Title: Drug Handling in kidney and liver disease
1Drug Handling in kidney and liver disease
Dr. Geoff Isbister
2Drug Action
- Drugs tend to be small lipid-soluble molecules
- Drugs must get access to sites of action
- Drugs tend to bind to tissues, usually protein
molecules - Drugs alter the actions of enzymes, ion channels
and receptors
3Drug Action
- ENZYME example Angiotensin Converting enzyme
inhibitors A I ----X----------gtA II lowered
A II -----gt Reduced BP - ION CHANNELS example Local Anesthetics Bloc
k Na channels---gtAnesthesia
4- Receptor Binding
- Receptors are specialised binding sites - often
on cell surface- which have specificity for
certain substances (incl drugs). Drugs may
activate or block the receptor - Activation of the receptor changes the activity
of the cell eg adrenaline activates the beta 1
receptors in the heart and speeds up the heart - Drugs have selectivity for receptors eg
Histamine2 antagonists- reduce histamine-induced
acid secretion and heal peptic ulcers
5Pharmacokinetics
- The study of the action of the body on the drugs
- Pharmacokinetics is the study of the time course
of concentrations of drug in the body - The way the body handles drugs determines the
dose, route and frequency of administration - The handling of drugs by the body can be split
into absorption, distribution and elimination
6Pharmacokinetics
- Rate of absorption determines the time to the
peak concentration - The extent of absorption determines the height of
the peak concentration and the AUC
7Pharmacodynamics
- The response of the tissue to the active free
concentration of drug present at the site of
action - May also be changed by disease processes
8Type of Disease
- Renal disease the nature of the disease doesnt
matter very much, the main determinant is the
decline in GFR
9Routes of elimination - Kidney
- Some drugs are water-soluble and are eliminated
directly by the kidney - Molecules with MW below 20000 diffuse into glom
filtrate. - examples gentamicin, digoxin, atenolol
- involves no chemical change to the drug
- in most cases occurs by filtration (and depends
on the GFR) - in a few cases (eg penicillin) some tubular
secretion contributes to elimination - Highly lipid-soluble drugs are filtered into the
tubules and then rapidly re-absorbed - High protein binding will reduce filtration
10Practical issues - treating real patients
- Assessing kidney function is straightforward
- serum creatinine reflects GFR
- relationship between serum creatinine and GFR
changes with age
11Effects of age on renal function
- There is a steady and proportional decline in
average GFR with increasing age - However the serum creatinine remains unchanged
- Why is this?
12Effects of age on renal function (constant serum
creatinine of 0.10 mmol/l)
13Multiple Dosing - renally excreted drug
Approx 5 half-lives to reach steady state
Elderly
14Drug Types
- Water soluble - excreted unchanged (by the
kidney) - Lipid soluble
- filtered but fully reabsorbed in the kidney
- metabolised to polar products (filtered without
reabsorption)
15A number of drugs are handled by tubular
mechanisms
- Two mechanisms
- Active tubular secretion important
- Acidic drugs frusemide, methotrexate,
penicillins, salicylate, uric acid, probenecid - Bases amiloride, morphine, quinine
- Passive diffusion
- After filtration lipid-soluble drugs will be
re-absorbed passively. - Will depend on degree of ionization at certain pH
levels
16Practical Examples of dosing in renal failure
17Gentamicin
- Practice is changing - trend to once/daily dosing
- The interval between doses may be gt24 hours in
the presence of renal failure and in the elderly - Toxicity relates to trough concentrations,
particularly with prolonged therapy - Toxicity mainly affects the kidney and 8th
cranial nerve
18Digoxin
- In the presence of renal impairment the dose must
be reduced - The dose is given once daily
- Elderly people almost invariably have some renal
impairment, so they usually require dose
reduction - normally a halving of dose compared
with young people
19Summary
- Reduced elimination of drugs from the body in the
elderly will lead to accumulation and toxicity - Disease and old age lead to reduced renal
elimination of water-soluble drugs - Co-morbidity and concomitant drug therapy
20Hepatic Disease
- Metabolism by the Liver
- role of metabolism
- types of metabolism
- Clearance
- hepatic clearance
- Liver disease
21Type of Disease
- In liver disease the type of disease does matter
- Hepatitis not much effect
- Biliary obstruction not much effect (initially)
- Cirrhosis has major effects on drug handling
22Assessing Function
- Assessing liver function is hard - no single test
of how well the liver metabolises drugs - Drug metabolism most likely to be impaired when
the patient has cirrhosis, and has evidence of
coagulation disturbances and low albumin
23Biotransformation
- Majority produces metabolites that are
- less active
- more polar and water soluble
- Minority
- Pro-drugs that require metabolism to be active
- active metabolites
- more toxic (mutagenic, teratogenic etc.)
24Drugs with Active Metabolites
25Types of Metabolism
- Phase 1 Reactions
- usually convert the parent drug into a more polar
metabolite by introducing or unmasking a
functional group (-OH, -NH2, -SH). Metabolite is
usually inactive. - Phase 2 Reactions - Conjugation
- an endogenous substrate (glucuronic acid,
sulfuric acid, acetic acid, or amino acid) is
attached to a functional group on the drug or
phase I metabolite.
26(No Transcript)
27Phase I Reactions
- Mixed Function Oxidase
- P450 enzyme system
- induced and inhibited
- hydroxylation and demethylation
- family of isoenzymes
- Monoamine Oxidase catecholamines
- Dehydrogenases eg. Alcohol dehydrogenase
28Phase I - P450 System
- FRAGILE
- High specificity
- Low volume
- Energy dependent
- First affected by liver disease
29Cytochrome P450 System
- Not a single entity
- Family of related isoenzymes (about 30)
- Important for drug interactions
- Enzyme induction
- Enzyme inhibition
- Genetic polymorphism
30Phase II ReactionsConjugation
- Glucuronidation
- Sulfation
- Acetylation
- Glutathione
- Glycine
31Phase II ReactionsConjugation
- ROBUST
- High volume
- Low specificity
- Not energy dependent
- Less effected by liver disease
32Paracetamol toxicity failure of Phase II
Conjugation pathway saturates
? oxidation by P450 cytochrome pathway
Formation of toxic metabolite NAPQI
Initially detoxified by glutathione
NAPQI accumulates and binds to tissue
macromolecules - cell death
Glutathione depletion
33Sites of Biotransformation
- Liver
- Lung
- Kidney
- Large and small intestine
- Placenta
34Hepatic Clearance
35Extraction Ratio
- High extraction ratio
- Effectively removed by the liver
- Limited by hepatic blood flow
- High first pass metabolism
- Eg. Lignocaine, propranolol, diltiazem, morphine
- Less effected by changes in intrinsic clearance,
such as induction and inhibition
36Extraction Ratio
- High Extraction ratio
- Clearance approximates organ blood flow
- Low Extraction ratio
- Clearance proportional to free drug in the blood
and intrinsic clearance of the liver
37Liver Disease
- Severe disease before major effects on metabolism
- Liver Disease
- Hepatocellular disease
- Decrease liver perfusion
- Type of metabolism
- Phase I
- Phase II
38Disease Factors
- Disease Type
- Acute hepatitis little effect
- Biliary Obstruction little effect
- Chronic Active Hepatitis major effects
- Cirrhosis major effects
- Indicators
- Established cirrhosis, varices, splenomegaly,
jaundice, increased prothrombin time.
39Disease Factors
- Poor perfursion
- Cardiac failure limits blood flow so effects
those with high extraction ratios - Eg. Lignocaine
- Combination with ischaemic liver injury
- Other low perfusion states
- Other causes of shock
40Recent theories to account for impaired
metabolism in cirrhosis
- Intact hepatocyte mass
- Sick cell theory
- Impaired drug uptake/shunting theory
- Oxygen limitation theory
41Type of Metabolism
- Phase I, mainly P450
- Affected first
- Phase II
- Severe disease before any effect
- Eg. Paracetamol poisoning.
42Other considerations
- Renal function may be impaired in moderate to
severe liver disease - Creatinine levels are not predictive
- Pro-drug metabolism impairment
- Eg ACE inhibitors
- Pharmaco-dynamic disturbances
- Tissues may be excessively sensitive to even low
concentrations of the drug eg morphone in the
brain in the presence of severe liver disease