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Ontogeny of oral drug absorption processes in children

, MSc MD, , &
Pages 1293-1303 | Published online: 11 Jun 2012
 

Abstract

Introduction: A large proportion of prescribed drugs to children are administered orally. Age-related change in factors affecting oral absorption can have consequences for drug dosing.

Areas covered: For each process affecting oral drug absorption, a systematic search has been performed using Medline to identify relevant articles (from inception till February 2012) in humans. This review presents the findings on age-related changes of the following processes affecting oral drug absorption: gastric pH, gastrointestinal motility, bile salts, pancreatic function, intestinal pH, intestinal drug-metabolizing enzymes and transporter proteins.

Expert opinion: Clinicians should bear in mind the ontogeny of oral drug absorption processes when prescribing oral drugs to children. The authors' review shows large information gaps on almost all drug absorption processes. It is important that more knowledge is acquired on intestinal transit time, intestinal pH and the ontogeny of intestinal drug-metabolizing enzymes and drug transporter proteins. Furthermore, the ultimate goal in this field should be to predict more precisely the oral disposition of drugs in children across the entire pediatric age range.

Acknowledgement

The authors thank dr. R Havenaar and drs. ir. B Anneveld of Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO) for their contributions to this manuscript.

Notes

This box summarizes key points contained in the article.

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