Factors influencing drug elimination
- Kidneys are the principle organ - renal filtration
- Drug metabolites rendered polar by phase II metabolism - can’t be reabsorbed by the renal tubules and so are excreted in urine
- Drug concentration changes over time in the body - absorption and elimination occur simultaneously

Clearance
- Clearance: an expression of the elimination of a drug from the body - the volume of blood removed of a drug per unit time
- Can be broken down into renal (CLR) , hepatic (CLH) or other (CHO elimination routes or described as total clearance (CLT)
- Helps determine the dosage rate needed to maintain a desired [D]plasma
- CL = rate of drug elimination/[D] plasma
First and zero order kinetics
- Initially, the rate of drug elimination increases as drug plasma concentration increases - first order kinetics (follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics)
- Over time, elimination mechanisms become saturated and reach VMAX – then becomes zero order kinetics

Steady state (SS)
- Exists when rate of drug administration (R0) = rate of elimination (RE)
- Dosage rate required to maintain steady state = [Drug]plasma X CL
Elimination half-life (t½)
- t½ = (0.693 x Vd)/CL
- Determines time required to reach SS and also time required for drug to be removed from body - usually 5 x t½ for either
Determinants of half-life
- CL increases → t½ decreases
- Cytochrome P450 induction
- CL decreases → t½ increases
- Cytochrome P450 inhibition
- Cardiac/hepatic/renal failure
- Vd increases → t½ increases
- Pathological fluid
- Obesity (increased adipose tissue)
- Vd decreases → t½ decreases
- Aging (decreased muscle mass)