TK Profiles: The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly
Every animal survived. Body weights stable. No major clinical signs. You're practically popping champagne — and you're about to get an FDA hold. Because buried in the appendices is a TK table that proves your drug never actually made it into the bloodstream. In this episode, we break down toxicokinetics — what it is, why it underpins every dose justification you'll ever make, and what good, bad, and ugly TK profiles actually look like in practice.
Key takeaways:
* TK is just pharmacokinetics in the context of a toxicology study — Cmax, Tmax, AUC, and T½ are the bridge between the dose you give and the effects you see
* Good TK tells a clean, cohesive story: consistent exposure, dose-proportional increases, well-timed sampling — it validates your NOAEL and supports your IND
* Bad TK doesn't fall apart completely, but introduces enough uncertainty to make interpretation tricky — inconsistent exposure, non-linear AUC increases, and exposure overlap between dose groups
* Ugly TK undermines the entire study — no systemic exposure at high dose, formulation failure, unexpected accumulation — and can force you to repeat the study entirely
* TK is not a supporting actor. It's part of the main story. Review it alongside findings, not as an afterthought
Links:
* Early access — The Complete Guide to Nonclinical Development: https://www.nonclinical.academy/ [https://www.nonclinical.academy/]
The Nonclinical is hosted by Dessi McEntee, MS, DABT — board-certified toxicologist and Fractional Head of Toxicology. Subscribe to the newsletter on LinkedIn, take the course at nonclinical.academy, or work with Dessi at toxistrategy.com.