* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Principles of Pharmacology
Polysubstance dependence wikipedia , lookup
Orphan drug wikipedia , lookup
Plateau principle wikipedia , lookup
Compounding wikipedia , lookup
Psychopharmacology wikipedia , lookup
Neuropsychopharmacology wikipedia , lookup
Pharmacognosy wikipedia , lookup
Pharmacogenomics wikipedia , lookup
Drug design wikipedia , lookup
Pharmaceutical industry wikipedia , lookup
Prescription costs wikipedia , lookup
Prescription drug prices in the United States wikipedia , lookup
Neuropharmacology wikipedia , lookup
Drug discovery wikipedia , lookup
Theralizumab wikipedia , lookup
Noppamas Rojanasthien, MD PHCO 320301 : General Principles of Pharmacology Noppamas Rojanasthien M.D. Pharmacology “drugs and the body ” I Pharmacokinetics II Pharmacodynamics What the body does to the drug - Absorption - Distribution - Biotransformation (Metabolism) Excretion What the drug does to the body - Drug receptors - Effects of drug - Responses to drugs - Toxicity and adverse effects of drugs Transfer of drugs across cell membranes 1. Passive diffusion (from high to low concentrations) Diffusion rate depends on concentration gradient, lipid solubility, degree of ionization and size of drug, area of the absorptive surface because cell membranes = Semipermeable phospholipid bilayer Drug molecule that favor drug transport across membrane 1. Lipid soluble drugs (uncharged, nonpolar) 2. Small molecules Most drugs are weak acids or weak bases Degree of ionization of drugs Weak acid (proton donor, e.g., aspirin ) AH ←→ A- + H+ Acid environment (gastric pH, 1.4) = ↑ Nonionized form Plasma pH, 7.4 = ↑ Ionized form Weak base (proton acceptor e.g., quinidine) BH+ ←→ B + H+ (Acid = ↑ Ionized form) (Alkaline = ↑ Nonionized form) Non-ionized form of drug is lipid soluble. Influence of pH on drug absorption Stomach e.g. salicylic acid (weak acid) ↓ ionized form in stomach (acid pH) ! cross readily in the stomach to plasma but cross hardly from plasma to stomach (plasma pH = 7.4 , ↑ ionized form) Is the drug lipid or water soluble ? Drug absorption takes place at the small intestine (large surface area). Effects of food, antacids, blood flow, bile etc. Controlled-release preparations Effects of pH on drug elimination (distal renal tubule) Alkalinized urine (sodium bicarbonate) ↑ excretion of acidic drugs (e.g. salicylate, uric acid) Acidified urine (ammonium chloride) ↑ excretion of basic drugs (e.g. amphetamine) 2. Active transport : (renal tubule, biliary tract, blood-brain barrier, GI tract) Require energy, selectivity, limited specific membrane carrier ! saturation kinetics e.g., ions, vitamins, sugars, amino acid 3. Facilitate passive diffusion e.g., glucose (low lipid solubility) rate of diffusion > expected carrier-mediated diffusion (selectivity, saturability, does not require energy, does not transport against concentration gradient 4 . Pinocytosis 1 Noppamas Rojanasthien, MD Drug absorption, Bioavailability and Routes of administration Factors that modify absorption 1. drug solubility (aqueous solution absorb faster than oily solution or solid form) 2. rate of dissolution (solid form) 3. concentration of drug 4. circulation to sites of absorption and area of absorbing surface 5. first-pass metabolism Bioavailability = the fraction of drug that reaches the systemic circulation. = the rate and extent of drug reaches its site of action Determine as the ratio of the AUC’s obtained after oral and IV doses Bioavailability (F) = AUCoral Doseiv x AUCiv Dose oral Bioequivalence = drugs with the same rate and extent of bioavailability Bioequivalence = Dosereference AUC test x AUCreference Dose test Routes of drug administrations 1. Alimentary routs : oral administration (sublingual, buccal, rectal, etc.) 2. Parenteral routes : intravenous, intramuscular, subcutaneous, etc 3. Others : Topical (skin, eye), Inhalation Some Characteristics of Common Routes of Drug Administration* ROUTE ABSORTION PATTERN SPECIAL UTILITY Oral ingestion Variable; depends upon many factors May show first-pass effect or presystemic extraction Intravenous Absorption circumvented Potentially immediate effects Intramuscular Prompt, from aqueous solution Most convenient and Requires patient economical; usually more safe cooperation Availability potentially erratic and incomplete for drugs that are poorly soluble, slowly absorbed, unstable, or extensively metabolized by the liver and/or gut Immediate onset Increased risk of (for emergency use, low BP adverse effects or shock) Must inject solutions Complete drug availability slowly, as a rule Not suitable for oily (no first-pass effect) solutions or insoluble Permits titration of dosage substances Usually required for high molecular weight protein and peptide drugs Suitable for large volumes and for irritating substances, when diluted Suitable for moderate Precluded during volumes, oily vehicles, and anticoagulant Rx, some irritating substances 2 LIMITATIONS AND PRECAUTIONS Noppamas Rojanasthien, MD Slow and sustained, from repository preparations Subcutaneous Prompt, from aqueous Suitable for some insoluble suspensions and for solution implantation of solid pellets Slow and sustained, from repository preparations *See text for more complete discussion and for other routes. bleeding tendency or low BP (shock) May interfere with interpretation of certain diagnostic tests (e.g., creatine kinase) Not suitable for large volumes Possible pain or necrosis from irritating substances Distribution of drugs 1. Physiological factors Cardiac output & blood flow & size of the organ (brain, liver, kidney, heart >> muscle, viscera, skin, adipose tissue) CNS (blood-brain barrier), Placenta 2. Physicochemical properties of drugs Solubility ( lipid or water solubility, degree of ionization) Drug reservoir (plasma proteins, cellular reservoirs) Drug displacement from binding sites and change in drug levels Distribution of drug influence its site of action and duration of action Redistribution [e.g. (IV) thiopental, diazepam distribution to brain ! action and redistribution to peripheral tissue! terminate action] Anatomical barrier : Blood-brain barrier (permit only lipid-soluble drugs) Meningitis or inflammation (more permeable to antibiotics) Placental transfer of drug (lipid-soluble, nonionized drugs) Acid drugs with highly protein bound (Warfarin 8 L / 70kg, Aspirin 12 L / 70Kg) Basic drug avidly taken up by tissue (Amphetamine = large Vd) Apparent volume of distribution (Vd) - determine amount of drug in the body - determine a loading dose - Estimate feasibility of using dialysis in case of drug overdose Vd = Amount of drug in the body F(dose) = Plasma drug concentration Co Loading dose = Cp x Vd Drug Biotransformation (Metabolism) Why is drug biotransformation necessary? To eliminate the drug Lipophilic drug ! filtered through glomerulus ! reabsorbed by renal tubule Lipophilic drug ! biotransformed to more polar compound ! more readily excretable by the kidney Where do drug biotransformation occur ? Liver, Kidney, GI, Skin, Lung (mostly occur in the liver) Phase I Oxidations ! liver CYP450 (Microsomal mixed function oxidase system) Enzyme inducers : 3 Noppamas Rojanasthien, MD Chronic alcohol ingestion, Cigarette smoker Barbiturates, Carbamazepine, Estrogen, Rifampin Enzyme inhibitor : Acute alcohol ingestion Cimetidine, Erythromycin, Ketoconazole, Verapamil, INH Reductions ! Flavin enzyme Hydrolysis ! Esterase Phase II Acetylation, Glucuronidation, Conjugations, Methylation Is the drug activated or inactivated by the liver enzymes ? an active drug ! inactive metabolite an active drug ! active metabolite (morphine, spironolactone) an active drug ! toxic metabolite (acetaminophen, lidocaine) PRODRUG ! active metabolite (enalapril, simvastatin, cyclophosphamide) First-pass effect and Extraction ratio High extraction ratio ! required larger oral dose or parenteral administration e.g. lidocaine, verapamil, nifedipine, propranolol, nitroglycerine, isosorbide, morphine, amitryptyline Hepatic blood flow-limited elimination Shunting of blood past hepatic site ! result in increasing drug availability Clinical relevance of drug metabolism Marked individual differences in drug concentrations 1. Age, Gender (sex) 2. Genetic factors: Fast and slow acetylators (INH), Oxidation (TCA) 3. High or low first-pass metabolism 4. Enzyme induction or inhibition (drug interactions) 5. Disease affecting drug metabolism : Liver disease, heart failure, 6. Diet & environmental factors, smoking Drug Excretion (elimination) Drug clear by the kidney or the GI ? MW > 300 ! Gall bladder ! Bile MW < 300 ! Kidney Biliary excretion and fecal excretion (conjugated metabolites, MW > 300) ! enterohepatic recycle (Benzodiazepine, Digoxin, Estrogen, chloramphenicol) (deconjugate by GI bacteria ! GI reabsorption) Renal excretion of drug : 1. Glomerular filtration : Plasma concentration (Cp) & Free form, MW < 20,000 2. Active tubular secretion : Competitive secretion cation : penicillin and probenecid anion : amiloride, ethambutol, cimetidine 3. Passive tubular reabsorption : probenecid and uric acid Effect of urine pH alkaline urine ↑excretion of acidic drug acidified urine ↑excretion of basic drug Clearance = total amount of blood which a drug is completely removed per unit time Clearance (Cl) = F(Dose) AUC First-order and Zero-order elimination First-order rate of elimination is proportion to the concentration of drug (apply to most drugs) 4 Noppamas Rojanasthien, MD Zero-order : drug is cleared at constant rate regardless of its concentration occurs if the elimination process is saturated or at high concentrations Half-life (t1/2) is the time required for the plasma concentration of a drug to be reduced by 50 % For first-order elimination : the t1/2 is constant 4 -5 t1/2 > 90 % of the drug is eliminated. Half - life (t 1/2 ) = 0.7 (Vd) Cl Multiple dosing, drug accumulation and steady state concentration The time to reach steady-state is 4 - 5 times t1/2 for most of the drugs At steady state : Rate in (dosing rate) = Rate out (elimination) Therefore : Maintenance dose = CL x Cp Steady-state concentration (Css) Css = Dosing rate Cl Rate at which steady-state achieved is the rate of accumulation and is the same as the rate of elimination The time required to obtain steady state equal the time required for drug elimination (4-5 times of the half-life) Drug intervals should be less than the half-life to avoid inter-dose fluctuation. To achieve a more constant plasma level, multiple dose (D) are given at fixed time interval (T). Shorter intervals lead to more constant plasma levels (smaller inter-dose fluctuation) Reference: 1. Benet LZ, Kroetz DL and Sheiner LB. Pharmacokinetics : the dynamics of drug absorption, distribution and elimination. In Hardman JG, editors. The Goodman & Gilman’s the pharmacoligical basis of therapeutics. 9th edition. McGraw-Hill companies, Inc, 1996 : 328. 2. Holford NHG and Benet LZ. Pharmacokinetics & pharmacodynamics : rational dose selection & the time course of drug action. In Katzung BG, edittor. Basic and clinical pharmacology. 6th edition. Prentice-Hall International, 1995 : 33-47. 3. Correia MA. Drug biotransformation. In Katzung BG, edittor. Basic and clinical pharmacology. 6th edition. Prentice-Hall International. 1995 : 48-59. 4. Lullman H, Mohr K, Ziegler A, editors. Color atlas of pharmacology. New York: Thieme, 1993. 5 Noppamas Rojanasthien, MD Pharmacodynamic Drug receptors : specific macromolecules (proteins, DNA) which drugs interact to produce changes in the system functions. Determine the relations between doses and pharmacologic effects (affinity, number of receptor) Responsible for selectivity of drug actions Mediate the action of pharmacological antagonist Effectors : molecules that translate the drug-receptor interaction into a change in cellular activity Receptor-effector signaling mechanisms: 1. Intracellular receptors Nitric oxide, hormones (steroids, thyroid, sex hormones), Vitamin D Lipid-soluble agent crosses the membrane Response element (gene-active receptor) in the nucleus Stimulate transcription of genes Delay onset of action (lag period 30 min – hours, synthesis of new proteins) Effects can persist for hours or days (slow turnover of protein-enzyme) 2. Transmembrane enzymes Insulin, growth factors, ANF etc. Acts on protein kinase enzyme (tyrosine, serine, guanyl cyclase) Altered membrane transport (glucose, amino acid) Down regulation of receptor 3. Transmembrane ion channels (ligand-gated channels) Regulate flow of ion through plasma membrane Alter electrical potential across membrane e.g. Ach = Nicotinic receptor, benzodiazepine = GABA receptor 4. G proteins & second messengers Drug-receptor activate coupling proteins (G protein) Alter effector element (enzyme or ion channel) Change concentration of intracellular second messenger (cAMP, Ca, phosphoinositides, cGMP) e.g. sympathomimetic drugs ! activation of G protein (+/- adenylyl cyclase) Relation between drug concentrations and responses Concentration-Effect Curves Agonists : fully activating the effector Partial agonists : lower maximal efficacy than full agonist (≈ competitive inhibitor) Antagonist Competitive antagonists Reversibly bind to receptor without activating the effector The log dose-response curve is shift to higher dose but the maximal effect is reached The effect can be overcome by adding agonist e.g., histamine – antihistamine, beta-receptor antagonist (beta-blocker) Irreversible antagonists Downward shift of the maximum effect with no shift of the curve on the dose axis (unless spare receptors are present) The effect cannot be overcome by adding agonist e.g., phenoxybezamine (alpha-receptor antagonist) Physiologic antagonist : Bind to different receptor producing opposite effect e.g. bronchoconstrictor action of histamine vs bronchodilator action of epinephrine glucocorticoid and insulin (blood suger) Chemical antagonist : Interact directly remove or prevent drug from reaching the target e.g. protamine-heparin, dimercaprol (chelator of lead and toxic metals) Spare receptors and Kd : persist effects of drug-receptor interaction 6 Noppamas Rojanasthien, MD actual number of receptors >> effector molecule available ↑ sensitivity to agonist Receptor desensitization Down regulation of the number of receptors Relation between drug dose and clinical response 1. Graded dose-response curves (Response VS Drug concentration) Efficacy : Maximal efficacy (Emax) measure with a graded dose-response curve maximal effect of an agonist Potency : EC50 determine Potency amount of drug needed to provide a given effect affinity of the receptor for the drug Shape of dose-response curves Steep dose-response curve 2. Quantal dose-response curves (Percent of population response VS Dose of the drug) Median effective dose ED50 , Median toxic dose TD50 and Median lethal dose LD50 Toxic dose 50 Therapeutic index = Effective dose 50 (estimate margin of safety of the drug) Therapeutic window : dose range between the minimum effective therapeutic concentration and the minimum toxic concentration Potency : amount of drug needed to provide a given effect Variation in drug responses Idiosyncratic reaction (genetic differences in drug metabolism, allergic reactions) Hypo-reactive, Hyper-reactive Hypersensitivity (allergic reaction) Tolerance (↓ response after continued drug administration) Tachyhylaxis (rapid ↓ response after drug administration) 7 Noppamas Rojanasthien, MD Basic & Clinical Evaluation of New Drugs 1. Drug discovery & Drug screening 2. Preclinical safety & toxicity testing In vitro studies Animal studies Acute, subacute and chronic toxicity Teratogeninity Carcinogenicity Mutagenicity 3. Evaluation of drug in humans Phase I Phase II Phase III Postmarketing surveillance Evaluation of drugs in humans To obtain safety and effectiveness data of drug The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Drug evaluation process Grants approval for marketing of drugs Ethical Committee Institutional Review Boards (IRB) The IND & NDA Investigational New Drug Application (IND) New Drug Application (NDA) Phases of a Clinical Trial Phase I ( First human administration ) Phase II ( Initial administration to patients ) Phase III ( Broad double blind clinical trial ) Phase IV (Postmarketing surveillance) Phase I (Human pharmacology study ) Evaluation of safety / Pharmacokinetics (PK) Healthy adults volunteers, 25-50 cases Except AIDS & Cancer drugs Single dose / dose escalation / repeated dose Phase II (Therapeutic exploratory study) Evaluation of efficacy / safety / PK First introduction of a drug into patients (10-200) Single-blind placebo controlled Dosage range (safety, dose/response) Monitor side effects Phase III (Therapeutic confirmatory study) Confirm efficacy and safety in patient population Determine efficacy for specific indications Large sample of specific patients (1,000) Randomized double-blind placebo controlled Monitor side effects Rate of common adverse effects 8 Noppamas Rojanasthien, MD Phase IV After drug approval for marketing Monitor the safety of the new drug in patients Determine patterns of drug utilization and additional efficacy Monitor rare, severe side effects / toxicity Documents submit to IRB Study protocol (and any amendments) Consent form and subject information sheets Subject recruitment procedures Investigator Brochure and safety information Information about indemnity/compensation Investigator’s current curriculum vitae Consent Form Eighth grade reading level (Lay language) Purpose and background Procedures (treatment/compensation for injury) Benefits and Risks & discomforts Confidentiality Costs/Reimbursement/Compensation Questions and Signature Obtaining informed consent Purpose of the trial (experimental aspects) Trial treatment(s), random assignment Trial procedures (invasive procedure) Subject’s responsibility Risks, inconveniences Clinical benefit Compensation/treatment available in the event of trial-related injury Payment or expenses for participating the trial Participation is voluntary and may withdraw from the trial anytime without penalty Confidentiality of the medical record Inform new information updates Person to contact for further information The reason to terminate subject’s participation Expected duration of participation Approximate number of subjects in the trial Data management Enter the result into the subject file Completion of case report form (CRF) Correcting data in a CRF Source data verification (Pt file, lab test,etc) Clinical fraud carries severe penalties Adverse events report Record ALL adverse events 9 Noppamas Rojanasthien, MD Is the event drug-related ? Is the event unexpected ? Serious adverse event (die, life threatening hospitalization, significant disability birth defect, overdose, cancer, pregnancy 10