Population Pharmacokinetics
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Clinical Pharmacokinetics
- Vol. 11 (5), 387-401
- https://doi.org/10.2165/00003088-198611050-00004
Abstract
Good therapeutic practice should always be based on an understanding of pharmacokinetic variability. This ensures that dosage adjustments can be made to accommodate differences in pharmacokinetics due to genetic, environmental, physiological or pathological factors. The identification of the circumstances in which these factors play a significant role depends on the conduct of pharmacokinetic studies throughout all stages of drug development. Advances in pharmacokinetic data analysis in the last 10 years have opened up a more comprehensive approach to this subject: early traditional small group studies may now be complemented by later population-based studies. This change in emphasis has been largely brought about by the development of appropriate computer software (NONMEM: Nonlinear Mixed Effects Model) and its successful application to the retrospective analysis of clinical data of a number of commonly used drugs, e.g. digoxin, phenytoin, gentamicin, procainamide, mexiletine and lignocaine (lidocaine). Success has been measured in terms of the provision of information which leads to increased efficiency in dosage adjustment, usually based on a subsequent Bayesian feedback procedure. The application of NONMEM to new drugs, however, raises a number of interesting questions, e.g. ‘what experimental design strategies should be employed?’ and ‘can kinetic parameter distributions other than those which are unimodal and normal be identified?’ An answer to the latter question may be provided by an alternative non-parametric maximum likelihood (NPML) approach. Population kinetic studies generate a considerable amount of demographic and concentration-time data; the effort involved may be wasted unless sufficient attention is paid to the organisation and storage of such information. This is greatly facilitated by the creation of specially designed clinical pharmacokinetic data bases, conveniently stored on microcomputers. A move towards the adoption of population pharmacokinetics as a routine procedure during drug development should now be encouraged. A number of studies have shown that it is possible to organise existing, routine data in such a way that valuable information on pharmacokinetic variability can be obtained. It should be relatively easy to organise similar studies prospectively during drug development and, where appropriate, proceed to the establishment of control systems based on Bayesian feedback.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Population pharmacokinetics of racemic warfarin in adult patientsJournal of Pharmacokinetics and Biopharmaceutics, 1985
- Comparison of Drug Dosing MethodsClinical Pharmacokinetics, 1985
- Feedback Control Methods for Drug Dosage OptimisationClinical Pharmacokinetics, 1985
- Population Pharmacokinetics of Procainamide from Routine Clinical DataClinical Pharmacokinetics, 1984
- Evaluation of methods for estimating population pharmacokinetic parameters. III. Monoexponential model: Routine clinical pharmacokinetic dataJournal of Pharmacokinetics and Biopharmaceutics, 1983
- Steady-state Pharmacokinetics of Phenytoin from Routinely Collected Patient Data???Clinical Pharmacokinetics, 1983
- Predicting individual phenytoin dosageJournal of Pharmacokinetics and Biopharmaceutics, 1981
- Evaluation of methods for estimating population pharmacokinetic parameters. I. Michaelis-menten model: Routine clinical pharmacokinetic dataJournal of Pharmacokinetics and Biopharmaceutics, 1980
- Prediction of Maintenance Dose Required to Attain a Desired Drug Concentration at Steady-state From a Single Determination of Concentration After an Initial DoseClinical Pharmacokinetics, 1980
- Estimation of population characteristics of pharmacokinetic parameters from routine clinical dataJournal of Pharmacokinetics and Biopharmaceutics, 1977