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Welcome to this short lecture on metabolism, excretion, and the therapeutic window. I'm Karel Allegaert, clinical pharmacologist working at KU Leuven.
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Why are we discussing this topic? It is because four parameters are the determinants of concentration/time profiles: absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion. For information related to absorption or distribution, I refer to another lecture. While in this lecture we'll focus on metabolism and excretion as both are determinants of the subsequent clearance or elimination of a given compound.
0:47
What is the definition of clearance? While in the most common setting which means first-order kinetics, linear kinetics, it is the amount of blood cleared, so it's a volume, from the drug in a unit of time. This unit can be seconds, minutes, or hours depending on the pattern. While in zero-order kinetics which means that it's commonly in toxic or intoxication type of settings, things become non-linear and then it's the amount of drug cleared in a unit of time. The most common example is ethanol as this will shift quite fast from linear to non-linear kinetics.
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What is the practical use of clearance? It has to do with the dose required to achieve target plasma concentration and obviously subsequent effect at steady state. I hereby use an illustration using continuous intravenous administration of two potential drugs. Drug A cleared five liters per hour, and Drug B cleared 10 liters per hour. If you would have the same dose rate, clearance will result in the steady state concentration and as Drug A has a lower clearance compared to Drug B, Drug A will have a higher steady-state compared to Drug B or the other way around because Drug B is cleared faster, the steady-state concentration will be lower. Obviously, if you would like to attain the same concentrations, you could still adapt the dose rate but at least it does illustrate the link between the dose needed and the clearance as present.

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Metabolism, excretion, and therapeutic window

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