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Pharmacokinetics What is pharmacokinetics? • Pharmacokinetics is the study of drug movement in, through and out of the body (ADME). • All pharmacokinetic processes involve transport of the drug across biological membranes. Biological membrane • This is a bilayer of phospholipid molecules, the polar groups of these are oriented at the two surfaces and the nonpolar chains are embedded in the matrix to form a continuous sheet. • Extrinsic and intrinsic protein molecules are adsorbed on the lipid bilayer. Some of the intrinsic ones, which extend through the full thickness of the membrane, surround fine aqueous pores. Membrane Transport • Drugs are transported across the membranes by: - Passive diffusion - Filtration - Carrier transport: -a) Facilitated diffusion -b) Active transport - Pinocytosis Passive diffusion • The drug diffuses across the membrane in the direction of its concentration gradient • The membrane playing no active role in the process. • This is the most important mechanism for majority of drugs. • Lipid-soluble drugs diffuse by dissolving in the lipoidal matrix of the membrane. • The greater the difference in the concentration of the drug on the two sides of the membrane, the faster is its diffusion. Passive diffusion Influence of pH • Most drugs are weak electrolytes, i.e. their ionization is pH dependent. • Weak acids or bases exist in both unionised and ionised form. • Lipid-soluble non-electrolytes readily cross biological membranes and their transport is pH independent. • For a weak base, the ionisation reaction is: BH B H • For a weak acid: HA H acidic pH A alkaline pH • The ionization of a weak electrolyte is given by the HendersonHasselbalch equation: [non-protonated electrolyte] pH = pKa + lg -------------------------------------[protonated electrolyte] • pKa is the dissociation constant of the weak electrolyte and is numerically equal to the pH at which the drug is 50% ionized • Henderson-Hasselbalch equation for weak acid: [A ] lg pH pK а [ HA] • Henderson-Hasselbalch equation for weak base: [ B] lg pH pK a [ BH ] • Weakly acidic drugs, which form salts with cations, are ionized at alkaline pH. • Weakly basic drugs, which form salts with anions, conversely are ionized more at acidic pH. • Ions are lipid insoluble and do not diffuse across a membrane NB! • Weakly acidic drugs could be absorbed only at acidic pH. • Weakly basic drugs could be absorbed only at alkaline pH. • Acidic drugs are ionized more in alkaline urine—do not back diffuse in the kidney tubules and are excreted faster. • Accordingly, basic drugs are excreted faster if urine is acidified. Filtration • Filtration is a passage of drugs through aqueous pores in the membrane or through paracellular spaces. • Lipid-insoluble drugs cross biological membranes by filtration if their molecular size is smaller than the diameter of the pores. • However, capillaries (except those in brain) have large paracellular spaces and most drugs (even albumin) can filter through these. Carrier transport • All cell membranes have transmembrane proteins which serve as carriers or transporters for drugs across the membrane. 1)Transporters combine transiently with substrate 2)carry the substrate to the other side of the membrane 3) the substrate dissociates 4)the transporter returns back to its original state. Carrier transport • - Carrier transport is: specific for the substrate, saturable, competitively inhibited by analogues which utilize the same transporter, - much slower than the flux through channels. Carrier transport • Depending on requirement of energy, carrier transport is of two types: • Facilitated diffusion • Active transport Facilitated diffusion • The transporter, solute carrier transporters (SLC), operates passively without needing energy and translocates the substrate in the direction of its electrochemical gradient, i.e. from higher to lower concentration. Active transport • It requires energy, • is inhibited by metabolic poisons, • transports the solute against its electrochemical gradient (low to high) • resulting in selective accumulation of the substance on one side of the membrane. Pinocytosis • It is the process of transport across the cell in particulate form by formation of vesicles. • This is applicable to proteins and other big molecules. ABSORPTION • Absorption is movement of the drug from its site of administration into the circulation. • Factors affecting absorption are: -Aqueous solubility ( a drug given as watery solution is absorbed faster than when the same is given in solid form or as oily solution). -Concentration (a drug given as concentrated solution is absorbed faster than from dilute solution). -Area of absorbing surface ( The larger is the surface area, the faster is the absorption). -Vascularity of the absorbing surface. -Route of administration ROUTES OF DRUG ADMINISTRATION LOCAL ROUTES • 1. Topical (skin, cornea, mucous membranes) • 2. Deeper tissues ( intra-articular injection, infiltration around a nerve (lidocaine)) SYSTEMIC ROUTES • 1. Oral • 2. Sublingual (s.l.) or buccal • 3. Rectal • 4. Cutaneous - Transdermal therapeutic systems (TTS) • 5. Inhalation • 6. Nasal • 7. Subcutaneous (s.c.) • 8. Intramuscular (i.m.) • 9. Intravenous (i.v.) • 10. Intradermal injection • • • • • There are some fundamental pharmacokinetic parameters, which must be understood: bioavailability (F), volume of distribution (Vd) clearance (CL) Plasma half-life (t½) Steady state plasma concentration (Css) BIOAVAILABILITY • Bioavailability refers to the rate and extent of absorption of a drug from a dosage form as determined by its concentration-time curve in blood. • It is a measure of the fraction (F ) of administered dose of a drug that reaches the systemic circulation in the unchanged form. • Bioavailability of drug injected i.v. is 100%. • It is frequently lower after oral ingestion because of: - the drug may be incompletely absorbed. - the absorbed drug may undergo first pass metabolism in the intestinal wall/liver or be excreted in bile. BIOAVAILABILITY AUC oral administration F = ------------------------------- X 100% AUC iv administration Absolute bioavailability - bioavailability of some delivery methods is compared with that of intravenous injection Relative bioavailability - bioavailability of some delivery methods is compared with other delivery methods in a particular study Bioequivalence • Oral formulations of a drug from different manufacturers or different batches from the same manufacturer may have the same amount of the drug (chemically equivalent) but may not yield the same blood levels—biologically inequivalent. • Two preparations of a drug are considered bioequivalent when the rate and extent of bioavailability of the active drug from them is not significantly different under suitable test. DISTRIBUTION • Once a drug has gained access to the blood stream, it gets distributed to other tissues that initially had no drug, concentration gradient being in the direction of plasma to tissues. The extent and pattern of distribution of a drug depends on its: • lipid solubility • ionization at physiological pH (a function of its pKa) • extent of binding to plasma and tissue proteins • presence of tissue-specific transporters • differences in regional blood flow. Apparent volume of distribution • Apparent volume of distribution (Vd) Presuming that the body behaves as a single homogeneous compartment with volume V into which the drug gets immediately and uniformly distributed. • The hypothetical volume that could contain total amout of a drug in the body at the same concentration as that present in plasma dose administered • Vd =————————— plasma concentration • Vd< VH2O (volume of body water) - drug is distributed into plasma and extracellular fluid; • Vd= VH2O- drug is distributed into plasma, extracellular and intracellular fluid. • Vd> VH2O –Drug is present in extravascular tissue (sequestration / accumulation in tissues). - Plasma concentration is low. - In case of poisoning, drugs are not removed by haemodialysis • The capillary endothelial cells in brain have tight junctions and lack large paracellular spaces. Further, an investment of neural tissue covers the capillaries. Together they constitute the so called blood-brain barrier (BBB). A similar blood-CSF barrier is located in the choroid Plexus. • Only lipid-soluble drugs are able to penetrate and have action on the central nervous system. • Inflammation of meninges or brain increases the risk that some drugs accumulate in the brain. • • • • • • Blood-brain barrier Blood-CSF barrier Blood-placental barrier Blood-ocular barrier Blood-retinal barrier Blood–testis barrier • Drugs may accumulate in specific organs by active transport or get bound to specific tissue constituents. • Drugs sequestrated in various tissues are unequally distributed, tend to have larger Vd and longer duration of action. • Local / general toxicity due to high concentration. • Chemical alteration of the drug in the body. • It is needed to render nonpolar (lipid-soluble) compounds polar (lipidinsoluble) so that they are not reabsorbed in the renal tubules and are excreted. • The primary site for drug metabolism is liver; others are—kidney, intestine, lungs and plasma. Biotransformation of drugs may lead to the following: • Inactivation Most drugs are rendered inactive or less active, • Active metabolite Many drugs could be converted to one or more active metabolite; • Activation of inactive drug Few drugs are inactive as such and need conversion in the body to active metabolites. Such a drug is called a prodrug. • The prodrug is more stable, has better bioavailability or less side effects and toxicity. • Biotransformation reactions can be classified into: • Phase 1/Nonsynthetic reactions:-Oxidation -Reduction -Hydrolysis • Phase 2/Synthetic reactions/Conjugation reactions/ : endogenous radical is conjugated to the drug to form a polar highly ionized substanse, which is easily excreted in urine or bile. • Inhibition of drug metabolism can precipitate toxicity of the object drug (whose metabolism has been inhibited) • Consequences of induction: 1. Decreased intensity and/or duration of action of drugs 2. Tolerance—if the drug induces its own metabolism (autoinduction), e.g. carbamazepine, rifampin. • Metabolism of a drug during its passage from the site of absorption into the systemic circulation. • All orally administered drugs are exposed to drug metabolizing enzymes in the intestinal wall and liver (where they first reach through the portal vein). • Presystemic metabolism in the gut (intestine) and liver can be limited/avoided by administering the drug through parenteral routes. • The first pass metabolism is an important determinant of oral bioavailability. • Excretion is the passage out of systemically absorbed drug. • Drugs and their metabolites are excreted in: 1.Urine 2.Faeces 3. Exhaled air 4. Saliva and sweat 5. Milk • The kidney is responsible for excreting all water soluble substances. • Renal excretion = (Glomerular filtration + tubular secretion) – tubular reabsorption • Glomerular capillaries have pores larger than usual; all nonprotein bound drug (whether lipid-soluble or insoluble) presented to the glomerulus is filtered. • Glomerular filtration of a drug depends on its plasma protein binding and renal blood flow. • It is a passive diffusion and depends on lipid solubility and ionization of the drug at the existing urinary pH. • Lipid-soluble drugs filtered back in the tubules, • Nonlipid-soluble and highly ionized drugs are unable to do so. • Weak bases ionize more and are less reabsorbed in acidic urine. • Weak acids ionize more and are less reabsorbed in alkaline urine. • This is the active transfer of organic acids and bases by specific transporters in the proximal tubules. • Active transport of the drug across tubules reduces concentration of it in vessels. • Drug elimination is the sumtotal of metabolic inactivation (biotransformation) and excretion. • Clearance (CL) – the volume of plasma which is cleared of a drug per unit time (drug is completely removed). • CLtotal= CLrenal + CLliver + CLlung + CLother • It can be calculated as: Rate of elimination CL = -------------------------C where C is the plasma concentration. • The Plasma half-life (t½) of a drug is the time taken for its plasma concentration to be reduced to half of its original value. • Mathematically, elimination t½ is ln2 • t½ = ------ , where - k is the elimination rate constant of the drug, k - ln2 - natural logarithm of 2 (or 0.693) • k = CL / Vd t1 2 ln 2 ln 2 Vd k el Cl Nearly complete drug elimination occurs in 4–5 half lives. • 1 t½ – 50% drug is eliminated. • 2 t½ – 75% drug is eliminated. • 3 t½ – 87.5% drug is eliminated. • 4 t½ – 93.75% drug is eliminated. • Steady state plasma concentration (Css) - the concentration of a drug in plasma at the time a “steady state” has been achieved (rates of drug administration and drug elimination are equal). • dose rate • Css = ————— • CL • Doubling the dose would double the average Css. • Doubling the dosage interval would reduce twice the average Css. скор _ введ D / время D / T Css Cl Cl Cl • Plasma concentration plateaus and fluctuates about an average steadystate level. This is known as the plateau principle of drug accumulation. • Steady-state is reached in 4–5 half lives . • The amplitude of fluctuations in plasma concentration at steady-state depends on the dose interval relative to the t½, i.e. the difference between the maximum and minimum levels is less if smaller doses are repeated more frequently. • Drugs with short t½ (upto 2–3 hr) administered at conventional intervals (6–12 hr) achieve the target levels only intermittently and fluctuations in plasma concentration are marked. In case of many drugs this however is therapeutically acceptable. • For drugs with longer t½ a dose will accumulate according to plateau principle and produce toxicity later on. • Such drugs are often administered by initial loading and subsequent maintenance doses. • This is a single or few quickly repeated doses given in the beginning to attain target concentration rapidly. • It may be calculated as: Loading dose = Vd x Css • This dose is one that is to be repeated at specified intervals after the attainment of target Css so as to maintain the same by balancing elimination. • It may be calculated as: Maintenance dose= CL x Css x ΔT • If there is no urgency, maintenance doses can be given from the beginning. • • • • By prolonging absorption from site of administration By increasing plasma protein binding By retarding rate of metabolism By retarding renal excretion • • • • • • • • • • • Side effects Toxic effects Tolerance and tachyphylaxis Idiosyncrasy Drug allergy Photosensitivity Drug dependence - Psychological dependence / Physical dependence Drug withdrawal reactions Teratogenicity Mutagenicity Carcinogenicity