Background: Some drugs, such as cyclosporin, exhibit flat and delayed absorption profiles, with a correlation between the delay and the peak width. Such profiles can be described by an absorption model in which the absorption rate is derived from a gamma distribution (of which the classical first-order absorption model is a special case).
Objective: To develop a model for the pharmacokinetics of extravascular administration of cyclosporin and apply it to a study of the pharmacokinetics of cyclosporin microemulsion in stable renal transplant recipients.
Patients And Participants: 21 renal transplant patients receiving oral cyclosporin microemulsion 75 to 175 mg twice daily.
Methods: The equation of the plasma concentration-time curve after oral administration was expressed as a convolution product between the absorption rate and a multi-exponential impulse response. The convolution integral was computed analytically and expressed in terms of the incomplete gamma function. Cyclosporin was assayed by liquid chromatography/mass spectrophotometry. The model was fitted by nonlinear regression, using a specially developed program.
Results: The gamma model yielded a good fit in all of the 21 patients studied. Attempts to fit the same data by a classical exponential with lag-time model failed in most patients.
Conclusions: This model could simplify the Bayesian monitoring of cyclosporin therapy.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.2165/00003088-200140050-00004 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!