Biotransformation Basics - Liver's Detox Dance
- Definition: Liver's process of chemically altering substances (drugs, toxins) for elimination.
- Location: Primarily liver (smooth ER, cytosol).
- Goal: Convert lipophilic compounds $\rightarrow$ hydrophilic metabolites for easier excretion (urine, bile).
- Phases:
- Phase I (Functionalization): Introduces/exposes functional groups.
- Reactions: Oxidation, reduction, hydrolysis.
- Key Enzymes: Cytochrome P450 (CYP450) family.
- Phase II (Conjugation): Covalent addition of endogenous polar molecules.
- Reactions: Glucuronidation, sulfation, acetylation, glutathione conjugation.
- Result: ↑ Water solubility, ↑ excretion. 📌 Makes It Water Soluble (MIWS for Phase II).
- Phase I (Functionalization): Introduces/exposes functional groups.
⭐ Cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzymes are major sites of drug interactions.

Phase I Impairment - Sick Liver's Slowdown
- Cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzyme system, crucial for Phase I (oxidation, reduction, hydrolysis), is significantly compromised.
- Liver disease (e.g., cirrhosis, severe hepatitis) leads to:
- ↓ CYP450 enzyme content & activity.
- ↓ Hepatic blood flow, reducing drug delivery to hepatocytes.
- Consequences for drug metabolism:
- ↓ Clearance of drugs reliant on Phase I pathways.
- ↑ Drug plasma half-life ($t_{1/2}$).
- ↑ Bioavailability of high hepatic extraction ratio drugs (e.g., propranolol, morphine, verapamil).
- ↑ Risk of adverse drug reactions & dose-dependent toxicity.
⭐ In patients with cirrhosis, the clearance of drugs like diazepam and theophylline (primarily undergoing Phase I metabolism) can be reduced by up to 50-70%, necessitating careful dose adjustments to avoid toxicity_._
Phase II Impairment - Conjugation Conundrum
- Phase II (conjugation) generally more resilient than Phase I in liver disease.
- Significant impairment can occur, especially in severe cases (e.g., cirrhosis).
- Glucuronidation:
- Often most affected Phase II pathway.
- ↓ clearance of drugs like morphine, lorazepam.
- Leads to ↑ drug $t_{1/2}$ & ↑ toxicity.
- Sulfation:
- Relatively preserved until advanced disease stages.
- Acetylation:
- Capacity reduced, particularly in slow acetylators (e.g., isoniazid).
- Clinical Impact:
- Dose adjustments crucial for drugs primarily eliminated by conjugation.
- Increased risk of drug accumulation and adverse effects.
⭐ Morphine glucuronidation is markedly reduced in cirrhosis, necessitating careful dose titration to avoid prolonged narcosis and respiratory depression_
Clinical Adjustments - Dosing in Distress
- Liver disease: Impairs drug biotransformation (Phase I & II) & excretion.
- Consequences: ↑ bioavailability, ↓ clearance, ↑ drug half-life ($t_{1/2}$), ↑ toxicity risk.
- Assessment: Child-Pugh & MELD scores guide severity.
- Dosing Strategies:
- ↓ Dose or ↑ dosing interval.
- Prefer drugs with renal excretion or preserved Phase II metabolism.
- Avoid hepatotoxic drugs.
- Therapeutic Drug Monitoring (TDM) if feasible.
- Key Drug Considerations:
- Opioids (e.g., morphine): ↓ dose significantly.
- Benzodiazepines: Prefer 📌 L.O.T. (Lorazepam, Oxazepam, Temazepam).
- Paracetamol: Limit to <2 g/day in severe cirrhosis.
⭐ "L.O.T." drugs (Lorazepam, Oxazepam, Temazepam) are safer in liver disease due to relatively preserved Phase II glucuronidation, unlike often impaired Phase I (CYP450) reactions.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Reduced Phase I (CYP450) reactions impair metabolism, especially for high first-pass drugs.
- Phase II conjugation (e.g., glucuronidation) is often better preserved than Phase I.
- Oral drug bioavailability ↑ due to ↓ first-pass effect and portosystemic shunting.
- Hypoalbuminemia causes ↓ protein binding, leading to ↑ free drug fraction and toxicity.
- Impaired biliary excretion affects drugs eliminated via bile, prolonging their effects.
- Drug half-life is typically prolonged, requiring dose adjustments and careful monitoring.
- Risk of hepatic encephalopathy ↑ with sedatives or ammonia-producing drugs.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app