Farmakokinetik
Farmakokinetik
Farmakokinetik
Clearance (1)
Is defined as that fraction of the apparent
volume of distribution is removed in unit
of time ml/min/kg
Indicates the volume of biological fluid
that would have to be completely freed of
drug to account for elimination
The total body clearance is usually
subdivided into renal and non-renal
(hepatic) clearances
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Clearance (2)
Is the most important concept to be considered when
a rational regimen for long-term drug administration
is to be designed. We want to maintain steady-state
concentrations of a drug within a known therapeutic
range.
The steady-state will be achieved when the rate of
drug elimination equals the rate of drug
administration:
Dosing rate = CL . Css (1-1)
If the steady-state concentration of drug in blood is
known, the rate of drug clearance by the patient will
dictate the rate at which the drug should be
administered.
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Clearance (3)
The clearance of a given drug is constant over
the range of concentration encountered
clinically, because the absolute rate of drug
elimination is essentially a linear function of its
plasma concentration.
It means that the elimination of most drugs
follows first order kinetics a constant fraction
of drug is eliminated per unit of time.
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Clearance (4)
Drug clearance is similar to creatinine
clearance, where the rate of creatinine
elimination in the urine is relative to its
concentration in plasma.
Clearance of a drug is its elimination by all
routes normalized to the concentration of
the drug in biological fluid where
measurement can be made:
CL = Rate of elimination/C (1-2)
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Clearance (5)
For a single dose of a drug with complete
bioavailability (F=100%) and first order kinetic
elimination, total systemic clearance may be
determined from a mass balance and the
integration of equation (1-2) over time:
CL = F.Dose/AUC
(1-3)
AUC is the total area under the curve that
describes the drug concentration in the systemic
circulation as a function of time, from zero to
infinity.
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Time (Hours)
AUC yang dihitung dengan menggunakan rumus luas trapesium (g/ml x jam)
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Volume of distribution
Is defined as the fluid volume that would be
required to contain all the drug in the body at
the same concentration as in the blood or
plasma:
Vd = amount of drug in the body/C
(1-4)
The plasma volume is about 3 L, blood volume is
5.5 L, the extra cellular fluid is 12 L, and the
volume of TBW is 42 L for a typical 70 kg man
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Volume of distribution
Many drugs exhibit Vd for an excess of those
values. For example, if 500 ug of digoxin were in
in the body of a 70 kg subject, a plasma conc.
Of 0.75 ng would be observed.
Vd = 500 ug/0.75 ng/ml = 700 L, a value 10 x
greater than TBW of 70 kg
Digoxin distributes preferentially to muscle,
adipose tissue and its specific receptor, leaving a
very small amount in the plasma.
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Volume of distribution
Vd may vary widely depending on pKa,
degree of binding to plasma protein, the
partition coefficient of the drug in fat, the
degree of binding to other tissues, and so
forth
Vd for a given drug can vary according to
patients age, gender, disease, and the
body composition
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Volume of Distribution
The Vd in equation (1-4) considers the body as
single compartment. In this one-compartment
model, all drug administration occurs directly
into the central compartment and distribution of
drug is instantaneous throughout volume (V).
Clearance of drug from this compartment occurs
in a first order kinetic; that is, the amount of drug
eliminated per unit time depends on the amount
(concentration) of drug in the body
compartment.
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Kompartemen Perifer
Kompartemen Sentral
V1
Dosis
C1
k12
k21
V2
C2
ke
Volume of distribution
The decline of plasma concentration with time for a
drug introduced into one-compartment model :
Ct = (Dose/Vd) . exp(-kt) (1-5)
Ct = C0 . exp(-kt)
k = 0.693/t1/2
(1-6)
k = the rate constant for elimination that reflects
the fraction of drug removed from the
compartment per unit of time.
The one-compartment model is sufficient to apply
to most clinical situation for most drugs
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Co
Vd = Dose/Co
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t
0
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Time (Hours)
Half-Life (t1/2)
It is the time it takes for the plasma
concentration as the amount of drug in the
body to be reduced by 50%.
It is a derived parameter that changes as a
function of both clearance and Vd.
Relationship between t1/2, clearance, and
Vd at steady state is given by:
t1/2 = 0.693. Vss/CL (1-7)
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Half-life (t1/2)
CL is the measure of bodys ability to
eliminate a drug; as CL decreases due to
a disease process, t1/2 would be expected
to increase. This reciprocal relation is valid
only when the disease does not change
Vd.
T1/2 of diazepam increases with aging; it is
not CL that change as a function of age,
but the volume of distribution.
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Half-Life (t1/2)
Changes in drug protein binding may affect its CL as well
as its Vd, leading to an unpredictable changes in t1/2.
Although it can be a poor index of drug elimination, t1/2
provides a good indication of time required to reach
steady state after a dosage regimen is initiated. It is
required four half-lives to reach approximately 94% of a
steady-state drug concentration in the body.
It is also and indication of the time for a drug to be
removed from the body, and a means to estimate the
appropriate dosing interval.
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Bioavailability
Is defined as the amount of administered
drugs which reaches the systemic intact
It is determined from the relationship
between AUC after equivalent IV and PO
doses
F (absolute) = AUC after oral dose/AUC after IV dose
F (relative) = AUC after an oral dose of me-too product
AUC after an oral dose of original product
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Loading Dose
A loading dose is one of a series of doses
that may be given at the onset of therapy
with the aim of achieving the target
concentration rapidly:
Loading dose=Target concentration.Vss/F
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Examples of pharmacokinetic
calculation
The Vd and clearance of theophylline is 35
L and 3 L/h respectively in a 70 kg person.
If the target concentration is 10 ugr/ml,
then the loading dose is :
Loading dose = Target Cp . Vss/F
= 10 g/ml . 35 L = 350 mg
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Examples of pharmacokinetic
calculation
Maintenance dose rate = clearance . concentration
= 3 l/h . 10 mg/l = 30 mg/h
= 720 mg/day
Half-life = 0.693 . Vd/CL = 0.693 . 35 L/ 31/h
= 8 hours
The expected time to achieve 90 % Css is about 4
half-lives or 32 hours
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