Title: Clinical Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics
1Clinical Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics
- Janice E. Sullivan, M.D.
- Brian Yarberry, Pharm.D.
2Why Study Pharmacokinetics (PK) and
Pharmacodynamics (PD)?
- Individualize patient drug therapy
- Monitor medications with a narrow therapeutic
index - Decrease the risk of adverse effects while
maximizing pharmacologic response of medications - Evaluate PK/PD as a diagnostic tool for
underlying disease states
3Clinical Pharmacokinetics
- The science of the rate of movement of drugs
within biological systems, as affected by the
absorption, distribution, metabolism, and
elimination of medications
4Absorption
- Must be able to get medications into the
patients body - Drug characteristics that affect absorption
- Molecular weight, ionization, solubility,
formulation - Factors affecting drug absorption related to
patients - Route of administration, gastric pH, contents of
GI tract
5Absorption in the Pediatric Patient
- Gastrointestinal pH changes
- Gastric emptying
- Gastric enzymes
- Bile acids biliary function
- Gastrointestinal flora
- Formula/food interaction
6Time to Peak Concentration
7Distribution
- Membrane permeability
- cross membranes to site of action
- Plasma protein binding
- bound drugs do not cross membranes
- malnutrition ?albumin ? free drug
- Lipophilicity of drug
- lipophilic drugs accumulate in adipose tissue
- Volume of distribution
8Pediatric Distribution
- Body Composition
- ? total body water extracellular fluid
- ? adipose tissue skeletal muscle
- Protein Binding
- albumin, bilirubin, ?1-acid glycoprotein
- Tissue Binding
- compositional changes
9Metabolism
- Drugs and toxins are seen as foreign to patients
bodies - Drugs can undergo metabolism in the lungs, blood,
and liver - Body works to convert drugs to less active forms
and increase water solubility to enhance
elimination
10Metabolism
- Liver - primary route of drug metabolism
- Liver may be used to convert pro-drugs (inactive)
to an active state - Types of reactions
- Phase I (Cytochrome P450 system)
- Phase II
11Phase I reactions
- Cytochrome P450 system
- Located within the endoplasmic reticulum of
hepatocytes - Through electron transport chain, a drug bound to
the CYP450 system undergoes oxidation or
reduction - Enzyme induction
- Drug interactions
12Phase I reactions types
- Hydrolysis
- Oxidation
- Reduction
- Demethylation
- Methylation
- Alcohol dehydrogenase metabolism
13Phase II reactions
- Polar group is conjugated to the drug
- Results in increased polarity of the drug
- Types of reactions
- Glycine conjugation
- Glucuronide conjugation
- Sulfate conjugation
14Elimination
- Pulmonary expired in the air
- Bile excreted in feces
- enterohepatic circulation
- Renal
- glomerular filtration
- tubular reabsorption
- tubular secretion
15Pediatric Elimination
- Glomerular filtration matures in relation to age,
adult values reached by 3 yrs of age - Neonate decreased renal blood flow, glomerular
filtration, tubular function yields prolonged
elimination of medications - Aminoglycosides, cephalosporins, penicillins
longer dosing interval
16Pharmacokinetic Principles
- Steady State the amount of drug administered is
equal to the amount of drug eliminated within one
dosing interval resulting in a plateau or
constant serum drug level - Drugs with short half-life reach steady state
rapidly drugs with long half-life take days to
weeks to reach steady state
17Steady State Pharmacokinetics
- Half-life time required for serum plasma
concentrations to decrease by one-half (50) - 4-5 half-lives to reach steady state
18Loading Doses
- Loading doses allow rapid achievement of
therapeutic serum levels - Same loading dose used regardless of
metabolism/elimination dysfunction
19Linear Pharmacokinetics
- Linear rate of elimination is proportional to
amount of drug present - Dosage increases result in proportional increase
in plasma drug levels
20Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics
- Nonlinear rate of elimination is constant
regardless of amount of drug present - Dosage increases saturate binding sites and
result in non- proportional increase/decrease in
drug levels
21Michaelis-Menten Kinetics
- Follows linear kinetics until enzymes become
saturated - Enzymes responsible for metabolism /elimination
become saturated resulting in non-proportional
increase in drug levels
22Special Patient Populations
- Renal Disease same hepatic metabolism,
same/increased volume of distribution and
prolonged elimination ? ? dosing interval - Hepatic Disease same renal elimination,
same/increased volume of distribution, slower
rate of enzyme metabolism ? ? dosage, ? dosing
interval - Cystic Fibrosis Patients increased metabolism/
elimination, and larger volume of distribution ?
? dosage, ? dosage interval
23Pharmacogenetics
- Science of assessing genetically determined
variations in patients and the resulting affect
on drug pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics - Useful to identify therapeutic failures and
unanticipated toxicity
24Pharmacodynamics
- Study of the biochemical and physiologic
processes underlying drug action - Mechanism of drug action
- Drug-receptor interaction
- Efficacy
- Safety profile
25Pharmacodynamics
- What the drug does to the body
- Cellular level
- General
26Pharmacodynamics
27Drug Actions
- Most drugs bind to cellular receptors
- Initiate biochemical reactions
- Pharmacological effect is due to the alteration
of an intrinsic physiologic process and not the
creation of a new process
28Drug Receptors
- Proteins or glycoproteins
- Present on cell surface, on an organelle within
the cell, or in the cytoplasm - Finite number of receptors in a given cell
- Receptor mediated responses plateau upon
saturation of all receptors
29Drug Receptors
- Action occurs when drug binds to receptor and
this action may be - Ion channel is opened or closed
- Second messenger is activated
- cAMP, cGMP, Ca, inositol phosphates, etc.
- Initiates a series of chemical reactions
- Normal cellular function is physically inhibited
- Cellular function is turned on
30Drug Receptor
- Affinity
- Refers to the strength of binding between a drug
and receptor - Number of occupied receptors is a function of a
balance between bound and free drug
31Drug Receptor
- Dissociation constant (KD)
- Measure of a drugs affinity for a given receptor
- Defined as the concentration of drug required in
solution to achieve 50 occupancy of its receptors
32Drug Receptors
- Agonist
- Drugs which alter the physiology of a cell by
binding to plasma membrane or intracellular
receptors - Partial agonist
- A drug which does not produce maximal effect even
when all of the receptors are occupied
33Drug Receptors
- Antagonists
- Inhibit or block responses caused by agonists
- Competitive antagonist
- Competes with an agonist for receptors
- High doses of an agonist can generally overcome
antagonist
34Drug Receptors
- Noncompetitive antagonist
- Binds to a site other than the agonist-binding
domain - Induces a conformation change in the receptor
such that the agonist no longer recognizes the
agonist binding site. - High doses of an agonist do not overcome the
antagonist in this situation
35Drug Receptors
- Irreversible Antagonist
- Bind permanently to the receptor binding site
therefore they can not be overcome with agonist
36Pharmacodynamics
37Definitions
- Efficacy
- Degree to which a drug is able to produce the
desired response - Potency
- Amount of drug required to produce 50 of the
maximal response the drug is capable of inducing - Used to compare compounds within classes of drugs
38Definitions
- Effective Concentration 50 (ED50)
- Concentration of the drug which induces a
specified clinical effect in 50 of subjects - Lethal Dose 50 (LD50)
- Concentration of the drug which induces death in
50 of subjects
39Definitions
- Therapeutic Index
- Measure of the safety of a drug
- Calculation LD50/ED50
- Margin of Safety
- Margin between the therapeutic and lethal doses
of a drug
40Dose-Response Relationship
- Drug induced responses are not an all or none
phenomenon - Increase in dose may
- Increase therapeutic response
- Increase risk of toxicity
41Clinical Practice
- What must one consider when one is prescribing
drugs to a critically ill infant or child???
42Clinical Practice
- Select appropriate drug for clinical indication
- Select appropriate dose
- Consider pathophysiologic processes in patient
such as hepatic or renal dysfunction - Consider developmental and maturational changes
in organ systems and the subsequent effect on PK
and PD
43Clinical Practice
- Select appropriate formulation and route of
administration - Determine anticipated length of therapy
- Monitor for efficacy and toxicity
- Pharmacogenetics
- Will play a larger role in the future
44Clinical Practice
- Other factors
- Drug-drug interaction
- Altered absorption
- Inhibition of metabolism
- Enhanced metabolism
- Protein binding competition
- Altered excretion
45Clinical Practice
- Other factors (cont)
- Drug-food interaction
- NG or NJ feeds
- Continuous vs. intermittent
- Site of optimal drug absorption in GI tract must
be considered
46Effect of Disease on Drug Disposition
- Absorption
- PO/NG administered drugs may have altered
absorption due to - Alterations in pH
- Edema of GI mucosa
- Delayed or enhanced gastric emptying
- Alterations in blood flow
- Presence of an ileus
- Coadministration with formulas (I.e. Phenytoin)
47Effect of Disease on Drug Disposition
- Drug distribution may be affected
- Altered organ perfusion due to hemodynamic
changes - May effect delivery to site of action, site of
metabolism and site of elimination - Inflammation and changes in capillary
permeability may enhance delivery of drug to a
site - Hypoxemia affecting organ function
- Altered hepatic function and drug metabolism
48Effect of Disease on Drug Disposition
- Alterations in protein synthesis
- If serum albumin and other protein levels are
low, there is altered Vd of free fraction of
drugs that typically are highly protein bound
therefore a higher free concentration of drug - Substrate deficiencies
- Exhaustion of stores
- Metabolic stress
49Effect of Disease on PD
- Up regulation of receptors
- Down regulation of receptors
- Decreased number of drug receptors
- Altered endogenous production of a substance may
affect the receptors
50Effect of Disease on PD
- Altered response due to
- Acid-base status
- Electrolyte abnormalities
- Altered intravascular volume
- Tolerance
51Management of Drug Therapy
- Target-effect strategy
- Pre-determined efficacy endpoint
- Titrate drug to desired effect
- Monitor for efficacy
- If plateau occurs, may need to add additional
drug or choose alternative agent - Monitor for toxicity
- May require decrease in dose or alternative agent
52Management of Drug Therapy
- Target-concentration strategy
- Pre-determined concentration goal
- Based on population-based PK
- Target concentration based on efficacy or
toxicity - Know the PK of the drug you are prescribing
- Presence of an active metabolite?
- Should the level of the active metabolite be
measured? - Zero-order or first-order kinetics?
- Does it change with increasing serum
concentrations?
53Management of Drug Therapy
- Critical aspects of target-concentration
therapy - Know indications for monitoring serum
concentrations - AND when you do not need to monitor levels
- Know the appropriate time to measure the
concentration - If the serum concentration is low, know how to
safely achieve the desired level - Be sure the level is not drawn from the same line
in which the drug is administered - Be sure drug is administered over the appropriate
time - AND Treat the patient, not the drug level
54REMEMBER
- No drug produces a single effect!!!
55Case 1
- JB is a 5 y.o. male with pneumonia. He has a
history of renal insufficiency and is followed by
the nephrology service. His sputum gram stain
from an ETT shows gram negative rods. He needs
to be started on an aminoglycoside. Currently,
his BUN/SCr are 39/1.5 mg/dL with a urine output
of 0.4 cc/kg/hr. You should - a) Start with a normal dose and interval for age
- b) Give a normal dose with an extended interval
- c) Give a lower dose and keep the interval
normal for age - d) Aminoglycosides are contraindicated in renal
insufficiency
56Case 2
- MJ is a 3 y.o. female with a history of
congenital heart disease. She is maintained on
digoxin 10 mcg/kg/day divided bid. She has a
dysrhythmia and is started on amiodarone. You
should - a) Continue digoxin at the current dose
- b) Decrease the digoxin dose by 50 and monitor
levels - c) Increase the digoxin dose by 50 and monitor
levels - d) Discontinue the digoxin
57Case 3
- AC is a 4 y.o male on a midazolam infusion for
sedation in the PICU. He is currently maintained
on 0.4 mg/kg/hr. You evaluate the child and
notice that he is increasingly agitated. You
should - a) Increase the infusion to 0.5 mg/kg/hr
- b) Bolus with 0.1 mg/kg and increase the
infusion to 0.5 mg/kg/hr - c) Bolus with 0.4 mg/kg and increase the
infusion to 0.5 mg/kg/hr - d) Bolus with 0.1 mg/kg and maintain the
infusion at 0.4 mg/kg/hr
58Case 4
- JD is a 10 y.o. child on phenytoin NG bid (10
mg/kg/day) for post-traumatic seizures but
continues to have seizures. He is on continuous
NG feeds. His phenytoin level is 6 mcg/ml. You
should - a) Increase his phenytoin dose to 12 mg/kg/day
divided bid - b) Load him with phenytoin 5 mg/kg and increase
his dose to 12 mg/kg/day - c) Change his feeds so they are held 1 hr before
and 2 hrs after each dose, give him a loading
dose of 10 mg/kg, continue his current dose of
10 mg/kg/day and recheck a level in 2 days
(sooner if seizures persist). - d) Add another anticonvulsant
59Case 5
- LF is a 12 y.o. with sepsis and a serum albumin
of 1.2 mg/dL. She has a seizure disorder which
has been well controlled with phenytoin (serum
concentration on admission was 19 mcg/ml). You
notice she is having clonus and seizure-like
activity. You should - a) Administer phenytoin 5 mg/kg IV now
- b) Order a serum phenytoin level now
- c) Obtain an EEG now
- d) Order a total and free serum phenytoin level
now
60Case 6
- KD is a 12 y.o. child admitted with status
asthmaticus who is treated by her primary
physician with theophylline (serum concentration
is 18 mcg/ml). Based on her CXR and clinical
findings, you treat her with erythromycin for
presumed Mycoplasma pneumoniae. You should - a) Continue her current dose of theophylline.
There is no need to monitor serum
concentrations. - b) Lower her dose of theophylline and monitor
daily serum concentrations - c) Increase her dose of theophylline by 10 and
monitor daily serum concentration - d) Continue her current dose of theophylline and
monitor daily serum concentrations
61Case 7
- BJ is a 13 y.o. S/P BMT for ALL. She is
admitted to the PICU in septic shock. She has
renal insufficiency with a BUN/SCr of 45/2.1
mg/dL and is on fluconazole, cyclosporine,
solumedrol, vancomycin, cefepime and acyclovir in
addition to vasopressors. - a) Identify the drugs which may worsen her renal
function - b) Identify the drugs which require dosage
adjustment due to her renal dysfunction - c) Identify the drugs which require serum
concentrations to be monitored and project when
you would obtain these levels