2002
DOI: 10.1177/089719002237667
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Renal Drug Transport and Drug-Drug Interactions

Abstract: The kidney plays a vital role in the elimination of xenobiotics including drugs, toxins, and endogenous metabolites. Renal drug elimination involves 3 major processes: glomerular filtration, tubular secretion, and tubular reabsorption. Although glomerular filtration is a simple unidirectional diffusion process, renal tubular secretion and/or reabsorption can involve saturable processes mediated by multiple highly specialized membrane transport systems. Current research has identified that these transport prote… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 92 publications
(118 reference statements)
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“…The lack of a drug‐drug interaction between adefovir and entecavir could well be attributed to the existence of multiple transport systems with different substrate specificities. In addition, many nucleosides and nucleoside analog drugs are substrates for more than 1 transport protein 14 . These different transport proteins include organic anion transporters (OAT), organic cation transporters, and P‐glycoprotein (P‐gp).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The lack of a drug‐drug interaction between adefovir and entecavir could well be attributed to the existence of multiple transport systems with different substrate specificities. In addition, many nucleosides and nucleoside analog drugs are substrates for more than 1 transport protein 14 . These different transport proteins include organic anion transporters (OAT), organic cation transporters, and P‐glycoprotein (P‐gp).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This could cause renal toxicity, especially when two drugs use the same transporter for elimination (Cihlar et al, 2009;Ronaldson and Bendayan, 2002). Drug-drug interaction is also likely to occur when two nucleoside inhibitors are phosphorylated by the same enzyme (Kewn et al, 1997).…”
Section: Nucleoside Toxicity and Drug-drug Interactionsmentioning
confidence: 96%