Hi everyone,
I have a question about choosing the lambda Z calculation method.
Should I choose best fit or time range? If to use time range, how to decide the first time point and the last time point?
Thank you!
LLLi
Posted 23 September 2016 - 02:41 PM
Edited by Simon Davis, 23 September 2016 - 02:41 PM.
Posted 23 September 2016 - 05:49 PM
Hi Simon,
Thank you for your reply. I have some more questions.
a) aim to estimate Lz over at least 2 half-lives, i.e. if I can go back further for a v small reduction in rsq-adj then I will do so.
This means that the time range should be larger than at least 2 half-lives and the influence of the change on the rsq-adj should be small?
b.) consistency with other, comparable, profiles, i.e. starting at similar times for similar individuals, beware in an SAD design with 2compartment model drugs since sometines in the lower doses you actually see only distribution phase.
I thought the consistency means the similar lambda Z for similar individuals under the same situation.
If consistency means the similar starting time for similar individuals, how do we know we need adjust the time range? Plot the starting and ending time points of all subject and adjust the "outliers"? How about plotting the lambda Z and adjusting the outliers?
Thank you!
LLLi
Posted 23 September 2016 - 07:59 PM
a) aim to estimate Lz over at least 2 half-lives, i.e. if I can go back further for a v small reduction in rsq-adj then I will do so.
This means that the time range should be larger than at least 2 half-lives and the influence of the change on the rsq-adj should be small?
Yes - that is what I would aim for (2 half-lives), i wouldn't put a hard limit on it but above0.85 for Rsq-adj is a guide I often see implemented in SOPs.
b.) consistency with other, comparable, profiles, i.e. starting at similar times for similar individuals, beware in an SAD design with 2compartment model drugs since sometines in the lower doses you actually see only distribution phase.
I thought the consistency means the similar lambda Z for similar individuals under the same situation.
If consistency means the similar starting time for similar individuals, how do we know we need adjust the time range? Plot the starting and ending time points of all subject and adjust the "outliers"? How about plotting the lambda Z and adjusting the outliers?
Agreed - it is consistent Lz that I would expect, and sometimes over-riding the 'automatic' selection to go back a few points earlier will help.
By outliers I meant points within an individual's time-conc profile that seem not to fit with expected/other's behaviour. I would investigate further with lab and clinic to see why this might happen e.g. is a switched sample suspected/possible.
Does that help - they're my personal opinions/experiences, maybe some others can contribute theirs too.
Simon
Posted 12 October 2016 - 03:18 PM
Hi Simon,
I am reading the NCA analysis strategies from the Introduction to Phoenix WinNonlin 6.3 Course Materials. One suggestion is that visual inspection should support a mono-exponential decrease. Dose this means that when there is a two-compartment model, we should choose the time points during the beta phase?
Thanks,
LLLi
Certara Forums →
Phoenix WNL basics →
% AUC extrap not populate in Pivot formStarted by nileshg , 18 Dec 2023 NCA, Pivot data |
|
|
||
Certara Forums →
Phoenix WNL basics →
NCA Results PlotsStarted by BEQool , 25 Aug 2023 NCA, Plots, Plot, Number of plots |
|
|
||
Certara Forums →
Phoenix WNL basics →
NCA Multiple Dose with Different Dosing Interval - Feasible within WNL?Started by aramisrojas_ , 03 Aug 2023 NCA, multiple dose and 6 more... |
|
|
||
Certara Forums →
Phoenix WNL basics →
Estimation of dual CmaxStarted by d_nil , 21 Feb 2023 Cmax, PK, NCA |
|
|
||
Certara Forums →
Phoenix WNL basics →
How to calculate pharmacokinetic parametersStarted by phoebe , 19 Feb 2023 NCA |
|
|
0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users