Drug Excretion Fundamentals - The Great Escape!
- Excretion: Irreversible removal of drug/metabolites, primarily terminating drug action and preventing toxicity.
- Major Organs:
- Kidney: Main route for water-soluble drugs & metabolites.
- Liver (Biliary Excretion): For larger, lipophilic drugs; may lead to enterohepatic circulation.
- Lungs: For volatile compounds (e.g., gaseous anesthetics, ethanol).
- Minor Routes: Saliva, sweat, tears, breast milk (important for drug transfer to infants).

⭐ First-order kinetics is the most common mechanism for drug elimination: a constant fraction of drug is eliminated per unit time ($C_t = C_0 e^{-kt}$).
Renal Excretion - Kidney's Clean Sweep
Kidneys are vital for eliminating water-soluble drugs/metabolites. Renal clearance ($Cl_R$) involves three key processes: $Cl_R = (Rate \ of \ filtration + Rate \ of \ secretion - Rate \ of \ reabsorption) / C_p$.
- Glomerular Filtration (GF):
- Passive; rate depends on GFR & fraction unbound (fu) of drug.
- Only unbound, low MW (< 60,000 Da) drugs are filtered. Protein-bound drugs are not.
- Active Tubular Secretion (ATS):
- Proximal tubule; carrier-mediated, saturable, requires energy.
- Transporters: OATs (for acidic drugs like penicillin; probenecid-sensitive), OCTs (for basic drugs like metformin), P-gp, MRPs.
- 📌 Probenecid + Penicillin: Probenecid inhibits OATs, ↓ penicillin secretion, ↑ its $t_{1/2}$ ("PROlongs PENicillin").
- Tubular Reabsorption (TR):
- Mainly passive diffusion in proximal & distal tubules.
- Favors lipid-soluble, non-ionized drugs.
- Ion trapping (pH-dependent excretion, based on drug pKa):
- Acidic drugs (e.g., aspirin): Alkalinize urine (NaHCO₃) → ↑ ionization → ↑ excretion.
- Basic drugs (e.g., amphetamine): Acidify urine (NH₄Cl) → ↑ ionization → ↑ excretion.

⭐ For drugs eliminated solely by glomerular filtration (e.g., inulin), renal clearance equals GFR multiplied by the unbound fraction ($Cl_R = GFR \times fu$).
Non-Renal Excretion - Beyond the Bladder
Drugs can also be eliminated through routes other than the kidneys. Key non-renal pathways include:
| Route | Drug Properties | Significance & Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Biliary | High MW (>500 Da), conjugated, polar | Enterohepatic circulation (EHC) prolongs drug action (e.g., digoxin, OCPs, morphine) |
| Pulmonary | Volatile liquids, gases | Rapid elimination via exhalation (e.g., general anesthetics like halothane) |
| Salivary | Lipid-soluble, unionized; pH-dependent | Minor route; drug taste, compliance issues (e.g., lithium, phenytoin, metronidazole) |
| Sweat | Lipid-soluble, unionized | Minor, variable; can cause skin reactions (e.g., rifampicin - red sweat, metals) |
| Milk | Basic drugs (milk pH $~7.0-7.2$ vs plasma $~7.4$), lipid-soluble | Ion trapping of basic drugs; risk to breastfeeding infant (e.g., morphine, diazepam) |
⭐ Enterohepatic circulation significantly prolongs drug half-life (e.g., OCPs, digoxin), affecting dosing schedules and potentially leading to accumulation if not considered.
Clinical Excretion Kinetics - Dosing Decisions
- Clearance ($Cl$): Plasma volume cleared of drug/time.
- $Cl_{Total} = Cl_{Renal} + Cl_{Hepatic} + Cl_{Other}$.
- $Cl_{Renal}$ vital for kidney-excreted drugs.
- Elimination Half-life ($t_{1/2}$): Time for drug conc. to halve.
- $t_{1/2} = (0.693 \times V_d) / Cl$.
- Steady state in 4-5 $t_{1/2}$; guides dosing interval.
- Renal Impairment: ↓GFR → ↓$Cl_R$ → drug accumulation/toxicity.
- Dose adjustment crucial for renally cleared drugs.
- Dose Adjustment: Based on Creatinine Clearance (CrCl).
- Cockcroft-Gault: $CrCl = [(140-age) \times Wt (kg) \times (0.85 \ if \ female)] / (72 \times SCr)$.
- Methods: ↓dose, ↑interval, or both.
- Dialysis: Removes drugs: Low MW, Low $V_d$, Low protein binding, Water-soluble.
- Supplemental dose post-dialysis may be needed.
⭐ For narrow therapeutic index drugs mainly kidney-excreted (e.g., aminoglycosides, digoxin), CrCl-based dose adjustment (e.g., if GFR < 50 mL/min) is vital to avoid toxicity.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Glomerular filtration is passive, affected by plasma protein binding & renal blood flow.
- Tubular secretion is an active, saturable process (e.g., penicillin with probenecid).
- Tubular reabsorption is pH-dependent; ion trapping (e.g., aspirin with NaHCO₃) aids excretion.
- Clearance (CL) = Rate of elimination / Plasma concentration; Total CL sums organ clearances.
- Enterohepatic circulation (e.g., digitoxin, rifampicin) prolongs drug action.
- Pulmonary excretion is key for volatile anesthetics and alcohol.
- Biliary excretion is important for high molecular weight drugs and their conjugates.
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