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Applying the biopharmaceutics classification system to veterinary pharmaceutical products Part II. Physiological considerations

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ADVANCED DRUG DELIVERY REVIEWS
卷 54, 期 6, 页码 825-850

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/S0169-409X(02)00071-6

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biopharmaceutics classification system; interspecies differences; veterinary oral drug absorption; animal models; food effects; lymphatic uptake

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in comparing product bioavailability across animal species, it is not unusual to observe marked interspecies differences. For many compounds, these differences reflect presystemic drug metabolism. However, a host of other variables must also be considered such as in vivo drug solubility, gastric transit time, intestinal permeability, diet, and species-by-formulation interactions. By combining information on drug solubility and intestinal permeability with an understanding of the interrelationship between pH, product dissolution and gastrointestinal physiology, we attempt to define those conditions under which in vitro dissolution data may be used as a surrogate for data on in vivo bioavailability. We consider the likely physiological causes for species-related differences in the absolute and relative bioavailability of orally administered pharmaceuticals, and examine the potential for these normal interspecies differences to reflect bioavailability changes that can occur with various human pathologies. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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