Login / Signup

Upholding or Breaking the Law of Superposition in Pharmacokinetics.

Malaz YousefJaime A YáñezRaimar LöbenbergNeal M Davies
Published in: Biomedicines (2024)
The law of superposition underpins first-order linear pharmacokinetic relationships. Most drugs, therefore, after a single dose can be described by first-order or linear processes, which can be superposed to understand multiple-dose regimen behavior. However, there are a number of situations where drugs could display behaviors after multiple dosing that leads to capacity-limited or saturation non-linear kinetics and the law of superposition is overruled. This review presents a practical guide to understand the equations and calculations for single and multiple-dosing regimens after intravenous and oral administration. It also provides the pharmaceutical basis for saturation in ADME processes and the consequent changes in the area under the concentration-time curve, which represents drug exposure that can lead to the modulation of efficacy and/or toxic effects. The pharmacokineticist must implicitly understand the principles of superposition, which are a central tenet of drug behavior and disposition during drug development.
Keyphrases
  • high dose
  • molecular docking
  • density functional theory
  • emergency department
  • adverse drug
  • neural network
  • monte carlo