1 / 27

Pharmacokinetics WebQuest

Pharmacokinetics WebQuest. http:// www.speedlighter.ca/2011/12/25/why-i-shoot-stills/courtney-craig-photo-by-michael-willems /. Kimberly Koon, Pharm. D. BW733 October 1, 2013. Overview. Introduction Absorption IV, SubQ , IM Oral, SL transdermal, rectal, vaginal, inhalation, topical

sabin
Download Presentation

Pharmacokinetics WebQuest

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Pharmacokinetics WebQuest http://www.speedlighter.ca/2011/12/25/why-i-shoot-stills/courtney-craig-photo-by-michael-willems/ Kimberly Koon, Pharm. D. BW733 October 1, 2013

  2. Overview • Introduction • Absorption • IV, SubQ, IM • Oral, SL • transdermal, rectal, vaginal, inhalation, topical • Distribution • models • % cardiac output • Vd • Metabolism • sites, • CYP450, first-pass, pro-drugs • t1/2vs duration of action • Excretion • kidney • liver • enterohepatic recycling • lungs • Time vs. concentration graph

  3. Introduction • Pharmacokinetics: study of how body processesdrugs; thinkreverse-factory • Absorption • Distribution • Metabolism • Excretion • Pharmacodynamics: study of drug effects on body Dictionary. Merriam-Webster website. http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/pharmacokinetics. Accessed September 27, 2013. Pharmacokinetics1-introduction [video]. Handwritten Tutorials website. http://www.handwrittentutorials.com/videos.php?is=79. Accessed September 27, 2013.

  4. Absorption Absorption rate: time from entry to circulation Bioavailability: percent that reaches circulation • IV drug infusion rate determined by characteristics of drug compound • drugs with small volume and can be given as a bolus or push (< 3 minutes) negate absorption time • Many IV drugs require slow infusion Vancomycin ‘red man syndrome’ if drug given rapidly, more than 1 gram/hr Red man syndrome Red man syndrome. Daily EM website. http://www.dailyem.wordpress.com/2013/08/06/red-man-syndrome/. Accessed September 27, 2013.

  5. Absorption • Subcutaneous • small volume bolus • slow absorption rate • infusions possible • Intramuscular rate varies according to drug properties • absorption rate variable • no infusions Insulin pump Services. St Vincent’s Hospital Sydney website. http://www.stvincents.com.au/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=751&Itemid=798. Accessed September 29, 2013.

  6. Absorption • Oral absorption rate has wide variation • drug dissolution time • presence or absence of food • transport time across intestine • passive • active Goole J, Lindley DJ, Roth W, et al. The effects of excipients on transporter mediated absorption. Int J Pharm 2010;393(1-2):17-31. doi:10.1016/j.ijpharm.2010.04.0419. Accessed September 27, 2013.

  7. Absorption • Sublingual – rapid • Transdermal/topical – slow, systemic or local • Rectal – unpredictable rate • Inhalation – rapid absorption, local or systemic • Other: eye, ear, nose, vaginal – most drugs stay local • Delayed release delivery systems • extended-release capsules and tablets • Depot subcutaneous and IM injections A first course in pharmacokinetics and biopharmaceutics. Biopharmaceutics and Pharmacokinetics website. http://www.boomer.org/c/pl/index.html. Accessed September 27, 2013.

  8. Distribution Time from circulation to target tissue: factors are rate (cardiac output), volume, diffusion model, drug properties. • one compartment model (linear kinetics): drug absorbs and distributes quickly, ie bolus IV • molecules less than 10,000 grams/mole diffuse freely through capillaries

  9. Distribution • two compartment model: • compartment 1 • central circulatory system • rapidly perfused tissues and organs • cardiac muscle • brain • lungs • liver • compartment 2 • peripheral circulatory sys. • deep organs and tissues • skeletal muscle • adipose tissue • skin Two Compartment Model A first course in pharmacokinetics and biopjharmaceutics website anesthesiologist book

  10. Distribution • three compartment model: drugs dependent on active transport • V1 circulation and rapidly perfused tissues • V2 slowly perfused tissues • V3 third much slower equilibrium compartment Woerlee GM. Gerry’s Real World Guide to Pharmacokinetics & Other Things. 1991 http://www.anesthesiaweb.org

  11. Distribution Example of 3 compartment distribution model for transdermal drug delivery system (patch) linked by 2 sets of rate constants. Patch Compartment 2 Compartment 1 Compartment 3 x space coordinate -L outer edge of matrix t time c(x,t) drug concentration m(t) drug mass p diffusivity k12, k21, k23, k32microconstants ke elimination rate constant c0 initial drug concentration in matrix Gopferich A, et al. Int J Pharm. 1991.

  12. Distribution Rate of Distribution and Volume of Physiological Compartments *Average cardiac output 335 L/h **Average body weight = 70kg; average body density = 1 L/kg = body volume = 70L http://2012.igem.org/Team:Slovenia/ModelingPK

  13. Distribution CirculationTimes Woerlee GM. Gerry’s Real World Guide to Pharmacokinetics & Other Things. 1991 http://www.anesthesiaweb.org

  14. Distribution • Volume of distribution (VD) • quantifies extent to which drug is present in tissues (extravascular) • hypothetical volume required to contain all drug in tissues at consistent concentration • does not reflect actual plasma or blood volume Absorption of Fluorescent Chemotherapy Drug by Murine Tumor Cells Image from: Thurber GM, Yang KS, Reiner T, et al. Single-cell and subcellular pharmacokinetic imaging allows insight into drug action in vivo. Nat Commun. 2013;4:1504. doi:10.1038/ncomms2506. Buxton IL, Benet LZ. Chapter 2. Pharmacokinetics: The Dynamics of Drug Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, and Elimination. In: Brunton LL, Chabner BA, Knollmann BC, eds. Goodman & Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics. 12th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill; 2011. http://www.accessmedicine.com/content.aspx?aID=16658120. Accessed October 2, 2013.

  15. Metabolism Metabolism starts as soon as drug reaches enzymes capable of metabolizing. • liver • kidney • no metabolism • proteolytic catabolism • large protein biotech drugs http://www.ema.europa.eu/docs/en_GB/document_library/EPAR_-_Product_Information/human/000582/WC500029271.pdf https://elcaminogmi.dnadirect.com/grc/patient-site/psychiatric-drug-response/what-affects-psychiatric-drug-response.html

  16. Metabolism • CYP450 – cytochrome P450 enzyme system • liver and intestines most common sites • P450 enzymes can be inhibited (slowed), induced (sped up) • drugs often compete for same enzyme subgroup http://www.boomer.org/c/p4/c07/c0702.html http://www.thebody.com/content/art875.html

  17. Metabolism • First-pass metabolism • occurs before drug reaches circulation • drugs with larger oral vsIV dose • propranolol • morphine • Prodrugs • enhanced bioavailability • avoids first-pass • metabolism http://epharmacology.hubpages.com/hub/Pharmacological-Effects-Prodrugs-Definition-Examples-and-Sources-of-Drug-Information

  18. Metabolism • Half-life: t1/2 • describes rate drug disappears from plasma • helpful with dosing parameters • exponential decline • Example: drug with 11 minute t1/2 • 1st 11 minutes concentration drops to 50% • 2nd 11 minutes concentration drops to 25% • 3rd 11 minutes concentration drops to 12.5% • 4th 11 minutes concentration drops to 6.25% • Not to be confused with duration of action Woerlee GM. Gerry’s Real World Guide to Pharmacokinetics & Other Things. 1991 http://www.anesthesiaweb.org

  19. Metabolism Drug effect does not necessarily relate to t1/2 • drugs that bind irreversibly • omeprazole • t1/2 30-60 minutes • binds irreversibly and inactivates proton pumps on gastric parietal cells • body must build new proton pumps before effects of omeprazole completely gone • 14 days average time to build a proton pump • drugs with atypical metabolism • bevacizumab binds endothelial cells • metabolism thought to be proteolysis at endothelial cell • t1/2 20 days http://www.prilosecotc.com/LocaleData/enUS/Assets/Documents/Monograph.pdf http://www.ema.europa.eu/docs/en_GB/document_library/EPAR_-_Product_Information/human/000582/WC500029271.pdf

  20. Excretion • Most common routes • kidney • diffusion • active transport • liver • through bile duct into feces • Enterohepatic recycling • drug excreted into feces • metabolized in intestine and reabsorbed • oral contraceptives http://www.boomer.org/c/p4/c16/c1604.html

  21. Excretion • Enterohepatic recycling http://www.boomer.org/c/p4/c16/c1604.html

  22. Excretion • Kidney • some drugs pass through by diffusion (passive transport) • some drugs pass by active transport into kidney tubule • many renally excreted drugs require dose adjustments based on renal function • creatinine clearance (CrCl) or glomerular filtration rate (GFR) used to evaluate renal function • declines naturally with age • helpful online calculator: www.globalrph.com http://www.boomer.org/c/p4/c16/c1604.html

  23. Excretion • Hemodialysis • small molecules • water soluble drugs • drugs with low protein binding • Lungs • excretion of gases • anesthesia • alcohol Hemodialysis Schematic http://www.medbroadcast.com/test_and _procedure_info_details.asp?TPid=8&Type =1#.Ukxyuoasim4 http://www.boomer.org/c/p4/c16/c1604.html

  24. Putting It All Together Pharmacokinetic parameters describing a typical plasma concentration time profile after an oral administration. • Cmax maximum concentration • tmax time to maximum concentration • Duration of action for this hypothetical drug: time above the minimum effective concentration (MEC) • Therapeutic range: concentration above MEC but below maximum tolerated concentration (MTC) • Area under curve (AUC) is a function of concentration and time that describes total body exposure to drug Figure 1. International Journal of Impotence Research website. www.nature.com/ijir/journal/v19/n3/fig_tab/3901522f1.html. Accessed September 27, 2013.

  25. Phase 1 Clinical Trials • Phase 1 trials determine pharmacokinetics in humans • using animal data extrapolate to humans • LD50: dose required to kill 50% of the non-human population • no-observed-adverse-effect level (NOAEL) for animals • human equivalent dose (HED) of NOAEL is calculated using body surface area (BSA) • dose escalation studies • max tolerated dose (MTD) • time to max tolerated • other factors determined: • frequency • route • food/drug interactions • healthy volunteers if risk:benefit acceptable Ivy SP, Siu LL, Garrett-Mayer E, Rubinstein L. Clin Cancer Res. 2010 Wood LF, Foote M eds. Targeted Regulatory Writing Techniques. Basel, Switzerland:BirkhauserVerlag; 2009.

  26. Phase 1 Clinical Trials • Traditional phase 1 trial design • dose escalated until 33% patients exhibit pre-determined toxicity parameter • dose dropped down once to pre/toxic dose and this is called maximum tolerated dose (MTD) • study continues with MTD to determine recommended phase 2 dose (RP2D) and schedule • Molecularly targeted agents (MTAs) and non-cancer agents ie biotech • often do not have DLTs • start safe dose according to animal data • escalate until toxicity or molecular-targeted effects seen • this dose is called max administered dose and sets RP2D Ivy SP, Siu LL, Garrett-Mayer E, Rubinstein L. Clin Cancer Res. 2010

  27. Resources • For more information on pharmacokinetics: • Hand Written Tutorials: http://www.handwrittentutorials.com/ • Biopharmaceutics and Pharmacokinetics • David W.A. Bourne, B.Pharm., Ph.D. of the University of Colorado • Free online textbook http://www.boomer.org/c/p4/#topics • Woerlee GM. Gerry’s Real World Guide to Pharmacokinetics & Other Things. 1991 http://www.anesthesiaweb.org

More Related