
Whole‐body physiologically based pharmacokinetic population modelling of oral drug administration: inter‐individual variability of cimetidine absorption
Author(s) -
Willmann Stefan,
Edginton Andrea N.,
KleineBesten Marcus,
Jantratid Ekarat,
Thelen Kirstin,
Dressman Jennifer B.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of pharmacy and pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.745
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 2042-7158
pISSN - 0022-3573
DOI - 10.1211/jpp.61.07.0008
Subject(s) - cimetidine , pharmacokinetics , absorption (acoustics) , pharmacology , oral administration , population , drug , gastric emptying , in vivo , dissolution testing , chemistry , bioavailability , medicine , stomach , biology , biochemistry , materials science , microbiology and biotechnology , biopharmaceutics classification system , environmental health , composite material
Objectives Inter‐individual variability of gastrointestinal physiology and transit properties can greatly influence the pharmacokinetics of an orally administered drug in vivo . To predict the expected range of pharmacokinetic plasma concentrations after oral drug administration, a physiologically based pharmacokinetic population model for gastrointestinal transit and absorption was developed and evaluated. Methods Mean values and variability measures of model parameters affecting the rate and extent of cimetidine absorption, such as gastric emptying, intestinal transit times and effective surface area of the small intestine, were obtained from the literature. Various scenarios incorporating different extents of inter‐individual physiological variability were simulated and the simulation results were compared with experimental human study data obtained after oral cimetidine administration of four different tablets with varying release kinetics. Key findings The inter‐individual variability in effective surface area was the largest contributor to absorption variability. Based on in‐vitro dissolution profiles, the mean plasma cimetidine concentration–time profiles as well as the inter‐individual variability could be well described for three cimetidine formulations. In the case of the formulation with the slowest dissolution kinetic, model predictions on the basis of the in‐vitro dissolution profile underestimated the plasma exposure. Conclusions The model facilitates predictions of the inter‐individual pharmacokinetic variability after oral drug administration for immediate and extended‐release formulations of cimetidine, given reasonable in‐vitro dissolution kinetics.