Lec 1- Basic pharmacokinetics Flashcards

1
Q

What is pharmacokinetics

A
  • Pharmacokinetics can easily be defined as
  • What the body does to the drug
  • It defines the kinetic change in a drug in the body over time
  • If the pharmacokinetics of a drug are poor, it can cause significant problems clinically
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2
Q

How is it used

A
  • Lead optimisation
  • Pre-clinical optimisation (starting doses, toxcitiy, therapeutic window)
  • Phase 1 FIM (starting doses, toxcitiy, therapeutic window)
  • Phase 2,3 = large trials (variabiliy in populations, dosing frequency)
  • Phase 4 = post market
  • Pharmacokinetics is first applied during drug discovery and development, and primarily during clincial trials to design the correct starting doses for animal studies
  • Which are then adjusted for first-in-man studies before being again used to propose a final dosing schedule for FDA submission and marketing
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3
Q

Clinical application of pharmacokinetics

A
  • Route of administration
  • Dosage form
  • Dosing intervals
  • Food effects- flucloxacillin (bad with food), some anti-malarials (increase effectiveness when taken with food)
  • Frequency of adverse effects
  • Dose adjustments
  • MUR’s
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4
Q

Pharmacokinetics deffinitions

A
  • Absorption- how does it get into the body
  • Distribution- how does it move around the body
  • Metabolism- will it remain intact
  • Excretion- how fast is the drug being eliminated
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5
Q

ADME- Absorption

  • What is drug absorption
  • What ways can you get a drug into a body
  • Is it an easy or complex process
A
  • When we talk about absorption we refer to the amount of drug reaching the part of the body what we can routinely sample during clinical trial (ie the blood)
  • Absorption is a complex process think about what happens when you take a drug orally
  • Absorption is a complex process, think about what happens when you take drug orally
  • The rate (how quick) and the extent (how much) of absorption is important to pharmacokinetics and is described by 2 terms
  1. Absorption rate (ka)- how fast drug gets into circulation
  2. Oral bioavailability (F)- how much of the drug ends up in blood
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6
Q

What could alter the absorption and hence the clinical outcome of a drug

A
  • pH of stomach- through food, or other medicines (antacid)
    • This is a problem because it effects ionisation of the drug, the more ionised the drug the less is absorbed due to phospholipid membrane
  • Drugs which effect peristalitc movement in small intestine which can effect absorption of the drug
  • Salt forms= poorly soluble drugs can be made into a salt which decrease dissolution time and therefore increase absorption rate
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7
Q

Pharmacokinetics- Distributio

A
  • Poorly distributed drugs= mostly stay in circulation
  • Well distributed drugs will spread to all tissues
  • Sometimes the distribtion can be different in different tissues (e.g. brain tissue)
  • Before you can expect to see a clinical response in a patient, te drug has to be able to leave the circulation (blood) and diffuse out into all of the tissues and organs
  • This is a really key concept as not all of the drug we give to patients will reach the target tissue
    *
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8
Q

Pharmacokinetic distribution- Distribution of a drug out of the circulation and into a tissue is affected by

A
  • Organ flow (is it rapid or slow)- blood flow to brain is far quickier than to digits
  • Organ barrier sites (is there a permeability barrier) e.g. blood brain barrier
  • When we are thinking about clinical effects the time it takes for the drug to distribute out of the circulation and into the target site is important. This means 2 types of distribution effect
    • Perfusion limited
    • Permeability limited
  • When we talk about distribution, the volume of distributio (Vd) is important in telling us how much a drug can distriute in the body and is VITAL in calculating target concentrations when choosing the right dose to give (loading dose)
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9
Q

What could alter the distribution and hence clinical outcome of a drug

A
  • Renal
  • % of adipose tissue (bodyweight)
  • Heart function
  • Pregnant (blood volume increase)
  • Amputee (Vd of a drug will be different- due to different volume)
  • Aneamic
  • Burns (due to loss of ability to maintain moisture leading to dehydration
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10
Q

Pharmacokinetic metabolism

A
  • A mechanism for destroying drugs, making them easier to remove from the body
  • This is typically a pathway where the body removes toxins/Drugs Phase 1 and 2 process
  • Typically in the liver and intestine
    • Mediated by drug metabolism enzyme (cP450)
    • Which metabolise drugs for eventual metabolism
    • Protective process (Endogenous function in the body
  • Phase 1= put on polar groups
  • Phase 2= conjugation
  • CYPp3A4- one of the main enzymes responsbile for metabolism
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11
Q

Pharmacokinetic elimination

A
  • Remember all drugs (and toxins) are eventually removed from the body
  • The process involves excretion of drug from the body through
    • Urine (kidneys)
    • Faeces (liver-small intestine)
    • Sweat
    • Tear fluid
    • Hair
    • Lungs
  • When we talk about excretion there are 3 important terms to think about
    1. Half-life-
    2. Elimination rate-
    3. Clearance-
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12
Q

What could alter the excretion and hence the clinical outcome of a drug

A
  • Kidney and liver funtion
  • Elderly (poor organ function)
  • Alcoholic- liver cirrhosis
  • Hepatitis
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13
Q

Pharmacokinetic- graphically

A
  • Clinical pharmacy-get information on drug concentrations (loading doses, through concentrations)
  • Collect blood samples over set time periods
  • When we work with pharmacokinetic data we are working from plasma concentrations collected over time
  • Graphically, we present this data using concentration vs time graphs
  • The shape of the graphs depends on the route of adminstration and tells us
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14
Q

Pharmacokinetics and patients

A
  • Pharmacokinetics is used to design dosage regimen in patients, this can be done during development of new drugs or in clinical setting (warfarin, Li, clonazepine, digoxin)
  • How long is absorption
  • Is distribution rapid
  • How effective is elimination
  • Do we see an effect (duration of action)
  • Is it toxic (MTC- max therapeutic conc NB MEC= minimum effective conc)
  • How do I maintain the duration of action
  • Plasma concentration profiles are really important in understanding the impact of ADME on the clinical activity
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