All Study Guides Medicinal Chemistry Unit 2 โ Pharmacokinetics
๐ Medicinal Chemistry Unit 2 โ PharmacokineticsPharmacokinetics explores how drugs move through the body, focusing on absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion. This field helps determine optimal dosing for effective and safe drug therapy, considering factors like administration routes and patient characteristics.
Key concepts include bioavailability, volume of distribution, clearance, and half-life. Understanding these principles is crucial for drug development, personalized medicine, and managing drug interactions in clinical practice.
Study Guides for Unit 2 โ Pharmacokinetics What's Pharmacokinetics?
Pharmacokinetics studies how the body processes drugs and other substances over time
Encompasses absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion (ADME) of drugs
Quantifies drug concentration changes in different body compartments
Helps determine optimal dosing regimens for therapeutic efficacy and safety
Considers factors like route of administration, drug formulation, and patient characteristics
Examples include oral, intravenous, or topical administration
Formulations can be immediate-release or extended-release
Pharmacodynamics, in contrast, studies the biochemical and physiological effects of drugs on the body
Mathematical models describe pharmacokinetic processes and predict drug behavior
Clinical applications include drug development, personalized medicine, and drug interaction studies
Key Concepts and Terminology
Bioavailability: fraction of administered drug that reaches systemic circulation unchanged
Influenced by factors like first-pass metabolism and drug solubility
Volume of distribution (Vd): theoretical volume needed to contain the total amount of drug at the same concentration found in plasma
Clearance: volume of plasma cleared of drug per unit time
Represents the efficiency of drug elimination processes
Half-life (t1/2): time required for drug concentration to decrease by half
Steady-state: equilibrium reached when drug administration and elimination rates are equal
Area under the curve (AUC): total drug exposure over time, calculated from a concentration-time graph
Maximum concentration (Cmax): highest drug concentration achieved after administration
Time to maximum concentration (Tmax): time to reach Cmax after drug administration
The ADME Process
Absorption: process by which a drug moves from the site of administration into the bloodstream
Influenced by factors like pH, surface area, and blood flow at the absorption site
Distribution: movement of drug from the bloodstream into various tissues and organs
Depends on drug properties (lipophilicity, protein binding) and tissue characteristics (perfusion, permeability)
Metabolism: chemical modification of the drug by enzymes, primarily in the liver
Biotransformation reactions (Phase I and Phase II) can activate or inactivate drugs
Cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes play a crucial role in drug metabolism
Excretion: removal of the drug and its metabolites from the body
Major routes include renal excretion (via urine) and biliary excretion (via feces)
The ADME process determines the onset, duration, and intensity of drug action
Understanding ADME helps optimize drug delivery and minimize adverse effects
Factors Affecting Drug Absorption
Physicochemical properties of the drug (solubility, lipophilicity, ionization)
Lipophilic drugs tend to have higher absorption rates
Ionization state depends on the pH of the environment and the drug's pKa
Route of administration (oral, parenteral, topical, inhalation)
Oral route is most convenient but subject to first-pass metabolism
Parenteral routes (intravenous, intramuscular) bypass absorption barriers
Formulation and dosage form (tablets, capsules, solutions, suspensions)
Disintegration and dissolution rates affect drug release and absorption
Physiological factors (gastrointestinal motility, pH, food intake)
Food can delay gastric emptying and alter drug absorption
Gastrointestinal diseases (Crohn's, celiac) can impair absorption
Drug interactions (chelation, adsorption, enzyme induction/inhibition)
Antacids can chelate drugs and reduce their absorption
Grapefruit juice inhibits CYP3A4, increasing bioavailability of some drugs
Drug Distribution in the Body
Plasma protein binding affects drug distribution and activity
Albumin and ฮฑ1-acid glycoprotein are major drug-binding proteins
Only unbound (free) drug can exert pharmacological effects
Tissue perfusion and permeability determine drug access to target sites
Highly perfused organs (liver, kidneys) receive drug more rapidly
Blood-brain barrier restricts entry of many drugs into the central nervous system
Drug reservoirs can accumulate in certain tissues (fat, bone)
Lipophilic drugs tend to have larger volumes of distribution
Redistribution from reservoirs can prolong drug effects
Special populations may have altered distribution patterns
Elderly patients often have reduced muscle mass and increased body fat
Pregnancy can change drug distribution due to physiological adaptations
Drug transporters (P-glycoprotein, organic anion transporters) influence distribution
Efflux transporters can limit drug access to certain tissues
Influx transporters can facilitate drug uptake into cells
Liver is the primary site of drug metabolism, but other organs also contribute
Phase I reactions (oxidation, reduction, hydrolysis) modify drug structure
Cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes catalyze many Phase I reactions
Examples include CYP3A4, CYP2D6, and CYP2C9
Phase II reactions (conjugation) attach polar groups to drugs or their metabolites
Common conjugation reactions include glucuronidation, sulfation, and acetylation
Conjugation generally increases drug water solubility and facilitates excretion
Genetic polymorphisms can affect enzyme activity and drug metabolism rates
Poor metabolizers may have higher risk of adverse effects or therapeutic failure
Ultrarapid metabolizers may require higher doses for therapeutic effect
Drug-drug interactions can occur through enzyme induction or inhibition
Inducers (rifampin, carbamazepine) increase enzyme activity and drug metabolism
Inhibitors (ketoconazole, erythromycin) decrease enzyme activity and drug metabolism
Prodrugs are inactive compounds that undergo biotransformation to active drugs
Examples include codeine (metabolized to morphine) and enalapril (metabolized to enalaprilat)
Elimination and Excretion
Renal excretion is the primary route of drug elimination
Glomerular filtration, tubular secretion, and tubular reabsorption determine drug clearance
Renal impairment can lead to drug accumulation and toxicity
Biliary excretion and fecal elimination are important for some drugs
Drugs and their metabolites can be secreted into bile and eliminated in feces
Enterohepatic recirculation can prolong drug presence in the body
Other minor elimination routes include sweat, saliva, and breast milk
Elimination rate constant (ke) and half-life (t1/2) characterize drug elimination
Ke represents the fraction of drug eliminated per unit time
t1/2 is the time required for drug concentration to decrease by half
Clearance (CL) is the volume of plasma cleared of drug per unit time
Total clearance is the sum of renal clearance, hepatic clearance, and other routes
Clearance determines the maintenance dose rate required to achieve steady-state concentrations
Dosage adjustments may be necessary for patients with organ dysfunction
Renal dosing adjustments based on creatinine clearance or estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR)
Hepatic dosing adjustments based on Child-Pugh classification or liver function tests
Pharmacokinetic Models and Equations
Compartmental models describe drug distribution and elimination
One-compartment model assumes rapid distribution and a single elimination phase
Two-compartment model includes a central compartment and a peripheral compartment
Multi-compartment models can be used for more complex drug behavior
Non-compartmental analysis uses statistical moments to estimate pharmacokinetic parameters
Absorption rate constant (ka) describes the rate of drug absorption into the systemic circulation
Elimination rate constant (ke) describes the rate of drug elimination from the body
Volume of distribution (Vd) relates the amount of drug in the body to the plasma concentration
Calculated as: $Vd = Dose / (AUC ร ke)$
Clearance (CL) is the volume of plasma cleared of drug per unit time
Calculated as: $CL = ke ร Vd$
Bioavailability (F) is the fraction of administered drug that reaches systemic circulation unchanged
Calculated as: $F = (AUC_{oral} / AUC_{IV}) ร (Dose_{IV} / Dose_{oral})$
Half-life (t1/2) is the time required for drug concentration to decrease by half
Calculated as: $t_{1/2} = 0.693 / ke$
Clinical Applications and Case Studies
Therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) uses pharmacokinetic principles to optimize dosing
Drugs with narrow therapeutic indices (digoxin, lithium) require careful monitoring
TDM helps maintain drug concentrations within the therapeutic range
Pharmacogenomics considers genetic variations in drug metabolism and response
Genetic testing can guide drug selection and dosing for certain medications (warfarin, clopidogrel)
Personalized medicine aims to tailor drug therapy based on individual genetic profiles
Drug interactions can be predicted and managed using pharmacokinetic knowledge
Dose adjustments or alternative medications may be necessary to avoid adverse interactions
Examples include the interaction between digoxin and clarithromycin (increased digoxin levels)
Special populations require pharmacokinetic considerations
Pediatric and geriatric patients may have altered drug absorption, distribution, and elimination
Obesity can affect drug distribution and dosing requirements
Pregnancy and lactation involve unique physiological changes and safety concerns
Case studies illustrate the application of pharmacokinetic principles in clinical practice
Example: Adjusting vancomycin dosing based on renal function and serum concentrations
Example: Managing drug therapy in a patient with liver cirrhosis and hepatic encephalopathy