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Approaches to intravenous clinical pharmacokinetics: recent developments with isotopic microtracers

journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-19, 11:16 authored by Graham Lappin
<p>Obtaining pharmacokinetic data from the intravenous route for drugs intended for oral administration has traditionally been expensive and time consuming because of the toxicology requirements and challenges in intravenous formulations. Such studies are necessary, however, particularly when regulator agencies request absolute bioavailability data. A method has emerged whereby the drug administered intravenously is isotopically labeled and dosed at a maximum of 100?µg concomitantly with an oral administration given at a therapeutically relevant level. The intravenous administration has been termed a microtracer and obviates intravenous toxicology requirements as well as simplifying formulations. The study design also essentially removes issues of nonlinear pharmacokinetics that may occur when oral and intravenous doses are administered separately. This review examines the methodology and the literature to date, including those studies intended for regulatory submission. The method has been extended to the study of prodrug–to–active drug kinetics and to obtaining clearance, volume of distribution, and absolute bioavailability at steady-state conditions.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Pharmacy (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

The Journal of Clinical Pharmacology

Volume

56

Issue

1

Pages/Article Number

11-23

Publisher

Sage for American College of Clinical Pharmacology

ISSN

0091-2700

eISSN

1552-4604

Date Submitted

2017-08-09

Date Accepted

2015-06-08

Date of First Publication

2015-06-12

Date of Final Publication

2015-06-12

ePrints ID

27904

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