Elimination Rate Constant (ke) Calculator
Pharmacokinetics Analysis Tool
Results:
Elimination Rate Constant (ke): h-1
Estimated Half-life (t1/2): hours
Elimination Percentage: % per hour
How to Calculate Elimination Rate Constant Pharmacokinetics
In pharmacokinetics, the elimination rate constant (ke) is a value that describes the rate at which a drug is removed from the body. It represents the fraction of the drug that is eliminated per unit of time (e.g., 0.1 per hour means 10% of the drug is removed every hour).
The ke Formula
The calculation is based on first-order kinetics, which applies to most drugs at therapeutic doses. The primary formula used when two plasma concentration points are known is:
- C1: Initial drug concentration
- C2: Final drug concentration
- Δt: The time elapsed between the two measurements
- ln: The natural logarithm
Why is the Elimination Rate Constant Important?
Understanding ke is crucial for several clinical reasons:
- Determining Half-Life: Once you have ke, you can calculate the half-life using the formula t1/2 = 0.693 / ke.
- Dosing Intervals: It helps pharmacists and doctors decide how often a drug should be administered to maintain steady-state levels.
- Clearance Relationship: It connects the volume of distribution (Vd) to clearance (CL) via CL = ke × Vd.
Step-by-Step Calculation Example
Suppose a patient is given a dose of an antibiotic. The blood concentration 2 hours after administration is 12 mg/L (C1). Six hours later (total 8 hours after dose), the concentration is 4 mg/L (C2).
- Step 1: Identify the time interval (Δt) = 8h – 2h = 6 hours.
- Step 2: Calculate the natural log of concentrations: ln(12) ≈ 2.485 and ln(4) ≈ 1.386.
- Step 3: Apply the formula: ke = (2.485 – 1.386) / 6 = 1.099 / 6.
- Step 4: Result: ke = 0.183 h-1.
- Step 5: Half-life: 0.693 / 0.183 ≈ 3.78 hours.