Lecture 9 Flashcards

Metabolism + Individuals

1
Q

How might toxic effects slip through clinical trials?

A

Non-response from patients experiencing the toxic effect.

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2
Q

Factors Affecting ADME

A
  • Gender
  • Age
  • Weight
  • Fitness
  • Diet
  • Organ function
  • Other medicines
  • Lifestyle
  • Other health states
  • Genetics

Some are not evident until after the drug is taken, can have significant effects on drugs like increasing half lives

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3
Q

PK alters….

A

Levels and durations of drugs in the body

  • Increased serum levels/duration will increase the likelihood of adverse effects
  • Decreased serum levels/durations will decrease the clinical response
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4
Q

PK Examples

A
  • GI Absorption altered - disease status of food
  • Distribution/Transport - differences in non-receptor drug binding sites in plasma or tissues, Vd or obesity
  • Excretion - renal or hepatic function due to age or disease process
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5
Q

Differences in Metabolism

A

Metabolic enzymes may be regulated by:

  • Non-genetic change in enzyme activity (diet, drugs, etc.)
  • Genetic variations - polymorphisms
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6
Q

Non-Genetic Changes

A
  • Environmental or lifestyle expose introduces a chemical (natural or synthetic) that modifies enzymatic activity
  • Can modify enzyme activity via competition or induction
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7
Q

Importance of CYP3A4

A
  • About half of all drugs are metabolized by this enzyme in Phase I
  • Includes statins, alprazolam, loratidine, warfarin, and methadone
  • Grapefruit is an inhibitor of this enzyme
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8
Q

Genetic Modifications

A
  • Twin studies have shown that drug metabolism is increasingly seen as heritable
  • Many genetic factors account for most of the variations in metabolic rates for many drugs
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9
Q

Polymorphism

A
  • DNA variation that occurs with >1% frequency
  • Can occur in coding or non-coding regions
  • May be insetions or deletions
  • May be point mutations, can be synonymous (no change in amino acid) or nonsynonymous (change in amino acid)
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10
Q

Important Genetic Polymorphisms

A
  • Isoniazid (acetylation) NAT2 - slow acetylation phenotype, increases the ADR
  • Warfarin (hydroxylation) CYP2C9 - Polymorphism that increases the bleeding risk
  • Codeine (oxidation) CYP2D6 - Increase or decrease in metabolism depending on the polymorphism
  • Omeprazole (O-demethylation) CYP2C19 - poor metabolizers that increases the efficacy
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11
Q

Impact varies based on Therapeutic Window

A
  • CYP29*3 variant - Warfarin clearence is about 10% of normal values which causes a BIG bleeding risk
  • Same variant also affects metabolisms of certain nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs that are less critical concerns
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12
Q

Why does this matter?

A
  • 40% of human P450-mediated drug metabolism is by polymorphic CYP isozymes
  • Polymorphisms can alter “effective” doses (ADR and drug interactions)
  • Inter-individual variation in human metabolism is an obstacle to new drug development and may account for 30-40% of failures in clinical trials
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13
Q

Transporter Variation

A
  • Drug transporter P-glycoprotein (MDR-1, ABCB1) affects response to cancer, viral, histamine, convulsion, and immunosuppressant drugs
  • P-glycoproteins are also is associated with tacrolimus and nortriptyline neurotoxicity and susceptiblility to developing ulcerative colitis, renal carcinoma, and Parkinson’s disease
  • Transporter variation can also affect levels of drug targets in the body (EX: Methotrexate’s DHFR)
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