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The key takeaways are that clinical pharmacokinetics provides the mathematical basis to assess how drugs move through the body and enables dosage regimens to be designed for optimal efficacy and minimal toxicity.

The objectives of understanding clinical pharmacokinetics are to enable dosage regimen design, therapeutic drug monitoring, understanding kinetics concepts like first and zero order, and applying pharmacokinetic principles to individual patients.

The four processes quantified by pharmacokinetics are absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME).

1

Basic pharmacokinetics
Soraya Dhillon and Kiren Gill

Aims and learning outcomes

Pharmacokinetics is a fundamental scientic discipline that underpins


applied therapeutics. Patients need to be prescribed appropriate medicines
for a clinical condition. The medicine is chosen on the basis of an evidence-
based approach to clinical practice and assured to be compatible with
any other medicines or alternative therapies the patient may be taking.
The design of a dosage regimen is dependent on a basic under-
standing of the drug use process (DUP). When faced with a patient who
shows specic clinical signs and symptoms, pharmacists must always
ask a fundamental question: Is this patient suffering from a drug-related
problem? Once this issue is evaluated and a clinical diagnosis is avail-
able, the pharmacist can apply the DUP to ensure that the patient is
prescribed an appropriate medication regimen, that the patient under-
stands the therapy prescribed, and that an agreed concordance plan is
achieved.
Pharmacists using the DUP consider:
Need for a drug
Choice of a drug
Goals of therapy
Design of regimen
Route
Dose and frequency
Duration
Monitoring and review
Counselling
Once a particular medicine is chosen, the principles of clinical pharmaco-
kinetics are required to ensure the appropriate formulation of drug is
chosen for an appropriate route of administration. On the basis of the
patients drug handling parameters, which require an understanding of
2 Basic pharmacokinetics

absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion, the dosage regimen


for the medicine in a particular patient can be developed. The pharmacist
will then need to ensure that the appropriate regimen is prescribed to
achieve optimal efcacy and minimal toxicity. Pharmacists then ensure
that the appropriate monitoring is undertaken and that the patient receives
the appropriate information to ensure compliance. Clinical pharmaco-
kinetics is thus a fundamental knowledge base that pharmacists require
to ensure effective practice of pharmaceutical care.
The aim of this chapter is to provide the practising clinical pharma-
cist with the appropriate knowledge and skills of applied clinical phar-
macokinetics, which can be applied in everyday practice.
The objectives for this chapter are to enable the reader to:
State the rationale for using therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) to
optimise drug therapy.
Identify drugs that should be routinely monitored.
Dene rst-order and zero-order kinetics.
Apply one-compartment pharmacokinetics to single and multiple
dosing following the intravenous and oral administration of drugs.
Apply the basic principles of interpretation of serum drug concen-
trations in practice.
Apply one-compartment pharmacokinetics to describe steady-state
serum drug concentrations following oral slow-release dosing.
Use the method of iteration to derive individualised pharmaco-
kinetic parameters from serum drug concentration data.
Apply nonlinear pharmacokinetics to describe steady-state plasma
concentrations following parenteral and/or oral phenytoin therapy.

Introduction

Pharmacokinetics provides a mathematical basis to assess the time course


of drugs and their effects in the body. It enables the following processes
to be quantied:
Absorption
Distribution
Metabolism
Excretion
These pharmacokinetic processes, often referred to as ADME, determine
the drug concentration in the body when medicines are prescribed. A
fundamental understanding of these parameters is required to design an
Rates of reaction 3

Table 1.1 Drugs that should be routinely monitored

Therapeutic group Drugs

Aminoglycosides Gentamicin, tobramycin, amikacin


Cardioactive Digoxin, lidocaine
Respiratory Theophylline
Anticonvulsant Phenytoin, carbamazepine, phenobarbital
Others Lithium, ciclosporin

appropriate drug regimen for a patient. The effectiveness of a dosage


regimen is determined by the concentration of the drug in the body.
Ideally, the concentration of drug should be measured at the site of
action of the drug; that is, at the receptor. However, owing to inaccess-
ibility, drug concentrations are normally measured in whole blood from
which serum or plasma is generated. Other body uids such as saliva,
urine and cerebrospinal uid (CSF) are sometimes used. It is assumed
that drug concentrations in these uids are in equilibrium with the drug
concentration at the receptor.
It should be noted that the measured drug concentrations in plasma
or serum are often referred to as drug levels, which is the term that will
be used throughout the text. It refers to total drug concentration, i.e. a
combination of bound and free drug that are in equilibrium with each
other.
In routine clinical practice, serum drug level monitoring and opti-
misation of a dosage regimen require the application of clinical pharma-
cokinetics. A number of drugs show a narrow therapeutic range and for
these drugs therapeutic drug level monitoring is required (Chapter 2).
Table 1.1 identies drugs that should be routinely monitored.
A variety of techniques is available for representing the pharmaco-
kinetics of a drug. The most usual is to view the body as consisting of
compartments between which drug moves and from which elimination
occurs. The transfer of drug between these compartments is represented
by rate constants, which are considered below.

Rates of reaction

To consider the processes of ADME the rates of these processes have to be


considered; they can be characterised by two basic underlying concepts.
4 Basic pharmacokinetics

The rate of a reaction or process is dened as the velocity at which it


proceeds and can be described as either zero-order or first-order.

Zero-order reaction
Consider the rate of elimination of drug A from the body. If the amount
of the drug, A, is decreasing at a constant rate, then the rate of elimin-
ation of A can be described as:
dA
 k*
dt

where k*  the zero-order rate constant.


The reaction proceeds at a constant rate and is independent of the
concentration of A present in the body. An example is the elimination of
alcohol. Drugs that show this type of elimination will show accumula-
tion of plasma levels of the drug and hence nonlinear pharmacokinetics.

First-order reaction
If the amount of drug A is decreasing at a rate that is proportional to A,
the amount of drug A remaining in the body, then the rate of elimination
of drug A can be described as:

dA
 kA
dt

where k  the rst-order rate constant.


The reaction proceeds at a rate that is dependent on the concentration
of A present in the body. It is assumed that the processes of ADME fol-
low rst-order reactions and most drugs are eliminated in this manner.
Most drugs used in clinical practice at therapeutic dosages will
show rst-order rate processes; that is, the rate of elimination of most
drugs will be rst-order. However, there are notable exceptions, for
example phenytoin and high-dose salicylates. In essence, for drugs that
show a rst-order elimination process one can show that, as the amount
of drug administered increases, the body is able to eliminate the drug
accordingly and accumulation will not occur. If you double the dose
you will double the plasma concentration. However, if you continue to
increase the amount of drug administered then all drugs will change
from showing a rst-order process to a zero-order process, for example
in an overdose situation.
Pharmacokinetic models 5

Pharmacokinetic models

Pharmacokinetic models are hypothetical structures that are used


to describe the fate of a drug in a biological system following its
administration.

One-compartment model
Following drug administration, the body is depicted as a kinetically homo-
geneous unit (see Figure 1.1). This assumes that the drug achieves instant-
aneous distribution throughout the body and that the drug equilibrates
instantaneously between tissues. Thus the drug concentrationtime prole
shows a monophasic response (i.e. it is monoexponential; Figure 1.2a).
It is important to note that this does not imply that the drug
concentration in plasma (Cp) is equal to the drug concentration in the
tissues. However, changes in the plasma concentration quantitatively
reect changes in the tissues. The relationship described in Figure 1.2a
can be plotted on a log Cp vs time graph (Figure 1.2b) and will then
show a linear relation; this represents a one-compartment model.

Two-compartment model
The two-compartment model resolves the body into a central compart-
ment and a peripheral compartment (see Figure 1.3). Although these com-
partments have no physiological or anatomical meaning, it is assumed
that the central compartment comprises tissues that are highly perfused
such as heart, lungs, kidneys, liver and brain. The peripheral compart-
ment comprises less well-perfused tissues such as muscle, fat and skin.
A two-compartment model assumes that, following drug adminis-
tration into the central compartment, the drug distributes between that
compartment and the peripheral compartment. However, the drug does
not achieve instantaneous distribution, i.e. equilibration, between the
two compartments.
The drug concentrationtime prole shows a curve (Figure 1.4a),
but the log drug concentrationtime plot shows a biphasic response

ka k
Single component

Figure 1.1 One-compartment model. ka  absorption rate constant (h1), k 


elimination rate constant (h1).
6 Basic pharmacokinetics

Cp

(a) Time

log C p

(b) Time

Figure 1.2 (a) Plasma concentration (Cp) versus time prole of a drug showing
a one-compartment model. (b) Time prole of a one-compartment model showing
log Cp versus time.

Peripheral

k 12 k 21

Drug in k
Central

Figure 1.3 Two-compartment model. k12, k21 and k are rst-order rate constants:
k12  rate of transfer from central to peripheral compartment; k21  rate of transfer
from peripheral to central compartment; k  rate of elimination from central
compartment.
Pharmacokinetic models 7

Cp

(a) Time

log C p

(b) Time

Figure 1.4 (a) Plasma concentration versus time prole of a drug showing a two-
compartment model. (b) Time prole of a two-compartment model showing log Cp
versus time.

(Figure 1.4b) and can be used to distinguish whether a drug shows a


one- or two-compartment model.
Figure 1.4b shows a prole in which initially there is a rapid decline
in the drug concentration owing to elimination from the central compart-
ment and distribution to the peripheral compartment. Hence during this
rapid initial phase the drug concentration will decline rapidly from the
central compartment, rise to a maximum in the peripheral compartment,
and then decline.
After a time interval (t), a distribution equilibrium is achieved
between the central and peripheral compartments, and elimination of the
drug is assumed to occur from the central compartment. As with the one-
compartment model, all the rate processes are described by rst-order
reactions.
8 Basic pharmacokinetics

Cp

(a) Time

log C p

(b) Time

Figure 1.5 (a) Plasma concentration versus time prole of a drug showing
multicompartment model. (b) Time prole of a multicompartment model showing
log Cp versus time.

Multicompartment model
In this model the drug distributes into more than one compartment and the
concentrationtime prole shows more than one exponential (Figure 1.5a).
Each exponential on the concentrationtime prole describes a compart-
ment. For example, gentamicin can be described by a three-compartment
model following a single IV dose (see Figure 1.5b).

Pharmacokinetic parameters

This section describes various applications using the one-compartment


open model system.
Pharmacokinetic parameters 9

Elimination rate constant


Consider a single IV bolus injection of drug X (see Figure 1.2). As time
proceeds, the amount of drug in the body is eliminated. Thus the rate of
elimination can be described (assuming rst-order elimination) as:
dX
 kX
dt

Hence

X  X0 exp(kt)
where X  amount of drug X, X0  dose and k  rst-order elimination
rate constant.

Volume of distribution
The volume of distribution (Vd) has no direct physiological meaning; it
is not a real volume and is usually referred to as the apparent volume
of distribution. It is dened as that volume of plasma in which the total
amount of drug in the body would be required to be dissolved in order
to reflect the drug concentration attained in plasma.
The body is not a homogeneous unit, even though a one-compartment
model can be used to describe the plasma concentrationtime prole of
a number of drugs. It is important to realise that the concentration of the
drug (Cp) in plasma is not necessarily the same in the liver, kidneys or
other tissues.
Thus Cp in plasma does not equal Cp or amount of drug (X) in the
kidney or Cp or amount of drug (X) in the liver or Cp or amount of drug
(X) in tissues. However, changes in the drug concentration in plasma (Cp)
are proportional to changes in the amount of drug (X) in the tissues. Since

Cp (plasma)  Cp (tissues) i.e. Cp (plasma)  X (tissues)


Then

Cp (plasma)  Vd  X (tissues)
where Vd is the constant of proportionality and is referred to as the vol-
ume of distribution, which thus relates the total amount of drug in the
body at any time to the corresponding plasma concentration. Thus

X
Vd 
Cp
10 Basic pharmacokinetics

and Vd can be used to convert drug amount X to concentration. Since

X  X0 exp(kt)
then

X X exp(kt)
 0
Vd Vd

Thus

Cpt  Cp0 exp(kt)

This formula describes a monoexponential decay (see Figure 1.2), where


Cpt  plasma concentration at any time t.
The curve can be converted to a linear form (Figure 1.6) using
natural logarithms (ln):

ln Cpt  ln Cp0  kt

where the slope  k, the elimination rate constant; and the y
intercept  ln Cp0. Since

X
Vd 
Cp

then at zero concentration (Cp0), the amount administered is the dose, D,


so that
D
Cp0 
Vd

If the drug has a large Vd that does not equate to a real volume, e.g. total
plasma volume, this suggests that the drug is highly distributed in tis-
sues. On the other hand, if the Vd is similar to the total plasma volume
this will suggest that the total amount of drug is poorly distributed and
is mainly in the plasma.

Half-life
The time required to reduce the plasma concentration to one half its
initial value is dened as the half-life (t1/2).
Consider

ln Cpt  ln Cp0  kt
Pharmacokinetic parameters 11

*Concentration at time 0

ln C p

Time

Figure 1.6 Ln Cp versus time prole.

Let Cp0 decay to Cp0/2 and solve for t  t1/2:

ln(Cp0/2)  ln Cp0  kt1/2


Hence

kt1/2  ln Cp0  ln(Cp0/2)


and
(ln 2)
t1 / 2 
k
0.693
t1 / 2 
k
This parameter is very useful for estimating how long it will
take for levels to be reduced by half the original concentration. It can be
used to estimate for how long a drug should be stopped if a patient has
toxic drug levels, assuming the drug shows linear one-compartment
pharmacokinetics.

Clearance
Drug clearance (CL) is dened as the volume of plasma in the vascular
compartment cleared of drug per unit time by the processes of metab-
olism and excretion. Clearance for a drug is constant if the drug is
eliminated by rst-order kinetics. Drug can be cleared by renal excretion
or by metabolism or both. With respect to the kidney and liver, etc.,
clearances are additive, that is:

CLtotal  CLrenal CLnonrenal


12 Basic pharmacokinetics

Mathematically, clearance is the product of the rst-order elimination rate


constant (k) and the apparent volume of distribution (Vd). Thus

CLtotal  k  Vd

Hence the clearance is the elimination rate constant i.e. the fractional
rate of drug loss from the volume of distribution.
Clearance is related to half-life by

0.693  Vd
t1 / 2 
CL

If a drug has a CL of 2 L/h, this tells you that 2 litres of the Vd is cleared of
drug per hour. If the Cp is 10 mg/L, then 20 mg of drug is cleared per hour.

Pharmacokinetic applications

This section describes how pharmacokinetics can be used in clinical


practice.

Single IV administration
Decay from a toxic level
For example, patient D has a potentially toxic digoxin level of 4.5 g/L.
Given that the half-life of digoxin in this patient is 60 h, and assuming
that renal function is stable and absorption is complete, for how long
should the drug be stopped to allow the level to fall to 1.5 g/L?
(a) Calculate elimination rate constant (k):

0.693
k
60
 0.0116 h1

(b) Time for decay (t) from Cp1 to Cp2

ln Cp1  ln Cp 2
t
k
ln 4.5  ln 1.5
t
0.0116
 94.7 h
Pharmacokinetic applications 13

Cp

Time

Figure 1.7 Time prole of multiple IV doses.

Hence

t  4 days

Multiple doses
Some drugs may be used clinically on a single-dose basis, although most
drugs are administered continually over a period of time. When a drug is
administered at a regular dosing interval (orally or IV), the drug accumu-
lates in the body and the serum concentration will rise until steady-state
conditions have been reached, assuming the drug is administered again
before all of the previous dose has been eliminated (see Figure 1.7).

Steady state
Steady state occurs when the amount of drug administered (in a given
time period) is equal to the amount of drug eliminated in that same
period. At steady state the plasma concentrations of the drug (C pss) at any
time during any dosing interval, as well as the peak and trough, are
similar. The time to reach steady-state concentrations is dependent on
the half-life of the drug under consideration.

Effect of dose
The higher the dose, the higher the steady-state levels, but the time to
achieve steady-state levels is independent of dose (see Figure 1.8). Note
that the uctuations in Cp max and Cp min are greatest with higher doses.
14 Basic pharmacokinetics

12

10
A = 0.75 g
8

Cp 6
B = 0.5 g

2 C = 0.35 g

0
Time

Figure 1.8 Time proles of multiple IV doses reaching steady state using different
doses.

Effect of dosing interval


Consider a drug having a half-life of 3 h. When the dosing interval,
, is
less than the half-life, t1/2, greater accumulation occurs, i.e. higher
steady-state levels are higher and there is less uctuation in Cp max and
Cp min (see Figure 1.9, curve A). When
t1/2, then a lower accumulation
occurs with greater uctuation in Cp max and Cp min (see Figure 1.9, curve C).
If the dosing interval is much greater than the half-life of the drug,
then Cp min approaches zero. Under these conditions no accumulation
will occur and the plasma concentrationtime prole will be the result of
administration of a series of single doses.

Time to reach steady state


For a drug with one-compartment characteristics, the time to reach steady
state is independent of the dose, the number of doses administered, and
the dosing interval, but it is directly proportional to the half-life.

Prior to steady state


As an example, estimate the plasma concentration 12 h after therapy
commences with drug A given 500 mg three times a day.
Pharmacokinetic applications 15

12

10

A: 0.5g 2-hourly   2
8

Cp 6
B: 0.5g 3-hourly   3

4
C: 0.35g 6-hourly   6
2

0
Time

Figure 1.9 Time proles of multiple IV doses reaching steady state using different
dosing intervals.

Cp

Cp 12

8 12 16 24 36
Time (h)

Figure 1.10 Multiple intravenous doses prior to steady state.

Consider each dose as independent and calculate the contribution


of each dose to the plasma level at 12 h post dose (see Figure 1.10).
From the rst dose:

Cp1  Cp0 exp(k  12)


From the second dose:

Cp2  Cp0 exp(k  4)


16 Basic pharmacokinetics

Cp max

Cp

Cp min

Time
Figure 1.11 Time prole at steady state and the maximum and minimum plasma
concentration within a dosage interval.

Thus, total Cpt at 12 h is

Cpt  Cp0 exp(k  12) Cp0 exp(k  4)


Remember that Cp0  D/Vd.
This method uses the principle of superposition. The following
equation can be used to simplify the process of calculating the value of
Cp at any time t after the nth dose:
D  [exp(kn
)  [exp(kt)]
Cpt 
Vd  [1  exp(k
)]

where n  number of doses,


 dosing interval and t  time after the
nth dose.

At steady state
To describe the plasma concentration (Cp) at any time (t) within a dosing
interval (
) at steady state (see Figure 1.11):
D  [exp(kt)]
Cpt 
Vd  [1  exp(k
)]

Remember that Cp0  D/Vd. Alternatively, for some drugs it is important


to consider the salt factor (S). Hence, if applicable, Cp0  SD/Vd and:

S  D  [exp(kt)]
Cpt 
Vd  [1  exp(k
)]
Pharmacokinetic applications 17

To describe the maximum plasma concentration at steady state


(i.e. t  0 and exp(kt)  1):
D 1
Cp max 
Vd  [1  exp(k
)]

To describe the minimum plasma concentration at steady state


(i.e. t 
):
D  [exp(k
)]
Cp min 
Vd  [1  exp(k
)]

To describe the average steady-state concentration, C pss (this nota-


tion will be used throughout the book):
D SD
Cpss  or Cpss 
CL 
CL 

Since
0.693  Vd
t1/2 
CL

then
1.44  D  t1/2
Cpss 
Vd 

Steady state from rst principles


At steady state the rate of drug administration is equal to the rate of drug
elimination. Mathematically the rate of drug administration can be stated
in terms of the dose (D) and dosing interval (
). It is always important to
include the salt factor (S) and the bioavailability (F). The rate of drug elim-
ination will be the clearance of the plasma concentration at steady state:

SFD
Rate of drug administration 

Rate of drug elimination  CL  C ss


p

At steady state:

SFD
 CL  Cpss

18 Basic pharmacokinetics

Table 1.2 In practice, steady state is assumed to be reached in 5 half-lives. If we


assume a patient is receiving 100-mg doses and half the total amount is eliminated at
each half life, the table shows the time to reach steady-state concentration in the body

Dose (mg) Amount in the body Amount eliminated Number of half lives
(mg) (mg)

100 100 50 1
100 150 75 2
100 175 87.5 3
100 187.5 93.75 4
100 197.5 98.75 5
100 198.75 99.37 6
100 199.37a 99.68 7
a
Continuing at this rate of dosage, the amount of drug in the body will remain the same.

Rearranging the equation:


SFD
Cpss 
CL 

In practice, steady state is assumed to be reached in 45 half-lives. If we


assume that a patient is receiving a 100-mg dose and half the total amount
is eliminated at each half-life, Table 1.2 shows the time to reach a steady-
state concentration in the body.

Intravenous infusion
Some drugs are administered as an intravenous infusion rather than as
an intravenous bolus. To describe the time course of the drug in plasma
during the infusion prior to steady state (see Figure 1.12), one can use:
R[1  exp(kt)]
Cpt 
CL
where
D
R

or
SD
R

if a salt of the drug is given.


Pharmacokinetic applications 19

Cp C pss

Time

Figure 1.12 Time prole after IV infusion.

Following a continuous infusion, the plasma concentrations will


increase with time until the rate of elimination (rate out) equals the rate
of infusion (rate in) and will then remain constant. The plateau concen-
tration, i.e. C ss
p, is the steady-state concentration. Steady state will be
achieved in 45 times the t1/2. If one considers the previous equation,
which describes the plasma concentration during the infusion prior to
steady state, then at steady state,

exp(kt)  0
As rate in  rate out at steady state,
R  CL  Cpss

D
Cpss 

 CL
where R  D/
 infusion rate (dose/h).
When a constant infusion is stopped, the drug concentrations in the
plasma decline in an exponential manner, as illustrated in Figure 1.13.
To estimate the plasma concentration, C p at t one must describe
the decay of C ss
p at time t to C p at time t . Thus, from the above:

D
Cpss 

 CL

To describe the decay of Cp from t to t , one uses the single-dose IV


bolus equation

Cpt  Cp0[exp(kt)]
20 Basic pharmacokinetics

C pss

Cp
C p
X

Time

Figure 1.13 Prole following discontinuation of an infusion.

Since Cp0 is Cssp, then from the above,


D exp[k(t  t)]
Cp 

 CL

Loading dose
The time required to obtain steady-state plasma levels by IV infusion
will be long if a drug has a long half-life. It is, therefore, useful in such
cases to administer an intravenous loading dose to attain the desired
drug concentration immediately and then attempt to maintain this con-
centration by a continuous infusion.
To estimate the loading dose (LD), where C ss p is the nal desired
concentration, use
LD  Vd  Cpss

If the patient has already received the drug, then the loading dose should
be adjusted accordingly:
LD  Vd  (Cpss  Cpinitial )

or
Vd  (Cpss  Cpinitial )
LD 
S
if the salt of the drug (salt factor S) is used.
Pharmacokinetic applications 21

Resultant level

Final steady-state level

Cp
Maintenance infusion

Loading dose decay

Time

Figure 1.14 Prole following a loading dose and maintenance infusion.

Now consider the plasma concentrationtime prole following a


loading dose and maintenance infusion (see Figure 1.14). The equation
to describe the time course of the plasma concentrations of drug follow-
ing simultaneous administration of an IV loading dose (LD) and initi-
ation of infusion (D) is the sum of the two equations describing these two
processes individually:
LD exp(kt) D[1  exp(kt)]
Cp 
Vd
 CL

The nal plasma concentration achieved is not the true steady-


state concentration, since that will still require about 4 half-lives to be
reached, but depending on the accuracy of the loading dose it will be
fairly close. However, this regimen allows the concentration somewhere
near steady state to be achieved more rapidly. If the salt is used:

S  LD exp(kt) S  D[1  exp(kt)]


Cp 
Vd
 CL

Single oral dose


The plasma concentrationtime prole of a large number of drugs can be
described by a one-compartment model with rst-order absorption and
elimination.
Consider the concentration versus time prole following a single
oral dose (Figure 1.15). Assuming rst-order absorption and rst-order
22 Basic pharmacokinetics

Cp

Time

Figure 1.15 Single oral dose prole.

elimination, the rate of change of amount of drug (X) in the body is


described by:

dX
 ka Xa  kX
dt

where ka  absorption rate constant; k  elimination rate constant;


X  amount of drug in the body; and Xa  amount of drug at the
absorption site (X0 if all is available). Following integration:

X0 ka [exp(kt)  exp(kat)]
X 
ka  k

To convert X to Cp one uses the apparent volume of distribution


(Vd). Furthermore, following oral administration, the bioavailability (F)
and salt factor (S) (see below) must be considered.

Fractional bioavailability, F
F is the fraction of an oral dose that reaches the systemic circulation,
which following oral administration may be less than 100%. Thus, if
F  0.5 then 50% of the drug is absorbed. Parenteral dosage forms (IM
and IV) assume a bioavailability of 100%, and so F  1; it is therefore
not considered and is omitted from calculations.
Pharmacokinetic applications 23

If the loading dose is to be administered orally, then the bioavail-


ability term (F) needs to be introduced. Thus:
Vd  Cp
LD 
F

Salt factor, S
S is the fraction of the administered dose, which may be in the form of
an ester or salt, that is the active drug. Aminophylline is the ethylene-
diamine salt of theophylline, and S is 0.79. Thus 1 g aminophylline is
equivalent to 790 mg theophylline.
Accordingly, S needs to be incorporated along with F into the oral
loading dose equation and the equation that describes the plasma con-
centration Cp at any time t following a single oral dose. Thus,
Vd  Cp
LD 
SF

and
SFD k [exp(kt)  exp(kat)]
Cpt   a
Vd ka  k

N.B. The S factor may need to be considered during IV infusion


administration.

Multiple oral dosing


Prior to steady state
Consider a patient on medication prescribed three times a day. The pro-
le shown in Figure 1.16 shows the administration of three doses. If we
consider a time 28 h into therapy, all three doses would have been
administered.
To calculate Cp at 28 h post dose, use the single oral dose equation
and consider the contributions of each dose:
Contribution from dose 1; t1  28 h:

SFD ka [exp(kt1)  exp(kat1)]


Cp1  
Vd ka  k
24 Basic pharmacokinetics

Cp

Time (h) 28 h

Figure 1.16 Multiple dosing prior to steady state.

Contribution from dose 2, t2  18 h:

SFD ka [exp(kt 2 )  exp(kat 2 )]


Cp2  
Vd ka  k

Contribution from dose 3; t3  8 h:

SFD ka [exp(kt3 )  exp(kat3 )]


Cp3  
Vd ka  k

Thus,

Cp28h  Cp1 Cp2 Cp3


The above method uses the principle of superposition to calculate the Cp
at any time t after the nth dose. The following equation can simplify the
process.

SFDka [1  exp(nk
)](exp(kt))
Cpt  
Vd (ka  k) 1  exp(k
)
[1  exp(nka
)](exp(ka t))

1  exp(ka
)

where n  number of doses,
 dosage interval and t  time after the
nth dose.
Pharmacokinetic applications 25

Cp max

Cp

Cp min

Time

Figure 1.17 Multiple dosing at steady state.

At steady state
At steady state the plasma concentrationtime prole can be described by

SFDka exp(kt) exp(kat)


Cpt   
Vd (ka  k) 1  exp(k
) 1  exp(ka
)

The plasma concentration at steady state uctuates between a maximum


(Cp max) and a minimum (Cp min) concentration, within a dose interval
(see Figure 1.17).
To estimate Cp max, one rst needs to estimate time to peak (tpk):

1 k [1  exp(k
)]
t pk   ln a
ka  k k[1  e(ka
)]

Note that tpk is independent of the dose administered. Thus,

SFDka exp(kt pk ) exp(kat pk )


Cp max   
Vd (ka  k) 1  exp(k
) 1  exp(ka
)

The minimum plasma concentration at steady state occurs just before


the next dose, i.e., when t 
. So

SFDka exp(k
) exp(ka
)
Cp min   
Vd (ka  k) 1  exp(k
) 1  exp(ka
)

When using these formulae, individual values should be calculated, since


they are often used more than once.
26 Basic pharmacokinetics

When the half-life of a drug is long, the uctuations between the peak and
trough are small, and the equation derived above under Intravenous infu-
sion (p. 18) can be used to describe the average steady-state concentration:

D
Cpss 
T  CL

Clinical case studies

CASE STUDY 1.1 Multiple IV bolus

Patient D receives Drug Code XR2, 100 mg every 8 h. At steady state, two
plasma concentrations are measured:
Sample 1 is taken at 1 h post dose: Conc  9.6 mg/L
Sample 2 is taken pre dose: Conc  2.9 mg/L
See Figure 1.18

Cp1h

Cp

Cp predose

8 16
Time (h)

Figure 1.18 Two plasma concentrations measured at steady state, Cp 1h and


Cp predose.

Since the samples were taken at steady state, the pre-dose sample represents
the trough concentration. Cp max, Cpt and Cp min will be the same within each
dosing interval.

Clinical case studies 27

C A S E S T U D Y 1 . 1 (continued)

Calculate the elimination rate constant (k )

ln Cp1  ln Cp2
k 
t 2  t1

Now Cp1 is 9.6 mg/L and Cp2 is 2.9 mg/L, and sample times are 1 h and 8 h
(extrapolated). Thus

t2  t1  7 h

So

ln 9.6  In 2.9 1.197


k  
7 7
k  0.171h1

and the half-life (t1/2) is

0.693
t1 2   4.1h
0.171

Calculate the volume of distribution (Vd)


The volume can be calculated from either the 1 h post- or pre-dose samples.
From the 1 h post-dose sample
The following equation describes the plasma concentration 1 h post dose at
steady state:

D  exp(kt )
Cp1 
Vd[1  exp(k
)]

Thus

D  exp(kt )
Vd 
Cp1[1  exp(k
)]

100 e0.17101
Vd 
9 .6(1  e0.17108 )
100  0.8428

9.6  0.7454
 11.8 L

28 Basic pharmacokinetics

C A S E S T U D Y 1 . 1 (continued)

From the pre-dose sample


The following equation describes Cp,min at steady state:

D  exp(k
)
Cp min 
Vd[1  exp(k
)]
D  exp(k
)
Vd 
Cp min[1  exp(k
)]

100 e0.17108
Vd 
2.9(1  e0.17108 )
100  0.2546

2.9  0.7454
 11.8 L

Calculate clearance

CL  k  Vd
 0.171  11.8
 2.02 L/h

Individualised pharmacokinetic parameters


The patients individual parameters are as follows:
Elimination rate constant (k) 0.171 h1
Volume of distribution (Vd) 11.8 L
Clearance (CL) 2.02 L/h
Half-life (t1/2) 4.1 h
Time to steady state (tss) 18.5 h

CASE STUDY 1.2 Oral dose

Patient H, aged 40 years and weighing 60 kg, receives an oral dose of Drug
Code XR4, 500 mg every 12 h. The patient is at steady state. A plasma level
is measured at 10 h post dose and is reported to be 18.2 mg/L.

Clinical case studies 29

C A S E S T U D Y 1 . 2 (continued)

Assume one-compartment kinetics, all doses were given and F  1.


Estimate patient Hs individualised pharmacokinetic data.
Data given:
Vd  0.4 L/kg
CL  0.05 L/h/kg
ka  0.4 h1
S1

Use population data to obtain starting parameters


Vd  0.4  60  24 L
CL  0.05  60  3.0 L/h
k  0.125 h1
t1/2  5.5 h

Estimate Cpt at sampling time (i.e. Cp predicted), t  10 h

SFDka exp(kt ) exp(kat )


Cpt   
[Vd(ka  k )] 1  exp(k
) 1  exp(ka
)

Now

SFDka  1  1  500  0.4

and

Vd(ka  k)  24(0.4  0.125)

and the exponential part is

(e0.12510 ) (e0.410 )
 

(1  e 0.125 12 ) (1  e0.412 )

Thus

200 0.2865 0.0183


Cpt 
6.6 0.7768 0.9918
 10.6 mg/L

30 Basic pharmacokinetics

C A S E S T U D Y 1 . 2 (continued)

Compare Cp predicted with Cp measured


Assess whether the patient is clearing the drug faster or slower than the initial
population data estimate. Assume the volume of distribution is xed. From
the data, the predicted concentration, 10.6 mg/L, when compared with the
measured value of 8.2 mg/L, does suggest that the patients clearance is faster
than population data.

Alter k accordingly by the process of iteration


Let k  0.10 h1. Thus

CL  2.4 L/h
Predict Cpt at 10 h post dose using the above information; ka remains the
same:

Vd(ka  k)  24(0.4  0.10)


and the exponential part is

e0.1010 e0.1012
 
0.412
1 e 0.4 10 e

Thus

Cp10 h  14.1 mg/L


Still Cp predicted is less than Cp measured.
Let k  0.08 h1. Thus

CL  1.92 L/h
Predict Cpt at 10 h post dose:

Vd(ka  k)  24(0.4  0.08)


and the exponential part is

e0.0810 e0.0810

1  e0.412 1  e0.412

Thus

Cp10 h  18.4 mg/L


Now Cp predicted is very close to Cp measured.

Clinical case studies 31

C A S E S T U D Y 1 . 2 (continued)

Summary
k (h1) CL (L/h) Cp predicted (mg/L)

0.125 3.0 10.6


0.10 2.4 14.1
0.08 1.92 18.4

Hence using k  0.08 h1 the predicted concentration is 18.4 mg/L, which is
similar to the observed concentration of 18.2 mg/L.

The patients observed pharmacokinetic parameters


CL  1.92 L/h
Vd  24 L
k  0.08 h1
t  8.6 h
Note that the volume of distribution of 0.4 L/kg is assumed to be constant.

Assessment of individualised data


In practice the glossary of equations described (p. 37) can be used to
simulate plasma concentration vs time proles for a dosage regimen
using different routes of administration. The important issue is to utilise
mean pharmacokinetics parameters derived from research that match
the clinical and demographic data of the patient. Basic data can be
obtained from original research papers or from the pharmaceutical indus-
try for the specic drug. Where possible the equations that describe the
average steady state concentration (C ss
p ) can be used to estimate the levels
in the patient. Pharmacokinetic interpretation and estimation of a patients
actual pharmacokinetic data, e.g. CL, relies on plasma concentrations
measured at a specic time following drug administration where this
depicts the average plasma concentration.
The basic questions to be asked when determining which set of
equations to use follows the algorithm described in Figure 1.22.
To determine whether the data are acceptable, see monographs on
individual drugs because, for TDM, the individual parameters must be
32 Basic pharmacokinetics

C ss
p

Daily dose

Figure 1.19 C ss
p prole following different doses of phenytoin.

interpreted in light of the patients dosage details, clinical status, and so


on (see individual drug monographs in the following chapters).

Nonlinear pharmacokinetics: Basic parameters

Drugs such as phenytoin will show nonlinear drug handing. The process
of metabolism are nonlinear and the rate of metabolism shows zero
order. In practice, MichaelisMenten pharmacokinetics are applied, and
the equations are summarised below.
If a patient receives different doses of phenytoin, e.g. 200 mg/day,
250 mg/day, 300 mg/day or 400 mg/day, the steady-state plasma concen-
tration varies exponentially with time; that is, a small change in the total
daily dose of phenytoin shows a disproportionate increase in the steady-
state concentration (C ss
p ) (Figure 1.19).
Figure 1.20 describes the prole of the rate of metabolism of pheny-
toin given at different dosages. As the dose of phenytoin increases, the
rate of elimination increases until it reaches a plateau where the rate of
elimination is constant despite increases in the total daily dose of the
drug. The prole can be described as follows.
Rate of elimination:

dX Vm  Cpss

dt Km Cpss

Hence the model that appears to t the pattern for the metabolic elim-
ination of phenytoin is not linear and is the one proposed by Michaelis and
Nonlinear pharmacokinetics: Basic parameters 33

Rate of elimination

Daily dose

Figure 1.20 Prole of elimination following phenytoin administration.

Vm

Vm/2

Km

Substrate concentration (C p)

Figure 1.21 Relationship between rate of metabolism (V ) versus substrate concen-


tration (Cp) for a drug showing nonlinear pharmacokinetics.

Menten. The velocity (V) or rate at which an enzyme can metabolise a


substrate (Cp) can be described by the following equation:

Vm  Cp
V 
Km Cp

where V is the rate of metabolism, Vm (sometimes referred to as Vmax) is


the maximum rate of metabolism and Km is the substrate concentration
(Cp) at which V will be half Vm, i.e. when half the total enzyme is com-
plexed with the substrate. (See Figure 1.21.)
34 Basic pharmacokinetics

At steady state we know that the rate of administration is equal to


the rate of elimination; hence, in the clinical situation, the daily dose (R,
or D) is substituted for velocity (V), and the steady-state phenytoin con-
centration (C ss
p ) is substituted for substrate concentration (S). Further
equations can be described for steady-state concentrations.
At steady state the rate of administration is equal to the rate of
elimination. The rate of administration can be expressed as SFD/
where
D/
can equal R. Hence

Vm  Cpss
RSF 
Km Cpss

Vm is the maximum metabolic capacity, i.e. the total amount of drug


that can be eliminated at saturation. Km is the Michaelis constant, which
by denition is the concentration at which the metabolism is operating
at half the maximum capacity.
All drugs will show nonlinear handling if they are administered in
high enough doses. However, only a small number of drugs show non-
linear handling at the doses used clinically.
Whether a drug will show linear or nonlinear drug handling in
therapeutic doses depends on the drugs Michaelis constant Km. For
example, consider a drug that has a Km that is much greater then C ss
p , i.e.
the plasma levels seen with normal therapeutic doses of the drug. The
rate of elimination can be described as

dX Vm  Cpss

dt Km Cpss

Since Km is much more than C ss


p , the equation simplies to

dX Vm  Cpss

dt Km

Since Vm and Km are constants, this now represents a rst-order process.


In another simulation a drug has a Km that is much less than C ss
p,
i.e. the plasma levels seen with normal therapeutic doses of the drug.

dX Vm  Cpss

dt Km Cpss
Nonlinear pharmacokinetics: Basic parameters 35

Since Km is much less than C ss


p , the equation simplies to

dX
 Vm
dt
Since Vm is a constant, this now represents a zero-order process.
Hence, the relationship between the Michaelis constant (Km) of the
drug and the plasma levels of the drug normally achieved with thera-
peutic dosages will determine whether the drug will show linear rst-
order or zero-order saturation pharmacokinetics.

Practical clinical use of nonlinear equations

Vm  Cpss
RF S 
Km Cpss

The above equation can be used


To calculate predicted C pss from a given dosage regimen, to estimate
the patients Vm using population Km values.
To describe the relationship between the total daily dose R (mg/day)
and the steady-state serum concentration.

Km  (R  F  S)
Cpss 
Vm  (R  F  S)

(Vm  Km )  R
RF S 
Cpss

(Vm  Cpss )  Km
Cpss 
RF S
or
(Dmax  Cpss )  Km
Cpss 
D
N.B. The last three equations are linear relationships.
Clearance (CL) is the parameter that relates the rate of elimination
to the plasma concentration. Since CL  R/C ss p,

Vm
CL 
Km Cpss
36 Basic pharmacokinetics

And since apparent t1/2  (0.693  Vd)/CL,

0.693  Vd (Km Cpss )


t1 2 
Vm

From the above equations, it can be noted that the clearance and half-
life will alter depending on the steady-state concentration. Thus Vm and
Km should be used to describe the kinetics of phenytoin and not clear-
ance and half-life.

Toxic drug levels


For the decay of a toxic plasma concentration (C p) to a desired plasma
concentration (Cp):

(Km  ln (C p /Cp )) (C p  Cp )
C pt decay 
Vm Vd

where t decay  time (days) to allow C p to fall to Cp.

Phenytoin serum levels in the presence of altered plasma


protein binding
To calculate a corrected C ss
p for a patient with a low serum albumin:

Cp*
Cp adjusted 
(1  )(P P) 

where Cp adjusted  plasma concentration that would be expected if the


patient had a normal serum albumin; C* p  steady-state serum level
observed; P  serum albumin concentration observed; P  normal
serum albumin concentration (40 g/L);   phenytoin free fraction (0.1).
To calculate a corrected C ss
p for a patient with both uraemia and
hypoalbuminaemia:

Cp*
Cp adjusted 
(1  )(0.44 P P) 

where 0.44 is an empirical adjustment factor and   0.2.


Chapter 10 on antiepileptics describes the clinical use of the above
equations.
Glossary of pharmacokinetic equations 37

Glossary of pharmacokinetic equations and their


application in clinical practice

SFD
Cp0  (1)
Vd

0.693
t1/ 2  (2)
k

CL  k  Vd (3)

Single IV bolus injection

Cpt  Cp0 exp(kt) (4)

Single oral dose


Equation to describe plasma concentration at any time (t) after a single
oral dose:

ka
Cpt  Cp0 [exp(kt)  exp(kat)] (5)
ka  k

Multiple IV bolus injections


Equations to describe the concentration at any time within a dosing
interval:

exp(kt)
Cpsst  Cp0 (6a)
1  exp(k
)

1
Cpssmax  Cp0 (6b)
1  exp(k
)

exp(k
)
Cpssmin  Cp0 (6c)
1  exp(k
)

IV infusion prior to steady state

DS
Cpt  [1  exp(kt)] (7)

 CL
38 Basic pharmacokinetics

IV infusion at steady state

DS
Cpss  (8)

 CL

Multiple oral dosing at steady state


Equation to describe the concentration at any time (t) within a dosing
interval, at steady state:

ka exp(kt) exp(kat)
Cpss  Cp0  (9)
ka  k 1  exp(k
) 1  exp(ka
)

The maximum concentration is given by:

ka exp(kt max ) exp(kat max )


ss ss
Cpssmax  Cp0  (10)
ka  k 1  exp(k
) 1  exp(ka
)

The time at which the maximum concentration occurs is given by:

1 k [1  exp(k
)]
ss
t max  ln a (11)
ka  k k[1  exp(ka
)]

The minimum concentration is given by:


ka exp(k
) exp(ka
)
Cpssmin  Cp0  (12)
ka  k 1  exp(k
) 1  exp(ka
)

Loading doses

Vd  Cp
LD  (13)
SF

Vd (Cp desired  Cp observed )


LD  (14)
SF
The average steady state concentration (C ss
p ) can be described by:

SFD
Cpss  (15)
CL 

Glossary of pharmacokinetic equations 39

Toxic level decay for drugs that show rst-order elimination

ln Cp1  ln Cp 2
Time for decay  (16)
k
Where Cp1  toxic plasma level and Cp2  desired plasma level.

Nonlinear pharmacokinetic equations

C ss
p

Daily dose

Figure 1.19 C ss
p prole following different doses of phenytoin.
Rate of elimination

Daily dose

Figure 1.20 Prole of elimination following phenytoin administration.

Pharmacokinetic model
The model that appears to t the pattern for the metabolic elimination
of phenytoin is not linear and is the one proposed by Michaelis and
40 Basic pharmacokinetics

Menten. The velocity (V) or rate at which an enzyme can metabolise a


substrate (Cp) can be described by the following equation:
Vm  Cp
V  (17)
Km Cp
where V is the rate of metabolism and Vm (sometimes referred to as
Vmax) is the maximum rate of metabolism and Km is the substrate con-
centration at which V will be half Vm, i.e. when half the total enzyme is
complexed with the substrate.

Vm

Vm/2

Km

Substrate concentration (C p)

Figure 1.21 Relationship between rate of metabolism (V ) versus substrate concen-


tration (Cp) for a drug showing nonlinear pharmacokinetics.

When equation (18) is used in the clinical situation, the daily dose
(R, or D) is substituted for velocity (V), and the steady-state phenytoin
concentration (Cpss) is substituted for substrate concentration. Expressions
can then be derived for steady state concentrations.

Vm  Cpss
RF S  (18)
Km Cpss

Km  (R  F  S)
Cpss  (19)
Vm  (R  F  S)

(Vm  Km )  R
RFS  (20)
Cpss

(Vm  Cpss )  Km
Cpss  (21)
RF S
Glossary of pharmacokinetic equations 41

or

(Dmax  Cpss )  Km (22)


Cpss 
D

Toxic drug levels


For the decay of a toxic plasma concentration (C p) to a desired plasma
concentration (Cp):

(Km  ln(C p /Cp )) (C p  Cp )


C pt decay  (23)
Vm /Vd

where t decay  time (days) to allow C p to fall to Cp.

Phenytoin serum levels in the presence of altered


plasma protein binding
To calculate a corrected Cssp or a patient with a low serum albumin:

Cp*
Cp adjusted  (24)
(1  )(P /P) 

where Cp adjusted  plasma concentration that would be expected if the


patient had a normal serum albumin; C* p  steady-state serum level
observed; P  serum albumin concentration observed; P  normal
serum albumin concentration (40 g/L);   phenytoin free fraction (0.1).
To calculate a corrected Cssp for a patient with both uraemia and
hypoalbuminaemia:

Cp*
Cp adjusted  (25)
(1  )(0.44P /P) 

where 0.44 is an empirical adjustment factor and   0.2.


N.B. The last three equations are linear relationships.
Clearance (CL) is the parameter that relates the rate of elimination
to the plasma concentration.
Since

R
CL  (26)
Cpss
42 Basic pharmacokinetics

Vm
CL  (27)
Km Cpss

And since
0.693  Vd (28)
Apparent t1/ 2 
CL

0.693  Vd (Km Cpss )


t1/ 2  (29)
Vm

From the above equations, it can be noted that the clearance and half-life
will alter depending on the steady-state concentration. Thus Vm and Km
should be used to describe the kinetics of phenytoin and not clearance
and half-life.

Selection of equations in clinical practice

In considering which equation to apply, use the algorithms shown in


Figures 1.22ac. The relevant questions are answered and the correct
equation is selected from the summary of equations above.
(a) Intravenous dosing

Does the drug show linear or nonlinear pharmacokinetics?

Is it intravenous therapy?
Linear, use Nonlinear, use
Eqs 1 to 16 Eqs 17 to 24
IV dosing

IV bolus? IV infusion?

Is it

INTRAVENOUS
Single IV dose? Multiple IV dose?
EQUATIONS, see
Eqs 4, 6, 7, 8
Is it

Prior to ss? At ss?

Figure 1.22 Getting the correct equation: the equation numbers link to the
glossary of equations. (a) Intravenous dosing. (b) Oral dosing. (c) Loading doses
and toxic level decay.
References/Further reading 43

(b) Oral dosing

Does the drug show linear or nonlinear pharmacokinetics?

Is it oral* therapy? Linear, use Nonlinear, use


Eqs 1 to 16 Eqs 17 to 24

Oral* dosing

Single Multiple
oral dose? doses?

ORAL EQUATIONS, Is it
see Eqs
5, 9, 10, 11, 12
Prior to ss? At ss?

*Equations can be used for rectal and intramuscular dosing if salt factor,
bioavailability and absorption rate constant are know

(c) Loading doses and toxic level decay

Is a loading dose required? Is it intravenous or oral?

Use Eqs 13 to 14 Is it a toxic level of drug? Linear or nonlinear?

Linear, use Eq.16 Nonlinear, use Eq.23

Figure 1.22 (continued).

References/Further reading

Clark, B (1986). In Clark B, Smith D A, eds. An Introduction to Pharmacokinetics,


2nd ed. Oxford: Blackwell Scientic.
Evans W E, Schentag J J, Jusko W J, Harrison H, eds (1992). In Evans W E, Schentag
J J, eds. Applied Pharmacokinetics: Principles of Therapeutic Drug Monitor-
ing, 3rd edn. Vancouver: Applied Therapeutics.
Gibaldi M, Prescott L, eds (1983). Handbook of Clinical Pharmacokinetics. New
York: ADIS Health Science Press.
Shargel L, Wu-Pong S, Yu A B C (2005). Applied Biopharmaceutics and Pharmaco-
kinetics. New York: Appleton & Lange Reviews/McGraw-Hill.
Taylor W J, Diers-Caviness M H (2003). A Textbook of the Clinical Application
of Therapeutic Drug Monitoring. Irving, TX: Abbott Laboratories Ltd,
Diagnostic Division.
44 Basic pharmacokinetics

White J R, Garrison M W (1994). Basic Clinical Pharmacokinetics Handbook.


Vancouver: Applied Therapeutics.
Winter M E (2003). Basic Clinical Pharmacokinetics, 4th edn. Philadelphia:
Lippincott Williams and Wilkins.

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