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Idialized Drug Discovery & development flow chart Disease area basic research; Medical disease understanding Animal Models Preclinical in-vivo profiling NDA NEW DRUG APPLICATION Compound repository Archive Assay strategy Assay development Assay validation Screening Med. Chem. optimization Lead Selection based on «lead criteria» Process development, Disease marker, endpoint definition Clinical Phase III Hit confirmation, Hit validation «counter screening» Hit Selection Hit to «Lead» early chemistry IND Investigational New Drug application Clinical Phase I Clinical Phase II 1 Animal experiments Meet increasing resistance and pose ethical problems. Consensus is that animal models are necessary to increase safety of clinical trial & to verify treatment concepts in-vivo before human trials are undertaken. Disease models are project specific and cannot be generalized Pharmacokinetic and toxicity evaluation is more standardized: PK data is generally obtained first in rhodents (mice &/or rats) & then in 1 «higher animal species» e.g. dogs, cats, rabbits, (hamster ). Toxicity data is first evaluated in mice & preferrably in rats. PK & toxicity (PD only in exceptional cases) is then normally evaluated in a non-human primate experiment e.g. chimps, before phase I studies are started. 2 Schedule 1. single ascending dose studies (i.v.) Q: what is the acute toxicity of my substance Starting dose? Investigation: - overall clinical signs (weight, behavior, signs of pain, etc… ) - plasma levels e.g. 10 mins, 15 mins, 1 h, 6 h, - tissue sampls (blood, fat tissue, muscle, kidney, spleen, liver, brain) 2. Multiple dosing study Q: what is the chronic toxicity of my substance Set-up: 1 week, 2, week, 4 week daily dosing (depending on indication) Investigation: - overall clinical signs (weight, behavior, signs of pain, etc… ) - plasma levels after multiple dosing - phathological investigation - phatohistology - «clinical chemistry»: erythrocytes, thromobcytes, cytokines, etc..3 A simple sign for toxicity: weight change of animals Average daily weight change [%] after 4 doses of SPK-843 1.04 1.02 1 NP1 0.98 NP2 0.11 ug/ml IV 0.96 oral 0.19 ug/ml 0.94 0.92 0.9 0 01 2 1 32 43 54 65 76 87 9 Days 5 mg/kg dose applied After 24 h, NP resulted in 57% of SPK level in blood compared to iv. injection 4 Example of histological analysis – Singe cell necrosis & NK infiltration in liver after multiple dosing. NK cell infiltration ( 24hrs) 5 Experiment size: Deciding how large an experiment needs to be is of critical importance because of the ethical implications of using animals in research. An experiment that is too small may miss biologically important effects, whereas an experiment that is too large wastes animals. Power Analysis A power analysis is the most common way of determining sample size. The appropriate sample size depends on a mathematical relation between the following: (1) effect size of interest, (2) Standard deviation (for variables with a quantitative effect), (3) chosen significance level, (4) chosen power, 1-4 are generally specified by the investigator and the experimental size (number of animals) is calculated based on this. 6 Effect size (D): Often specified in units of standard deviation e.g. treatment is expected to increase litter size by 1 in mice (normal 5 mice per litter, std.dev: 0.8 -> D = 1/0.8 = 1.25 Significance Level The significance level is the chance of obtaining a false positive result due to sampling error (known as a Type I error). It is usually set at 5%, although lower levels are sometimes specified. Power The power of an experiment is the chance that it will detect the specified effect size for the given significance level and standard deviation and be considered statistically significant. Choice of a power level is somewhat arbitrary and usually ranges from 80 to 95%. If too small numbers of animals (samples) are used, then the study is called “underpowered” . This means, with high likelihood differences, even if present would not have been detected/classified as statistically significant due to normal variations. 7 8 Different methods exist for e.g. sample size determination if a proportion of two groups is measured e.g. % of successfully treated patients in two groups: Successfully treated with control: Successfully treated with new treatment 9 Sample size estimate – resource equation Provides a simple alternative to accurate power analysis. Especially useful in early stage research and when accurate assumptions on expected effect sizes etc.. are not available. Method is based on correlation between Information content and E (degrees of freedom in a data set) Correlation function is steep but with a saturation value between 10 and 20. E=N-T-B N = total number of animals in expriment - 1 T = total number of groups B = number of subgroups -1 Example: Two treatments, 1 control in 3 groups of 8 animals each. E = 23 (animals -1) - 3 (groups ) – 0 (no subgroups) = 20 E of 20 is > threshold of 10-20 and could be reduced. 10 Prodrugs 11 Prodrugs • Concept: use of known in-vivo transformations or enzymatic processes in order to optimize the properties of drug candidate molecules in terms of toxcicity, therapeutic window, pharmakokinetics, dosing regimens, metabolism and eliminiation routes. • Delivered molecules ≠ the molecule which acts as the drug but a modified «masked» version of it. • Parameters most commonly addressed: Aqueous Solubility If concentration is not reached Absorption and Distribution If lipid/hydrophilic profile is not right Site Specificity If target tissue has unique enzymes Instability If metabolized before site of action reached Prolonged release If half-life is too short/inconvenient Toxicity If therapeutic window is too narrow Poor patient acceptance If unpleasant or painful or irritant etc.. Formulation problems 12 1. Carrier linked prodrugs Example: Brivanib (Bristol-Myers Squibb) Anti-cancer drug candiate Limited solubility/bioavailability Ester pro-drugs: Improved solubility/oral bioavailability Estrification is the most common approach to pro-drugs Ubiquitously present esterases will generate drug in-vivo 13 1. Carrier linked prodrugs The «Carrier» has to… Protect the drug until it is at the site of action Localize the drug to the site of action Allow for release via chemical or enzymatic mechanism Minimize host toxicity, be non immunogenic Be biodegradable Most common activation method is hydrolysis (enzymatic or purely chemical) 14 15 DRUG Choline esters can change the overall characteristics of Carboxylic acid DRUG DRUG DRUG Succinate esters 16 Adefovir dipivoxil Hepatitis B Phosphate or sulfate drugs normally not well absorbed in ionized form Pro-drug oral bioavailability: 60% Fostamatinib (Syk kinase inhibitor) Phosphate group increases solubility, Activated at intestinal epithelium 17 Amides: not generally used, unless activated (carbamates, phenylcarbamates, etc..) Alternative: Imines (Schiff Base) Example: Progabide (Sanofi-Aventis) 18 Dabigatran (anticoagulant, thrombin inhibitor) i.v. oral Prevention of thromoembolic disease after planned surgery (e.g. hip replacement) 19 Reductive cleavage mechanism: X= NH or O, Y= O, S, Z = C, N Tumor environment = hypoxic Drawback = Sulfonamides: drug Solubility enhancement Plasma half-life 5 min 20 Prednisolon Glucocorticosteroid, Treatment of anaphylactic shock Poor solublity Succinate Lyophilized powder for reconsitution Sulfonate, carboxylates poorly hydrolyzed.. Solution shelf-life > 2 years 21 Prodrugs for Site Specific delivery: This is feasible when physicochemical prpoerties of parent drug and prodrug can be tuned optimally for the target site. However, in general, increasing lipophilicity will increase passive transport to most tissues. Oxyphenisatin (laxative) Oxyphenisatin acetate Only deliverd rectally Oral delivery 22 Brain targeting: Crosses BBB GABA + GABA aminotransferase inhibitor Is trapped in brain tissue 23 Liver targeting: General approaches: a) Very lipophilic substances b) Phosphate or phosphonate moiety using aryl-substituted cyclic phosphodiesters Activation: oxidative hydroxylation on benzylic position by liver specific isoform of cytochrome P450. (free phosphate drug is trapped in hepatocytes due to poor Membrane passage). 24 Adefovir Reverse Transcriptase inhibitor Hepatitis B Suboptimal dosing regime – Renal toxicity 60 fold higher liver c in liver compared to Adefovir & Kidney c 33% lower 25 Tumor microenvironment also contains increased phosphatases and proteases Example: Delivery of dethylstilbestrol to prostate cancer tissue Drawback: derivatives with poor membrane permeability -> poor distribution into tissue… 26 glucuronation Prodrugs for Stability: What happens? Propranolol (beta-blocker) (see day 1) Oral application of the drug has a much lower activity than IV injection. -> strong «first pass effect» Hydroxylation, glucuronation Prodrug: Succinate ester has 8x higher plasma Levels after oral dosing. 27 Prodrugs for slow & prolonged release Advantages: (1) Reduces number & frequency of dosing (2) Can eliminate night-time adminsitration (3) Greater patient compliance (4) More constant, lower drug dose in system with less peak levels (5) Less toxicity (due to lower constant dose) General strategy: Make long-chain fatty acid esters or PEG esters and use intra-muscular injection Example: Haloperidol (Haldol) A potent, orally active CNS depressant, sedative & tranquilizer. Peak plasma levels observed 2-6 h after administration. Decanoate ester (Haldol decanoate) is injected intramuscularly -> antipsychotic activity lastst 1 month.28 Example 2: Tolmetin sodium (Tolectin) is a nonsteroidal ntiinflammatory drug with peak concentration duration of 1 h Tolmetin glycine amide Higher potency & extension of peak concentration to 9 h (slow hydrolysis of amide) 29 30 Prodrugs to minimize Toxicity Side effects of long-term usage of painkillers and antiinflammatory drugs e.g. Aspirin, paracetamol, Ibuprofen are associated with liver damage gastrici irritation and bleeding. Ulcerogenicity and gastric bleeding associated with aspirin may be due to accumulation of the acid in gastric mucosal cells. Deacetylation half-life 2h in plasma Estrification reduces Ulcerogenicity. But… deacetylation half-life 1-3 min Quicker ester hydrolysis removes deacetylation problem 31 Prodrugs for patient acceptance Clindamycin Bacterial protein synthesis Inhibitor; bacteriostatic i.v. application causes pain, Oral use – bitter taste Well tolerated, Hydrolysis t1/2= 10 min Clindamycin Palmitate Pediatric use in cherry-flavored syrup 32 Bioprecursor Prodrugs Rely predominantly on redox transformation to generate the active form of the drug, which is administered as inactive precursor. Example: Proton pump inhibitors Day 1 we had talked about discovery of anti-histminergica as anti-ulcer drugs. A second approach is based on H+/K+ ATPase (proton-pump) inhibitors . The enzyme catalyzes an exchange of K+ for H+ in the parietyl cells in the gastric mucosa (the cells responsible for secretion of acid) and thereby increases the acidity of the stomach. Starting point: Screening for compounds which block gastric acid secretion. Lead compound identified: Exhibited Liver toxicity -> attributed to thiamide 33 Exhibited Liver toxicity -> attributed to thiamide Sulfur analog with good activity Series of Heterocycle analogs Metabolism studies (dogs) Timoprazole More potent but iodine uptake blockage Picoprazole (no thyrooid uptake inhibition ) Omeprazole (Prilosec, Astra Zeneca) one of the most widely prescribed medicines 34 Omeprazole (Prilosec, Astra Zeneca) one of the most widely prescribed medicines Accumulates in gastric mucosa. Omeprazole is weakly basic (pKa of only 4). -> pyridine ring is not protonated at physiolog. pH. pH in parietal cell is much lower, pH = 1. -> drug is protonated inside the cells and undergoes a transformation. Thereby the drug covalently binds to ATPase. Secondarily, the drug inhibits carbonic anhydrase. ATPase 35 Example: Antiviral drugs - Acyclovir Acyclovir Nobel price in 1988 to Elion &Hitchings for this molecule (amongst others). Open chain mimick of 2´-deoxyguanosine, the precursor of GTP. Acyclovir is inactive – but is activated by viral thymidine kinase to monophosphate. Viral Thymidine kinase Selective for infected cells 36 guanylkinase Phosphoglycerat kinase and others Further selectivity of acyclovir is obtained by the fact that Acyclovir-triphosphate has a ~ 40times higher affinity for viral a-DNA polymerase than for normal cellular a-DNA polymerase. -> «Dead end complex» during viral replication. Even if access phosphorylated drug is released form an infected cell (because of cell death… ) Acyclovir-PP and Acyclovir-PPP is not taken up in new cells Due to poor cell penetration because of high polarity (negative charged molecules) Acylovir is a prodrug with an exceptionally high degree of selectivity! 37 Most severe weakness of Acyclovir is that only 15-20% of oral dose is absorbed. Prodrugs of the prodrug have been designed… Adenosin deaminase 6-deoxyacyclovir 18 times more water-soluble than acyclovir. Plasma concentrations were 5x-6x higher after oral dose than for Acyclovir. 38 Prodrugs of the prodrug have been designed… Valacyclovir (Valtrex) 3x-5x higher oral bioavailiablity than Acyclovir Ganciclovir, even closer mimick of natural template. Higher activity aginst human cytomegalo virus Penacyclovir Longer acting Famicyclovir Longer acting 39 - Oral Hepatitis C treatment - FDA approved in 2013 - Most expensive drug in history - Price: 1000 US$ per tabet, 84000$ for 12 weeks treatment course. - Drug cured > 90% patients in clinical trial Sofosbuvir (Sovaldi, Gilead) Diisobutyrate ester prodrug of fluoro analog uridinmonophosphate 40 Delivered In-vivo as Starting point: Fluoro-Cytidine analog Active in-vitro as Tri-phosphate Di-isobutylester analog Active in-vivo Metabolis studies however showed that… First activation step - conversion of Uridyl analog to Uridyl-phosphate does not work in-vivo Uridyl analog more potent Monophosphate had to be delivered 41 First pass 42 43 Activation mechanism: 44 Case study: Dopamine In the brain there is a balance of inhibitory neurotransmitter dopamine & excitatory neurotransmitter acetylcholine. Parkinson`s disease is characterized by a loss of dopaminergic neurons and a deficiency of dopamne. Treatment by supplementation of a high dose of dopamine does not work as dopamine does not cross the BBB (bisphenol – deprotonated negative charges) Making use of the L-amino acid transport system, L-dopa (levodopa) is used to deliver a precursor of dopamine to the brian where it is decarboxylated. Dopamine L-dopa 45 Major complication arises because L-amino acid decarboxylase also exists outside the CNS and >95% of L-dopa is decarboxylated after oral dosing due to first-pass in the liver and in kidneys -> only 1% of dose elicits the effect. Inhibition of peripheral L-amino acid decarboxylase can increase efficiency, Effective dose of L-dopa can be reduced by 75%. Peripheral decarboxylase inhibitors: Carbidopa Benserazide Dopamine also increases renal blood flow and systolic and puls blood pressure. If only renal vasodilation is desired a kidney specific delivery is used: Kidneys have high concentrations of g-glutamyl transpeptidase: g-Glutamyltranspeptidase 46 Macromolecular drug carriers Concept: use of a «macromolecular» delivery platform to which the pharmacologically active substance is conjugated in a way to allow release at target site. • Pharmacokinetic properties can be tuned independent of drug structure • Pharmacokinetic properties now depend on characteristics of polymer • Medium sized molecules (peptides) are protected from glomerular filtration • Bound drug less toxic • Drug carrier allows also to incorporate specific targeting funtions to deliver drug to site of action - Macromolecular carriers may be unsuitable for oral administration - Immunogenic - Release might be inefficient 47 Simple polymers Aspirin linked to Polyvinylalcohol: Less side effects long term treatment Polylysine methotrexate Folate reductase inhibitor Improved uptake & therapeutic window Ibuprofen linked PEG - Sustained release, - Prolonged action - Higher plasma half-life Polyglutamate norethindrone 9-month release contraceptive 48 Pharmacokinetics 49 Pharmacokinetics is the study of drug absorption, distribution within body, and drug elimination over time. Absorption depends on the route of administration, Drug distribution depends on lipophilicity of the drug (to pass through membranes) and on the extent to which the drug binds to blood proteins (plasma protein binding) Drug elimination is accomplished by excretion into urine and/or by inactivation by enzymes in the liver 50 Dose-response curve: Effective doses must be reached and maintained to generate the desired therapeutic effect. Overdosing causes risk of toxicity 51 Toxic Potentially Toxic Therapeutic Potentially therapeutic Subtherapeutic 100× 10× 52 53 The disposition of chemicals entering the body (from C.D. Klaassen, Casarett and Doull’s Toxicology, 5th ed., New York: McGraw-Hill, 1996). 54 Routes of Administration Enteral Parenteral i.v. subcutaneous Inhalation Intramuscular Rectal Oral Routes of Administration Plasma concentration following i.v. and oral application A drug given by the i.v. route will have an absolute bioavailability of 1 (F=1 or 100% bioavavailable) While drugs given by other routes usually have an absolute bioavailability of less than one. The absolute bioavailability is the area under curve (AUC) non-intravenous divided by AUC intravenous 57 Definitions Exposure: A measure for the amount of drug that an organism has really "seen" Bioavailability A measure for the proportion of the dose that reaches the systemic circulation (not the same as exposure) Clearance A measure of the elimination of a compound from the blood given as volume cleared/time Volume of Distribution A measure of the theoretical volume that a compound distributes to. Half-Life A measure of the time it takes for the organism to decrease the concentration of the drug by 50% 58 A Pharmacokinetic Study Rats were dosed with compound xx and Blood samples were collected over 96 hours after oral and Intravenous dosing (h) 0 0.166 0.333 0.666 1 2 4 7 24 30 48 72 96 (ug/l) 0 2422.971 4435.444 7552.264 7421.424 5572.851 2784.17 2270.989 1046.388 714.68 445.44 108.63 5.046 (h) 0 0.0833 0.166 0.333 0.666 1 2 4 7 24 30 48 72 96 (ug/l) -37700 28600 25500 18100 15700 12200 4200 2200 1630 932 108 130 36 59 Measuring drug concentration in circulation Blood component How Obtained Components Whole blood Venous puncture – collected in tube with anticoaggulant Contains all cellular & protein components Serum Is liquid obtained from whole blood after clotting Does not contain cells, fibrinogen and other clotting factors Plasma Is liquid obtained after centrifugation of whole blood treated with anticoagulant Non-cellular liquid fraction contiaing all protein components • Measuring drug concentrations ensures that therapeutic levels are reached • Measurments of PK allow model building and prediction of drug concentrations • PK data allow individual ajustment for patients 60 Plasma concentration after 5 mg/kg oral dosing 61 Rat plasma Concentrations of BAY XX-XXXX after 5 mg/kg oral administration to rats Cmax BAY XX-XXXX (ug/l) 8000 6000 4000 2000 0 0 2 Absorption Phase 4 6 Time (h) 62 Distribution 63 Absorption • Most Drugs administered orally as pills • Absorbed largely from small intestine •Some Sublinqual absorption •Rectal Absorption (suppository) •Some Absorption from stomach (rare) • Molecules need to be near the intestinal mucosa to be absorbed •Compound should be soluble in gut contents or in vehicle • Crystals are not well absorbed • Gummy stuff is not well absorbed 64 Passive Transport normally thought to be the major Route 65 PK models are usually built using abstract compartment models. A compartment symbolizes the volume of liquid in which a drug distributes/ dilutes. Observed drug Blood/Plasma/tissue concentrations are used to model drug behaviour using differential equations. In practice: accurate measurements of drug in different discrete tissues is difficult, also, perfusion rates are not exactly known – therefore compartments are abstract and virtual constructes without exact physical equivalence. Comparment 1 In which drug distributes 66 Example: 1 comparment model – i.v. bolus administration Entire body is described as one continous compartment VD = apparent volume of distribution Cp = concentration of drug in Plasma at t=0 after it has equilibrated D0 = Dose of drug administered k = elimination rate constant AUC = area under the curve Comparment 1 distributes In which drug k Volume of distribution, VD Cp = D0/VD In practice Cp is not easily accessible D0 = k x VD x AUC 67 The apparent Volume of distribution, VD The apparent VD is a specific number and differs from drug to drug The apparent VD (expressed as % body weight) is constant for a given drug between patients The apparent VD indicates how much of the drug is distributed into the tissue The apparent VD determines how high a doses is required to achieve effctive concentrations Most drugs have an apparent VD smaller or equal to the body mass (1kg = 1L) However, in some cases VDs of several times the body mass have been measured Volume of plasma for an adult is ca. 3 liter Apparent volume of distribution is normally > 3 liter Polar drugs: VD = 8-10 L Lipophilic drugs: VD can be 20-30 Liter 68 k D1B , VD k = km + ke DB = Cp x VD dDB dt DB… drug in body First order rate constants log DB = -kt + log DB0 2.3 DB cannot be measured directly … but .. = -kDB DB0 log Cp = Cp -kt 2.3 + log Cp0 0 VD= DB0/Cp0 Slope -k/2.3 Log [DB] Log [Cp] 0 0 [t] [t] 69 Clearance Reason for clearance to be a first-order process is that filtration rate of kindeys is relatively constant (120 ml/min in humans). Therefore elimination of drug from plasma depends on plasma concentration. The mechansimsm of drug elimination may be complex, but collectivley drug elimination can be quantitated with the concept of clearance. Clearance (CL) refers to volume of plasma fluid eliminated per unit of time. Example: Dose = 100 mg VD = 10 ml Cp = 10 mg/ml Volume eliminated / minute: 1 ml/min Clearance for a first-order process is constant regardless of drug concentration because it is expressed in volume/unit time instead of drug amount per unit time. CL = k x VD t1/2= 0.693/k…… k = obtained via semilog cp vs t 70 Multicompartimental models What if log Cp vs time is not linear? Distribution phase Plasma c Log [Cp] Elimination phase tissue 0 0 [t] [t] PK models are used to simplify all the complex processes that occur during drug administration, including distribution & elimination in the body. Model simplification is necessary becasue of the inability to measure quantitatively all the rate processes in the body. 71 Compartimental models are classical PK models that simulate the kinetic processes of adsorption, distribution and elimination with little physiological detail. 2-Compartment model Central compartment D V1 C p p ke p Peripheral compartment 1 Dt Vt Ct Drug tissue concentration Ct is assumed to be uniform within a given hypothetical compartment. Since no data can be collected on Ct; Ct is only theoretical. However, Cp are simulated assuming the presence of a tissue compartment. In contrast to Ct, which is not useful, Dt is a usful parameter as it allows to assess how much drug accumulates extravascularly in the body. -> tracking mass balance. 72 Multicompartment models provide answers such as: (1) How much of a dose is eliminated? (2) How much drug remains in the plasma compartment? (3) How much drug accumulates in the tissue compartment Multicompartment models explain the observation that after a rapid IV bolus dose , The plasma level – time curve does not decline linearly. Nonlinear plasma drug level – time decline occurs because the drug distributes into different types of tissues with lower perfusion rates. The highly perfused tissues and blood makes up the central compartment, while lower perfused tissues like fat body, mucle, etc.. makes up the peripheral compartment. Kinetic analysis of multi-compartment models assumes that all transfer rate processes between compartments are first-order processes. Blood supply Tissue Group Highly perfused Heart, brain, kidney, hepato-portal system, Medium perfused Adipose tisuse, muscle, connective t. Slowly perfused Bone, ligaments, cartilage, hair, teeth 73 Blood flow to human tissues Tissue % Body weight %cardiac output Blood Flow ml/100g per min Kidney 0.4 24 450 Thyroid 0.04 2 400 2 5 20 20 75 Heart 0.4 4 70 Brain 2 15 55 Muscle 40 15 3 Fat 15 2 1 Liver Hepatic Portal 74 Practical example: The following time course was recorded: Time Cp (observed 0.25 43 0.5 32 1.0 20 1.5 14 2.0 11 4.0 6.5 8.0 2.8 12.0 1.2 16.0 0.52 blood level (ug/ml) plasma level ug/ml) 10 1 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 Time (h) Clearly, not a 1-compartment kinetics Step 1: Fit a bi-exponential decay: Cp = Ae-at + Be-bt i.e. fit terminal phase to a linear equation log Cp’ = -bt/2.3 + log B -> gain B (intercept) 75 Clearly, not a 1-compartment kinetics Step 1: Fit a bi-exponential decay: Cp = Ae-at + Be-bt i.e. fit terminal phase to a linear equation log Cp’ = -bt/2.3 + log B -> gain B (intercept) blood level (ug/ml) B = 15 ug/ml t1/2 = 0.693/b = 3.3 h 10 Slope= -bt/2.3 b = 0.21 h-1 1 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 Time (h) Now, distribution phase can be obtained by substraction of Cp’ from Cp. Using Cp’= 15e-0.21t 76 Time Cp (observed Cp’ Cp – Cp’ A = 45 ug/ml 0.25 43 14.5 28.5 0.5 32 13.5 18.5 1.0 20 12.3 7.7 1.5 14 11 3 2.0 11 10 1 4.0 6.5 8.0 2.8 12.0 1.2 16.0 0.52 blood level (ug/ml) plasma level ug/ml) 10 a= 1.8 h-1 1 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 Time (h) A number of PK parameters can be calculated: 77 16 A number of PK parameters can be calculated: Elimination rate constant transition rate constant central -> peripheral compartment transition rate constant peripheral -> central compartment Vt = Vp k12/k21 Once the PK parameters are determined for an individual, the equations can be used to extrapolate to different situations 78 PK parameters for digoxin (heart failure drug) for a normal patient and a patient with renal impairment. Q: when is the maximum tissue concentration reached? A: maximum tissue C is then when Transfer from central compartment to tissue is equal to transfer from tissue to central compartment: Dpk12 = Dtk21 Dp 1.02 = Dt 0.15 -> 3-4 hours for normal patient Dp 0.45 = Dt 0.11 -> Dp = 0.24xDt -> 7-8 hours for renal impaired patient 79 Some more important relationships: In the beginning, volume of distribution plasma is In the beginning there is no elimination, therefore exponential terms are zero: and giving Alternatively the volume of the central compartment can be calculated from the Area under the curve: From one compartment model: Analog: 80 Example: 81 Constant infusion of drug: In a constant i.v. infusion, drug solution is infused at a constant zero-order rate, R. During infusion drug concentration in plasma increases and also the rate of elimination increases (because elimination is concentration dependent = kCp). Cp keeps increasing until steady state is reached (R = k DB). R is rate of infusion (mg/h) % of Css reached Number of half-lifes 90 3.32 95 4.32 99 6.65 82 To reach steady state concentration faster, a loading dose is normally used, plus a maintenance dose. Loading dose: Dose = Cp(Target) x Vd Q: What is the loading dose required for drug A if; • Target concentration is 10 mg/L • Vd is 0.75 L/kg • Patients weight is 75 kg 83 Answer: • Dose = Target Concentration x VD • Vd = 0.75 L/kg x 75 kg = 56.25 L • Target Conc. = 10 mg/L • Dose = 10 mg/L x 56.25 L • = 565 mg ~ 600 mg 84 Maintenance Dose Calculation • Maintenance Dose = CL x CpSS • CpSS is the target average steady state drug concentration • The units of CL are in L/hr or L/hr/kg • Maintenance dose will be in mg/hr so for total daily dose will need multiplying by 24 85 Q: What maintenance dose is required for drug A if; • Target average SS concentration is 10 mg/L • CL of drug A is 0.015 L/kg/hr • Patient weighs 75 kg A: Maintenance Dose = CL x CpSS CL = 0.015 L/hr/kg x 75 = 1.125 L/hr Dose = 1.125 L/hr x 10 mg/L = 11.25 mg/hr So will need 11.25 x 24 mg per day = 270 mg 86 Half life: Half-life is the time taken for the drug concentration to fall to half its original value The elimination rate constant (k) is the fraction of drug in the body which is removed per unit time. t 1/2 = 0.693 / k 87 Steady-State • Steady-state occurs after a drug has been given for approximately five elimination half-lives. • At steady-state the rate of drug administration equals the rate of elimination and plasma concentration - time curves after each dose should be approximately same 100 mg given every half-life: 88 Q: Determine the total body clearance for a drug in a 70kg patient. The drug follows the kinetics of a one-compartment model and has an elimination half-life of 3 hours with an apprent volume of distribution of 100 mL/kg A: t1/2 = 0.693/k => 0.693/3= 2.31 h-1 CL = k * VD = 2.31 h-1 x 100 ml/kg -> 23.1 ml kg -1 h-1 CL for 70 kg patient: 1617 ml/h 89 Oral dosing: Extravascular routes, particularly oral dosing are very popular for convenience. PK models after extravasular administration must take into account systemic drug absorption from the administration site (gut, lung, etc..) into the plasma. The major advantage of intravenous admin. is that the rate and extend of systemic absorption can be more carefully controlled. Systemic absorption from e.g. the GI depends on (1) physicochemical properties of the drug (2) type and design of dosage form (3) anatomy & phsiology of drug absorption site. In PK the overall rate of drug absorption may be described as either firt-order or zeroorder input process. (?) 90 1 4 2 3 91 ka k D1B , VD DGI F = fraction already absorbed Amount in GI exp. declines Integrated to At the end of aborption e-kat = 0 -> 92 ka can be determined as follows: 1. Fit a straight line to determine y – intercept and slope -> k 2. Take 3 points on the extrapolated line and determine corresponding concentration points on the curve 3. Calculate differences between corresponding points and plot -> straight line wiht slope - ka/2.3 93 Determined parameters can be used to calculate full curve and Cmax and t max. Cmax = Cp at Tmax For oral dosing, a one compartment model is normally the model of choice. There is more complex models but they all require also i.v. injection experiments to determine k12 and k21 and other konstants to feed the model. This level of complexity is not always desireable. 94 Repetitive dosing – essential aspects Ideally a dosing regimen is established for each drug to provide the correct plasma level without excessive fluctuation and drug accumulation outside the therapeutic window. 2 main parameters: - Dose applied - t, the frequency of drug administration Average concentration of drug at steady state is calculated by: Can also be obtained from AUC & F being the fraction of dose absorbed and Concentration of drug x hours after n doses: &after many doses 95 Maximum and minimum amounts of drug between doses: f = e-kt f is fraction of dose left at end of dosing intervall Cmax = Dmax/VD Dmax = D0 / ( 1-f) Dmin = Dmax – D0 96 Example: A patient receives 1000 mg of an antibiotic drug every 6 hours by i.v. bolus injection. The drug has an elmination half-life of 3 hours and shows a volume of distribution of 20 L. (1) What is the maximum and minimum amount of drug in the body between dosings (2) What is the steady state average plasma concentration (3) What is the plasma concentration 3 hours after the second dose? 1. Calculate k: k = 0.693/t1/2 = 0.693/3 = 0.231 h-1 2. Calculate remaining dose at the end of dosing interval (f factor): f = e-kt = e- 0.231x6 = 0.25 …. After dosing interval 0.25 is left of previous dose. ( with this information a table can be generated showing amount of drug after each dose) Dmax = D0/(1-f) = 1000/ (1-0.25) = 1333 mg -> maximum amount immediately after dosing. Dmin = Dmax – D0 = 1333 – 1000 = 333 -> minimum dose shortly before dosing. 97 Dmax = D0/(1-f) = 1000/ (1-0.25) = 1333 mg -> maximum amount immediately after dosing. Dmin = Dmax – D0 = 1333 – 1000 = 333 -> minimum dose shortly before dosing. knowing that the Volume of distrubution is 20L we can calculate the cmax and cmin in plasma between dosings: cmax is 1333 mg/20000ml = 66 ug/ml cmin is 333mg/20000ml = 16.5 ug/ml Q2: (2) What is the steady state average plasma concentration? F is 1 for an i.v. injection, therefore Cav = 1000/(20x0.231x6) = 36 mg/L = 36 ug/ml 98 (3) What is the plasma concentration 3 hours after the second dose? n= 1, t=3 Cp = 1000 20 ( 1-e-(2)(0.231)(6) 1-e- (0.231)(6) ) e-(0.231)(3) Dose # Before dosing After dosing 1 0 1000 2 250 1250 3 312 1312 4 328 1328 5 332 1332 6 333 1333 7 333 1333 n 333 1333 = 31.3 mg/L = 31.3 ug/ml -> amount of drug before and after repetitive dosing with f= 0.25 This is influenced by Dose, interval and Half-life (or elimination rate constant) k = 0.693/t1/2 f = e- kt 99 Example: Tobramycin: t1/2 = 2.15 h VD = 33.5% of body weight What is the correct dose for a 80kg patient if a average concentration of 2.5 ug/ml is desired and the dosing regime is once every 8h? k = 0.693/t1/2 D0 = 173 mg every 8 hours 100 Dose and frequency of dosing The size of drug dose is related to frequency at which it is given. The more fequently a drug is given, the smaller the individual dose needed. On the other hand, if dosing interval is too long, the dose required to keep a desired average concentration increases and leads to higher Cmax and Cmin differences. In general, dosing interval for most drugs is determined by elimination half-life Especially drugs with a narrow therapeutic window need to be given more frequently to prevent cmax shooting over the toxic threshold. Cmax = Cmin 1 e-kt Example: antibiotic with 3 h half-life, VD = 20% body weight (200ml/kg), Therapeutic range is 5 – 15 ug/ml. Serum concentrations > 20 ug/ml are toxic . Calculate dosing regime which will maintain therapeutic levels betwen 5-15 ug. 1st calculate appropriate t: 15/5 = 1/e-(0.693/3)xt -> t = 4.76 h For Cav= 10ug/ml D= 0.01x200*0.693/3*4 D = 1.848 ug/kg 101