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Pharmacokinetics



 
 
Pharmacokinetics (in Greek
Greek language

Greek is an Indo-European languages native to the southern Balkan peninsula, the language of the Greek people. It forms an independent branch within Indo-European....
: “pharmacon” meaning drug and “kinetikos” meaning putting in motion, the study of time dependency; sometimes abbreviated as “PK”) is a branch of pharmacology
Pharmacology

Pharmacology is the study of drug action. More specifically it is the study of the interactions that occur between a living organism and exogenous chemicals that alter normal biochemical function....
 dedicated to the determination of the fate of substances administered externally to a living organism. In practice, this discipline is applied mainly to drug substances, though in principle it concerns itself with all manner of compounds ingested or otherwise delivered externally to an organism, such as nutrients, metabolites, hormones, toxins, etc.

Pharmacokinetics is often studied in conjunction with pharmacodynamics
Pharmacodynamics

Pharmacodynamics is the study of the biochemical and physiological effects of drugs on the body or on microorganisms or parasites within or on the body and the mechanisms of drug action and the relationship between drug concentration and effect....
.






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Pharmacokinetics (in Greek
Greek language

Greek is an Indo-European languages native to the southern Balkan peninsula, the language of the Greek people. It forms an independent branch within Indo-European....
: “pharmacon” meaning drug and “kinetikos” meaning putting in motion, the study of time dependency; sometimes abbreviated as “PK”) is a branch of pharmacology
Pharmacology

Pharmacology is the study of drug action. More specifically it is the study of the interactions that occur between a living organism and exogenous chemicals that alter normal biochemical function....
 dedicated to the determination of the fate of substances administered externally to a living organism. In practice, this discipline is applied mainly to drug substances, though in principle it concerns itself with all manner of compounds ingested or otherwise delivered externally to an organism, such as nutrients, metabolites, hormones, toxins, etc.

Pharmacokinetics is often studied in conjunction with pharmacodynamics
Pharmacodynamics

Pharmacodynamics is the study of the biochemical and physiological effects of drugs on the body or on microorganisms or parasites within or on the body and the mechanisms of drug action and the relationship between drug concentration and effect....
. Pharmacodynamics explores what a drug does to the body, whereas pharmacokinetics explores what the body does to the drug. Pharmacokinetics includes the study of the mechanisms of absorption and distribution of an administered drug, the rate at which a drug action begins and the duration of the effect, the chemical changes of the substance in the body (e.g. by enzymes) and the effects and routes of excretion of the metabolites of the drug.

ADME

Pharmacokinetics is divided into several areas which includes the extent and rate of Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism and Excretion. This is commonly referred to as the ADME
ADME

ADME is an acronym in pharmacokinetics and pharmacology for absorption , distribution , metabolism, and excretion, and describes the disposition of a pharmaceutical Chemical compound within an organism....
 scheme. However recent understanding about the drug-body interactions brought about the inclusion of new term Liberation. Now Pharmacokinetics can be better described as LADME.
  • Liberation
    Libération

    Lib?ration is a France daily newspaper founded in Paris in 1973 by Jean-Paul Sartre, Pierre Victor alias Benny L?vy and Serge July in the wake of the protest movements of May 1968....
     is the process of release of drug from the formulation
    Pharmaceutical formulation

    Pharmaceutical formulation, in pharmaceutics, is the process in which different chemical substances, including the active drug, are combined to produce a final medication....
    .
  • Absorption
    Absorption (Pharmacokinetics)

    In pharmacology , absorption is the movement of a drug into the bloodstream.Absorption involves several phases. First, the drug needs to be administered via some route of administration and in a specific dosage form such as a tablet, capsule, and so on....
     is the process of a substance entering the body.
  • Distribution
    Distribution (pharmacology)

    Distribution in pharmacology is a branch of pharmacokinetics which describes the reversible transfer of drug from one location to another within the body....
     is the dispersion or dissemination of substances throughout the fluids and tissues of the body.
  • Metabolism
    Metabolism

    Metabolism is the set of chemical reactions that occur in living organisms in order to maintain life. These processes allow organisms to grow and reproduce, maintain their structures, and respond to their environments....
     is the irreversible transformation of parent compounds into daughter metabolites.
  • Excretion
    Excretion

    Excretion is the process of eliminating waste products of metabolism and other non-useful materials. It is an essential process in all forms of life....
     is the elimination of the substances from the body. In rare cases, some drugs irreversibly accumulate in a tissue in the body.


Pharmacokinetics describes how the body affects a specific drug after administration. Pharmacokinetic properties of drugs may be affected by elements such as the site of administration and the concentration in which the drug is administered. These may affect the absorption rate.

Analysis

Pharmacokinetic analysis is performed by noncompartment
Compartment (pharmacokinetics)

In pharmacokinetics, a compartment is a defined volume of body fluids. It is distinguished from anatomic compartments, which are bounded by fasciae....
al (model independent) or compartmental methods. Noncompartmental methods estimate the exposure to a drug by estimating the area under the curve of a concentration-time graph. Compartmental methods estimate the concentration-time graph using kinetic models. Compartment-free methods are often more versatile in that they do not assume any specific compartmental model and produce accurate results also acceptable for bioequivalence studies.

Noncompartmental analysis

Noncompartmental PK analysis is highly dependent on estimation of total drug exposure. Total drug exposure is most often estimated by Area Under the Curve methods, with the trapezoidal rule (numerical differential equations) the most common area estimation method. Due to the dependence of the length of 'x' in the trapezoidal rule, the area estimation is highly dependent on the blood/plasma sampling schedule. That is, the closer your time points are, the closer the trapezoids are to the actual shape of the concentration-time curve.

Compartmental analysis

Compartmental
Multi-compartment model

A multi-compartment model is a type of mathematical model used to describe the way materials or energies are transmitted among the compartments of a system....
 PK analysis uses kinetic models to describe and predict the concentration-time curve. PK compartmental models are often similar to kinetic models used in other scientific disciplines such as chemical kinetics
Chemical kinetics

Chemical kinetics, also known as reaction kinetics, is the study of reaction rate of chemical processes. Chemical kinetics includes investigations of how different experimental conditions can influence the speed of a chemical reaction and yield information about the reaction mechanism and transition states, as well as the construction of ma...
 and thermodynamics
Thermodynamics

In physics, thermodynamics is the study of the conversion of heat energy into different forms of energy ; different energy conversions into heat energy; and its relation to macroscopic variables such as temperature, pressure, and volume....
. The advantage of compartmental to some noncompartmental analysis is the ability to predict the concentration at any time. The disadvantage is the difficulty in developing and validating the proper model. Compartment-free modeling based on curve stripping does not suffer this limitation. "PK Solutions" is an easy to use, industry standard software that produces both noncompartmental as well as compartment-free results suitable for research and education. The simplest PK compartmental model is the one-compartmental PK model with IV bolus administration and first-order elimination. The most complex PK models (called PBPK models) rely on the use of physiological information to ease development and validation.

Bioanalytical methods

Bioanalytical methods are necessary to construct a concentration-time profile. Chemical techniques are employed to measure the concentration of drugs in biological matrix, most often plasma. Proper bioanalytical methods should be selective and sensitive.

Mass spectrometry
Pharmacokinetics is often studied using mass spectrometry
Mass spectrometry

Mass spectrometry is an analytical technique for the determination of the elemental composition of a sample or molecule. It is also used for elucidating the chemical structures of molecules, such as peptides and other chemical compounds....
 because of the complex nature of the matrix (often blood or urine) and the need for high sensitivity to observe low dose and long time point data. The most common instrumentation used in this application is LC-MS
Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry

Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry is an analytical chemistry technique that combines the physical separation capabilities of HPLC with the mass analysis capabilities of mass spectrometry....
 with a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer
Quadrupole mass analyzer

The quadrupole mass analyzer is one type of mass analyzer used in mass spectrometry. As the name implies, it consists of 4 circular rods, set perfectly parallel to each other....
. Tandem mass spectrometry is usually employed for added specificity. Standard curves and internal standards are used for quantitation of usually a single pharmaceutical in the samples. The samples represent different time points as a pharmaceutical is administered and then metabolized or cleared from the body. Blank or t=0 samples taken before administration are important in determining background and insuring data integrity with such complex sample matrices. Much attention is paid to the linearity of the standard curve; however it is not uncommon to use curve fitting
Curve fitting

Curve fitting is finding a curve which has the best fit to a series of data points and possibly other constraints. This section is an introduction to both interpolation and regression analysis....
 with more complex functions such as quadratics since the response of most mass spectrometers is less than linear across large concentration ranges.

There is currently considerable interest in the use of very high sensitivity mass spectrometry for microdosing
Microdosing

Microdosing is a technique for studying the behaviour of drugs in humans through the administration of doses so low they are unlikely to produce whole-body effects, but high enough to allow the cellular response to be studied....
 studies, which are seen as a promising alternative to animal experimentation.

Population pharmacokinetics

Population pharmacokinetics is the study of the sources and correlates of variability in drug concentrations among individuals who are the target patient population receiving clinically relevant doses of a drug of interest. Certain patient demographic, pathophysiological, and therapeutical features, such as body weight, excretory and metabolic functions, and the presence of other therapies, can regularly alter dose-concentration relationships. For example, steady-state concentrations of drugs eliminated mostly by the kidney are usually greater in patients suffering from renal failure than they are in patients with normal renal function receiving the same drug dosage. Population pharmacokinetics seeks to identify the measurable pathophysiologic factors that cause changes in the dose-concentration relationship and the extent of these changes so that, if such changes are associated with clinically significant shifts in the therapeutic index, dosage can be appropriately modified. The industry standard software for population pharmacokinetics analysis is NONMEM
NONMEM

NONMEM is a software package developed at UCSF for use in population pharmacokinetics. Its name is an acronym for non-linear mixed effects modeling....
.. An alternative is MCSim
MCSim

GNU MCSim is a suite of simulation software. It allows one to design one's own statistical or simulation models,perform Monte Carlo method simulations, and Bayesian inference through Markov chain models....
, originally developed for PBPK models.

See also

  • blood alcohol concentration
  • Biological half-life
    Biological half-life

    The biological half-life of a substance is the time it takes for a substance to lose half of its pharmacologic, physiologic, or radiologic activity, as per the Medical Subject Headings definition....
  • bioavailability
    Bioavailability

    In pharmacology, bioavailability is used to describe the fraction of an administered dose of unchanged drug that reaches the systemic circulation, one of the principal pharmacokinetics properties of medication....
  • toxicokinetics
    Toxicokinetics

    Toxicokinetics is the application of pharmacokinetics to determine the relationship between the systemic exposure of a compound in animal testings and its toxin....
  • Patlak plot
    Patlak plot

    A Patlak plot is a Graph of a function analysis technique based on the Compartment model that uses linear regression to identify and analyze pharmacokinetics problems involving irreversible uptake, such as in the case of deoxyglucose....


External links

  • Noncompartmental Pharmacokinetics Software
  • The Complete Pharmacokinetic Database