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Systemic Pharmacokinetic Principles of Therapeutic Peptides.

Clin Pharmacokinet · 2026

Last updated 2026-05-28

This study analyzed how peptide drugs—including GLP-1 medications like semaglutide and tirzepatide—are processed by the body. It found that chemical modifications, such as adding fatty acids, can extend how long these drugs stay active, allowing for less frequent dosing. The research also showed that drug behavior in the body follows predictable patterns across different species, which could help in designing future peptide-based treatments.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalClin Pharmacokinet, 2026
Citations0
Molecules

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Peptide-based therapeutics represent a rapidly expanding class of drugs. Endogenous peptides typically exhibit short elimination half-lives due to proteolytic cleavage and renal filtration. However, modifications such as amino acid substitutions and fatty-acid conjugation can significantly prolong their half-lives, enabling, for example, once weekly dosing. This study revisits the systemic pharmacokinetics of peptide drugs using classical pharmacokinetic principles and elucidates the scaling of peptide pharmacokinetics across species. METHODS: Preclinical and clinical pharmacokinetic data were collected from published literature and AstraZeneca internal sources, covering four unconjugated peptides (teduglutide, apraglutide, pramlintide, and exenatide) and five fatty-acid conjugated peptides (tirzepatide, cotadutide, liraglutide, semaglutide and pemvidutide). Algebraic equations for clearance, volume of distribution, and plasma half-life were derived. RESULTS: Theoretical predictions from these models were broadly consistent with collected data; however, there was a tendency to overpredict the volume of distribution. Furthermore, for each peptide drug, these pharmacokinetic parameters were well described by inter-species allometric relationships. The allometric exponents for apparent clearance ranged from 0.58 to 0.88 (geometric mean: 0.72; n = 9; R ≥ 0.93), while those for apparent volume of distribution ranged from 0.89 to 1.1 (geometric mean: 0.98; n = 8; R ≥ 0.88). Notably, there were no differences in scaling exponents between unconjugated and fatty-acid conjugated peptides. CONCLUSION: In summary, our results underscore that the systemic pharmacokinetics of peptide drugs generally follow size-related physiological scaling patterns and provide quantitative tools to facilitate translational assessments in the drug discovery process.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 41661442 ↗