QUANTITATIVE ASPECTS OF DRUG ACTIONS

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QUANTITATIVE ASPECTS OF DRUG ACTIONS. DR. SHABANA ALI. QUANTITATIVE ASPECTS OF DRUG ACTIONS. Quantitative aspects are important for mode of use e.g. dose-response relationship Dose-Response Relationship of agonists - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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QUANTITATIVE ASPECTS OF DRUG ACTIONS

DR. SHABANA ALI

QUANTITATIVE ASPECTS OF DRUG ACTIONS

Quantitative aspects are important for mode of use e.g. dose-response relationship

Dose-Response Relationship of agonists Relationship between amount of drug administered in

plasma and magnitude of desired responsecont.

A given dose of drug produces measurable degree of action in a biological system (sm.muscle or whole animal)

Types of DRC Two types1) Graded Dose-Response2) Quantal Dose-Response

1) GRADED DOSE-RESPONSE When dose of drug response also

e.g., contraction or relaxation of muscles, ∆ BP, ∆ blood sugar etc.

Studied in vitro on a piece of small intestine Relationship b/w dose & response can be plotted on curve

(x-axis=dose; y-axis=response) Conc./dose on arithmetic scale, curve is hyperbolic (not

linear relationship) Conc./dose on log scale, curve is sigmoid-shaped (semi

log dose-response curve)

Effect of various conc. of ACh on isolated small intestine of rabbit showing graded response

GRADED DOSE-RESPONSE CURVE

Advantages of semi log Dose-Response Curve

Wide range of drug doses is depicted

Easy comparison between agonists

Easy study of antagonists

The middle portion (25-75%)

of curve is linear; direct

relationship between dose

and response can be obtained

GRADED DOSE-RESPONSE CURVEFollowing valuable data can be drawn

Threshold dose: dose which produces first noticeable response

ED50/EC50 (median effective dose or concentration): Dose or conc. which produces 50% of maximal response

Cont.

Drugs with same action at a receptor but with d/f potency show parallel DRC

Potencies of two drugs can be compared by ED50

ED100/EDmax (ceiling effect):

Conc. which produces maximal response

2) QUANTAL DOSE-RESPONSE

Response follow all or none phenomenon (e.g.,

analgesics, convulsants, anticonvulsant activity, death etc)

Dose of drug evokes a fixed pharmacological

response

Studied in whole animal (in vivo); data derived

from group of animals or population

Results can be plotted as Log dose-

percentage curve

Gaussian Distribution Curve (sigmoid >

graded response) is obtained by keeping log

doses on horizontal-axis and % response on

vertical-axis

QUANTAL DOSE-RESPONSE CURVE

Following valuable data can be drawn from Quantal Dose Response curve

A) Median Effective Dose (ED50)

Dose of a drug required to produce 50% of maximum response

B) Median lethal dose (LD50)

Dose of a drug required to kill 50% of experimental animals; measurement of toxicity

C) Median toxic dose (TD50)

Dose producing toxicity in 50% animals or humans

D) Therapeutic Index

Ratio of the median lethal dose to median effective dose

CONT.

Therapeutic Index (TI) =LD50 / ED50

e.g. digoxin & warfarin have TI; Penicillin = TI

Based on median doses; not about slope of DRC for therapeutic or toxic doses

Approximate assessment of safety of the drug

TI safer is drug &vice versa

THERAPEUTIC INDEX

E) Margin of safetyRatio of LD 0.1 / ED 99.9

LD0.1=min. lethal dose for 0.1 % of population;

ED99.9%=minimum effective dose for 99.9 %

of population

STRUCTURE-ACTIVITY RELATIONSHIP

Study of chemical structure of drug and its relationship with its pharmacological action

Both affinity & efficacy of drug r determined by its chemical structure

Minor change in drug molecule major change in pharmacological property

cont.

Significance of structure-activity relationship Synthesis of 1. Valuable therapeutic agent from parent compound 2. Drug with wide margin of safety 3. Drug with selectivity for tissues

Useful therapeutic antagonist of hormone or neurotransmitter

Improvement of PK property Drug designing, identification of receptors, size, shape,

position, orientation of charged groups or H+ bond donors

Improved affinity and selectivity for receptors

E.g., Chlorpromazine (antipsychotic) trifluoperazine

Procaine (antiarrhythmic) procainamide (resistant to hydrolysis)

Benzyl pencillin (antibiotic) phenoxymthylpencillin, ampicillin, amoxycillin (resistant to HCl)

Atropine (mydriatic) Homatropine (less lasting effect)