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Vol. 303, Issue 3, 889-895, December 2002

Predicting Drug Absorption: How Nature Made It a Difficult Problem

Philip S. Burton, Jay T. Goodwin, Thomas J. Vidmar and Benny M. Amore

Drug Absorption and Transport (P.S.B, J.TG.), NonClinical Biostatistics (T.J.V.), and Global Drug Metabolism (B.M.A.), Pharmacia, Kalamazoo, Michigan

Significant recent work has focused on predicting drug absorption from structure. Several misperceptions regarding the nature of absorption seem to be common. Among these is that intestinal absorption, permeability, fraction absorbed, and, in some cases, even bioavailability, are equivalent properties and can be used interchangeably. A second common misperception is that absorption, permeability, etc. are discrete, fundamental properties of the molecule and can be predicted solely from some structural representation of the drug. In reality, drug absorption is a complex process dependent upon drug properties such as solubility and permeability, formulation factors, and physiological variables, including regional permeability differences, pH, lumenal and mucosal enzymology, and intestinal motility, among others. This article will explore the influence of these different variables on drug absorption and the implications with regards to attempting to develop predictive drug absorption algorithms.


0022-3565/02/3033-0889$07.00/0
THE JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL THERAPEUTICS
Copyright © 2002 by The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics



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