Definition/Introduction
Understanding the concept of drug clearance is essential when determining the dosing of medications. When a medication is administered intravenously, the drug ends up either in the blood plasma or redistributes into the extravascular volume. The drug present in the plasma can be removed from the body primarily through the kidneys and liver. Drug clearance is defined as the volume of plasma cleared of a drug over a specified time period.[1] Thus, the unit of measurement for drug clearance is volume/time. Another equation can calculate clearance. Clearance is equal to the rate at which a drug is removed from plasma(mg/min) divided by the concentration of that drug in the plasma (mg/mL). The total ability of the body to clear a drug from the plasma is renal clearance plus hepatic clearance plus clearance from all other tissues. It is important to be aware of the fact that clearance does not tell us the amount of drug cleared. For example, let’s say drug X has a renal clearance of 20 mL/min and hepatic clearance of 5 mL/min. The total clearance of drug X would be 25 mL of plasma is cleared of drug X per minute.