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2000
Volume 17, Issue 1
  • ISSN: 1574-8847
  • E-ISSN: 2212-3938

Abstract

Background: We assessed the extent to which urinary and fecal excretion of C-labeled drug material in animal ADME studies was predictive of human ADME studies. We compared observed plasma elimination half-lives for total drug-related radioactivity in humans to pre-study predictions, and we estimated the impact of any major differences on human dosimetry calculations. Methods: We included 34 human ADME studies with doses of C above 0.1 MBq. We calculated ratios of dosimetry input parameters (percentage fecal excretion in humans animals; observed half-life in humans predicted pre-study) and output parameters (effective dose post-study pre-study) and assessed their relationship. Results: A quantitative correlation assessment did not show a statistically significant correlation between the ratios of percentages of C excreted in feces and the ratios of dosimetry outcomes in the entire dataset, but a statistically significant correlation was found when assessing the studies that were based on ICRP 60/62 (n=19 studies; P=0.0028). There also appeared to be a correlation between the plasma half-life ratios and the ratios of dosimetry results. A quantitative correlation assessment showed that there was a statistically significant correlation between these ratios (P<0.0001). Conclusion: In all cases where the plasma elimination half-life for C in humans was found to be longer than the predicted value, the radiation burden was still within ICRP Category IIa. Containment of the actual radiation burden below the limit of 1.00 mSv appeared to be determined partly also by our choice to limit C doses to 3.7 MBq.

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/content/journals/ccp/10.2174/1574884716666210309103625
2022-03-01
2024-11-22
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  • Article Type:
    Review Article
Keyword(s): 14C; ADME; Dosimetry; effective dose; excretion; ICRP
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