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Local Identifiability Analysis, Parameter Subset Selection and Verification for a Minimal Brain PBPK Model.

Kamala DadashovaRalph C SmithMansoor A Haider
Published in: Bulletin of mathematical biology (2024)
Physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling is important for studying drug delivery in the central nervous system, including determining antibody exposure, predicting chemical concentrations at target locations, and ensuring accurate dosages. The complexity of PBPK models, involving many variables and parameters, requires a consideration of parameter identifiability; i.e., which parameters can be uniquely determined from data for a specified set of concentrations. We introduce the use of a local sensitivity-based parameter subset selection algorithm in the context of a minimal PBPK (mPBPK) model of the brain for antibody therapeutics. This algorithm is augmented by verification techniques, based on response distributions and energy statistics, to provide a systematic and robust technique to determine identifiable parameter subsets in a PBPK model across a specified time domain of interest. The accuracy of our approach is evaluated for three key concentrations in the mPBPK model for plasma, brain interstitial fluid and brain cerebrospinal fluid. The determination of accurate identifiable parameter subsets is important for model reduction and uncertainty quantification for PBPK models.
Keyphrases
  • drug delivery
  • cerebrospinal fluid
  • white matter
  • resting state
  • machine learning
  • small molecule
  • multiple sclerosis
  • deep learning
  • cerebral ischemia
  • mass spectrometry
  • brain injury
  • big data
  • simultaneous determination