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Journal ArticleDOI

Disease-induced Changes in the Plasma Binding of Basic Drugs

K. M. Piafsky
- 01 May 1980 - 
- Vol. 5, Iss: 3, pp 246-262
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TLDR
Plasma concentration monitoring of drug therapy by use of total drug concentrations will be inaccurate in situations in which large variations in binding occur, and misinterpretations of both therapeutic monitoring and pharmacokinetic studies in disease slates with altered binding are likely.
Abstract
The plasma binding of basic (cationic) drugs differs from that of the more completely studied acidic drugs. Basic drugs associate with a number of plasma constituents. alpha 1-Acid glycoprotein, lipoprotein, and albumin all appear to play an important role in the binding of most of these drugs. Acidic drugs bind largely to albumin. The variation in plasma albumin is relatively narrow and is almost always in the direction of decreased concentrations. alpha 1-Acid glycoprotein and lipoproteins show large fluctuations due both to physiological and pathological conditions. Decreases and increases in concentration have been observed. Associated with these changes in binding proteins, both decreases and increases in plasma binding of basic drugs have been recorded. Increased binding with disease appears to be virtually unique to basic drugs. The implications of these newly described disease-induced increases in plasma binding have yet to be explored. With the limited information in hand the following consequences are predicted. Increased binding will tend to decrease the volume of distribution of total (bound plus free) drug. The clearance will be unchanged or decreased depending upon the initial clearance of the drug and the avidity of the protein binding. As the half-life depends upon both clearance and volume of distribution, changes in it will be variable, depending upon changes in these two parameters. It is predicted that the area under the free drug plasma concentration-time curve will decrease with increasing binding after an intravenous dose while it will be unchanged after an oral dose. The relationship of total drug plasma concentration to free drug concentration will change with changes in binding. Thus plasma concentration monitoring of drug therapy by use of total drug concentrations will be inaccurate in situations in which large variations in binding occur. Misinterpretations of both therapeutic monitoring and pharmacokinetics studies in disease states with altered binding are likely unless these changes are appreciated.

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Citations
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Human alpha-1-glycoprotein and its interactions with drugs

TL;DR: It can be predicted that in the fulture, rapid automatic methods to measure binding to albumin and/or AAG will routinely be used in drug development and in clinical practice to predict and/ or guide therapy.
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Direct liquid chromatographic resolution of racemic drugs using α1-acid glycoprotein as the chiral stationary phase

TL;DR: The capacity factors of the solutes were easily regulated by changing the pH, or by adding 1-propanol to the mobile phase, and the separation factors between 1.1 and 3.0 were obtained as mentioned in this paper.
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TL;DR: The aim of this article is to provide a concise review of the theoretical concepts of protein binding, and to discuss relevant examples where applicable, to facilitate appropriate analysis of both pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic processes.
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References
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TL;DR: The kinetics of a drug eliminated by first-order processes in a perfusion-limited isolated perfused organ system are examined and the virtue of using clearance, instead of half-life, as a correlative parameter between these systems is stressed.
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Binding of Drugs to Serum Albumin

TL;DR: Most drugs are carried from their sites of absorption to their Sites of action and elimination by the circulating blood, but many others are partly a part of serum water.
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