Pang K S, Gillette J R
J Pharm Sci. 1978 May;67(5):703-4. doi: 10.1002/jps.2600670536.
The bioavailability of a drug administered extrasystemically is a measure of the initial extraction of a compound by a series of eliminating events involving the intestinal mucosal enzymes, the gut bacterial microflora, the liver, and the lung. A theoretical analysis is presented to differentiate the process of gut wall elimination and hepatic removal of a drug during this first-pass effect. The area under the blood concentration--time curve (AUC) for a drug and its metabolite is shown to be useful in determining the presence of these processes when a drug and its metabolite are administered concomitantly by different routes of administration. Furthermore, the fraction of a precursor transformed to its metabolite also can be determined by pharmacokinetic analysis of the AUC of a drug and its metabolite after administration of both substances.