ISSN (Print):
1389-2002
ISSN (Online):
1875-5453
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Current Drug Metabolism

Limited Time Complementary OA Offer Papers submitted before February 29, 2024, will be published as Open Access free of charge

Impact Factor: 2.3

Indexed in: Scopus, SCI Expanded, MEDLINE/PubMed... View all

Volume 25 , Issues 10, 2024

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Institutional Members
Impact Factor
Web of Science Impact Factor

Current: 2.3
5 - Year: 3.4

Ranking & Category

  • 164th of 292 in Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
  • 122nd of 261 in Pharmacology & Pharmacy

Topic(s) Covered

2 Topic(s)

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Aims & Scope

Current Drug Metabolism aims to cover all the latest and outstanding developments in drug metabolism, pharmacokinetics, and drug disposition. The journal serves as an international forum for the publication of full-length/mini review articles and guest edited issues in drug metabolism. Current Drug Metabolism is an essential journal for academic, clinical, government and pharmaceutical scientists who wish to be kept informed and up-to-date with the most important developments. The journal covers the following general topic areas: pharmaceutics, pharmacokinetics, toxicology, and most importantly drug metabolism.

More specifically, in vitro and in vivo drug metabolism of phase I and phase II enzymes or metabolic pathways; drug-drug interactions and enzyme kinetics; pharmacokinetics, pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic modeling, and toxicokinetics; interspecies differences in metabolism or pharmacokinetics, species scaling and extrapolations; drug transporters; target organ toxicity and interindividual variability in drug exposure-response; extrahepatic metabolism; bioactivation, reactive metabolites, and developments for the identification of drug metabolites. Preclinical and clinical reviews describing the drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics of marketed drugs or drug classes.

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Endorsement(s)

"Current Drug Metabolism is an important new source of current and comprehensive reviews that are of interest to drug metabolism scientists working in academia, industry and government."

David S. Riddick
Univ. of Toronto, Canada

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