Pond S M, Tozer T N
Clin Pharmacokinet. 1984 Jan-Feb;9(1):1-25. doi: 10.2165/00003088-198409010-00001.
First-pass elimination takes place when a drug is metabolised between its site of administration and the site of sampling for measurement of drug concentration. Clinically, first-pass metabolism is important when the fraction of the dose administered that escapes metabolism is small and variable. The liver is usually assumed to be the major site of first-pass metabolism of a drug administered orally, but other potential sites are the gastrointestinal tract, blood, vascular endothelium, lungs, and the arm from which venous samples are taken. Bioavailability, defined as the ratio of the areas under the blood concentration-time curves, after extra- and intravascular drug administration (corrected for dosage if necessary), is often used as a measure of the extent of first-pass metabolism. When several sites of first-pass metabolism are in series, the bioavailability is the product of the fractions of drug entering the tissue that escape loss at each site. The extent of first-pass metabolism in the liver and intestinal wall depends on a number of physiological factors. The major factors are enzyme activity, plasma protein and blood cell binding, and gastrointestinal motility. Models that describe the dependence of bioavailability on changes in these physiological variables have been developed for drugs subject to first-pass metabolism only in the liver. Two that have been applied widely are the 'well-stirred' and 'parallel tube' models. Discrimination between the 2 models may be performed under linear conditions in which all pharmacokinetic parameters are independent of concentration and time. The predictions of the models are similar when bioavailability is large but differ dramatically when bioavailability is small. The 'parallel tube' model always predicts a much greater change in bioavailability than the 'well-stirred' model for a given change in drug-metabolising enzyme activity, blood flow, or fraction of drug unbound. Many clinically important drugs undergo considerable first-pass metabolism after an oral dose. Drugs in this category include alprenolol, amitriptyline, dihydroergotamine, 5-fluorouracil, hydralazine, isoprenaline (isoproterenol), lignocaine (lidocaine), lorcainide, pethidine (meperidine), mercaptopurine, metoprolol, morphine, neostigmine, nifedipine, pentazocine and propranolol. One major therapeutic implication of extensive first-pass metabolism is that much larger oral doses than intravenous doses are required to achieve equivalent plasma concentrations. For some drugs, extensive first-pass metabolism precludes their use as oral agents (e. g. lignocaine, naloxone and glyceryl trinitrate).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
首过消除发生在药物在给药部位与用于测量药物浓度的采样部位之间被代谢时。临床上,当给药剂量中未被代谢的部分较小且变化不定时,首过代谢就很重要。通常认为肝脏是口服给药药物首过代谢的主要部位,但其他潜在部位包括胃肠道、血液、血管内皮、肺以及采集静脉血样的手臂。生物利用度定义为血管外和血管内给药后血药浓度 - 时间曲线下面积的比值(必要时校正剂量),常被用作首过代谢程度的一种度量。当多个首过代谢部位串联时,生物利用度是进入组织的药物在每个部位逃脱损失的分数的乘积。肝脏和肠壁中的首过代谢程度取决于许多生理因素。主要因素包括酶活性、血浆蛋白和血细胞结合以及胃肠蠕动。对于仅在肝脏中发生首过代谢的药物,已经建立了描述生物利用度对这些生理变量变化依赖性的模型。其中两个被广泛应用的模型是“充分搅拌”模型和“平行管”模型。可以在所有药代动力学参数与浓度和时间无关的线性条件下区分这两个模型。当生物利用度较大时,模型的预测相似,但当生物利用度较小时则有显著差异。对于药物代谢酶活性、血流量或未结合药物分数的给定变化,“平行管”模型总是预测生物利用度的变化比“充分搅拌”模型大得多。许多临床重要药物口服给药后会经历相当程度的首过代谢。这类药物包括阿普洛尔、阿米替林、双氢麦角胺、5 - 氟尿嘧啶、肼屈嗪、异丙肾上腺素、利多卡因、劳卡尼、哌替啶、巯嘌呤、美托洛尔、吗啡、新斯的明、硝苯地平、喷他佐辛和普萘洛尔。广泛首过代谢的一个主要治疗意义是,为达到等效的血浆浓度,口服剂量比静脉注射剂量大得多。对于某些药物,广泛的首过代谢使其不能用作口服制剂(例如利多卡因、纳洛酮和硝酸甘油)。(摘要截短至400字)