This work is the second in a series of publications outlining the fundamental principles and proposed design of a biopharmaceutics classifications system for inhaled drugs and drug products (the iBCS). Here, a mechanistic computer-based model has been used to explore the sensitivity of the primary biopharmaceutics functional output parameters: (i) pulmonary fraction dose absorbed () and (ii) drug half-life in lumen () to biopharmaceutics-relevant input attributes including dose number (Do) and effective permeability (). Results show the nonlinear sensitivity of primary functional outputs to variations in these attributes. Drugs with Do < 1 and > 1 × 10 cm/s show rapid ( < 20 min) and complete ( > 85%) absorption from lung lumen into lung tissue. At Do > 1, dissolution becomes a critical drug product attribute and becomes dependent on regional lung deposition. The input attributes used here, Do and , thus enabled the classification of inhaled drugs into parameter spaces with distinctly different biopharmaceutic risks. The implications of these findings with respect to the design of an inhalation-based biopharmaceutics classification system (iBCS) and to the need for experimental methodologies to classify drugs need to be further explored.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9257747PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.2c00112DOI Listing

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