3 - Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics Flashcards
What is pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics?
- Pharmacokinetics: what the body does to the drug
- Pharmacodynamics: what the drug does to the body
What are some of the pharmacokinetic facts we need to know about a drug before it can be approved for use?
What are some factors that can affect the pharmacokinetics/Vd of a drug?
What is bioavailabilty and what is it affected by?
Amount of drug that gets to the systemic circulation unchanged!
Affected by: formulation, age, food (chelation), vomiting, malabsorption (Crohn’s), first pass metabolism in liver and gut
100% in IV
Why is metformin available in different preparations?
- Modified slow release only needs to be taken once a day, less likely to have GI side effects
- More expensive to have extended release but patients more likely to adhere if less side effects
- Most of the time different preparations are just branding, e.g nurofen period pain
What are some factors that affect the distribution of a drug?
- Blood flow
- Lipophilicity
- Hydrophilicty
- Protein binding (difficult to distribute when bound)
- Vd
- Pregnancy
- Hypoalbuminaemia
- Renal failure
- Other drugs displacing the original drug from protein binding
What is the multicompartment model of drug distribution?
When prescribing a patient a second drug, when should you be really careful with the first drug interactions?
- Second drug may displace first so more first drug that can elicit a response
- Be careful if first drug is highly protein bound, has a narrow therapeutic index, low Vd
How do you work out the volume of distribution?
- Larger Vd than body water means it is absorbed by the adipose tissue
- Larger weight, more adipose so larger Vd so need higher dose
What are the two phases of drug metabolism?
What CYP’s are affected by smoking and alcohol, and what else can they be affected by?
- Age
- Hepatic disease
- Blood flow to liver
- Alcohol and Cigarette smoking (CYP450 inhibited in acute, induced in chronic)
What changes can CYP450 enzymes make to a drug?
- Can inactivate active drugs
- Can activate inactive drugs, e.g Levodopa
- Can covert active drug into another one e.g codeine to morphine
What is the most common CYP that metabolises drugs and what CYP is an example of genetic variations?
- CYP3A4
- CYP2D6 absent in some caucasians and over expressed in 30% of Africans. Has substrates like beta blockers and SSRIs
When dosing two different patients for a drug, what should you think about in terms of the metabolism of the drug?
- Race
- Sex (women slower ethanol metaboliser)
- Self induced metabolism with drugs e.g Carbamazepine
- If they are taking St John’s Wort (inducer of CYP3A4)
- Weight
- Smoking and drinking status
- Age
What routes can drugs be eliminated from the body?
- Mainly through the kidney
- Faeces
- Hair
- Sweat
- Tears
- Saliva
- Breast milk
- Genital secretions
What type of drug molecules are excreted renally?
- Low weight polar molecules
- Clearance mainly affected by GFR
What type of drug molecules are excreted hepatically and therefore into the faeces?
Usually high molecular weight molecules, conjugated with glucaronic acid