Humans are animals, but are animals human enough? A systematic review and meta-analysis on interspecies differences in renal drug clearance.

Published
February 07, 2020
Journal
Drug discovery today
PICOID
37d35ac4
DOI
Citations
27
Keywords
Copyright
Copyright © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
Patients/Population/Participants

animals, humans

Intervention

drug administration

Comparison

animal models vs. humans

Outcome

pharmacokinetics (PK), human renal clearance (CLr), interspecies differences, drug properties

Abstract

P
I
C
O

Various animal models are used to study pharmacokinetics (PK) of drugs in development. Human renal clearance (CLr) should be predictable through interpolation from animal data by allometric scaling. Based on this premise, we quantified interspecies differences in CLr, and related them to drug properties. Using PubMed and EMBASE, we systematically reviewed literature on human and animal CLr measures for 20 renally excreted drugs, calculated average fold errors, and quantified mean differences between animals and humans. Our results show that animal models are generally good predictors for human drug clearance using simple allometry, except for rats, with which human CLr is significantly overestimated.

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