Lecture 4 to 5: PK Flashcards

1
Q

ENTERAL ROUTES

A
  • Oral
  • Sublingual: bypasses first-pass effect
  • Rectal: partial avoidance of first-pass effect
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2
Q

PARENTERAL ROUTES

A
  • IV
  • IM
  • Sub-Q
  • Intradermal
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3
Q

EFFECT OF pH ON DRUG ABSORPTION

A
  • The protonated form of a weak acid is the more liposoluble form
  • The unprotonated form of a weak base is the more liposoluble form.
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4
Q

APPLICATIONS OF THE H-H EQUATION

A

ION TRAPPING

  • The most important application of this equation is in the manipulation of drug excretion by the kidney.
  • If a drug is in a liposoluble form during its passage down the renal tubule, a significant fraction will be reabsorbed by passive diffusion.
  • Weak acids are excreted faster in alkaline urine; weak bases are excreted faster in acidic urine.
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5
Q

DETERMINATION OF BIOAVAILABILITY (F)

A

determined comparing the AUC after a particular route of administration with the AUC after IV injection.

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6
Q

FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE BIOAVAILABILITY

A
  • DRUG FORMULATION
  • CHEMICAL INSTABILITY
  • FOOD AND DRUG INTERACTIONS
  • FIRST-PASS HEPATIC METABOLISM
  • DRUG SOLUBILITY
  • P-GLYCOPROTEIN
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7
Q

DRUG DISTRIBUTION

A
  • Initially, liver, kidney, brain, and other well- perfused organs receive most of the drug.
  • Delivery to muscle, most viscera, skin, and fat is slower.
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8
Q

DRUG BINDING TO PLASMA PROTEINS

A
  • Acidic drugs bind to plasma albumin and basic drugs to α1-acid glycoprotein.
  • Drugs can compete with each other and with endogenous substances for these binding sites.
  • Displacement of unconjugated bilirubin from albumin by sulfonamides increases the risk of bilirubin encephalopathy in the newborn, i.e. Sulfonamide admin in mother or newborn causes kernicterus
  • drugs with a narrow TI, a transient change in the unbound concentration due to administration of a competing drug could be of concern.
  • Warfarin is highly bound to albumin and only a small fraction is free.
  • If a sulfonamide is given, it will displace warfarin causing a significant increase in the plasma level of free warfarin.
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9
Q

BLOOD-BRAIN BARRIER

A
  • only liposoluble drugs can cross the bbb.
  • transcellular route
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10
Q

DRUG METABOLISM

A
  • Many drugs are lipophilic
  • But lipophilic compounds are not easily excreted because they are reabsorbed through the tubular membranes.
  • Drug metabolism involves two kinds of biochemical reactions:
    • phase I: ER & cytosol
    • phase II: cytosol
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11
Q

PHASE I REACTIONS

A
  • oxidations, reductions, decarboxylations, deaminations and hydrolytic reactions.
  • usually convert the parent drug to a more polar metabolite
  • In some instances activity is only modified or even enhanced.
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12
Q

PRODRUGS

A

One example is the drug cyclophosphamide, which is bioactivated by metabolism to an active anticancer metabolite

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13
Q

PHASE II REACTIONS

A
  • conjugation reactions form a covalent bond between the drug molecule and glucuronate, acetate, glutathione, amino acids or sulfate.
  • Not all drugs undergo these sequential reactions (Phase I → Phase II).
  • Ex. isoniazid is acetylated by N-acetyltransferase, in a phase II reaction.
  • The acetylated conjugate then undergoes a phase I reaction: hydrolysis to isonicotinic acid.
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14
Q

SITES OF DRUG METABOLISM

A
  • Liver: most imp
  • skin, the lungs, the GI tract, and the kidneys.
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15
Q

ENZYME INDUCTION

A
  • Certain drugs increase the synthesis of one or more P450 isoforms such as
    • **phenobarbital: **benzo
    • **rifampin: **antimycobacterial
    • carbamazepine: anti-epileptic
  • St. John’s wort increases the metabolismof various drugs, by inducing CYP3A4.
    • Ex. St. John’s Worts co-admin decreases levels of Indinavir, an anti-HIV drug/protease inhibitor
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16
Q

XENOBIOTIC RECEPTORS

A
  • Drugs can enter hepatocytes and bind to xenobiotic receptors.
  • This activates the receptor, allowing it to translocate to the nucleus and bind to the promoters of various enzymes.
  • Aryl hydrocarbon receptor(AhR)
  • Pregnane X receptor (PXR)
    • Note: Hyperforin in St. John’s Worts in the tabl
  • Constitutively active receptor(CAR)
17
Q

CYP ENZYME INHIBITION

A
  • Amiodarone: ANTIARRHYTHMICS Class III
  • Cimetidine: H2 Antagonists
  • Ketoconazole: anti-fungal
  • Erythromycin: macrolide
  • Chloramphenicol: antimicrobials
  • Grapefruit juice: inhibits both CYP3A4 and P-glycoprotein in the small intestine
18
Q

DRUG TRANSPORT

A
  • P-glycoproteinactively transports drugs back into the intestinal lumen.
  • This process limits the oral bioavailability of several drugs, including digoxin and HIV-1 protease inhibitors.
  • Drug transporters can be induced or inhibited by other drugs.
  • For example, macrolide antibiotics, Ex. Clarithomycin, can inhibit P-glycoprotein.
  • This inhibition can lead to increased serum levels of drugs, such as digoxin, that are excreted by P-glycoprotein.
19
Q

DRUG TRANSPORT: INDUCTION & INHIBITION

A
  • P-glycoprotein is also transcriptionally regulated by PXR.
  • So, drugs that induce P450 enzymes via the PXR pathway also induce P-glycoprotein.
20
Q

METABOLISM OF ACETAMINOPHEN

A
  • Acetaminophen metabolises in 3 ways:
    • Glucoronate
    • Sulfonate
    • NAPQI (minor, 5%):
      • CYP2E1 catalyzes
      • normally have enough GSH to detoxify the NAPQI levels
  • antidote is N-acetylcysteine when NAPQI is high
  • It supplies cysteine for glutathione production, and also reacts directly with NAPQI.
21
Q

EFFECT OF GRAPEFRUIT ON FELODIPINE METABOLISM

A
  • Felodipine: Ca2+ channel blocker
  • Grapefruit juice inhibits CYP3A4 -> incr. serum felodipine levels
22
Q

DIET & ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS

A
  • Aromatic hydrocarbons in cigarette smoke cause AhR-mediated P450 enzyme induction.
  • Charcoal-broiled foods and cruciferous vegetables induce CYP1A enzymes.
  • Industrial workers exposed to some pesticides metabolize certain drugs more rapidly than nonexposed individuals.
23
Q

DRUG EXCRETION

A
  • Renal excretion is the most common mechanism of drug excretion.
  • A small number of drugs are excreted in the bile.
24
Q

RENAL EXCRETION OF DRUGS & METABOLITES

A

3 basicprocesses involved in renal excretion of drugs:

  1. Glomerular filtration
  • Glomerular capillaries allow drug molecules of MW < 20,000 to diffuse into the glomerular filtrate.
  • Lipid solubility and pH don’t influence the passage of drugs into the glomerular filtrate.
  1. Active tubular secretion: drug molecules are pumped into the lumen of the tubule by two active transport systems: one for anions and one for cations.
  2. Passive diffusion across tubular epithelium: Liposoluble drugs can be passively reabsorbed.