Biopharmaceutics
Biopharmaceutics
Biopharmaceutics
Ali
Shargel L., Yu AB
Applied Biopharmaceutics and
Pharmacokinetics
To illustrate the importance of the drug
substance and the drug formulation on
absorption, and distribution of the drug to
the site of action, one must first consider the
sequence of events that precede elicitation of
a drug's therapeutic effect.
Elimination
Excretion Pharmacologic
and Or
metabolism Clinical effect
MEC
Peak time
Time
tissue biopsies are occasionally removed for
diagnostic purposes, such as the verification
of a malignancy.
Usually, only a small sample of tissue is
removed, making drug concentration
measurement difficult.
Drug concentration in tissue biopsies may not
reflect drug concentrations in other tissues
nor the drug concentration in all parts of the
tissue from which the biopsy material was
removed.
For example, if the tissue biopsy was for
diagnosis of a tumor within the tissue, the blood
flow to the tumor cells may not be the same as
the blood flow to other cells in this tissue.
In fact, for many tissues, blood flow to one part
of the tissues need not be the same as the blood
flow to another part of the same tissue.
The measurement of the drug concentration in
tissue biopsy material may be used to ascertain if
the drug reached the tissues and reached the
proper concentration within the tissue.
Measurement of the drug in urine is an
indirect method to ascertain the
bioavailability of a drug.
The rate and extent of drug excreted in the
urine reflects the rate and extent of systemic
drug absorption.
Measurement of drug in feces may reflect
drug that has not been absorbed after an oral
dose or may reflect drug that has been
expelled by biliary secretion after systemic
absorption.
Fecal drug excretion is often performed in mass
balance studies, in which the investigator
attempts to account for the entire dose given to
the patient.
for a mass balance study, both urine and feces
are collected and their drug content measured.
For certain solid oral dosage forms that do not
dissolve in the gastrointestinal tract but slowly
leach out drug, fecal collection is performed to
recover the dosage form. The undissolved
dosage form is then assayed for residual drug.
Saliva drug concentrations have been
reviewed for many drugs for therapeutic drug
monitoring.
Because only free drug diffuses into the
saliva, saliva drug levels tend to approximate
free drug rather than total plasma drug
concentration.
The saliva/plasma drug concentration ratio is
less than 1 for many drugs. The
saliva/plasma drug concentration ratio is
mostly influenced by the pKa of the drug and
the pH of the saliva.
Weak acid drugs and weak base drugs with
pKa significantly different than pH 7.4
(plasma pH) generally have better correlation
to plasma drug levels.
The saliva drug concentration generally
provide more stable indication of drug levels
in the body.
The use of salivary drug concentrations as a
therapeutic indicator should be used with
caution and preferably as a secondary
indicator.
There are three factors must be considered in
order to get reliable pharmacokinetics study
including:
Time of sampling
Frequency of sampling
Tissue
Time
absorption
cp Elimination Muscle + GIT
Absorption
elimination Blood
Time
Tissue
In this case there well be a clear distribution
phase
1. Two compartment open model, iv bolus
injection
Elimination Blood
Distribution phase
cp Elimination phase
Absorption phase
distribution phase Muscle + GIT
elimination
Blood Tissue
Time
In this case we notice
1. a rapid decline in the concentration-time
curve which represent a rapid distribution
phase and then
2. it followed by a slower decline in the
concentration-time curve which represent a
slower distribution phase and then
3. finally we notice a terminal phase which
represent the elimination phase.
1. Three compartment open model, iv bolus
injection
High perfused
organ
Distribution phase I
Distribution phase II Elimination Blood Tissue I
Elimination phase
cp
Tissue II
Time
Low perfused
organ
2. Three compartment open model with first
order absorption
Muscle + GIT
Absorption phase
distribution phase I
Absorption
Cp distribution phase II
Time
Tissue II
This study is usually performed in animals
since we have to administer the drug and
then separate each organ and tissue and
measure the concentration of drug in each
organ and tissue rather than in blood alone
as in case of compartmental approach.