Freise Kevin J, Schmidt Robert L, Widness John A, Veng-Pedersen Peter
College of Pharmacy, University of Iowa, 115 S. Grand Ave., Iowa City, IA, 52242, USA.
J Pharmacokinet Pharmacodyn. 2008 Oct;35(5):527-52. doi: 10.1007/s10928-008-9100-x. Epub 2008 Oct 21.
Lifespan-based pharmacodynamic (PD) models of cellular response assume that the lifespan of cells is predetermined at the time of cellular production, despite recognized changes in the cellular environment following production that may alter the survival of the cells. This work extends previously proposed cellular lifespan PD models to incorporate environmental effects on the cell lifespan by considering two basic classes of models from survival analysis: accelerated life and relative risk models. Cellular responses using both model classes were simulated using a steady-state cellular production rate with changes in the environmental effects resulting from three different basic profiles. The environmental effect models were also fitted to the red blood cell (RBC) and hemoglobin concentration data from six sheep following hematopoietic ablation by busulfan administration. The simulations indicated that the basic shapes of the cellular responses were different between the accelerated life and relative risk models. Due to the more direct physical interpretation, relatively simple steady-state relationship between the cellular response and environmental effects, and the ability to reduce the model to a "point" baseline lifespan distribution, the accelerated life model appears to be a more realistic and flexible model. The analysis of the sheep RBC and hemoglobin data indicated that the environmental effect began to decrease the survival of cells 1-2 weeks following initiation of ablation and that the average "severity" of the environmental effect increased 3.49 (29.5%) (mean (C.V.)) fold under the accelerated life model. Alternative models without an environmental effect did not describe the observed data as well. The proposed environmental effect cellular lifespan PD models allow for the incorporation of arbitrary changes in the conditions of the cellular environment and modeling of environmentally dependent cellular survival. These PD models have potential applications in hematological management of end-stage renal disease, transfusion medicine, and patients undergoing chemotherapy, among other diseases and therapies.
基于寿命的细胞反应药效学(PD)模型假定,细胞寿命在细胞产生时就已预先确定,尽管细胞产生后细胞环境会发生公认的变化,这些变化可能会改变细胞的存活。这项工作扩展了先前提出的细胞寿命PD模型,通过考虑生存分析中的两类基本模型:加速寿命模型和相对风险模型,将环境对细胞寿命的影响纳入其中。使用稳态细胞产生率模拟了两类模型的细胞反应,并考虑了三种不同基本情况导致的环境影响变化。还将环境影响模型应用于六只绵羊在接受白消安造血消融后红细胞(RBC)和血红蛋白浓度数据。模拟结果表明,加速寿命模型和相对风险模型的细胞反应基本形状不同。由于加速寿命模型具有更直接的物理解释、细胞反应与环境影响之间相对简单的稳态关系,以及将模型简化为“点”基线寿命分布的能力,因此它似乎是一个更现实、更灵活的模型。对绵羊红细胞和血红蛋白数据的分析表明,环境影响在消融开始后1 - 2周开始降低细胞存活率,并且在加速寿命模型下,环境影响的平均“严重程度”增加了3.49(29.5%)(均值(变异系数))倍。没有环境影响的替代模型对观测数据的描述效果不佳。所提出的考虑环境影响的细胞寿命PD模型允许纳入细胞环境条件的任意变化,并对环境依赖性细胞存活进行建模。这些PD模型在终末期肾病的血液学管理、输血医学以及接受化疗的患者等其他疾病和治疗中具有潜在应用。