| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2484899 | Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences | 2012 | 10 Pages | 
Abstract
												Binding of drugs to plasma proteins is commonly considered in pharmacokinetics as being in an instantaneous equilibrium. Although if the timescale of dissociation of drug-protein complex becomes comparable to the time that a drug molecule spends in blood while passing through the elimination organ, the kinetics of protein binding may influence the organ clearance. This appears possible for the compounds that have large dissociation energy from protein. Typically, the dissociation of drug-protein complex is fast. However, the longest experimentally observed average bound time of drug to human albumin was as much as 11 min, whereas the time that a drug molecule spends in blood while passing through the liver is around 19 s. The equations for the calculation of hepatic clearance (Clh) with the account of protein binding kinetics are derived for the wellâstirred and parallelâtube models. It turns out that for drugs with very low extraction ratio, the influence of protein binding kinetics on Clh is negligible; however, for drugs with high extraction ratio, it may lead to substantially smaller values (possibly by an order of magnitude) of Clh compared with that provided by the common calculations.
											Keywords
												
											Related Topics
												
													Health Sciences
													Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science
													Drug Discovery
												
											Authors
												Leonid M. Berezhkovskiy, 
											