PHARMACOECONOMICS • The study of economic use and management of disease • Cost effectivity of drugs • TOXICOLOGY • The study of adverse effects of drugs

  7. PHARMACODYNAMICS • The action of a drug on the body • Includes receptor interactions, dose-response phenomena, and mechanisms of therapeutic and toxic action

  8. PHARMACODYNAMICS • A drug will exert its activity through interactions at one or more molecular targets • The macromolecular species that control the functions of cells • May be surface-bound proteins like receptors and ion channels • Species internal to cells, such as enzymes or nucleic acids

  9. PHARMACODYNAMICS • Other sites of drug binding: • Proteins (in patient or microbes) • Genome (cyclophosphamide) • Microtubules (vincristine)

  10. PHARMACODYNAMICSMECHANISMS AND SPECIFICITY OF DRUG BINDING • Majority occurs through non-covalent interactions • These govern • The folding of proteins and DNA • The association of membranes • Molecular recognition • Interaction between an enzyme and its substrate or the binding of an antibody

  11. PHARMACODYNAMICSMECHANISMS AND SPECIFICITY OF DRUG BINDING • They are generally weak and operate only over short distances • So for an effect to occur, you need: • Large numbers of interactions for stability • High degree of complementarity

  12. PHARMACODYNAMICSEFFECTS OF BINDING • CONFORMATION EFFECTS • Binding also locks a mobile, flexible molecule into a restricted conformation • CONFIGURATION EFFECTS • Differences in configuration (e.g. stereochemistry) can lead to startling differences in the biological effect • E.g. the L-enantiomer of penicillamine is highly toxic and only the S-enantiomer of indomethacin acts as an anti-inflammatory agent • Wrong configuration  either no reaction or a toxic effect

  13. PHARMACODYNAMICSNON-RECEPTOR MEDIATED INTERACTIONS • Acid base reaction • Outcome does not need a receptor, just a simple acid-base equilibrium • Ex. antacid • Counterfeit incorporation mechanism • A form of poisoning • Utilized in cancer chemotherapy • Mechanism: feed the patient/cell with false nucleotides to cheat the cancer cells • Colligative mechanism • This elicits effect by means of numbers • Ex. Acetylcysteine, Mannitol

  14. PHARMACODYNAMICSDRUG RECEPTOR • A macromolecular component of a cell with which a drug interacts to produce a response • Usually a protein which requires translation to have an effect AGONIST A drug that triggers the same events in the receptor as the native ligand ANTAGONIST A drug that stops the binding of the native agent without eliciting a response

  15. PHARMACODYNAMICSRECEPTOR TYPES • TYPE 1: ionotropic receptors • (ligand-gated channels) • TYPE 2: metabotropic receptors • (G-protein coupled) • TYPE 3: tyrosine kinase-linked receptors • Ex. Insulin and growth factor receptors • TYPE 4: steroid receptors

  16. PHARMACODYNAMICSENZYMES • Proteins that catalyze the reactions required for cellular function • Control a number of metabolic processes

  17. PHARMACODYNAMICSENZYMES • INHIBITORS • Molecules that restrict the action of enzyme on its substrate • REVERSIBLE (competitive or non-competitive) • A very common mode of action of many drugs • E.g. in the patient (ACE inhibitors) in microbes (sulfas, penicillins) in cancer cells (5-FU, 6-MP) • IRREVERSIBLE • Enzyme inhibitors might be seen to allow very fine control of cellular processes • E.g. 6-methylpurines  death of CA cells

  18. PHARMACODYNAMICSNUCLEIC ACIDS • Potentially the most exciting and valuable of the available drug targets • May be used in gene therapy • BUT designing compounds that can distinguish target nucleic acid sequences is not yet achievable

  19. PHARMACODYNAMICSNUCLEIC ACIDS • ACTION: generally inhibit the processes of DNA manipulation required for protein synthesis and cell division • Suitable as drugs for applications where cell death is the goal of therapy – such as treatment of cancer

  20. PHARMACODYNAMICSDRUG-RECEPTOR INTERACTION • DOSE-RESPONSE RELATIONSHIP • Most important concept in pharmacodynamics • “Dose of a drug translates to an effective response”

  21. PHARMACODYNAMICSDRUG-RECEPTOR • CONCEPT OF A RECEPTOR • For most drugs, the site of action is at a specific macromolecule, termed as RECEPTOR • Not all drug actions and effects are mediated through receptors. An average of 10% of them is not • For most drugs, the magnitude of pharmacological response increases as the drug concentration (dose) increases at the site

  22. PHARMACODYNAMICSTHEORY AND ASSUMPTIONS OF DRUG-RECEPTOR INTERACTIONS • Combination or binding of drug to receptor leads to response • Response to a drug is graded or dose-dependent • Drug-receptor interaction follows simple mass-action relationships. Only one drug molecule occupies each receptor site and binding is reversible

  23. PHARMACODYNAMICSTHEORY AND ASSUMPTIONS OF DRUG-RECEPTOR INTERACTIONS • For a given drug, the magnitude of response is directly proportional to the number of receptor sites occupied by drug molecules (occupancy assumption) • The number of drug molecules is assumed to be much greater than the number of receptor sites

  24. PHARMACODYNAMICSSIGNIFICANCE OF KD (DISSOCIATION CONSTANT) • Represents the drug concentration at which half maximal binding occurs • The smaller the KD, the greater the affinity the drug has for the receptor • The smaller the KD for a reaction, the lower the concentration of drug required in order to produce half maximal binding

  25. PHARMACODYNAMICSOTHER TERMS • SAFETY • No drug is 100% safe • QUALITY • Tests bioavailability • How much of the drug will enter the system • VARIABILITY • Changes from patient to patient, drug to drug, and time to time

  26. LOG DOSE RESPONSE CURVE • EFFICACY • Maximal ceiling effect • Drug effect irrespective of the dose • POTENCY • Does not refer to the strength of the drug • Drug effect with respect to the dose • Location of the drug response curve along the horizontal axis • The nearer the dose to the y axis, the greater the potency • The farther the dose, the lesser potency

  27. Log dose response curve

  28. Log dose response curvecomparison of drugs

  29. PHARMACODYNAMICSAGONISTS • AGONIST DURGS • Drugs that interact with and activate receptors • Possess both affinity and efficacy • 2 TYPES • FULL – an agonist with maximal efficacy • PARTIAL – an agonist with less than maximal efficacy

  30. PHARMACODYNAMICSAGONISTS • PARTIAL AGONISTS • A partial agonist is one that produces less of a response when all receptors are occupied than does a full agonist • Can compete with and can displace a full agonist for binding sites  the maximal effect of the full agonist will be less

  31. PHARMACODYNAMICSANTAGONISTS COMPETITIVE NON COMPETITIVE Irreversible Antagonist will prevent the agonist from producing a maximal effect, at any agonist concentration Maximal effect of the agonist drug will be decreased, and this cannot be overcome by increasing the concentration of the agonist drug Dose-effect curve flattened out • Reversible • Maximal effect of the agonist drug will not be affected, but larger concentrations of the agonist drug will be required to achieve maximal effect • Dose-effect curve is shifted to the right

  32. PHARMACOKINETICS • Action of the body to the drug • COMPONENT PROCESSES • ABSORPTION • The transfer of a drug from its site of administration to the blood stream • DISTRIBUTION • The process by which drug reversibly leaves the blood stream and enters the interstitium and/or other tissues

  33. PHARMACOKINETICS • COMPONENT PROCESSES • METABOLISM • Process by which drug structure is altered for removal from the body • Liver is the major site of drug metabolism • EXCRETION • Usually through feces, urine, or bile

  34. PHARMACOKINETICSABSORPTION • PASSIVE DIFFUSION • Aqueous or Lipid diffusion • Most common • ACTIVE TRANSPORT • Important for some drugs, particularly larger molecules

  35. PHARMACOKINETICSABSORPTION • AQUEOUS DIFFUSION • Within large aqueous compartments (e.g. interstitial space, cytosol) • Driving force: drug concentration gradient (described by Fick’s Law) …. Molecules will tend to move from a higher concentration to a lower concentration • Plasma protein bound drugs cannot permeate through aqueous pores

  36. PHARMACOKINETICSABSORPTION • LIPID DIFFUSION • Most important barrier for drug permeation due to many lipid barriers separating body compartments • Lipid-soluble drugs readily move across biological membranes • Ionization state of the drug is an important factor: charged drugs diffuse through lipid environments with difficulty

  37. PHARMACOKINETICSABSORPTION • SPECIAL CARRIERS • Peptides, amino acids, glucose • Active transport, facilitated diffusion • Saturable (unlike passive diffusion) because of limited number of carrier sites

  38. PHARMACOKINETICSABSORPTION • ENDOCYTOSIS/EXOCYTOSIS • Entry into cells by very large substances • E.g. iron, vit B12

  39. PHARMACOKINETICSABSORPTION • PHYSICAL FACTORS INFLUENCING ABSORPTION • Blood flow to the absorption site • Blood flow to intestine > blood flow to stomach • Absorption from the intestine is favored • Total surface area available for absorption • Intestines: rich in microvilli, surface area about 1000-fold that of the stomach • Absorption from the intestine is favored • Contact time at the absorption surface • E.g. Diarrhea – drug moves through the GI tract very quickly, thus it is not well absorbed

  40. PHARMACOKINETICSBIOAVAILABILITY • The fraction of administered drug that reaches the systemic circulation • Example • 100 mg of a drug administered orally • If 70 mg of this drug is absorbed unchanged, bioavailability is 70%

  41. PHARMACOKINETICSBIOAVAILABILITY • HOW TO TEST FOR BIOAVAILABILITY • Get plasma levels of a drug after a particular route of administration (e.g. oral administration) • Compare the plasma levels obtained with plasma levels achieved by IV injection • By plotting plasma concentrations of the drug versus time, one can measure the area under the curve (AUC) • AUC – reflects the extent of absorption of the drug

  42. PHARMACOKINETICSBIOAVAILABILITY • FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE BIOAVAILABILITY • First pass hepatic metabolism • Solubility of the drug • Very hydrophilic drugs cannot cross cell membrane lipid component, thus, may not be well absorbed • Paradoxically, drugs that are extremely hydrophobic are also poorly absorbed because they are totally insoluble in aqueous body fluids, thus, cannot gain access to the surface of cells • FOR GOOD ABSORPTION: The drug must be largely hydrophobic yet have some solubility in aqueous solutions

  43. PHARMACOKINETICSBIOAVAILABILITY • FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE BIOAVAILABILITY • Chemical instability • Ex. Penicillin G – unstable in the pH of gastric contents • Nature of the drug formulation • Unrelated to drug chemistry • Ex. Enteric coatings

  44. PHARMACOKINETICSABSORPTION • ROUTES OF ADMINISTRATION • Enteral • Oral • Sublingual • Parenteral • IV, IM, SC

  45. PHARMACOKINETICSABSORPTION • ORAL ADMINISTRATION • Simplest, most convenient, most economical • Disadvantages • Emesis (drug irritation of GI mucosa) • Digestive enzymes/gastric acidity destroy the drug • Enteric coating of the drug protects it from the acidic environment • Unreliable or inconsistent absorption due to food or other drug effects • Metabolism of drug by GI flora

  46. PHARMACOKINETICSABSORPTION • ORAL ADMINISTRATION • First-Pass Effect • Drugs absorbed from the GI tract passes through the portal venous system  LIVER and  systemic circulation • IMPORTANCE: Extensive hepatic metabolism/extraction results in minimal drug delivery to the systemic circulation

  47. PHARMACOKINETICSABSORPTION • ORAL ADMINISTRATION • First-Pass Effect • Therefore, drugs that exhibit high first-pass metabolism should be given in sufficient quantities to ensure that enough of the active drug reaches the target organ • Example: nitroglcerin • NOT given orally because 90% of the drug is cleared during a single passage through the liver

  48. PHARMACOKINETICSABSORPTION • SUBLINGUAL ADMINISTRATION • Allows drug to diffuse into the capillary network, and, therefore, to enter the systemic circulation directly • ADVANTAGES • Rapid absorption • Convenience of administration • Low incidence of infection • Avoidance of harsh GI environment • Avoidance of first-pass metabolism

  49. PHARMACOKINETICSABSORPTION • PARENTERAL ADMINISTRATION • Intravenous (IV) • Permits rapid effect and maximal degree of control over the circulating levels of the drug • May inadvertently introduce bacteria through contamination at the site of injection • Intramuscular (IM) • Requires absorption • Drug diffuses out of the muscle  precipitates at the site of infection  dissolves slowly, providing a sustained dose over an extended period of time

  50. PHARMACOKINETICSABSORPTION • PARENTERAL ADMINISTRATION • Subcutaneous (SC) • Like IM administration, requires absorption • Slower than IV route but minimizes risks associated with intravascular injection

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