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In pharmacology, clearance is a pharmacokinetic measurement of the volume of plasma from which a substance is completely removed per unit time. Usually, clearance is measured in L/h or mL/min. The quantity reflects the rate of drug elimination divided by plasma concentration. Excretion, on the other hand, is a measurement of the amount of a substance removed from the body per unit time (e.g., mg/min, μg/min, etc.). While clearance and excretion of a substance are related, they are not the same thing. The concept of clearance was described by Thomas Addis, a graduate of the
University of Edinburgh Medical School The University of Edinburgh Medical School (also known as Edinburgh Medical School) is the medical school of the University of Edinburgh in Scotland and the United Kingdom and part of the University of Edinburgh College of Medicine and Veterinar ...
. Substances in the body can be cleared by various organs, including the kidneys, liver, lungs, etc. Thus, total body clearance is equal to the sum clearance of the substance by each organ (e.g., renal clearance + hepatic clearance + lung clearance = total body clearance). For many drugs, however, clearance is solely a function of renal excretion. In these cases, clearance is almost synonymous with renal clearance or renal plasma clearance. Each substance has a specific clearance that depends on how the substance is ''handled'' by the nephron. Clearance is a function of 1)
glomerular filtration Renal functions include maintaining an acid–base balance; regulating fluid balance; regulating sodium, potassium, and other electrolytes; clearing toxins; absorption of glucose, amino acids, and other small molecules; regulation of blood pre ...
, 2) secretion from the
peritubular capillaries In the renal system, peritubular capillaries are tiny blood vessels, supplied by the efferent arteriole, that travel alongside nephrons allowing reabsorption and secretion between blood and the inner lumen of the nephron. Peritubular capillaries s ...
to the
nephron The nephron is the minute or microscopic structural and functional unit of the kidney. It is composed of a renal corpuscle and a renal tubule. The renal corpuscle consists of a tuft of capillaries called a glomerulus and a cup-shaped structure ...
, and 3) reabsorption from the
nephron The nephron is the minute or microscopic structural and functional unit of the kidney. It is composed of a renal corpuscle and a renal tubule. The renal corpuscle consists of a tuft of capillaries called a glomerulus and a cup-shaped structure ...
back to the
peritubular capillaries In the renal system, peritubular capillaries are tiny blood vessels, supplied by the efferent arteriole, that travel alongside nephrons allowing reabsorption and secretion between blood and the inner lumen of the nephron. Peritubular capillaries s ...
. Clearance is variable in
zero-order kinetics In chemistry, the rate law or rate equation for a reaction is an equation that links the initial or forward reaction rate with the concentrations or pressures of the reactants and constant parameters (normally rate coefficients and partial reactio ...
because a constant amount of the drug is eliminated per unit time, but it is constant in
first-order kinetics In chemistry, the rate law or rate equation for a reaction is an equation that links the initial or forward reaction rate with the concentrations or pressures of the reactants and constant parameters (normally rate coefficients and partial reactio ...
, because the amount of drug eliminated per unit time changes with the concentration of drug in the blood. Clearance can refer to the volume of plasma from which the substance is removed (i.e., ''cleared'') per unit time or, in some cases, inter-compartmental clearances can be discussed when referring to redistribution between body compartments such as plasma, muscle, and fat.


Definition

When referring to the function of the
kidney The kidneys are two reddish-brown bean-shaped organs found in vertebrates. They are located on the left and right in the retroperitoneal space, and in adult humans are about in length. They receive blood from the paired renal arteries; blo ...
, clearance is considered to be the ''amount of liquid filtered out of the blood that gets processed by the
kidney The kidneys are two reddish-brown bean-shaped organs found in vertebrates. They are located on the left and right in the retroperitoneal space, and in adult humans are about in length. They receive blood from the paired renal arteries; blo ...
s'' or ''the amount of blood cleaned per time'' because it has the units of a volumetric flow rate volume_per_unit_time.html"_;"title="volume.html"_;"title="volume">volume_per_unit_time">volume.html"_;"title="volume">volume_per_unit_time_.html" ;"title="volume">volume_per_unit_time.html" ;"title="volume.html" ;"title="volume">volume per unit time">volume.html" ;"title="volume">volume per unit time ">volume">volume_per_unit_time.html" ;"title="volume.html" ;"title="volume">volume per unit time">volume.html" ;"title="volume">volume per unit time However, it does not refer to a real value; "the kidney does not completely remove a substance from the total renal plasma flow." From a mass transfer perspective and physiology, physiologically, volumetric blood flow (to the dialysis machine and/or kidney) is only one of several factors that determine blood concentration and removal of a substance from the body. Other factors include the
mass transfer coefficient In engineering, the mass transfer coefficient is a diffusion rate constant that relates the mass transfer rate, mass transfer area, and concentration change as driving force: k_c = \frac Where: *k_c is the mass transfer coefficient ol/(s·m ...
, dialysate flow and dialysate recirculation flow for hemodialysis, and the
glomerular filtration rate Renal functions include maintaining an acid–base balance; regulating fluid balance; regulating sodium, potassium, and other electrolytes; clearing toxins; absorption of glucose, amino acids, and other small molecules; regulation of blood pre ...
and the tubular reabsorption rate, for the kidney. A physiologic interpretation of clearance (at steady-state) is that clearance is ''a ratio of the mass generation and blood (or plasma) concentration''. Its definition follows from the
differential equation In mathematics, a differential equation is an equation that relates one or more unknown functions and their derivatives. In applications, the functions generally represent physical quantities, the derivatives represent their rates of change, an ...
that describes exponential decay and is used to model kidney function and
hemodialysis Hemodialysis, also spelled haemodialysis, or simply dialysis, is a process of purifying the blood of a person whose kidneys are not working normally. This type of dialysis achieves the extracorporeal removal of waste products such as creatinin ...
machine function: Where: * \dot is the mass generation rate of the substance - assumed to be a constant, i.e. not a function of time (equal to zero for foreign substances/drugs) mol/minor ol/s* t is dialysis time or time since injection of the substance/drug inor * V is the volume of distribution or total body water or 3* K is the clearance L/minor 3/s* C is the concentration mol/Lor ol/m3(in the United States often g/mL From the above definitions it follows that \frac is the first
derivative In mathematics, the derivative of a function of a real variable measures the sensitivity to change of the function value (output value) with respect to a change in its argument (input value). Derivatives are a fundamental tool of calculus. ...
of concentration with respect to time, i.e. the change in concentration with time. It is derived from a mass balance. Clearance of a substance is sometimes expressed as the inverse of the
time constant In physics and engineering, the time constant, usually denoted by the Greek letter (tau), is the parameter characterizing the response to a step input of a first-order, linear time-invariant (LTI) system.Concretely, a first-order LTI system is a s ...
that describes its removal rate from the body divided by its volume of distribution (or total body water). In steady-state, it is defined as the mass generation rate of a substance (which equals the mass removal rate) divided by its concentration in the
blood Blood is a body fluid in the circulatory system of humans and other vertebrates that delivers necessary substances such as nutrients and oxygen to the cells, and transports metabolic waste products away from those same cells. Blood in the cir ...
.


Clearance, half-life and distribution volume

There is an important relationship between clearance, elimination half-life and distribution volume. The elimination rate constant of a drug K_ is equivalent to total clearance divided by the distribution volume K_ = \dfrac (note the usage of Cl and not Κ, not to confuse with K_). But K_ is also equivalent to \ln 2 divided by elimination rate half-life t_, K_ =\dfrac . Thus, Cl_ = \dfrac . This means, for example, that an increase in total clearance results in a decrease in elimination rate half-life, provided distribution volume is constant. Derivation of these equations can be found in e.g. Rang and Dale's Pharmacology Ritter J, Flower R, Henderson G, Rang H. Rang & Dale's Pharmacology. 8th ed. London. Churchill Livingstone; 2015


Effect of plasma protein binding

For substances that exhibit substantial plasma protein binding, clearance is generally dependent on the total concentration (free + protein-bound) and not the free concentration. Most plasma substances have primarily their free concentrations regulated, which thus remains the same, so extensive protein binding increases total plasma concentration (free + protein-bound). This decreases clearance compared to what would have been the case if the substance did not bind to protein. However, the mass removal rate is the same, because it depends only on concentration of free substance, and is independent on plasma protein binding, even with the fact that plasma proteins increase in concentration in the distal
renal glomerulus The glomerulus (plural glomeruli) is a network of small blood vessels (capillaries) known as a ''tuft'', located at the beginning of a nephron in the kidney. Each of the two kidneys contains about one million nephrons. The tuft is structurally s ...
as plasma is filtered into Bowman's capsule, because the relative increases in concentrations of substance-protein and non-occupied protein are equal and therefore give no net binding or dissociation of substances from plasma proteins, thus giving a constant plasma concentration of free substance throughout the glomerulus, which also would have been the case without any plasma protein binding. In other sites than the kidneys, however, where clearance is made by
membrane transport protein A membrane transport protein (or simply transporter) is a membrane protein involved in the movement of ions, small molecules, and macromolecules, such as another protein, across a biological membrane. Transport proteins are integral transmembra ...
s rather than filtration, extensive plasma protein binding may increase clearance by keeping concentration of free substance fairly constant throughout the capillary bed, inhibiting a decrease in clearance caused by decreased concentration of free substance through the capillary.


Derivation of equation

Equation is derived from a mass balance: where: * \Delta t is a period of time * \Delta m_\text the change in mass of the toxin in the body during \Delta t * \dot m_\text is the toxin intake rate * \dot m_\text is the toxin removal rate * \dot m_\text is the toxin generation rate In words, the above equation states: :''The change in the mass of a toxin within the body (\Delta m) during some time \Delta t is equal to the toxin intake plus the toxin generation minus the toxin removal. Since and Equation A1 can be rewritten as: If one lumps the ''in'' and ''gen.'' terms together, i.e. \dot m=\dot m_\text +\dot m_\text and divides by \Delta t the result is a difference equation: If one applies the limit \Delta t \to 0 one obtains a differential equation: Using the
Product Rule In calculus, the product rule (or Leibniz rule or Leibniz product rule) is a formula used to find the derivatives of products of two or more functions. For two functions, it may be stated in Lagrange's notation as (u \cdot v)' = u ' \cdot v ...
this can be rewritten as: If one assumes that the volume change is not significant, i.e. C \frac=0, the result is Equation :


Solution to the differential equation

The general solution of the above differential equation (1) is:Full Text
/ref> Where: * ''C''o is the concentration at the beginning of dialysis ''or'' the initial concentration of the substance/drug (after it has distributed) mol/Lor ol/m3* ''e'' is the base of the natural logarithm


Steady-state solution

The solution to the above differential equation (''9'') at time infinity (steady state) is: The above equation (''10a'') can be rewritten as: The above equation () makes clear the relationship between mass removal and ''clearance''. It states that (with a constant mass generation) the concentration and clearance vary inversely with one another. If applied to creatinine (i.e.
creatinine clearance Assessment of kidney function occurs in different ways, using the presence of symptoms and signs, as well as measurements using urine tests, blood tests, and medical imaging. Functions of a healthy kidney include maintaining a person's fluid ...
), it follows from the equation that if the
serum creatinine Creatinine (; ) is a breakdown product of creatine phosphate from muscle and protein metabolism. It is released at a constant rate by the body (depending on muscle mass). Biological relevance Serum creatinine (a blood measurement) is an importa ...
doubles the clearance halves and that if the serum creatinine quadruples the clearance is quartered.


Measurement of renal clearance

Renal clearance can be measured with a timed collection of
urine Urine is a liquid by-product of metabolism in humans and in many other animals. Urine flows from the kidneys through the ureters to the urinary bladder. Urination results in urine being excreted from the body through the urethra. Cellular ...
and an analysis of its composition with the aid of the following equation (which follows directly from the derivation of ()): Where: * K is the clearance L/min* CU is the urine concentration mol/L(in the USA often g/mL * Q is the urine flow (volume/time) L/min(often L/24 h * CB is the plasma concentration mol/L(in the USA often g/mL When the substance "C" is creatinine, an endogenous chemical that is excreted only by filtration, the clearance is an approximation of the
glomerular filtration rate Renal functions include maintaining an acid–base balance; regulating fluid balance; regulating sodium, potassium, and other electrolytes; clearing toxins; absorption of glucose, amino acids, and other small molecules; regulation of blood pre ...
.
Inulin Inulins are a group of naturally occurring polysaccharides produced by many types of plants, industrially most often extracted from chicory. The inulins belong to a class of dietary fibers known as fructans. Inulin is used by some plants as a m ...
clearance is less commonly used to precisely determine glomerular filtration rate. Note - the above equation () is valid ''only'' for the steady-state condition. If the substance being cleared is ''not'' at a constant plasma concentration (i.e. ''not'' at steady-state) ''K'' must be obtained from the (full) solution of the differential equation ().


See also


References


Further reading

* {{Pharmacology Nephrology Pharmacokinetic metrics Temporal rates de:Clearance (Medizin)