drcampos
★    

Brazil,
2008-10-08 19:04
(6464 d 10:40 ago)

Posting: # 2494
Views: 7,603
 

 Time scaling [Dissolution / BCS / IVIVC]

Dear All,

Recently I have read an article describing a IVIVC. In this article was collected samples at 5, 10, 15, 20, 30 and 45 min in dissolution experiment and at 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 8 h in in vivo study. So, I would like to know how I could correlate these data. The article cite a rescaling procedure. How could I do it? Has someone already used this procedure for IVIVC?

Thank you in advance.

Daniel Rossi de Campos
Brazil


Edit: Subject line changed. [Helmut]
SDavis
★★  
Homepage
UK,
2009-01-15 10:57
(6365 d 17:48 ago)

@ drcampos
Posting: # 3034
Views: 5,925
 

 Time in IVIVC

Hi Daniel - sorry if this information comes to you late but I only just saw that no one had responded to your question and although I'm not an IVIVC expert...

❝ The article cite a rescaling procedure. How could I do it? Has someone already used this procedure for IVIVC?


To correlate deconvolved Fabs with Fdiss there are various correlation models that can be used. 3 are built into WinNonlin's IVIVC Wizard and you may find the third option would be the equation you'd like to implement:

Fabs = Fa*Fdiss(tscale*time-tshift)-Foffset

the "tscale" allows you to 'stretch' the Dissolution profile,
"tshift" is to account for a lag in absorption

You may of course modify a built-in model to account for some other factor. Hope this helps a little, you could also try watching one of Pharsight's free webinars on IVIVC that are hosted under events.

Simon

Simon
Senior Scientific Trainer, Certara™
[link=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xX-yCO5Rzag[/link]
https://www.certarauniversity.com/dashboard
https://support.certara.com/forums/
drcampos
★    

Brazil,
2009-01-19 13:01
(6361 d 15:43 ago)

@ SDavis
Posting: # 3063
Views: 5,866
 

 Time in IVIVC

Dear Simon,

Thank you for your explanation.

Regards,

Daniel Rossi de Campos
UA Flag
Activity
 Admin contact
23,655 posts in 4,993 threads, 1,570 registered users;
144 visitors (0 registered, 144 guests [including 23 identified bots]).
Forum time: 05:45 CEST (Europe/Vienna)

Science is simply common sense at its best that is,
rigidly accurate in observation, and
merciless to fallacy in logic.    Thomas Henry Huxley

The Bioequivalence and Bioavailability Forum is hosted by
BEBAC Ing. Helmut Schütz
HTML5