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Clinical Pharmacokinetics Janice E. Sullivan, M.D. Brian Yarberry, Pharm.D.

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Page 1: Pk2

Clinical Pharmacokinetics

Janice E. Sullivan, M.D.

Brian Yarberry, Pharm.D.

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Why Study Pharmacokinetics (PK) and Pharmacodynamics (PD)?

• Individualize patient drug therapy

• Monitor medications with a narrow therapeutic index

• Decrease the risk of adverse effects while maximizing pharmacologic response of medications

• Evaluate PK/PD as a diagnostic tool for underlying disease states

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Clinical Pharmacokinetics

• The science of the rate of movement of drugs within biological systems, as affected by the absorption, distribution, metabolism, and elimination of medications

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Absorption• Must be able to get medications into the

patient’s body

• Drug characteristics that affect absorption:– Molecular weight, ionization, solubility, &

formulation

• Factors affecting drug absorption related to patients:– Route of administration, gastric pH, contents of GI

tract

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Absorption in the Pediatric Patient

• Gastrointestinal pH changes

• Gastric emptying

• Gastric enzymes

• Bile acids & biliary function

• Gastrointestinal flora

• Formula/food interaction

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Time to Peak Concentration

0102030405060708090

100

0 5 10 20 30 60 120 180

minutes

con

cen

trat

ion

IVOralRectal

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Distribution• Membrane permeability

– cross membranes to site of action

• Plasma protein binding– bound drugs do not cross membranes– malnutrition = albumin = free drug

• Lipophilicity of drug– lipophilic drugs accumulate in adipose tissue

• Volume of distribution

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Pediatric Distribution

• Body Composition total body water & extracellular fluid adipose tissue & skeletal muscle

• Protein Binding– albumin, bilirubin, 1-acid glycoprotein

• Tissue Binding– compositional changes

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Metabolism

• Drugs and toxins are seen as foreign to patients bodies

• Drugs can undergo metabolism in the lungs, blood, and liver

• Body works to convert drugs to less active forms and increase water solubility to enhance elimination

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Metabolism

• Liver - primary route of drug metabolism

• Liver may be used to convert pro-drugs (inactive) to an active state

• Types of reactions– Phase I (Cytochrome P450 system)– Phase II

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Phase I reactions• Cytochrome P450 system

• Located within the endoplasmic reticulum of hepatocytes

• Through electron transport chain, a drug bound to the CYP450 system undergoes oxidation or reduction

• Enzyme induction

• Drug interactions

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Phase I reactions types

• Hydrolysis

• Oxidation

• Reduction

• Demethylation

• Methylation

• Alcohol dehydrogenase metabolism

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Phase II reactions

• Polar group is conjugated to the drug

• Results in increased polarity of the drug

• Types of reactions– Glycine conjugation– Glucuronide conjugation– Sulfate conjugation

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Elimination

• Pulmonary = expired in the air

• Bile = excreted in feces– enterohepatic circulation

• Renal – glomerular filtration– tubular reabsorption– tubular secretion

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Pediatric Elimination

• Glomerular filtration matures in relation to age, adult values reached by 3 yrs of age

• Neonate = decreased renal blood flow, glomerular filtration, & tubular function yields prolonged elimination of medications

• Aminoglycosides, cephalosporins, penicillins = longer dosing interval

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Pharmacokinetic Principles

• Steady State: the amount of drug administered is equal to the amount of drug eliminated within one dosing interval resulting in a plateau or constant serum drug level

• Drugs with short half-life reach steady state rapidly; drugs with long half-life take days to weeks to reach steady state

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Steady State Pharmacokinetics

• Half-life = time required for serum plasma concentrations to decrease by one-half (50%)

• 4-5 half-lives to reach steady state0

102030405060708090

100

% steady state

1 2 3 4 5

Half-life

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Loading Doses

• Loading doses allow rapid achievement of therapeutic serum levels

• Same loading dose used regardless of metabolism/elimination dysfunction

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

w/ bolus

w/obolus

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Linear Pharmacokinetics

• Linear = rate of elimination is proportional to amount of drug present

• Dosage increases result in proportional increase in plasma drug levels

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

dose

conc

entr

atio

n

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Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics

• Nonlinear = rate of elimination is constant regardless of amount of drug present

• Dosage increases saturate binding sites and result in non- proportional increase/decrease in drug levels

05

101520253035404550

dose

conc

entr

atio

n

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Michaelis-Menten Kinetics

• Follows linear kinetics until enzymes become saturated

• Enzymes responsible for metabolism /elimination become saturated resulting in non-proportional increase in drug levels

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

dose

conc

entr

atio

nphenytoin

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Special Patient Populations

• Renal Disease: same hepatic metabolism, same/increased volume of distribution and prolonged elimination dosing interval

• Hepatic Disease: same renal elimination, same/increased volume of distribution, slower rate of enzyme metabolism dosage, dosing interval

• Cystic Fibrosis Patients: increased metabolism/ elimination, and larger volume of distribution dosage, dosage interval

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Pharmacogenetics

• Science of assessing genetically determined variations in patients and the resulting affect on drug pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics

• Useful to identify therapeutic failures and unanticipated toxicity