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PHARMACOKINETICS IN DRUG DEVELOPMENT - more haste less speed Dr. Jennifer Martin FRACP, PhD Chair of Clinical Pharmacology University of Newcastle 1 OVERVIEW • Introduction • Pharmacokinetic principles • Pharmacokinetic applications • Pharmacokinetic parameters • Pharmacokinetic characterisation • Dosage form design • Other issues – formulations, devices, registration in Australia • Conclusion 2 INTRODUCTION • For clinical decision making new drugs for clinical use can be helpfully divided into discovery and development programs (TGA). • The former is often undertaken in University or biotechs, uses knowledge and libraries of of the pharmacodynamic (PD) pathways or putative targets for a particular disease, establishing suitable in vitro models (or surrogate markers or IVIVC) to test biological activities including cell death, effects on other pathways and activity. • In the development stage, few potential candidates are chosen for more thorough evaluation of the toxicity and efficacy of those agents. Studies may include a drug device. 3 PHARMACOKINETICS- what body does to drug • Study and characterisation of the time course of ADME absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion, and relationship of these processes to therapeutic and toxicological effects (and over time). • Study of how specific mode of administration and specific dose/dosing intervals are handled individuals, leading to the specific drug concentrations in different tissues/organs (over time). • Studying which part of drug will reach the site(s) of action and exerts its pharmacodynamic (PD) action either directly or by effects on pathways that have effect (e.g. nuclear transcription) 4 PK PRINCIPLES AND WHY IMPORTANT • Improved safety and efficacy - AUC and Cmax related to outcome • Better formulation e.g. transdermal/SR to reflect the required PK parameter • More appropriate route for indication e.g. transdermal • Disease factors that affect PK e.g. dry or inflamed skin • Select the right drug for a particular illness – concurrent therapies, concurrent comorbidities • Predict and explain drug-food and drug-drug interactions. • Design an appropriate single or multiple dosage regimen. • Therapeutic drug monitoring in individual patients – where evidence exits • Dosage adjustments in situations of altered physiology and drug interactions. 5 PK APPLICATIONS • Rational Drug Design (quantitative structure pharmacokinetic relationship) • Drug Development • Formulation Development • Dosage Regimen – frequency, concomitant meds • ADME study, Bioavailability and Bioequivalence studies • In Vitro –In Vivo correlation studies • PK-PD Relationship 6 PHARMACOKINETIC PARAMETERS • First order elimination rate constant (K) • Half life(t1/2) • Clearance (Total, Renal, Hepatic etc.(Cl) • Effective concentration range – Ctrough/Cmax • Absorption rate constant (Ka) • Extent of bioavailability (F) • Fraction of dose excreted unchanged in urine (fu) • Blood/plasma/tumour concentration ratio • Apparent volume of distribution (Vd) • Fraction of protein binding(Fb) • Time to reach peak concentration(tmax) • Toxic concentrations – relationship of effective and toxic concentrations 7 ADME • Absorption: Site of administration to entering plasma. Factors affecting – pH, cation binding, transit time, diet • Distribution: Transfer from blood to the extravascular fluids (i.e extracellular and intra cellular) and tissues. • Metabolism: The chemical conversion of drug into another chemical form, usually conversion of non polar to polar • Elimination: This is the irreversible loss of drug from the site of measurement e.g. bile • Excretion: It is the irreversible loss of chemically unchanged drug via faeces, urine, biliary secretion, saliva. sweat, milk, respiratory. 8 PK APPLICATIONS FOR DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS • ADME affects onset and intensity of biological response. • PK is useful in design and utilisation of In-vitro models that can evaluate dissolution characteristics of new compound formulated as new drug formulations and establish meaningful IVIVC. • In design and development of new drug and their appropriate dosage regimen. • Safe and effective management of patients by improving drug therapy (CONT.) 9 PK Applications for drug delivery systems • Knowledge of PK necessary to understand bioavailability – important for new dosage forms and generics/biosimilars • And to guide the bioavailability and bioequivalence studies Eg: a drug with short half life can be formulated as controlled release drugs by using polymers. Or lower bioavailability of the drugs can be increased by using several components like ß-cyclodextrin. • A lot of drug carriers in new drug delivery systems – -Somes, micelles, nanoparticles, microemulsion, nanosuspension, etc. 10 DESIGNING A DOSE REGIMEN Individualised Dosage Regimen: is based on the drug PK in the individual Dosage Regimen on population Averages: based on one of several models. i) Bayesian model: a priori estimates ii) Fixed model: Population average pharmacokinetic parameters are used directly to calculate the dosage regimen. ii) Adaptive model: Based on both population average pharmacokinetic parameters of the drug as well as patient variables (weight, age, sex, lean body weight ?body surface area and known patient pathophysiology) Empirical Dosage Regimen - designed by physician based on empirical clinical data, personal experience and clinical observations e.g. flat dosing, adjuvant (radiosensitising). NB there is a maximum (rate of DNA intercalation, unravelling etc) 11 DOSE CHOICE • The magnitude of both therapeutic and toxic responses depends on dose size – this relationship will differ for EVERY patient • Dose size calculation also requires knowledge of amount of drug absorbed after administration of each dose. • Greater the dose size, greater the fluctuations between Css, Cmax and min during each dosing interval and greater chances of toxicity. • ED50, ED90, ED100 – what is target? 12 13 DOSING FREQUENCY • The dosing interval (inverse of dosing frequency) is calculated on the basis of half life of the drug. • If the interval is increased and the dose is unchanged, Cmax, Cmin & Cav decrease but the ratio Cmax/Cmin increases. • Opposite is observed when dosing interval is reduced or dosing frequency increased. 14 Therapeutic Drug Monitoring • Depending upon the drug and the disease, management of drug therapy in individual patient can be by: o Monitoring therapeutic effect (e.g. cancer outcome) o Monitoring pharmacologic actions- pharmacodynamic (PD) monitoring o Monitoring plasma drug concentration - pharmacokinetic (PK) monitoring. 15 PK AND DRUG INTERACTIONS • Absorption – Transit time, effect of diet, concomitant PPI • Bioavailability – Complexation / chelation: Calcium, magnesium, or aluminum and iron salts with tetracycline complexes with divalent cations, causing a decreased bioavailability. • Distribution – Protein binding of warfarin/phenytoin, drug pumps at BBB (e.g. large proteins) • Metabolism – P450 interactions • Excretion – Pgp pumps (digoxin and dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers) 16 PK ENABLES INDVIDUALISATION Important in drugs with a narrow therapeutic index The aspects of a TDM service: • Determine need for measuring serum drug concentrations. • Assay for drug concentration in biological fluids. • Perform pharmacokinetic evaluation of drug concentrations. • Readjust dosage regimen, if necessary. • Monitor serum drug concentrations to confirm. • But who pays for this? Why worry when one dose fits all. 17 Design of Dosage Regimen • Overall aim of dosage regimen design is to achieve a target drug concentration at the receptor site. • The usual pharmacokinetics of the drug—including ADME profile—need to be considered for each individual patient • Pathophysiologic conditions, such as renal or hepatic disease, or congestive heart failure, change the normal PK profile of the drug, and dose must be carefully and regulalry adjusted with appropriate monitoring. 18 Drug Dosage Factors The rate and extent of absorption affect drug bioavailability – do we want high Cmax or target AUC Patient Compliance: • Cost of the medication. • Complicated instructions. • Multiple daily doses. • Difficulty in swallowing. • Adverse drug reactions. Evaluation of Patient's Response: • May need to review the drug and dosage regimen 19 Measurement of Serum Drug Concentrations. For most drugs, concentrations not doses relate to efficacy/toxicity A single blood sample rarely gives sufficient information. Several blood samples over a doing period are needed to clarify the adequacy of the dosage regimen at least initially. Dosage Adjustment. The new dosage regimen should be calculated using the pharmacokinetic parameters derived from the patient's serum drug concentrations. 20 DOSING OF DRUG IN SPECIAL GROUPS - OBESITY • Total, Lean or Ideal • Evidence has shown that obese people are underdosed. They have less toxicity, and poorer survival after adjustment for all other factors known to affect survival. 21 DOSING OF DRUG IN SPECIAL GROUPS - CHILDREN • NOT SMALL ADULTS! • How does dosing/BSA perform? • Young’s rule (For children 2 years and above ) • Clark’s rule • Fried’s rule • Square meter surface area OR Mosteller’s equation SA in m2 = ( height × weight ) ½ 60 22 • Child’s maintenance dose can be calculated from adult dose by using the following equation : Child’s Dose = SA of Child in m2 × Adult dose 1.73 Where 1.73 is surface area in m2 of an average 70 Kg adult . • Since the surface area of a child is in proportion to the body weight according to equation SA ( in m2 ) = Body weight (in Kg )0.7 • The following relationship can also be written for child’s dose : Child’s Dose = [ Weight of child in Kg ] 0.7 × Adult dose 70 23 DOSING OF DRUG IN SPECIAL GROUPS - ELDERLY WHO ADJUSTS? Books say: Maintenance dose for a patient of any age (except neonates and infants) when maintenance of same Css,av is desired is : Patient’s Dose = (weight in Kg )0.7 (140 - Age in years) × Adult dose 1660 etc What about renal clearance, for example What about altered PD target in elderly But even if you did know all this, how much are you going to alter the dose by? 24 DOSING OF DRUG IN SPECIAL GROUPS LIVER DISEASE Influence of hepatic disease on drug PK is unpredictable as multiple effects that liver disease has on the drug metabolising enzyme, binding and hepatic blood flow. 25 DRUG DOSING IN RENAL DISEASE Dose adjustment based on total body clearance. This is not correlated with BSA, may be correlated with height but best correlated with lean body weight, confirmed with TDM We need to keep the concentration the same, thus the dose needs to reduce. C = F × Cl /Dose But how much to reduce? Depends on the reduction in CrCl and the fu (new dose = (1-fu ) x (patients CrCl/normal CrCl) x actual dose) 26 27 WHY PICKING THE RIGHT PD TARGET IS IMPORTANT RELATIONSHIP OF DOSE TO REDUCTION IN LDL AND OVERALL MORTALITY 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Rosuvastatin dose (mg) % reduction in LDL 1 1.5 % reduction in coronary events 2 2.5 % reduction in coronary mortality 5 20 % reduction in total mortality 28 CONCLUSION • Accurate and full knowledge of drug PK characteristics of drug and factors effecting them for designing an effective dosing regiment AND useful drug delivery systems. • TDM is imperative, there is no other method yet validated that improved individual outcomes. • PK studies are important to identify variables that control the potential success of drug delivery systems • PK can be used to evaluate the products or delivery systems. • Selection/design of proper experimental protocol is very important. Suitable analytical method is necessary for proper estimation of exposure. • IV-IC correlation and PK /PD relationship/modelling help better design. CONTROLLED RELEASE FORMULATION • CT is the target concentration to be maintained for T hour. • Rate of elimination = K.CT.Vd or 1/2 CT.Vd • Where K is the eliminnation rate constant of the drug. • V is the apparent volume of distribution. • Rate of absorption, Ka Xa should be equal to the rate of elimination to maintain constant concentration. So , Ka Xa = K. CT Vd • Then rate of release should be equal to the rates of absorption and elimination. So, Rate of release, Kr = K. CT Vd 30 So, Maintainence dose = rate of release x duration to be maintained = K. CT Vd T tmax Log Ka = a K Where Ka is absorption rate constant Loading dose = CT Vd e-Ktmax F • Where F is bioavailability (fraction) • Above is on the basis that drug confers one compartment distribution 31 • Equation to express plasma concentration of controlled release product administered C= K0 (e-KT -1) e-Kt K Vd • Where K0 is zero order release rate • ‘T’ is time of total release • ‘t’ is anytime at which concentration is measured • ‘t’ can be less than or equal or more than ‘T’ 32