This course covers the core principles of clinical pharmacokinetics, including drug absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion, and binding. In modern clinical practice, determining the correct dose is never a guessing gameāit is a precise science where patient safety is continually on the line.

Clinical Pharmacokinetics: Dosing and Monitoring

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Basic pharmacokinetics and comfort with algebraic equations. Prior coursework in clinical pharmacy or pharmacokinetics is strongly recommended.
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Basic pharmacokinetics and comfort with algebraic equations. Prior coursework in clinical pharmacy or pharmacokinetics is strongly recommended.
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Apply pharmacokinetic principles to individualize and monitor drug dosing through problem-solving exercises used in pharmacy practice.
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May 2026
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This module introduces the fundamental concepts of pharmacokinetics through the intuitive "Fish Tank" model. Dr. Daniel Brown will explain the core principles of first-order elimination, guiding learners to define the volume of distribution, clearance, and the elimination rate constant. The curriculum explores the physiological context of these metrics, illustrating why changes in protein binding actively affect both drug clearance and volume. By the end of this module, learners will understand the specific factors that determine the area under the curve (AUC) and be able to describe how half-life and the percentage of remaining drug are calculated during the elimination phase.
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- 1.1 What is the "Fish Tank Model"?ā¢12åé
- 1.2 Important parameters in the Fish Tank 1: Volume, Clearance, and k ā¢11åé
- 1.3 The relationship between Volume, Clearance, and kā¢8åé
- 1.4 Important parameters in the Fish Tank 2: Half-life, Serum Concentration, and AUCā¢7åé
- 1.5 Important parameters in the Fish Tank 3 : Mean Residence Time and Protein Bindingā¢7åé
- 1.6 The factors affect Clearance : Summaryā¢11åé
2ēÆé 读ęęā¢ę»č®”15åé
- Module 1: The Fish Tank ā A Simplified Model of First-Order Elimination!ā¢5åé
- Using the Fish Tank Model as a teaching tool for pharmacokineticsā¢10åé
2äøŖä½äøā¢ę»č®”100åé
- Fish Tank Theroy ā¢50åé
- The Fish Tank ā A Simplified Model of First-Order Eliminationā¢50åé
Building upon foundational pharmacokinetic principles, this module examines the dynamic clinical application of drug dosing. Dr. Daniel Brown comprehensively compares the effects of administering a loading dose, a continuous infusion, and an intermittent dosing regimen to achieve specific target steady-state concentrations (such as C0, Css, Cav,ss, Cmax,ss, and Cmin,ss). Furthermore, the module elucidates how the superposition principle and first-order linearity can be practically applied to design patient-specific regimens. Learners will also evaluate the percentage of drug lost and correlate this factor with drug accumulation dynamics during various infusion and intermittent therapies.
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- 2.1 How to determine an effective dose : the importance of a loading dose?ā¢13åé
- 2.2 Which factor(s) impacts the loading dose? ā¢10åé
- 2.3 The multiple dosing regimen : how to identify the most practical dosing regimen? ā¢11åé
- 2.4 The concept of an accumulation factorā¢18åé
- 2.5 Summary: The keys to optimal drug dosingā¢7åé
2ēÆé 读ęęā¢ę»č®”20åé
- Module 2: Dosing Basics ā How to Determine the Right Amount of Drug for a Patient!ā¢5åé
- Pharmacokinetic-Based Design and Modification of Dosage Regimensā¢15åé
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- Predicting Changes in Drug Concentrationā¢40åé
- Dosing Basics ā How to Determine the Right Amount of Drug for a Patientā¢40åé
This module focuses on the analytical evaluation and prediction of fluctuations in serum drug concentrations. Dr. Daniel Brown will detail the critical physiological and pharmacological factors that dictate the determination of an optimal dosing interval (tau) and overall dose. Learners will systematically predict the clinical impact that modifications in dose, volume of distribution, tau, or the elimination rate constant have on both serum concentrations and AUC. Additionally, the module provides practical strategies to accurately determine how a patient's serum drug concentration would be pharmacokinetically altered by missed or supplemental doses.
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- 3.1 How to predict changes in serum concentration?ā¢12åé
- 3.2 How to change dose or dosing interval in response to a change in volume, clearance, or k ?ā¢12åé
- 3.3 How do clearance and volume impact the serum concentration? ā¢12åé
- 3.4 What happens when volume increases?ā¢8åé
- 3.5 Protein binding: the impact of unbound drugā¢8åé
- 3.6 What has changed before and after steady-state : Summaryā¢8åé
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- Module 3: The Ups and Downs of Predicting Changes in Drug Concentrationā¢5åé
3äøŖä½äøā¢ę»č®”130åé
- Review of Predicting Changes in Drug Concentrationā¢50åé
- Applied Clinical Pharmacokineticsā¢30åé
- The Ups and Downs of Predicting Changes in Drug Concentrationā¢50åé
Drug elimination pathways are complex and essential for designing safe therapeutic regimens. In this module, Dr. Daniel Brown explores the physiological differences between drug elimination via renal filtration and hepatic biotransformation. Learners will evaluate how to estimate renal function using creatinine clearance (CLCr) or GFR, adjust these metrics to a standard body size, and critically assess the inherent sources of error in the Cockcroft-Gault equation related to body composition. The module also provides an in-depth analysis of hepatic clearance mechanics, distinguishing between High E and Low E drugs, and explaining how factors such as QH, CLint, and fu impact the hepatic first-pass effect, Css, CU, and overall bioavailability.
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- 4.1 How to assess the need to change drug dosing ? ā¢11åé
- 4.2 Sources of error of the Cockcroft-Gault equation: How to adjust a CLcr or GFR ?ā¢11åé
- 4.3 When to adjust the dose for patients having renal failure?ā¢11åé
- 4.4 Example: how to avoid overestimating and underestimating a patient's renal functionā¢8åé
- 4.5 Hepatic Blood Flow & First-Pass Effectā¢7åé
- 4.6 Factor(s) affects Low E and High E drugsā¢7åé
- 4.7 Hepatic Metabolism Review : How will Css change if fu changes?ā¢9åé
- 4.8 Michaelis- Menten Non-Linear metabolism & summaryā¢7åé
1ēÆé 读ęęā¢ę»č®”5åé
- Week 4:The Challenges of Assessing Renal and Hepatic Clearance.ā¢5åé
2äøŖä½äøā¢ę»č®”100åé
- Review of Assessing Renal and Hepatic Clearanceā¢50åé
- The Challenges of Assessing Renal and Hepatic Clearanceā¢50åé
Transitioning from theoretical models to specific pharmacotherapy, this module addresses the clinical dosing of narrow-therapeutic-index antibiotics. Dr. Daniel Brown elucidates the fundamental differences between time-dependent and concentration-dependent antibiotic killing, specifically distinguishing between AUC24 and AUIC metrics. Learners will master the estimation of vancomycin clearance to design individualized dosing regimensāincluding loading doses, intermittent regimens, or continuous infusionsābased on CLCr, patient weight, and infection severity. Finally, the module explores extended-interval dosing for aminoglycosides, demonstrating how to utilize the Hartford nomogram to estimate pharmacokinetic parameters such as k and half-life effectively.
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- 5.1 The ideas pharmacists need to know about dosing Aminoglycosides and Vancomycinā¢8åé
- 5.2 PK differences and Traditional Vancomycin Dosingā¢6åé
- 5.3 How to determine a Vancomycin dosing regimen based on AUIC? ā¢8åé
- 5.4 Advantages of Vancomycin continuous infusion and Traditional AMG dosing ā¢9åé
- 5.5 Intermittent infusion dosing & AMG serum level analysisā¢8åé
- 5.6 Once-daily (Extended-Interval) Aminoglycoside Dosing & Summaryā¢15åé
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- What Pharmacists Need to Know about Dosing Aminoglycosides and Vancomycin ā¢5åé
2äøŖä½äøā¢ę»č®”100åé
- Review of Dosing Vancomycin and Aminoglycosideā¢50åé
- What Pharmacists Need to Know about Dosing Aminoglycosides and Vancomycinā¢50åé
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- Dosing aminoglycosides and vancomycinā¢10åé
In this final application-based module, learners will synthesize their pharmacokinetic knowledge through realistic clinical case studies involving vancomycin and gentamicin. Dr. Daniel Brown facilitates the practical calculation of estimated serum levels and instructs learners on determining the optimal timing for drawing therapeutic drug monitoring samples. The curriculum covers how to appropriately evaluate inappropriately drawn levels, recommend evidence-based dose adjustments, and identify comprehensive monitoring parameters for both clinical efficacy and safety. The module concludes with a critical evaluation of the limitations associated with relying solely on trough levels, grounded in current clinical literature and guideline recommendations.
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- 6.1 Clinical recommendations on the therapeutic monitoring of Vancomycinā¢8åé
- 6.2 Clinical indications of AMG & PK/PD optimization of Antibiotic therapyā¢7åé
- 6.3 Summary : Case practiceā¢14åé
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- Clinical Application ā Vancomycin and Gentamicin Case Practiceā¢5åé
- A Consensus Review of Vancomycinā¢20åé
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- Vancomycin and Gentamycin Caseā¢50åé
- Clinical application - vancomycin and gentamycin case practiceā¢50åé
This assessment evaluates cumulative understanding of clinical pharmacokinetics across all six modules of the course and is designed to assess the ability to integrate and apply key pharmacokinetic concepts in clinically relevant situations. It requires learners to demonstrate overall mastery of core principles and their application to patient care, including the interpretation of drug concentration data and the use of pharmacokinetic reasoning to support safe and effective dosing decisions.
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- Final Reviewā¢40åé
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- Course feedback and reflectionā¢10åé
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Taipei Medical University (TMU), established in 1960, is a leading private medical university in Taiwan with a strong focus on biomedical education, research, and healthcare innovation. With multiple affiliated hospitals and global partnerships, TMU advances interdisciplinary learning and contributes to improving health outcomes worldwide.
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