Oral bioavailability

The fraction of an orally-administered dose of drug that reaches the systemic circulation and, as with bioavailability, abbreviated as F. Following oral administration, the drug must be absorbed across the walls of the GI tract and then must escape metabolism as it passes through the liver, in order to reach the systemic circulation. The oral bioavailability is equal to the product of the fraction of the dose that is absorbed from the gut (fg) and the fraction of that absorbed portion that then escapes from the liver (fH). So F = fg × fH.

The hepatic extraction ratio refers to the fraction of drug removed from the blood on a single pass through the liver, a value which is equal to 1-fH. A drug can not generally have an oral bioavailability value higher than its value for fH, and oral bioavailability can equal fH only when all of the drug escapes from the GI tract and is able to enter the portal circulation (i.e. when fg = 1). However, some orally-administered drugs are able to avoid first-pass metabolism, to some degree at least, as a result of lymphatic drug absorption. Oral bioavailability would then be higher than predicted, based on consideration of hepatic extraction ratio and fH.

Plasma concentrations following administration of identical doses of a drug to an individual by IV (blue) and PO (red) routes. AUC values (from t=0 to infinity) were determined with graphing software as 77.9 mg/l h (IV) and 39.7 mg/l h (PO), yielding an oral bioavailability for this drug in this individual of (39.7/77.9) = 51%.

Neither fg nor fH can be measured directly; instead, F is determined by comparing area under the curve of a plasma concentration versus time plot for an orally-administered dose with the area under the curve following an IV dose of the same amount of the same drug to the same patient. The ratio of areas (AUCPO/AUCIV) reveals oral bioavailability, since AUC is proportional to the amount of drug that was present within the systemic circulation.

Further comments pertinent to oral bioavailability are included under the entry for bioavailability. Click here to view a short vodcast explaining oral bioavailability.

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An ABC of PK/PD Copyright © 2023 by Dr. Andrew Holt is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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