Pharmacokinetics Flashcards
Pharmacokinetics
What the body does to the drug
Movement of drug molecules across cell barriers, can be either …. or …..
Lipophilic –> diffusion through lipid
Hydrophilic –> diffusion through aqueous channel
Transport across a concentration gradient, can be either …. or …..
Passive –> from high to low concentration, without energy (facilitate diffusion, passive diffusion)
Active –> from low to high, with energy (primary active transport –> ATP or secondary active transport –> symport or antiport
P-glycoprotein (P-gp) (7)
- one of the key transporter systems in the body
- ABC transporters family, multi-drug resistance protein 1 (MDR-1)
- ATP dependent transport molecule (GI tract, blood-brain barrier, placenta…)
- “pumps” drugs from intra-cellular intro extracellular space
- imp modulator of intestinal drug transport, expel drugs from intestinal mucosa into lumen (contributes to first pass elimination)
- drugs that inhibit it (ex: varapil) –> increase bio availability of other drugs –> increase the concentration of toxic drugs in plasma
- drugs that induce it (rifampin) –> decrease bio availability of other drugs –> decrease plasma concentration
pH and ionization (3)
- pKa: pH at which 50% of the drug is in its non- ionized form and 50% is in its ionized form
- Ionized is polar, it does not cross barriers very well; so, it would be eliminated quickly via the kidney
- Example: aspirin. It is absorbed by ion trapping. When it is in the stomach its in the non-ionized form so its absorbed. But when it enters the blood, it becomes ionized again so it cannot go back to the stomach, that’s why it is called ion trapping.
Binding of drugs to plasma proteins (6)
- Albumin binds acidic drugs
- B- globulin and acidic glycoprotein binds basic drugs
- Saturable binding –> ?
- Extensive binding –> ?
- Competition
- Drugs bind to proteins in order to be transported
- Absorption
2. Main routes
- drug goes from site of administration into plasma
2. oral, sublingual, rectal, application to epithelial surface, inhalation.
Factors affecting GI absorption (5)
- GI motility
- GI pH
- Particle size and formulation
- Physiochemical factors - weak acids and bases are well absorbed, strong acids and bases are poorly absorbed
- Splanchnic blood flow - if you increase it, absorption of the drug could increase and vice-versa
Bio-availability (5)
- part of the drug which reaches systemic circulation
- oral dose –> portal circulation –> liver –> systemic circulation
- intravenous dose –> systemic circulation –> liver
- Rectal administration –> majority of drug goes directly to systemic circulation, but if it not inserted deep enough it will go through portal circulation and to liver etc
- calculated from (area under the plasma concentration curve) AUC(route)/ AUC(IV)
Bio-equivalence (2)
- biological equivalence of 2 proprietary preparations of drug
- if 2 products are bio-equivalent, it means that they would be expected to be clinically the same
First-pass (pre-systemic) metabolism (3)
- take into account how much of the drug will be metabolized in the liver and in the gut wall
- the concentration of the drug is greatly reduced before it reaches systemic circulation
- oral, sublingual, rectal, inhalation, injection
Where in the body can drugs be metabolized? (2)
- Mainly in the liver, but everywhere
- Liver and kidney are the most imp organs responsible for elimination of the drugs
Bio-transformation
-chemical modification made by organism on chemical compound (drug, toxin, nutrient)
Drug metabolism
-Phases (5)
- Phase I
- Phase II
- Genetic factors
- Induction of drug metabolism
- Inhibition of drug metabolism
Drug metabolism
-Phase I (5)
- catabolic
- more polar (water-soluble) or more reactive product by unmasking or inserting polar functional groups such as OH, SH, NH2
- Oxidation - cytochrome p450, monoamine oxidase, alcohol dehydrogenase
- Reduction - warfarin, clonazepam, naloxone
- Hydrolysis - aspirin