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Review Article

Role of enterohepatic recirculation in drug disposition: cooperation and complications

, , , &
Pages 281-327 | Received 17 Sep 2015, Accepted 19 Feb 2016, Published online: 18 Mar 2016
 

Abstract

Enterohepatic recirculation (EHC) concerns many physiological processes and notably affects pharmacokinetic parameters such as plasma half-life and AUC as well as estimates of bioavailability of drugs. Also, EHC plays a detrimental role as the compounds/drugs are allowed to recycle. An in-depth comprehension of this phenomenon and its consequences on the pharmacological effects of affected drugs is important and decisive in the design and development of new candidate drugs. EHC of a compound/drug occurs by biliary excretion and intestinal reabsorption, sometimes with hepatic conjugation and intestinal deconjugation. EHC leads to prolonged elimination half-life of the drugs, altered pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. Study of the EHC of any drug is complicated due to unavailability of the apposite model, sophisticated procedures and ethical concerns. Different in vitro and in vivo methods for studies in experimental animals and humans have been devised, each having its own merits and demerits. Involvement of the different transporters in biliary excretion, intra- and inter-species, pathological and biochemical variabilities obscure the study of the phenomenon. Modeling of drugs undergoing EHC has always been intricate and exigent models have been exploited to interpret the pharmacokinetic profiles of drugs witnessing multiple peaks due to EHC. Here, we critically appraise the mechanisms of bile formation, factors affecting biliary drug elimination, methods to estimate biliary excretion of drugs, EHC, multiple peak phenomenon and its modeling.

Acknowledgements

Author A. S. is thankful to Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), New Delhi, for financial support in the form of his fellowship. The authors M. S. and S. J. acknowledge Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) for providing research fellowship for this CDRI communication (9186).

Disclosure statement

The authors report no declaration of interest.

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