Abstract

The population approach is a general term covering different aspects of kinetic and dynamic data collected mainly from drug-treated patients and new techniques allowing evaluation of sparse observations from each subject. Such data originate from clinically relevant conditions and can give information on several qualities of a drug. An example is given with the tricyclic antidepressant nortriptyline for which the kinetics and the concentration-effect relationship have been thoroughly documented previously with conventional techniques. We have evaluated retrospective data from a therapeutic drug monitoring service using a nonparametric population kinetic method (NPML) that allows description of kinetic outliers and nonlinear relationships between kinetic parameters and covariates. In addition, drug interactions, nonlinear kinetics and dosing habits were studied with other techniques corroborating previous results and adding new information. The concentration-effect relationship could not be evaluated from our data as information on efficacy and adverse effects was of too low quality. However, several controlled studies have defined a therapeutic concentration interval and a discussion on dosing strategies is based on this interval. Collection of sparse data in patients during phases II-IV of drug development as a complement to conventional studies is highly recommendable.

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